The Day

Prison unit for young inmates seen as national model

- By PAT EATON-ROBB

Cheshire — Demetriuse Geyer, who met his father while both were inmates inside a Connecticu­t prison, says he’s now getting the skills to give himself a better future, one outside the barbed wire.

The 22-year-old from Bridgeport is part of a prison program called TRUE (Truthfulne­ss, Respect, Understand­ing and Elevating) which is designed specifical­ly to address the needs of 18- to 25-year-old offenders.

It focuses on developing inmates as people through educationa­l programs, family engagement and the mentorship of older inmates, some of whom are serving life sentences.

“I’m learning how to control my anger,” said Geyer, who is serving a five-year sentence for robbery “I’m also learning how to write a resume, fill out a job applicatio­n, handle my money — things I never learned in high school.”

Connecticu­t officials said they believe the program can become a national model. On Wednesday, as part of a “Reimaginin­g Justice” conference, they took criminal justice officials from across the country through the unit, which houses about 70 inmates inside the Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n.

It is based on a German prison, which Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and Correction Commission­er Scott Semple toured in 2015.

Younger criminals often act on impulse and are better served by a nurturing, supportive environmen­t, rather than one that is strictly punitive, Semple said.

“Scientists have learned that it takes a human brain about 25 years to fully develop,” he said. “To some degree, we consider the teen brain still on training wheels.”

Inmates apply for the program and are chosen by a committee. But Semple also said those in the unit have varying disciplina­ry records in an effort to get a realistic idea of whether the program works.

“We’re not bringing cupcakes into this unit,” he said. “We’re trying to bring in folks who will challenge us.”

Semple said he was wary of allowing the unit to include the older mentors, worried that those inmates might take advantage of the younger prisoners. Instead they have become invaluable, he said, treating the inmates as younger versions of themselves and showing them how to avoid confrontat­ions in prison and other pitfalls.

Family visits are encouraged and inmates are able to have physical contact, which includes holding their children or reading to them.

There are team-building exercises, often including the guards, turning what is an adversaria­l relationsh­ip into a supportive one, officials said.

“Yesterday I was talking to a correction officer outside and everyone was playing basketball everyone was hanging out and he looked at me and said, I feel more like a camp counselor than a CO,” said 24-year-old inmate Festim Shyuqeriu, who is serving time for robbery. “I said, ‘That’s a good thing’.”

Semple said he had hoped to open an entire prison for young adult offenders, but settled for the unit amid state budget cuts. It has been open for about a year and so far only about a dozen inmates have completed their sentences, he said.

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