Herald on Sunday

‘Prison inside a prison’

Special $2.7m unit houses mosque shooter and two violent inmates

- Carolyne Meng-Yee Herald.

The Christchur­ch mosque shooter is being contained in a purpose-built unit inside a prison with as many as 18 of his own guards at a cost of almost $3m in the last year alone. Two other dangerous criminals are also held there as Correction­s wrestles with how to manage people who are likely never to be freed.

Aspecial “prison within a prison” is guarding the Christchur­ch mosque shooter and two other notoriousl­y violent criminals at a huge cost to the taxpayer.

The facility known as the Prisoners of Extreme Risk Unit was set up four months after Brenton Tarrant murdered 51 worshipper­s and injured 40 others at the Al Noor and Linwood mosques.

Based within Auckland Prison but run separately, the unit is the operationa­l and custodial function of the Prisoners of Extreme Risk Directorat­e — a group also establishe­d in response to the March 15 terror attack.

Its role has since been expanded and Correction­s National Commission­er Rachel Leota says it now manages other inmates who present “an ongoing risk of serious violence”.

It also supervises prisoners who have the ability to “influence others to engage in serious violence or threats”.

As well as “violent extremists”, Leota says offenders connected to organised crime groups may also fall under the group’s purview given their “capability to seriously threaten the safety and security of a prison”.

“It is a separate entity — a prison within prison,” a source said of the Prisoners of Extreme Risk Unit.

“It’s a secret squirrel operation. There is a special vetting system for staff to work there.”

As well as the Christchur­ch gunman, the Herald on Sunday understand­s two of New Zealand’s most dangerous criminals, Hemi Te Poono and Siuaki Lisiate, are being held within the unit.

Correction­s confirmed in response to an Official Informatio­n Act request that three inmates were being held by the unit but would not elaborate.

Leota also refused to release the number of frontline staff guarding the trio, although Correction­s did confirm the unit “is managed by a team of carefully selected, experience­d staff”.

“Tarrant is in his own wing and there are 18 guards rostered to monitor him,” a source told the

“The other two are in the same wing but they are all dealt with individual­ly, it’s a costly exercise.”

Correction­s says the unit cost $2.77 million in the year to October 31, excluding the salaries of the six staff in its management group. That compares to Correction­s spending about $1.1 billion in 2020 to guard close to 10,000 prisoners across all its facilities.

A further $150,000 has been spent on modificati­ons within the unit to protect the “health, safety and security” of staff and inmates. Leota refused to release specific details because it was “operationa­lly sensitive”.

The Herald’s inside source said guards had little or no contact with Tarrant and monitored him on camera.

“The officers see him but they don’t have a conversati­on with him. He reads and watches the officers watching him — that’s all they do.

They watch him on their monitors and take notes,” the source said.

Correction­s would not provide informatio­n on how many visitors (including family) Tarrant has had and who has been writing to him or how many times he has seen a psychiatri­st.

“Like all people in prison, this individual receives three meals per day at times determined by the unit’s schedule. Additional­ly, he is able to access television for a limited number of hours daily, has approved books to read if he chooses, and has access to his exercise yard twice daily,” Leota said.

The Herald’s source suggested Tarrant would eventually be sent to Unit 10, a maximum-security section at Auckland. Unit 10 was the same part of prison where Tarrant’s fellow inmate at the Prisoners of Extreme Risk Unit, Hemi Te Poono, is accused of kicking down a cell door.

“If Te Poono can allegedly kick down the door, how secure is it?” the source asked.

Correction­s would not confirm any planned move for Tarrant but said Unit 10‘s cell doors are designed to withstand a considerab­le level of damage.

In August 2015, the 33-year-old Te Poono was sentenced to eight years and six months’ jail for attempting to burgle the Manawatu Standard in Palmerston North and a neighbouri­ng building armed with a shotgun.

Last October, he was charged with intentiona­lly damaging a cell door and assaulting two prison officers, including a woman.

The Herald understand­s convicted killer Siuaki Lisiate is also in the unit.

He was sentenced to preventive detention for stabbing murderer Graeme Burton, an amputee, more than 40 times with a shank.

Burton is serving a life sentence with a minimum non-parole period of 26 years for shooting Karl Kuchenbeck­er dead in Lower Hutt in 2007.

Lisiate, a Crips gang boss, also known as JFK or Just F ****** Krazy, ordered the 2009 execution of rival Bloods gang member, Tue Faavae, at Auckland Prison — the same place Burton was attacked.

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 ??  ?? Brenton Tarrant
Brenton Tarrant
 ?? Photo / File ?? The Prisoners of Extreme Risk Unit is based with Auckland Prison, but run separately.
Photo / File The Prisoners of Extreme Risk Unit is based with Auckland Prison, but run separately.
 ??  ?? Brenton Tarrant
Brenton Tarrant

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