Police officer stabbed within the chest at Frankland Prison

A police officer is critically ill after being stabbed in the chest at a high-security prison.

The officer, who is from Greater Manchester Police, was attacked at HMP Frankland in Durham just after 11am on Tuesday. While the policeman is seriously ill, he is said to be ‘conscious and talking’. 

Frankland is known as the ‘Monster Mansion’ due to the many convicted murderers, rapists and terrorists imprisoned there – including Ian Huntley, Wayne CouzensMichael Adebolajo and Levi Bellfield. 

Other criminals housed in the prison include al-Qaeda ‘dirty bomber’ plotter Dhiren Barot and Thomas Mair, the Nazi-obsessed terrorist who murdered Labour MP Jo Cox in 2016. 

Today’s incident is only the latest attack on an official in the 850-capacity jail, with a prison warden stabbed repeatedly in January by a Muslim convert shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’, according to reports at the time. 

The officer was injured inside the high security County Durham prison at just after 11am this morning and is said to be conscious and talking

One of the cells inside maximum security prison HMP Frankland in County Durham

A spokesman for Durham Police said: ‘Shortly after 11am this morning, Durham Constabulary were called to an incident at HMP Frankland in Durham City.

‘A police officer, who was visiting the facility from an outside force, suffered a stab wound to the chest during the incident.

‘The injured officer has been taken to hospital by ambulance, where he is described as being ”conscious and talking”.’

Inmates being held at the jail include Damien Bendall, who is serving a whole life term for murdering his partner Terri Harris, 35, her daughter Lacey Bennett, 11, her son John Paul Bennett, 13, and Lacey’s friend Connie Gent, also 11, in Killamarsh, Derbyshire, in 2021.

The Sun reported in May that he had attacked another inmate at the prison with a claw hammer.

Double murderer and necrophiliac David Fuller appeared via videolink from the jail for his trial for sexually abusing bodies in 2022, while Soham murderer Ian Huntley is also said to be held there.

Liberian war criminal Charles Taylor, who is serving a 50-year sentence, is another notorious Frankland resident.

Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe, who murdered at least 13 women in the 1970s and 1980s, was living at the prison before he died in 2020, and it also formerly housed Charles Bronson. 

Frankland’s latest inspection in March this year described the prison as ‘a very capable institution, with fewer assaults recorded and less use of force than at similar establishments’. 

Despite this, it found half of prisoners said they had felt unsafe at some point, ‘perhaps due to the prison’s complex, high-risk population’. 

Inmates at the prison include Wayne Couzens (left) and Levi Bellfield (right) 

Among the other prisoners locked up in Frankland are Michael Adebolajo (left) and Ian Huntley 

The inspection continued: ‘Although violence and use of force had increased since the last inspection, levels were lower than in other category A establishments, partly as a result of detailed oversight by leaders. 

‘Monster Mansion’ with a ‘jail within a jail’ for terrorists 

HMP Frankland is a category A men’s prison, the highest level of security.

Opened in 1980, it includes some of Britain’s most dangerous inmates including Michael Adebolajo, Wayne Couzens, Ian Huntley and Levi Bellfield.

The prison features several specialist facilities, including a wing dedicated to the treatment of men with severe personality disorders (the Westgate unit) and a close supervision centre. 

The prison also includes a ‘separation centre’ – or jail within a jail – which houses terrorists in sound proof cells to stop them from trying to radicalise other inmates. 

In 2011, two convicted prisoners, Nathan Mann and Michael Parr, disemboweled fellow inmate Mitchell Harrison so they could eat his liver. 

Advertisement

‘Leaders had also prioritised reducing levels of self-harm, which were now lower than at the time of the previous inspection and at other high security prisons.’

There were nearly 8,000 assaults on prison staff during the year to June 2023, almost one an hour on average, official data shows. 

HMP Feltham – a young offenders’ institution – was recently named as the most violent in England and Wales. 

Chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor painted a disturbing picture of conditions inside the facility, describing a volatile environment where children aged between 15 and 18 play ‘the big man’ and have to be kept apart.

Housing 84 boys inside a run-down, poorly-insulated building that suffers from frequent leaks, the facility saw 410 violent incidents in the year to March, equating to a rate of 488 incidents per 100 children.

These figures suggest six times more violence at the west London site than at HMP Bedford – one of the most violent adult prisons – where a recent inspection found the rate of violence was calculated at 80.6 incidents per 100 prisoners.

Over last summer the level of disorder reached such a level that dogs were introduced to Feltham to keep order. One person assaulted 38 members of staff in seven months, according to a separate report published in August 2023.