France – World – At the Fleury-Mérogis Unit for Violent Inmates, “Lack of Murder” and Desire to Fly

France – World – At the Fleury-Mérogis Unit for Violent Inmates, “Lack of Murder” and Desire to Fly
France – World – At the Fleury-Mérogis Unit for Violent Inmates, “Lack of Murder” and Desire to Fly

Imprisoned overseas, the young man (name changed) blinded a guard in the eye and was urgently transferred to this section of the largest remand center in Europe, in mainland France.

For six months, away from other prisoners, he is followed by a team who hope, through interviews and activities, to reduce his level of violence before reintegrating him into the general prison environment.

According to the prison administration, 28% of prisoners who went through a UDV in 2022 – there are ten in France – reoffended within three months of their release.

When Colombo was transferred, security measures were at their maximum: guards equipped themselves with shields every time they opened his cell.

These precautions have since been relaxed, but he remains handcuffed behind his back and escorted by three officers whenever he moves.

That day, in his cell, he paces up and down, staring at the peephole. “I’m anxious, pensive, I have lots of dark thoughts,” he says in an interview with AFP.

“At night, my body refuses the mattress. I want to bang on the door, burn the cell, break the TV. But I don’t do it…”

– Childish and threatening –

His profile is “the most mysterious” of the UDV prisoners, analyses a guard.

He is a frightened child, far from his family, who is desperate to reach his grandmother.

His sense of insecurity makes him fearsome. From his cell, he shouts at anyone who can hear him. “I threaten so people will stop looking for me.”

Through interviews with a psychologist and workshops organized by the Prison Integration and Probation Service (SPIP), he learned to channel his words and perceived their psychological impact on exhausted staff and worried fellow prisoners.

The serious injury Colombo inflicted on a guard who had lost one eye troubled him.

“I barely touched him, but he fell,” he muses, his short dreadlocks blurring his vision every time he shakes his head “no.”

A prison officer looks through a peephole in a door inside a cell in the Violent Inmates Unit at Fleury-Mérogis prison on June 21, 2023 in Essonne. PHOTO AFP / Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT

“I didn’t mean to hit people, it was something I did in the moment. I didn’t want the consequences. I’m working to make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

All his efforts came crashing down a few weeks later when an inmate hit him during a workshop. “Colombo went crazy,” one guard said.

Since then, he has remained in his cell, on his guard, and says he is “ready”. For what? He himself does not know. But he considers that it would be “good if we released him into the wild”. “I am not a violent person, I just like breaking and entering.”

On a board in the staff room, the supervisor wrote “Vigilance +++” next to her name.

Since Colombo refused to attend the workshop “Knowing how to act against violence”, Martial (name changed) shows up alone. On the agenda today: dissecting the phases of acting out in an attempt to avoid it.

At the root of his crises, Martial identified a “Molotov cocktail” of fear and anger that inevitably escalates to violence.

“Afterwards, I think. The anger goes away, you’ve beaten the person, you’re relieved, you feel good,” describes the thirty-year-old. “That’s the moment when your brain can think about something else again. When you’re angry, it’s like putting your heart in a fridge and going to war.”

A female guard in a corridor of the Unit for violent prisoners at Fleury-Mérogis prison, June 21, 2023 in Essonne PHOTO AFP / Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT

It’s hard to imagine Martial in a rage. At the UDV, he has the air of quiet strength. Polite, up at 6:00 every morning, with music playing in the background to bring a little “sunshine” into his day. He explains that he wants to “invest” his time in prison for “his life, which continues behind bars”.

The man was imprisoned in Fleury-Mérogis for the murder of a fellow prisoner he suspected of rape.

“It was more than anger,” he explains, “it triggered the darkness (sic) in me.”

Capucine, SPIP advisor, asks him:

– Was there anything that could have prevented this situation?

– Nothing, it would happen again. I’m not running away from my responsibilities.

Martial believes he acted as he should have done when faced with a “pointer”, the name given by prisoners to perpetrators of sexual crimes.

“You can’t talk about a desire to evolve if you say you would do the same thing in the same situation,” Capucine points out.

“When a whole prison bangs on the doors saying ‘Kill him’… It gave me an impulse, I was a different person,” Martial explains.

The discussion turns to the reasons for his transfer to the UDV: Martial threatened to kill a prison official, whom he accused of ignoring his letters.

– “Without it exploding” –

Although he considers that he has reacted to an injustice, Martial remains attentive to his advisors. “I see what I need to work on, but it’s going to be complicated.”

The next day, he takes part in a role-playing game: he plays a prison counselor being lectured by his superiors. Martial gets agitated, but does not lose his temper.

A prisoner takes part in a radio workshop at Fleury-Mérogis prison (Essonne), June 21, 2024 PHOTO AFP / Geoffroy Van der Hasselt

“I’m learning to manage my emotions and adapt them to emotions that are different from mine,” he summed up to AFP. “Today, you can be around me without it exploding.”

His favorite workshop? A radio show with another inmate from the unit, Moussa.

Both of them select illustrations that remind them of a pleasant moment. Martial chooses a castle that flies away: “It reminds me of my freedom. I hope I’ll see you all again outside of this Machiavellian place.”

Behind the cell door, the atmosphere suddenly became tense. On a lower floor, a prisoner opened an officer’s skull with a pen.

Another prisoner will soon be transferred to the UDV.

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