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Mangaung Correctional Centre

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Mangaung Correctional Centre GANG MANAGEMENT INTRODUCTION Prison gangs have been part of the South African Correctional environment for years, and cannot be wished away. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mangaung Correctional Centre


1
  • Mangaung Correctional Centre
  • GANG MANAGEMENT

2
INTRODUCTION
  • Prison gangs have been part of the South African
    Correctional environment for years, and cannot be
    wished away.
  • They are a reality, and due to the long sentences
    they serve, they know the system and the
    loopholes in the system.
  • To minimize their negative effect on the
    Correctional system (and the intended outcomes of
    the correctional system), we need to develop a
    dynamic strategy to manage gangs.
  • Such a Gang Strategy was implemented at Mangaung
    Correctional Centre (MCC) and is being developed
    further as we learn more about the gangs and the
    ways they operate.

3
AIMS OF MCC GANG STRATEGY
  • To develop a common understanding on the reasons
    / causes why inmates join gangs.
  • To establish a consistent approach in the
    handling of prison gangs and gang-members in
    order to manage them effectively.
  • To minimize the negative impacts gangs have on
    the security of other residents/employees and the
    various Inmate Care and Empowerment programmes at
    the Centre.

4
FOCUS AREA
  • Develop and update our understanding of Gangs and
    What make them tick?
  • Why do people want (or need to) join gangs?
  • Safety / protection / commodities / sexual favors
    / to show they are men
  • Link between the reasons and causes of gang
    involvement and officials approach and handling
    of gangs and gang members
  • Awareness on how an officials behavior
    influences the gangs

5
FOCUS AREA (continued)
  • To develop a proactive approach
  • Create measures to counteract gangs, reasons and
    causes, recruitment, involvement, activities,
    networking, and gang violence at MCC.
  • Management of causes and reasons that cannot be
    counteracted or prevented effective management
    thereof to best advantage.
  • Focus on employees role and behavior on inmates
    to be active participative rehabilitators.

6
FOCUS AREA (continued)
  • To develop a reactive approach
  • Manage the consequences and implications of gang
    involvement and activities (e.g. violence,
    threats, information, intelligence) in the
    facilitys day-to-day operation and management.
  • Focus on employees role and behavior on inmates
    to be active participative rehabilitators.

7
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN IN PRACTICE
  • To minimize and manage gangsterism and to
    minimize further recruitment of gang members at
    the facility.
  • To predict and manage gang activities, gang
    targets, gang fights and attacks.
  • Identify high-risk situations (e.g. sport day,
    vacation days, gang fights).
  • Conduct random searches of suspected gang
    members, making of weapons.
  • Screen gang members before inclusion in
    programmes with other or opposite gang members.
  • Utilize gang members institutional record (DCS
    and at MCC) for gang involvement, type of
    activities and incidents involved n order to
    predict individual risk.

8
PRACTICE (Continued)
  • Intelligence-driven to determine the status,
    function, role, activities, recruitment and
    planning of gangsterism.
  • Classification, handling and unit allocation of
    active and passive gang members (e.g. high and
    low risk categories).
  • Facelessness of prominent gang leaders by
    making them accountable when instruction was
    given by them for violence.
  • Minimize gang issues between gangs members
    follow-up on informers, listening and acting on
    information taking it seriously.

9
PRACTICE (Continued)
  • Re-organize streets, disrupt plans and activities
    without instigating challenges or aggravating
    gangs to retaliate regular movement and
    supervision of gang members and high-profile gang
    members.
  • Cell placement of gang members and managing gang
    networks (letters, calls, visits and inmate
    associations).
  • Alerting of non-gang members during the Induction
    phase (e.g. anti-bullying).
  • Handling of threats to staff, management and
    fellow-inmates.

10
PRACTICE (Continued)
  • Understand and re-direct the reasons why inmates
    are active gang members at MCC (e.g. not happy
    to be at MCC, want to be transferred to DCS,
    family support, contact and visits).
  • Not compromising approach and method of handling
    gang members (e.g. extra food and special
    favors), always adhering to Company policies,
    procedures and contractual obligations.
  • Instill discipline, structure and positive
    meaning to gang members daily routine, thinking
    patterns and general anti-social behavior and
    thinking patterns.

11
PRACTICE (Continued)
  • Protect gang members that want to exit gangs
    transferring them to non-gang streets and units,
    and instilling pro-social values, norms and
    attitudes and assist in individual independence
    (functioning without gang support and approval).
  • Regular empowerment of officials working with
    gang members - personal development and support.
  • Monthly meetings to discuss gang-related issues,
    additional gang information, problems and general
    approach and strategy.

12
SUPPORT FOR OFFICIALS
  • Officials at MCC are encouraged to report any
    gang involvement or suspicion thereof on a
    Security Intelligence Report.
  • Two dedicated Intelligence Officers gather,
    analyse and disseminate intelligence information
    to proactively manage gangs.
  • Professional therapy, counselling, debriefing and
    support are furthermore offered to officials who
    are threatened, intimidated, and manipulated by
    gangs or gang members, and for officials that
    have been involved in efforts to stabilise gang
    violence and gang fights.

13
WAY FORWARD
  • Within the broader Correctional Services 9 and
    academic arena there is a competency and a
    knowledge base available that should be shared
    amongst the role players.
  • Any Gang Management Strategy needs to be updated
    and has to stay as dynamic as the gangs.
  • If we share, we do not have to reinvent the
    wheel.
  • We need a broader strategy, that deals with a
    gang member and gangs on a national basis, since
    current practices of transfers sometimes fuels
    the gang activity and undermines the effective
    management of gangs.
  • Gangs may be one of the biggest threats against
    implementing and reaching the vision as expressed
    in the White Paper.
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