TN. Another escape from Woodland Hills Youth Development Center

Another breakout from Woodland Hills Youth Development Center.

See Video at: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/teens-escape-from-tennessee-youth-detention-center-a-second-time/

Security upgrades at a troubled youth detention center in Nashville were not enough to prevent 13 teenagers from escaping Friday, the second major breakout from the facility this month.

Tennessee Department of Children’s Services spokesman Rob Johnson said several teens overpowered a guard at the Woodland Hills Youth Development Center about 11 p.m. Friday. They took the guard’s radio and keys and let themselves out of a dormitory. All but one, 16-year-old Timothy Wills, were recaptured within hours, reported CBS News correspondent Julianna Goldman.

The breakout was the latest in a series of problems that have alarmed Tennessee authorities, including a mass breakout by 32 teens on Sept. 1. The state has since begun conducting a review of youth detention security in the state.

 

Security improvements since the Sept. 1 breakout include securing the bottom of the fence that surrounds the facility in concrete. Workers also have reinforced aluminum panels under the dormitory windows that the teens were able to kick out during the first escape.

Johnson said Friday’s breakout began while a guardhouse was empty and that the guard was out checking the perimeter. According to the official, the teens smashed the guardhouse window with a rock and one went through the broken window and opened the gate for the others.

The guard who was overpowered in the dormitory was treated at a hospital and released, Johnson said. Another worker also was injured, but not seriously.

Within hours of the breakout, Nashville’s Metro police and Tennessee Highway Patrol officers had regained custody of all but one youth, a 16-year-old. The recaptured teens were taken to the juvenile court detention center. The 52 other teens being held at the Woodland Hills complex remained calm during the disturbance, Johnson added.

Thirty-two teenagers escaped from the same center on the night of Sept. 1. Two days later, riots broke out on the grounds of the facility, with teens brandishing fire extinguishers and sticks.

The Woodland Hills center has a history of violent clashes, breakout attempts and attacks on guards.

Currently, he had said, guards do not carry weapons and must rely on talking with the inmates to quell disturbances.  This is baloney, the guards can use other intervention techniques.  The facility just chose not to train their guards in the modalities they need to maintain safety.  Try HWC training.

However, some lawmakers in Tennessee have said that’s not enough. They want the state to reopen a facility closed in 2012, Taft Youth Development Center, which primarily housed older, more violent offenders. They say the inmates at Taft were transferred to Woodland Hills, which then saw a spike in assaults.

 

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