This HMP inmate says a rat gave birth in his pants but it was no surprise - Action News
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This HMP inmate says a rat gave birth in his pants but it was no surprise

Inmate Devon Fitzpatrick says a rodent infestation is one of many problems that make living at Her Majesty's Penitentiary intolerable.

Lawyer says the public will pay the price for deplorable prison conditions

A man wearing a white t-shirt sits in front of a whiteboard
Devon Fitzpatrick, an inmate at Her Majesty's Penitentiary in St. John's, says he woke up and discovered a rat gave birth in his pants. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

Her Majesty's Penitentiary inmate Devon Fitzpatrick says early one morning in mid-Mayhe woke up and felt something moving in the crotch of his pants. When he reached in, he discovered a rat had given birth there.

But the incident wasn't shocking or even surprising, he said in a sit-down interview with CBC News.

An ongoing rodent infestation at the St. John's jail parts of which date back to theVictorian era means "stuff like that happens on a regular basis," said Fitzpatrick.

"You see 'em coming in and out of your cell. They climb up on the tables, they climb up the pipes and the wires.They're everywhere," he said.

The Newfoundland and Labrador government announced in this year's provincial budget that it will spend $15 million over the next two years on temporary upgrades to the penitentiary, with $8 million earmarked for this year.

Plans to build a replacement for the jailwerestalled for years. Transportation and Infrastructure Minister John Abbott told reporterslast week that the provincial government is going to the "next stage" with New Avalon Corrections Partners, the only company that came forward with a proposal to build a new prison.

Abbott said the provincial government will soon announce more details about what the "next stage" is andpredicted the prison would be completed some time in 2026 or2027.

He told reports that "nothing really significant has started yet" when it comes to temporary upgrades to the jail.

The provincial Justice Department declined an interview request. A statement from department spokesperson Eric Humber said pest control is "contracted to service the facility on a regular basis."

Humber's statementalso saidwork will begin on new outdoor recreation and programming spaces, as well as a new admissions building, in the coming weeks.

WATCH | An HMP inmate shares what it's like to live ina prison overrun with rats and mice:

This HMP inmate says a rat gave birth in his pants

2 months ago
Duration 2:35
Her Majestys Penitentiary inmate Devon Fitzpatrick says he wasnt too surprised when he woke up early one morning and found rats in his pants. He tells the CBCs Jessica Singer that a rodent infestation is one of many ongoing issues that make living at the correctional facility intolerable.

Fitzpatrick, who's been incarcerated for over 10 months on a variety of firearms and assault charges, says he's been bitten by rats around 20 times. Inmates are rarely let outside for recreation, he said, and aren't provided rehabilitation programming or adequate and timely health care.

Criminal defence lawyer Erin Breen says she has five clients at HMP. One of them tried to make a hammock out of his sheets, she told CBC News, because rodents were crawling over him through the night. Inmates have told her stories of finding rats and mice in their food, mattresses and clothing.

On a recent visit to the prison, she said, an inmate brought her a cup of water that had solid orange bits and an orange film floating in it.

Life in the prison is dehumanizing, she said, and if inmates aren't properly rehabilitated the public will pay the price.

"People are hopeless inside and they're not coming back out equipped to deal with the world in a better way," she said.

'You wouldn't put an animal in this'

When Fitzpatrick woke up that morning May 11, around 3:30 he thought he'd soiled himself. Then he saw a rat run out through the bottom of his pants, and when he reached into his pantshe found a tiny, pink rat.

"Yes, we're incarcerated. Most people here are here for a reason. People do crimes, we get convicted, we spend time here. But I wouldn't even put a dog in here where we're being housed," he said.

On May 22, Fitzpatrick says, he and eight other inmates decided to protest by refusing to belocked in for lunchtime. They wrote a note to their unit's lieutenant, requesting that a health inspector and rodent exterminator be brought in, and that inmates be provided hot showers.

WATCH | This criminal defence lawyer says living in HMP is 'dehumanizing':

Lawyer says the public will pay the price for deplorable conditions inside HMP

2 months ago
Duration 2:11
Criminal defence lawyer Erin Breen, who has five clients living in Her Majestys Penitentiary, says the living conditions described to her from inside the jail are dehumanizing and deplorable. If inmates arent properly rehabilitated, she says, the public will also pay the price.

The protest got him 10 days in segregation, he said, and it didn't lead to any tangible change.He said he can see more protests or riots happening in the future.

"There's no fresh air. We don't get off the unit at all. The rats are killing us, like you wouldn't put an animal in this. So everyone needs to stand up for themselves sooner or later," he said.

"We finally had it to the point that we did, and we all ended up getting punished for it."

CBC News investigations have found that HMP staff have filed scores of reports, with one staff member writing in July 2022 that inmates were at the point of "rioting/becoming violent" because of the "unfit living conditions" inside the jail.

Breen says there are too many inmates and not enough staff in HMP, so prisoners are often locked into their cells with limited access to recreation and fresh air, and family visits are often cancelled.

She says she hasn't heard that any improvements have been made to the jail since the province announced it would be putting millions into temporary upgrades.

Fitzpatrick says he hopes things will get betterbut the provincial government is neglecting some of society's most vulnerable in the meantime. It's a vicious cycle, he said, and he's notconfident it will end any time soon.

"Coming in here, there's no anger management, there's no programming to help us, say, to defer us from committing the crime again," he said.

"So once we get out of here, most people hit the street and are homeless right away."

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