Although located about 3 miles (4.8 km) from the center of Calipatria, the prison is within the city limits.[3] Called the lowest prison in the Western Hemisphere, it lies 184 feet (56 m) below sea level. As of Fiscal Year 2005/2006, CAL had a total of 1,143 staff and an annual operating budget of $123 million.[4]
The facility covers a total of 1,227.5 acres (496.8 ha) (with the prison on 300 acres (120 ha)).[4] In September 2007, it had a design capacity of 2,308 but a total institution population of 4,180, for an occupancy rate of 181.1 percent.[5]
As of July 31, 2022, CAL was incarcerating people at 110.1% of its design capacity, with 2,543 occupants.[6]
Over 2,000 of its housing units are maximum-security Level IV ("Cells, fenced or walled perimeters, electronic security, more staff and unarmed officers both inside and outside the installation"); the remainder are minimum-security Level I ("Open dormitories without a secure perimeter").[4][7]
History
CAL opened in January 1992,[4] approximately 22 months before California State Prison, Centinela (the other state prison in Imperial County). A $1.5 million electrified fence, which could cause instantaneous death for escaping inmates and which was the first of its kind among California state prisons, was installed in November 1993.[8][9] After a number of birds had died by electrocution, an ornithologist was hired to help redesign the fence and eliminate the problem.[10]
As of 1995, CAL's problems included "double-celling" (placing two inmates in bunk beds in a cell designed for one), psychological stress, a drastic shortage of work for prisoners, chronic understaffing among prison employees, and gang violence.[10] A May 1995 incident in which five inmates stabbed and assaulted eight officers was described in 1997 as the worst inmate attack on staff in California state prisons in recent years.[9]
The weather in the area is desert-like, cold in winter and very hot in summer—up to 118 degrees Fahrenheit. The smell of cow manure pervades the prison and the entire area due to large cattle feed lots nearby.
An August 2005 riot at CAL was the most violent uprising at the prison.[12] The event left 25 inmates and 25 prison staff members wounded.[12] A guard shot and killed an inmate with a Mini-14semiautomatic rifle, which was believed to have contributed to ending the violence.[12] A spokesman for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation stated that the disturbance involved Hispanic gang members."[13]
^ abcdCalipatria State Prison (CAL) (2009). "Mission Statement". California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Archived from the original on August 6, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
^Buzbee, Sally Streff. Prisoner Advocates Voice Dismay Over State Facility's Lethal - Fence. Daily News of Los Angeles, November 21, 1993.
^ abFurillo, Andy. Pressures Building in State's 32 Prisons. Sacramento Bee, January 19, 1997.
^ abDavis, Mike. A Prison-Industrial Complex: Hell Factories in the Field. The Nation, Vol. 260, Issue 7, pp. 229-234, February 20, 1995. HTML version.Archived 2007-12-19 at the Wayback Machine
^Saunders, Debra J. Death of a strangler. San Francisco Chronicle, October 1, 2002.