The Chronicle

Within these walls

FLY-ON-THEWALL TV SHOW ON LIFE INSIDE DURHAM

- Crime Reporter By SOPHIE DOUGHTY sophie.doughty@ncjmedia.co.uk @Sophie_Doughty

REAL life behind the cell doors of a North East prison is being revealed for the first time in a new TV documentar­y.

HMP Durham, its inmates and the staff who work there feature in the three-part series looking at life on the inside.

The Channel Four documentar­y ‘Prison’ was filmed over seven months at HMP Durham, in Old Elvet in the city.

And filmmakers say they were given unpreceden­ted access to the facility, revealing the violence, drugs and mental health problems that form everyday life inside.

A spokesman for the programme said: “The series captures first-hand the escalating drug problem, the scale of violence that frontline staff and prisoners endure daily and the multiple challenges of dealing with those suffering from mental health issues.

“By gaining the trust and confidence of prisoners and staff, the crew gained a level of access and emotional honesty never seen before in an English prison documentar­y – offering a unique insight into why drugs are important to prisoners, how and why violence quickly escalates and why so many prisoners suffer from debilitati­ng mental health problems.”

The filmmakers spent around seven months at the prison, with the crew taking around a month to gain the trust of prisoners prior to the start of filming.

Then governor Tim Allen gave the crew the run of the prison so they could see first-hand the challenges the prison staff were up against on a day-to-day basis.

After being given training in security and personal safety, they were even given their own set of prison keys.

The three episodes each deal with a different issue; drugs, mental health and violence. Last year, Durham became the North East’s remand centre, serving the local courts and prisons.

It has an operationa­l capacity of 996 and is home to adult and youth offenders, aged between 18 and 21, on remand as well as a low proportion of sentenced category B and C prisoners.

The spokesman added: “With a vast weekly traffic of prisoners from driving offences to murderers to drug addicts, the prison is faced with ever changing demands, a pressure on bed space and complex prisoner needs.

“These challengin­g conditions at Durham offer a good reflection of the national issues currently facing the prison service.”

The first episode of Prison aired on Channel Four last night.

The series captures the escalating drug problem and scale of violence staff and prisoners endure daily Series spokesman

 ??  ?? HMP Durham, in Durham City Centre
HMP Durham, in Durham City Centre

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