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Oregon State Correctional Institution (OSCI) is a 33-acre (130,000 m 2) medium security men's prison in Salem, Oregon, United States. It is operated by the Oregon Department of Corrections . The prison was established by an act of the Oregon State Legislature in 1955 and opened in 1959. [ 1 ]
Mill Creek Correctional Facility, Salem (290 inmate capacity) (closed July 2021 [1]) Oregon State Correctional Institution, Salem (888 inmate capacity) Oregon State Penitentiary, Salem (2,194 inmate capacity) Powder River Correctional Facility, Baker City (366 inmate capacity) Santiam Correctional Institution, Salem (440 inmate capacity)
The Oregon Department of Corrections are being sued by five current and former inmates of CCFI for allegations of rape, groping, assault, and molestation at the hands of a nurse in the medical unit, Tony Klein. Oregon State Police investigation found that Klein had been reported by 11 inmates for some type of sexual contact and was not charged ...
Oregon Mill Creek Correctional Facility (MCCF) was a minimum-security prison located five miles southeast of Salem on 2,089 acres. The facility was a minimum-security work camp providing AIC labor to the Oregon Department of Corrections, other state and local agencies, and private industries throughout the Willamette Valley.
A Salem man served jail time and owes thousands in fines for poaching a giant white sturgeon and four oversized sturgeon in Scappoose Bay in 2022, according to Oregon State Police.
Oregon State Penitentiary was the site of Oregon's first supermax unit, the "Intensive Management Unit" (IMU), constructed in 1991. The 196-bed self-contained Intensive Management Unit provides housing and control for male inmates who disrupt or pose a substantial threat to the general population in all department facilities.
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In 1995, a bill was introduced in the Oregon State Legislature that would establish an independent department, the Oregon Youth Authority, to administer Oregon's youth correctional facilities. [2] The bill became law that same year and the Oregon Youth Authority became a division of the Oregon Department of Human Resources.