59°40′52″N 56°42′25″E / 59.681°N 56.707°E / 59.681; 56.707

White Swan
LocationSolikamsk, Perm Krai, Russia
StatusOperational
Capacity962
Opened1938
Managed byFederal Penitentiary Service
Governorcolonel Viktor Khomko

Federal Governmental Institution — penal colony № 2 with special conditions of economic activity of the main directorate of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia in Perm Krai, popularly known as White Swan (Russian: Белый лебедь, Belyy Lebed), is a prison in Solikamsk, Perm Krai, Russia.[1][2] It is one of the seven maximum-security supermax prisons operated by the Federal Penitentiary Service for convicts sentenced to life imprisonment in Russia.

History

White Swan was founded in 1938 as a penal colony by the Soviet Union to hold political prisoners, particularly priests, but was eventually used for common criminals as well.[1] In 1955, a special decree of the CPSU Central Committee changed the colony to correct the so-called "Thieves in Law", and the main task of the prison was the total isolation and closure of all methods of communication between prisoners and the outside world. The Soviet authorities began to staff White Swan with some of the highest quality correctional officers in the country to control the Thieves in Law, in order to be able to withstand the bribes and intimidation.[3]

In 1996, the death penalty in Russia entered a moratorium as a requirement for joining the Council of Europe, and a new criminal code introduced life sentences. In 1999, White Swan was re-purposed to house serious criminals serving life sentences and, unlike previous detainees, were not expected to ever leave the facility. The prison has roughly 300 inmates, one-third of its maximum capacity, held in cells of one, two and three people. All cells have a dossier containing photos, articles, and a brief "biography" of the detainees. White Swan was the first prison in Russia to feature an on-site professional psychologist, and the administration, after studying the prisoners, settles them based on psychological compatibility in order to avoid conflicts. The conditions of the prison supposedly correspond to the requirements of international standards, with a library, correspondence materials, a commissary, a weekly shower, and an hour-long walk per day. During White Swan's entire existence, there have been no confirmed escapes.[3]

Origin of White Swan name

The origin of the prison's nickname is unknown, with one theory being the bright white painted walls of the prison building, while another being from the way detainees were moved across the prison, leaning forward (almost 90 degrees) with their hands thrown behind their back, appearing like a swan. The prison is also known by the slightly more formal name VK-240/2 (Russian: ВК-240/2)

Notable inmates

References

  1. 1 2 "ВК-240/2. "Белый Лебедь"". The Union of Prisoners.
  2. "ФКУ ИК-2 ОИК-2 ОУХД ГУФСИН России по Пермскому краю". Official Site Russian Federal Penitentiary Service in the Perm Krai.
  3. 1 2 "Учреждения ГУФСИН России по Пермскому краю".
  4. Chechen warlord dies in Russian jail.
  5. Chechen warlord dies in jail, BBC News, 15 December 2002
  6. Shutov, Yury (1991). Собчачье сердце, или Записки помощника ходившего во власть. Moscow: Eksmo. ISBN 5-9265-0172-5.
  7. Shutov, Yuri (2011). Крестный отец "питерских". Moscow: Algorithm. ISBN 978-5-4320-0022-4.
  8. "Юрий Титович Шутов".
  9. Yuri Felshtinsky and Vladimir Pribylovsky The Age of Assassins. The Rise and Rise of Vladimir Putin, Gibson Square Books, London, 2008, ISBN 1-906142-07-6, pages 273-277.
  10. ""Московского стрелка" Виноградова поместили в трехместную камеру" ["Moscow shooter" Vinogradov was placed in a three-person cell]. Interfax (in Russian). 2014-03-19. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
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