Neuruppin-Wulkow correctional facility

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Neuruppin-Wulkow correctional facility
House of the Open Execution of the Neuruppin-Wulkow Prison
Information about the institution
Surname Neuruppin-Wulkow correctional facility
Reference year 2001
Detention places 160 of which 30 in open prison (140 places are temporarily closed)
Employee 132
Institution management Wolf-Dietrich Voigt
Outer wall

The correctional facility Neuruppin-Wulkow (abbreviated JVA Neuruppin-Wulkow ) is a correctional facility of the state of Brandenburg in the Neuruppin district of Wulkow . The prison houses adult male offenders with sentences of up to three years and detainees on remand.

history

The JVA Neuruppin-Wulkow was built by the Brandenburg Ministry of Justice as part of a large-scale investment and new building program from 1998 to 2001. The Berlin architecture firm Bruno Fioretti Marquez (BFM) delivered the design after a competition .

For this purpose, a former GSSD barracks in the Wulkow district of Neuruppin was demolished and a new building was built for 59 million DM (other sources give 100 million DM). This replaced the former penal institutions in Neuruppin (city), Potsdam and Prenzlau , which were up to 100 years old , which were closed. The opening took place during an open house on April 9, 2001, when 8,312 visitors toured the building. Regular hospital operations began on April 28th.

Jurisdiction

In the Neuruppin-Wulkow prison, male adult prisoners serve prison sentences of up to three years in open prison and prison sentences of up to two years in closed prison . The prisoners on remand of the Neuruppin district court are also housed here. There are currently 160 places of detention, 30 of which are in the open prison (140 places are temporarily closed).

staff

In the Neuruppin-Wulkow prison there are currently 132 employees, 99 of them in the general prison service. Furthermore, two psychologists, a pedagogue and four social workers are available to provide specialist care for the prisoners. A Protestant and a Catholic pastor are available. Medical care for the prisoners is made possible by contract doctors and nursing staff of the institution.

In January 2002 Kirsten Heinemann took over the management of the prison. Her successor Georg Oliver Allolio took over this position on September 6, 2004, which he handed over to Petra Wellnitz on July 1, 2008. She was then followed by Wolf-Dietrich Voigt.

Prisoner Care

The prisoners are usually accommodated in individual cells measuring ten square meters.

For adult prisoners, three-month courses for further education are offered. Knowledge in the field of wood processing and sanitary technology can be acquired in the specialist workshop. Furthermore, vocational training measures are possible for adolescents and young people on remand.

The prisoners can work in the in-house operations such as the kitchen, chamber, house workshops, garden area and the wood and ceramics factory. The objects made in the workshops such as small and garden furniture are sold at street markets in Neuruppin and the surrounding area.

In addition, anti-violence training, a psychosocial group, addiction counseling, traffic education courses and psychotherapeutic treatment by external therapists are offered. All prisoners are enabled to exercise in the sports rooms of the detention houses, in the sports hall and in the sports facilities in the open air area through two sports instructors. The focus is on ball sports and weight training. The institution library has an extensive range of non-fiction and fictional literature. Introductory courses for various application programs take place in the institution's computer cabinet.

See also

Web links

Commons : Neuruppin-Wulkow prison  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Prison Wulkow: Restricted competition ( Memento of the original from August 7, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Competition Online , No. 11447, October 1996. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.competitionline.de
  2. ^ Mass rush in the new JVA Wulkow. Hours of waiting, long queues . In: BZ , April 9, 2001, accessed December 8, 2010.
  3. Märkische Allgemeine , November 13, 2010, p. 20

Coordinates: 52 ° 55 ′ 40.6 ″  N , 12 ° 54 ′ 16.6 ″  E