Black Dolphin Prison

Correctional facility in Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Federal Governmental Institution - Penal Colony No. 6 of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia in Orenburg Oblast,[a] commonly known as the Black Dolphin Prison (Russian: Чёрный дельфин, romanized: Chyorny delʹfin) and formerly known as NKVD Prison No. 2 is a prison in Sol-Iletsk, Orenburg Oblast, Russia, near its border with Kazakhstan.[1] It is one of the oldest prisons in Russia, and one of the first in the Orenburg Oblast to accept prisoners with life sentences. It gets its unofficial name from a prisoner-constructed[2] sculpture depicting a black dolphin, which is set in front of the main entrance.

Coordinates51°9′20″N 54°59′35″E
StatusOperational
Population~700
Openedcirca 1745
Quick facts Coordinates, Status ...
Black Dolphin
Black Dolphin Prison is located in Orenburg Oblast
Black Dolphin Prison
Black Dolphin Prison is located in Russia
Black Dolphin Prison
Coordinates51°9′20″N 54°59′35″E
StatusOperational
Population~700
Openedcirca 1745
Managed byFederal Penitentiary Service
GovernorColonel Yuri Korobov
CitySol-Iletsk
State/provinceOrenburg Oblast
CountryRussia
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Originally, Black Dolphin was a jail (ostrog) for those sentenced to life at hard labor, since at least 1745. After the suppression of Pugachev's Rebellion in 1773, the prison was updated for the deportation and confinement of robbers. The prison houses approximately 700 of Russia's worst criminals, including child molesters, murderers, terrorists, cannibals, and serial killers.[3] Prisoners at Black Dolphin are all serving sentences of life imprisonment. The prison began accepting these inmates on November 1st, 2000.[1]

Conditions

Inmates are kept isolated in cells that have a set of three steel doors. For 90 minutes a day, they exercise in a large cage; during this time, cells are searched for contraband or illegal items. Inmates are also under 24-hour surveillance and supervision; they are forced to stand and forbidden from resting or sitting on their bunks from the time they awake until bedtime (roughly 16 hours). When prison officers make a command to the inmates, they’re required to immediately respond with the words "yes sir". Guards make rounds every quarter hour. Prisoners are fed soup four times a day,[3][better source needed] and are only allowed books, newspapers, and a radio. Prisoners are also severely beaten with rifles daily as a form of physical torture.[citation needed]

Prison guards place blindfolds on arriving inmates so that they cannot map out the prison or plan escapes. Inmates are also blindfolded whenever they are transported between buildings. Black Dolphin prison officers have a unique form of escorting inmates: Prisoners are kept bent over at the waist while a guard holds his handcuffed hands behind his back, higher than his hips. This escort control tactic allows for maximum control while depriving him of a view of his immediate surroundings (preventing him from escaping and/or attacking prison staff).[4]

Notable inmates

Current

Former

  • Vladimir Krishtopa (1973), murderer and rapist
  • Sergey Maduev (1956-2000), serial killer and brigand; died from heart-failure and diabetes complications.
  • Alexander Maslich (1972-2015), serial killer who committed four murders while incarcerated at different prisons; died at Black Dolphin from undisclosed causes[10]
  • Carola Neher (1900-1942), actress; sentenced to 10 years for Trotskyism; was incarcerated at three different prisons, including Black Dolphin, where she died from typhus[11][12][13][14]
  • Tariel Oniani (born 1952), mafia boss and thief in law, was incarcerated at Black Dolphin from 2010 to 2019 after being convicted of kidnapping and then released.
  • Mikhail Popkov (born 1964), serial killer, was incarcerated at Black Dolphin from 11 December 2018 until 2020 and then transferred.
  • Valery Skoptsov (1951-2004), serial killer, rapist, and thief; died from heart-failure.
  • Tsyben Zhamtsarano (1881-1942), Buryat scholar and folklorist.

See also

Notes

  1. Russian: Федеральное казённое учреждение — Исправительная колония №6 Управления Федеральной службы исполнения наказаний России по Оренбургской области, or shortly Russian: ФКУ ИК-6 УФСИН России по Оренбургской области

References

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