This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Pelican Bay State Prison" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(June 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
![]() Interactive map of Pelican Bay State Prison | |
| Location | Crescent City,Del Norte County, California |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 41°51′18″N124°09′00″W / 41.855°N 124.15°W /41.855; -124.15 |
| Status | Operational |
| Security class | Supermax[citation needed] |
| Capacity | 2,380[citation needed] |
| Population | 1,711 (71.9% capacity) (as of January 31, 2023[1]) |
| Opened | 1989[2] |
| Managed by | California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation |
| Warden | Stephen Smith[3] |
| Website | https://www.cdcr.ca.gov/facility-locator/pbsp/ |
Pelican Bay State Prison (PBSP) is asupermax prison inCrescent City, California. The 275-acre (111-hectare) prison takes its name from a shallow bay on the Pacific coast, about two miles (three kilometers) to the west.

The prison is located in a detached section of Crescent City, several miles north of the main urban area and just south of the Oregon border.[4]
Pelican Bay State Prison opened in 1989. It covers 275 acres (111 hectares), and grounds and operations are physically divided.
An X-shaped cluster of buildings comprise a quarter of the prison's facilities, and are known as the Security Housing Unit, or SHU. This facility contains 1,056solitary confinement cells, organized into 132 eight-cell pods.[5][6] Each cell is 8 ft × 10 ft (2.4 m × 3.0 m) and contains a concrete ledge with a foam pad to be used as a bed, a steel combination sink and toilet, and two concrete cubes that serve as a desk and chair.[7]
Armed guards monitor six pods of 48 cells at once from central control booths, through perforated steel doors that make it easy for guards to see in, but difficult for prisoners to see out. Cell doors are controlled remotely. Prisoners can be allowed out to shower or to exercise in each 8 ft × 20 ft (2.4 m × 6.1 m) pod's solitary exercise yard.[7]
Half of the prison holds Level IV (maximum security) inmates in a general population environment with two-man cells. The remaining prison houses Level II inmates in an open-cell, dormitory-style facility for 500 individuals. Level I (minimum security) prisoners are housed in a 400 man facility outside of the main perimeter of the prison.[6]
As of March 2022[update], 1,852 people were incarcerated at Pelican Bay State Prison. 1,112 (60%) of those inmates were Level IV (maximum security) prisoners, 290 of whom were located in the Security Housing Unit.[8]
After Pelican Bay State Prison opened in 1989, guards eager to assert their dominance over the inmates established a culture of violence. Inmates in the Security Housing Unit were beaten, tied and left naked, or subjected to staged "gladiator fights" by guards who would intentionally release two prisoners from enemy gangs and then shoot at the prisoners after they began fighting.[7]
Vaughn Dortch, who was serving a ten-year sentence forgrand theft and whose mental illness had worsened since being moved to the SHU, was taken in April 1992 to be bathed by guards after smearing himself with feces. Five or six guards subjected Dortch to a bath in scalding water while he was handcuffed, leaving him with second- andthird-degree burns.[7][9] Prisoners were regularly housed two to a cell in the SHU due to overcrowding, with 364 prisoners double-bunked in 1990 and approximately 1,000 double-bunked by 1995, leading to serious injuries from cell fights.[7]
Media attention, including a September 199360 Minutes report about the brutality against Dortch, and lawsuits ultimately led to changes at Pelican Bay State Prison. Federal District Court JudgeThelton Henderson ruled in the 1995Madrid v. Gomez decision that the facility was not being ruled in a constitutional way, and ordered oversight byprisoner's rights lawyers and other experts. Henderson's ruling specifically demanded changes to the use of excessive force by guards, inadequate medical and mental healthcare, and the practice of housing mentally ill prisoners in the SHU.[7]
Prisoners at PBSP, particularly those in isolation for several years, have organized or joined inhunger strikes in protest of conditions at the prison and the practice of subjecting prisoners to long periods of isolation.
In 2002, a reported 60 SHU inmates began a hunger strike.The prisoners called attention to the effects of isolation in the secure housing unit.[citation needed]
On July 1, 2011, several thousand prisoners at Pelican Bay State Prison joined a total of more than 6,000 prisoners elsewhere in California prisons to stage ahunger strike in protest against overly restrictive conditions and extended periods of isolation. They demanded warm clothes and ahandball for use during their one-hour a day in the outdoor exercise yard, the ability to make one phone call per week, adequate food, and the possibility of reconsideration of their long periods of isolation after several years. The original strike lasted for over two weeks, and was repeated again in October of the same year.[7]
Inmates resumed the July 2011 hunger strike two years later, on July 8, 2013, alleging a failure to uphold promises on the part of theCalifornia Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), with upwards of29,000 prisoners across California joining in the hunger strike.[7] Strikers demanded reform of "cruel" policies used to identify and subsequently isolate or punish alleged gang members, including lengthy solitary confinement and the quality of living improvements.[10]
The strike lasted for two months, and dozens of prisoners were hospitalized.[7] The strike brought the first widespread media attention to the Security Housing Units in California, the scale at which prisoners were being kept in such conditions, and the fact that there were prisoners who had been kept in solitary confinement at Pelican Bay for twenty years.[7]
On the seventh week of the strike, Judge Thelton Henderson signed an order to permit the "re-feeding" of prisoners who were participating, though it was not clear precisely what was permitted by the order. This was made unnecessary shortly after when SenatorLoni Hancock and Assembly memberTom Ammiano promised to investigate the state's policies around solitary confinement and consider legislation. Following this promise, the prisoners agreed to end the strike.[7]
In May 2012, California's prison system faced a lawsuit from theCenter for Constitutional Rights, Legal Services for inmates with Children, and other California attorneys on behalf of ten men incarcerated in the SHU. The plaintiffs were all housed in the SHU for 11 to 22 years, some having been transferred directly from other SHUs. The suit claims that the inmates "have been incarcerated California’s Pelican Bay State Prison's Security Housing Unit ("SHU") for an unconscionably long period of time without meaningful review of their placement", that "California's uniquely harsh regime of prolonged solitary confinement at Pelican Bay is inhumane and debilitating", and that "[t]he solitary confinement regime at Pelican Bay violates theUnited States Constitution's requirement ofdue process and prohibition ofcruel and unusual punishment".[11]
In August 2015, as a result of the aforementioned class-action lawsuit, California agreed to end its unlimited isolation policy. Inmates are no longer isolated as a preventive measure; only those who commit new crimes while incarcerated are eligible for up to five years of isolation.[12]
In the fictional seriesLife, Detective Charlie Crews spends twelve years in Pelican Bay for a triple homicide he did not commit, part of it spent in the SHU, as the background of the series' plot. In the TV seriesThe Shield, the main characterVic Mackey regularly threatens recalcitrant suspects with only the name of the prison.
Alonzo Harris (Denzel Washington) threatens gang members with a sentence in Pelican Bay and the SHU program in the movieTraining Day (2001).
Waingro (Kevin Gage) explains to a bartender he was in the SHU at Pelican Bay, B-wing, to get work in the movieHeat (1995).
In the novelThe Lincoln Lawyer (2005), defense attorneyMickey Haller suggests to his client that he will serve his sentence in Pelican Bay due to his dishonesty and noncooperation.
Pelican Bay State Prison