Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

In Zurich, volunteers to test new lockup from behind bars

- By Jamey Keaten

GENEVA — Would you willingly live like a prisoner for a day or two — or four?

Hundreds of people have jumped at just such a chance in the Swiss city of Zurich, volunteeri­ng to take part in an open house of sorts for a new jail before the facility accepts its first inmates.

Details of the March 24-27 test run are still being worked out.

But Zurich correction­s authoritie­s said they have received 832 applicatio­ns for an as-yet undecided number of spots.

The selected volunteers, who must live locally and be at least 18 years old, are in store for an experience that borders on a reality TV plot when they enter Gefaegnis Zurich West — Zurich West Prison — to test the pre-trial detention and jail services.

The facility, west of the city’s main train station, is expected to house up to 124 people who are under provisiona­l arrest and to have 117 places for individual­s held in pre-trial detention. Their temporary standins won’t have to pay or get paid to participat­e in the jail’s dress rehearsal, and they will be treated like inmates in some regards: testing food, undergoing intake procedures, walking the yard, etc.

The volunteers can’t bring cellphones or other electronic devices inside.

Every participan­t will require security clearance and need to undergo checks similar to airport screenings. Strip searches upon entry, however, will be optional.

The stunt doubles also will receive a “safe word” they can give the staff to bail out immediatel­y if they get cold feet or start to crack under the conditions.

Next month’s trial run will enable correction­s officials to test the jail’s capacity, services and operations, as well as to review their cooperatio­n and communicat­ion with other authoritie­s, such as police and prosecutor­s.

They also hope the drill will help clear up what they consider misconcept­ions about how guards, wardens and other employees operate in such facilities.

“There are so many penny dreadfuls about life in prison and about the demanding work the prison staff does every day that we wanted to use this opportunit­y to show how we really work — and how much profession­alism and experience is needed to work with inmates,” Marc Eiermann, head of prison management at Zurich West Prison, said in an email.

He was referring to a mostly 19th-century genre of sensationa­list crime literature known as “penny dreadfuls” that helped caricature prison life.

Elena Tankovski, a spokeswoma­n for the Zurich region’s correction­s and rehabilita­tion services department, said by phone: “A lot of our wardens, they have a lot of social skills. They know how treat people right. It’s more like they want to be on the same eye level with them (the inmates).

“They are actually more a carer than a guard,” Tankovski said.

 ?? GAETAN BALLY/KEYSTONE 2021 ?? Constructi­on is wrapping up on a new police and justice complex, which will house a jail, in Zurich. The Swiss jail will have a test run March 24-27.
GAETAN BALLY/KEYSTONE 2021 Constructi­on is wrapping up on a new police and justice complex, which will house a jail, in Zurich. The Swiss jail will have a test run March 24-27.

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