How "safe" are prisons?

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dibbons

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Found this somewhere, forgot the exact source:

Looking to Live in a Community with Low Murder Rates? Try Committing a Crime
By STEVEN D. LEVITT
Crime rates have a large influence on the choices people make about where to live. The amazing declines in crime over the last fifteen years have been especially strong in big cities, a factor that helped fuel an urban renaissance. Ironically, however, some of the lowest murder rates are found in places where one might suspect just the opposite to be true: U.S. prisons. The Bureau of Justice Statistics recently released data on the causes of death among inmates in state prisons. In 2005, 56 prisoners were murdered. There are roughly 2 million inmates held in state prisons, meaning that the homicide rate per 100,000 prisoners last year was only 2.8. That number is less than half the rate of New York City (6.6 per 100,000) and an order of magnitude lower than Baltimore (42 per 100,000). Indeed, of the 66 largest cities in the United States, only El Paso, Tex. and Honolulu, Hawaii have lower homicide rates than the state prisons.
Interestingly, suicide rates in prison are about average for the U.S. There were 215 suicides in state prisons in 2005, for a rate of roughly 10 per 100,000. The overall suicide rate for all Americans is 10.6 per 100,000.
These low homicide and suicide rates are both testimony to the fact that prisons are incredibly highly controlled environments. Whenever I have visited prisons, I have been amazed at how safe I felt. In contrast, when doing ride-alongs in police cars, I’ve always had the feeling that something crazy could happen at any moment.
So if you feel there is too much crime in your own neighborhood, there is a simple solution to your problem: just commit a crime yourself. Your new home in prison will likely be a much safer place to live.
 
There are also very few drownings and death by car accidents in prisons, but I wouldn't recommend it.
 
Survival in prison: It's not who you know, it's who you blow.

My recommendation? Stay out.
 
Found this somewhere, forgot the exact source:

Looking to Live in a Community with Low Murder Rates? Try Committing a Crime
By STEVEN D. LEVITT
Crime rates have a large influence on the choices people make about where to live. The amazing declines in crime over the last fifteen years have been especially strong in big cities, a factor that helped fuel an urban renaissance. Ironically, however, some of the lowest murder rates are found in places where one might suspect just the opposite to be true: U.S. prisons. The Bureau of Justice Statistics recently released data on the causes of death among inmates in state prisons. In 2005, 56 prisoners were murdered. There are roughly 2 million inmates held in state prisons, meaning that the homicide rate per 100,000 prisoners last year was only 2.8. That number is less than half the rate of New York City (6.6 per 100,000) and an order of magnitude lower than Baltimore (42 per 100,000). Indeed, of the 66 largest cities in the United States, only El Paso, Tex. and Honolulu, Hawaii have lower homicide rates than the state prisons.
Interestingly, suicide rates in prison are about average for the U.S. There were 215 suicides in state prisons in 2005, for a rate of roughly 10 per 100,000. The overall suicide rate for all Americans is 10.6 per 100,000.
These low homicide and suicide rates are both testimony to the fact that prisons are incredibly highly controlled environments. Whenever I have visited prisons, I have been amazed at how safe I felt. In contrast, when doing ride-alongs in police cars, I’ve always had the feeling that something crazy could happen at any moment.
So if you feel there is too much crime in your own neighborhood, there is a simple solution to your problem: just commit a crime yourself. Your new home in prison will likely be a much safer place to live.
And you're point is?.......
 
I worked in a county jail for 5 years. Let me tell you that it is no walk in the park. Having feces and urine thrown on you, being the only officer to break up a fight, transporting a prisoner somewhere by yourself, transporting 10 to 12 prisoners to state prison with only one other officer. Dealing with physicological serial killers, while trying to have 8 eyes to see everything that is going on around you. Having to stand in an operating room while they operate on a prisoner because you cannot take your eyes off of them for a second, sitting in their hospital room so no one has access to them. Always checking their cuffs and chains so they are secure. That is why I jumped at the chance to transfer to the unit that works prisoners outside of the jail, minimum security of course. Try doing that job and come home and lead a normal life. It takes a special kind of person to withstand and sustain this life style. Sorry for the rant but some people take so much for granted these days and have no idea what is going on in the real world just to keep them safe. I know crime will never stop but you have to appreciate the things our law enforcement does on a daily basis to keep some kind of order, so regular people can go about their daily routine safely.
 
If you end up in the one in Airway Heights Washington hope you like drag racing...it is across the Street from Spokane County Raceway...
 
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