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In 1936 Changi Prison was opened and operational as a Maximum Security Prison and as a training ground for the reform and rehabilitation of its inmates. [citation needed] The Singapore Prison Service was institutionalised as a Department of the Singaporean Government in 1946 and G.E.W.W. Bayly became its first Commissioner. On 1 November 1973 ...
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The Singapore Prisons Emergency Action Response (SPEAR) is a correctional emergency response team within the Singapore Prison Service (SPS). SPEAR is a highly trained elite force that is deployed in various high risk special operations [1] [2] and prepared to quell any riots or fights within the prisons. It assists SPS officers in handling non ...
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A Singaporean police vehicle. In Singapore, law enforcement is principally led by the Singapore Police Force (SPF), and supported by other agencies including the Singapore Prison Service, Central Narcotics Bureau, Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau, Internal Security Department, Immigration and Checkpoints Authority, and Singapore Customs.
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Changi, Singapore, 1941 Newly liberated Allied prisoners in makeshift quarters in a central corridor and from crowded cells in Changi Prison in 1945. Prior to Changi Prison, the only penal facility in Singapore was at Pearl's Hill, beside the barracks of Sepoy Lines, and was known as the Singapore Prison. [8]