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Beto Unit

George Beto Unit
George Beto Unit is located in Texas
George Beto Unit
Location in Texas
Location 1391 FM 3328
Tennessee Colony, Texas
Coordinates 31°45′16″N 95°49′22″W / 31.7545333°N 95.822777°W / 31.7545333; -95.822777Coordinates: 31°45′16″N 95°49′22″W / 31.7545333°N 95.822777°W / 31.7545333; -95.822777
Status Operational
Security class G1-G4, Administrative Segregation, Outside Trusty, Transient
Capacity Unit: 3,150 Trusty Camp: 321
Opened June 1980
Managed by TDCJ Correctional Institutions Division
Warden Norris Jackson, Assistant Jimmy Bowman, Assistant Michael Owens
County Anderson County
Country USA
Website www.tdcj.state.tx.us/unit_directory../b.html

The George Beto Unit (B) is a men's maximum security prison of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice located in unincorporated Anderson County, Texas. The unit is located along Farm to Market Road 3328, 6 miles (9.7 km) south of Tennessee Colony. The prison, co-located with Coffield Unit, Michael Unit, and Powledge Unit prisons and the Gurney Unit transfer facility, has 20,518 acres (8,303 ha) of land. The unit currently houses over 3,400 offenders.

The unit opened in June 1980. It has the Correctional Institutions Division Region II Maintenance headquarters. The unit was named after George Beto, who served as prison director from 1962 to 1972. In 2008 Perryn Keys of the Beaumont Enterprise said that Beto "has been described as a gladiator’s playground — a hardcore joint, even as prisons go." That year, Ricardo Ainslie, an author and a professor in the educational psychology department of the University of Texas, said that when he toured Beto with the warden, he was "scared (expletive)." Joyce King, author of the 2002 book Hate Crime: The Story of a Dragging in Jasper, Texas, said that Beto's reputation as a "gladiator" prison stems from the fact that most of its prisoners are in their mid-20s, relatively young. As of that year, some inmates are at the equivalent of a 4th year high school student (senior), and a few are near their 30s. King also said "The dubious distinction is also a warning—gladiators either fight because they must or because they like to."

In 2014 Curtis Garland, Jr., a prisoner from Dallas who began a 12 year sentence for family violence in 2012, died of an asthma attack. His family believed that prison officials did not disclose the true details related to the death.


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