Jimmy Autry State Prison Explained

Prison Name:Jimmy Autry State Prison
Status:open
Classification:medium
Capacity:1698
Opened:1993

Jimmy Autry State Prison is a state prison located in Mitchell County, near Pelham, Georgia.[1] It was constructed in 1992 and opened in 1993.

Autry houses close security inmates who, due to their offense or behavior, would not be safe in the general prison population. Sex offender treatment is compulsory. Various religious activities are offered and are well attended. Vocational options consist of Footwear Manufacturing, Buffer Repair, and Food Preparation. The prison compound consists of eight buildings. Six buildings maintain two cell units which have 48 double-bunked beds in each. Building seven has four living areas with 92 beds in each. The last building holds one dorm with 85 double-dunks and a segregation hall of 47 beds.[1]

Autry state prison, as of 2020, offers two programs for inmate recreation. These include a Bee Keeping program and an Art Workshop. Due to lack of adequate security inmates are not currently able to fully participate in all of the camp's programs.

Autry was one of nine Georgia state prisons implicated in an FBI sting operation announced in February 2016. The agency indicted 47 correction officers who'd agreed to deliver illegal drugs while in uniform. These charges were "part of a larger public corruption investigation into Georgia Correctional Facilities".[2]

References

31.1894°N -84.145°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: || Georgia Department of Corrections || . 2009-07-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090721022223/http://www.dcor.state.ga.us/GDC/FacilityMap/html/autry_state_prison.html . 2009-07-21 . dead .
  2. News: 47 Georgia Correctional Officers Arrested in Drug Conspiracy. 28 July 2016. WSAV. 11 Feb 2016.