How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside (15 pics)

How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside (15 pics)
1How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Located near the Kazakhstan border, ‘Black Dolphin’ contains Russia’s worst criminals, all with a life sentence (or more). According to the prison lieutenant, once they’ve arrived, inmates must accept that they’ll only ever leave in a bodybag. No one has ever escaped.

2How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

The black dolphin statues outside the prison are said to instill fear in even the most hardened criminals thanks to the prison’s reputation.

3How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

There are approximately 900 guards and 700 prisoners, most of which are serial killers, along with pedophiles, cannibals, and terrorists.

Combined, they’ve killed about 3,500 people, which is an average of five murders per inmate.

4How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Prisoners are essentially kept in a “cell within a cell” because each cell is behind three sets of steel doors.

5How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Prisoners either live in a cell alone or share a 50-square-foot cell with another inmate, depending on circumstances.

6How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Cells are kept under 24 hour surveillance through cameras and checked in person every 15 minutes.

At night, a bright light is kept on, and prisoners are not allowed to cover their heads under the blanket.

7How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

When inmates leave their cells, they’re forced to walk bent at the waist. This unique “stress position” gives the guard full control and also stops the inmates from learning the layout of the prison.

8How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

When walking outside, inmates are also blindfolded.

9How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

In a documentary for National Geographic, Vladimir Nikolayev explained that he was in prison for cannibalism. In reference to his first victim he said “I cut off a piece of meat off his thigh and boiled it. I tried it and didn’t like it, so I chopped it up and fried it in a frying pan”.

10How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Like many prisoners there, Nikolayev is covered in tattoos he received on the outside, some of which even depict the crimes he’s committed.

11How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Another inmate, Nyikolaj Asztyankov, is there for killing an entire family and burning their bodies in the forest. In his interview he said “If you constantly think about how you are here, what is waiting for you, that you won’t ever get free, that you are left here alone, you simply won’t make it”.

12How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

After inmates are woken up at 6am, they are not allowed to rest or sit on their beds again until 10pm.

13How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Black Dolphin does not have a cafeteria. Instead, prisoners are fed soup and bread everyday through their cells.

14How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

Each day, prisoners are allowed 90 minutes of exercise in a larger cell that consists of pacing back and forth. During which time, their cells are checked for contraband.

15How Russia’s Toughest Prison Looks From The Inside

In order to keep the guards from feeling bad for the inmates, their crimes are often written on their cell doors to remind them why the prisoners are there.

Guard Denis Avsyuk said “To call them people, it makes your tongue bend backwards just to say it. I have never felt any sympathy for them”.

Credits: www.businessinsider.com

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Tags: russia, prison, inside



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