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Washington Corrections Center is a Washington State Department of Corrections men's prison located in Shelton, Washington. [1] With an operating capacity of 1,300, it is the sixth largest prison in the state (after Stafford Creek Corrections Center) and is surrounded by forestland. It opened 60 years ago in 1964, seventy-five years after statehood.
Olympic Corrections Center (OCC) Forks: 1968 No Male 381 MI-2 Stafford Creek Corrections Center (SCCC) Aberdeen: 2000 Yes Male 1,936 MI-3 Medium Maximum Washington Corrections Center (WCC) Shelton: 1964 Yes Male 1,268 Medium Close Maximum Washington Corrections Center for Women (WCCW) Gig Harbor: 1971 Yes Female 738 MI-2 MI-3 Medium Close
The Washington Department of Corrections revenue-generating, industry job training, and factory food production branch is Washington State Correctional Industries. [18] It is a member of the National Correctional Industries Association. [19] Correctional Industries began centralizing food production at the Airway Heights Correctional Center in ...
Tomas Keen is an incarcerated writer from Washington State. Nick Hacheney is a social and environmental activist currently incarcerated at the Washington Corrections Center. Show comments.
May 19—Records that could potentially identify dozens of transgender inmates in Washington's state prisons must remain sealed for now, a federal judge in Spokane ruled Monday. U.S. District ...
Roughly 15 members of UPS’s faculty taught classes as part of the BA program, said Erzen, who began working with students at the Washington Corrections Center for Women more than a decade ago.
Washington State Penitentiary (also called the Walla Walla State Penitentiary) is a Washington State Department of Corrections men's prison located in Walla Walla, Washington. With an operating capacity of 2,200, it is the largest prison in the state and is surrounded by wheat fields. It opened in 1886, three years before statehood.
U.S. District Court Judge Thomas O. Rice ruled that releasing the records would violate the inmates’ rights under the federal and state law to be protected from potential harm.