February 11, 2009 4:46 PM
- Text
3 Badly Hurt In Baltimore Prison Fight
(AP)
A fight broke out among inmates in a prison yard Friday, injuring 18 prisoners, three of them critically, prison officials said.
Authorities said that no employees were hurt in the brawl at the Metropolitan Transition Center in east Baltimore, but that the prison was being locked down.
Details about the cause of the disturbance were not immediately available, but it involved several groups of inmates, some of whom were armed with homemade weapons, corrections spokeswoman Major Priscilla Doggett said.
Emergency crews found inmates with injuries ranging from lacerations to stab wounds, Baltimore Fire Chief Kevin Cartwright said.
"Our paramedics arrived here in quite a chaotic situation," he said. Paramedics had to wait for correction officers to secure the yard before they could treat the injured, he said.
The entire facility will be searched for contraband, Doggett said. All inmates were returned to their housing area by Friday afternoon.
The facility will remain on indefinite lockdown, and the emergency operations command center has been activated, she said.
The transition center, a minimum-security facility, houses more than 1,700 inmates with two years or less to serve on their sentences. It is in part of the former Maryland Penitentiary, an imposing, gothic structure built in 1811 that was once a maximum-security prison.
Authorities said that no employees were hurt in the brawl at the Metropolitan Transition Center in east Baltimore, but that the prison was being locked down.
Details about the cause of the disturbance were not immediately available, but it involved several groups of inmates, some of whom were armed with homemade weapons, corrections spokeswoman Major Priscilla Doggett said.
Emergency crews found inmates with injuries ranging from lacerations to stab wounds, Baltimore Fire Chief Kevin Cartwright said.
"Our paramedics arrived here in quite a chaotic situation," he said. Paramedics had to wait for correction officers to secure the yard before they could treat the injured, he said.
The entire facility will be searched for contraband, Doggett said. All inmates were returned to their housing area by Friday afternoon.
The facility will remain on indefinite lockdown, and the emergency operations command center has been activated, she said.
The transition center, a minimum-security facility, houses more than 1,700 inmates with two years or less to serve on their sentences. It is in part of the former Maryland Penitentiary, an imposing, gothic structure built in 1811 that was once a maximum-security prison.
Latest Now in National
- Squatters cite old law to claim homes
- Whitney Houston always remembered in her hometown
- Whitney Houston cause of death under investigation
- Whitney Houston's body moved from hotel
- Induced labor allows dying Texas man see daughter
- Induced labor allows dying Texas man see daughter
- Former Pa. DEP chief on contaminated water from gas drilling
- Whitney Houston's daughter taken in ambulance
- NJ man who shot off-duty officer must pay $5.9M
- Autopsy on Whitney Houston to begin Sunday
- Experts: Stanford's trial not won with 1 witness
- Drillers cut natural gas production as prices drop
- Man charged in plot to kill Utah governor
- Nature: Bobcats riding out the snow
- US seeks to mine social media to predict future
- RI player wins $336 million Powerball jackpot
- How the revolution became digitized
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Grammys to honor Houston, Hudson to pay tribute
- Whitney Houston never forgot New Jersey roots
- Govt: Health scare on New Zealand flight just flu
- Quinn defends Ill. after CEO blasts jobs climate
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






