It’s only when you’ve served some time in prison that you come to realise just how much rubbish passes as commonly accepted fact on the outside. Fuelled by the media, there seems to be a general consensus that prisoners have far too cushy a life inside and that every cell is actually a ‘man cave’ in which idle cons get to spend all day lying on their bunks watching Sky Sports and daytime TV – when they’re not pumping iron in the gym, of course.
Well, just to set the record straight, I’ve never been in
any prison that had Sky subscription services in any form. It’s a nasty,
dishonest myth peddled by certain sections of the media and - more amazingly -
believed by many politicians, including some who should know better.
Perhaps when Andrew Selous - MP for South West Bedfordshire
and the newly appointed Prisons Minister - makes his first visit to a prison he
could get one of the rented in-cell TVs switched on and work his way through
the nine Freeview channels on offer (BBC 1, BBC 2, ITV, C4, C5 as standard and
four others, usually ITV3, E4, Film 4 and VIVA). That’s your lot and you pay
£1.00 per week for the privilege (50p in a shared cell). This would at least
provide him with first-hand knowledge of the actual situation and he would be
in a position to set the record straight in Parliament and in the media when
the old lie about Sky channels is wheeled out yet again.
Of course, some private sector prisons do provide a wider range
of Freeview channels – or at least they did. Whether the new IEP system set out
in PSI 30/2013 has put a stop to that, I don’t yet know and none of the lads
that I’m still in contact with is in a private nick at the moment. However, it
always seemed crazy to me that public sector prisons ban most of the more
educational channels such as BBC 4… access to which could expand cons’
knowledge and horizons in a way that VIVA and its music videos can’t. But
that’s just a personal view.
Prison rich? |
While we’re on the subject of ‘man caves’, one of the
stranger terms I came around in the nick was 'prison rich'. I heard it a couple
of times in closed conditions, but it was in the D-cat (open prison) that it
came into its own. Basically, 'prison rich' means having the maximum amount of
personal property allowed in possession. By definition this is limited to
inmates who are on the Enhanced level of the Incentives and Earned Privileges
(IEP) system.
So what does being ‘prison rich’ really consist of in
practice? Well, if an inmate has purchased a DVD player from the Argos catalogue
or a Playstation 2 games system (the most recent model permitted as it doesn’t have internet
capability), a radio/CD player (no SW), a 4 x 6 foot floor rug (also Argos),
his own duvet and bedding and a vacuum flask for hot water then he counts as
being ‘prison rich’. Hardly
“riches beyond the dreams of avarice,” as Dr Johnson once observed.
Now, it should be remembered that none of the above items
has been handed out free of charge or supplied by the taxpayer. The prisoner
has saved up his prison ‘wages’ (usually ranging from £8.00 to £16.00 a week)
and, if he has a bit of cash in his private spends account, then as an Enhanced
level inmate he can also spend his own money to the tune of £25.50 a week (the Standard
level weekly allowance is £15.50, Entry level is £10.00 and Basic level is
£4.00). None of this cash comes from public funds… it’s either the prisoner’s
own money from outside or sent in by his family or friends.
Your own duvet and bedding |
So, picture your ‘man cave’… It has a metal-framed bed or
bunk, a sink, a toilet (usually in the same room, often right by the end of
your bed), a wooden locker, a small wooden table and a metal-framed chair. It
you’re in a shared cell that was originally designed for one prisoner then
there won’t be room for two chairs. When you eat your meals, one pad-mate will
need to sit on his bed or on the toilet with the lid closed (assuming it still
has one). I did this daily for six months in one B-cat nick.
Of course, if you happen to be ‘prison rich’ then you can
personalise your space. Your own duvet and bedding will brighten the place up,
as will the floor rug. Most nicks now provide thin curtains, but if you’re on
Enhanced level you can buy your own from the Argos catalogue. Complete the
effect with your DVD player or games console and that’s about it. You can also
paste up a few family photos and a calendar on your pinboard (by ‘paste up’, I
mean literally using toothpaste, because drawing pins, blu-tack and sellotape are
contraband).
When I first entered prison I used to regard these little
personalised touches in a pad (cell) as being the sign of an institutionalised
long-termer. Why else would anyone want to make a locked concrete box with a
thick steel door look homely? I deliberately didn’t want to feel ‘at home’ in
such an alien environment. However, as the months rolled on into years, I came
to realise that my fellow cons were just trying to humanise their own living
space… to soften the harsh edges of rigid institutional life.
No frills... life on Basic regime |
Remember, you can be 'prison rich' and then lose it all at the stroke of a pen these days. Enhanced level is reviewed regularly and unless an inmate can demonstrate that he is 'making a contribution' by doing some voluntary work (Insider, literacy mentor, Listener, wing rep etc) then it can all be taken away. Lose your Enhanced status and screws will come along with property bags and confiscate the lot. It will then be placed in your stored prop until either you regain your Enhanced (very unlikely) or you are discharged. I predict that there will be a lot of stored prop mounting up at the moment as more and more cons get downgraded to Standard or even Basic level.
By the time I was transferred to an open nick, I had
acquired most of the above items (except the Playstation 2), even a cheap floor
rug. I had a china plate, bowl and mug (now seemingly banned outside of
D-cats), so I ate my food off something that belonged to me, not the Prison
Service. Maybe it even tasted different on a china plate, or at least we
convinced ourselves that it did. So I had become ‘prison rich’ myself and when
new receptions transferred from closed nicks called round to my room (no cells, bars or
lock up in D-cats) they looked round enviously at my fully equipped ‘man cave’.
When I was released, I took great pleasure in passing on all
of the above items to friends who were less ‘prison rich’ than I was. Sure, it
was against the rules, but at least in open nicks there is less of an obsession
with rigid prop card checks. As I walked though the main gate on the way to the
railway station, I took very little with me in my holdall except for a few
items of clothing, some books, some letters, my diaries and photos and a large bundle
of prison writings. Looking back now – a few months on - I like to think that
my legacy has been to make a few decent lads feel ‘prison rich’.
My most valued item, even more than having my own footwear, was a little rechargeable beard trimmer that did service for hair clippers. mains clippers were forbidden. This freed me from having to wait in a queue to have my hair cropped with the blunt, dirty clippers that had to serve the entire prison.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading this, thank you for putting thins straight. Having now seen a few ultra rich people go to prison e.g.Bill Crosby, do you think they get treated different. do they receive any protection.
ReplyDelete