Purpose-built to house 750 low-risk prisoners, by May 1946 Pingley camp actually held 984.
The three categories are considered homogeneous, in that the output of housing one low-risk prisoner is the same as housing another.
The money would be better spent on alternative programs for low-risk prisoners in the city's jails.
In September 2010, a low-risk prisoner, doing gardening work outside the prison, decided to escape with the prison's tractor that he was using at the time.
Many of these low-risk prisoners could be easily placed into alternative incarceration.
The present prison system is no longer acceptable for low-risk prisoners.
As a low-risk prisoner he was released in September 2011 on home detention after serving a quarter of the sentence.
Since he was a low-risk prisoner, he was given a lot more freedom, and thus found it easy to dig behind everyone else's back.
Because prisons continue to hold low-risk geriatric prisoners, new cell space is needed to handle prison overflow.
Once at the county jail, officials there have been releasing inmates early, probably because they keep being inundated with low-risk prisoners.