The Arizona Republic

Goodyear prison awaits Arias

Sentencing will send her to stark Perryville cell

- CRAIG HARRIS THE REPUBLIC AZCENTRAL.COM

The only way Jodi Arias will see freedom in the foreseeabl­e future is by peering through two six-inch window slits in her new home, a prison cell in Goodyear.

Loop 303 is easily visible from her cell, a 12by-7-foot concrete room where Arias will live in maximum custody at Arizona State Prison Complex-Perryville.

Arias, convicted of first-degree murder in the 2008 slaying of Travis Alexander, will be transporte­d from Maricopa County Superior Court in downtown Phoenix to the 400-acre Perryville campus after Judge Sherry Stephens sentences her April 13. Stephens by law must hand down a life sen- tence following Thursday’s mistrial — the second such verdict in the high-profile murder case.

Stephens has options, however: Sentencing Arias to spend the rest of her natural life in prison, or giving her life with a chance for release after 25 years.

If her behavior warrants a downgrade in her security level, Arias after five years could be placed in a medium-custody prison and be allowed to work, a prison spokesman said Thursday.

Arias, 34, said she killed her lover in self-defense, but a jury in May 2013 did not believe her. That jury was unable to agree on a life or death sentence, so a new jury was impaneled in October 2014.

The Arizona Republic was previously permitted to examine the facility where she will be housed at the all-female prison complex. The cell is small — about the size of a Mini Cooper, only taller — and spartan.

She will be in an individual cell in the L-shaped maximum-security “special management” building within the Lumley Unit. The unit was named for Brent Lumley, a correction­al officer killed by a male inmate who now lives on death row in Florence for the slaying.

Every cell door in Arias’ building is solid steel. The cells have a narrow slot through which correction­al officers will pass her food. Doors on the first floor open out into a prison yard. Those on the second floor open onto a catwalk overlookin­g the yard.

The Department of Correction­s declined to say on which floor she would be housed.

Inside each cell is a toilet, a sink, a bed and a desk, all made of concrete and steel.

There is one electrical and one cable outlet on the wall. Inmates may pur- chase a radio and a small television, which gets about 15 channels, including the four major networks and educationa­l and religious shows. Many inmates spend their days watching “Law and Order” reruns, according to prison officials.

The prison will issue Arias a mattress, a pillow, a blanket and two sheets. An air vent above her bed will allow her to speak to her neighbor if she wishes. Many inmates use the vents to ease their isolation, prison officials say.

A prison spokesman said maximum-security and death-row inmates are offered programmin­g, which means outof-cell time, in addition to recreation time. The type of programmin­g Arias receives will depend on the assessment that she’ll undergo when she arrives.

Lumley’s maximumsec­urity unit is surrounded by a tall fence with razor wire. Ten outdoor enclosures nearby serve as exercise areas.

The women at Lumley are allowed at least one hour of daily exercise time for up to six days a week. Each woman may shower once a day for up to six days a week.

Maricopa County sheriff’s deputies eventually will transport Arias roughly 23 miles from the courthouse to the prison after Stephens pronounces her sentence.

There, inmates are issued orange prison clothing and a t-shirt, and have their mug shot taken. Arias will undergo medical, mental and dental examinatio­ns, according to prison officials.

She will be allowed one visit of up to two hours per week. There can be no physical contact, and visitors must be approved by the Department of Correction­s. An inmate’s family may visit during that time.

Initially, Arias will be allowed one 15-minute phone call per week, mon- itored by prison officials. Privileges, such as recreation time, can increase based on an inmate’s behavior.

The complex houses Wendi Andriano, a deathrow resident who, like Arias, was prosecuted by Deputy Maricopa County Attorney Juan Martinez. Shawna Forde, Arizona’s only other female deathrow denizen, lives in the complex, too.

After two years, Arias could be moved to a closecusto­dy unit, which is less restrictiv­e. The biggest difference would be that Arias could go into a twobunk cell and have a roommate.

She also would be allowed to be escorted to an eating area with other inmates. Three years later, she could be moved to medium custody, where she could live in a dormitory environmen­t with 10 or more inmates. There, she would be able to work, according to a prison spokesman.

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