Whatnot in a prison cell. Though head against the wall

A pre-trial detention center is the first place a suspect goes after spending some time in quarantine with other prison newcomers and before he is sentenced. SIZO is a common cell where there are other suspects the difference between them is only in the period of detention.

It is a narrow but long room with painted or simply whitewashed walls. The number of beds is the same as the number of prisoners, which should be no more than 9. For them, there are several two-tiered iron beds located opposite each other. Ideally, each of them should have a mattress with a pillow, but, as reality shows, the living conditions of prisoners cannot always boast of such a minimum.

Despite all the harsh realities in each cell of the pre-trial detention center there is always a place necessary for primary needs - a toilet. In addition to it there is a sink. The rest of the furnishings, if you're lucky, include a wooden or metal table paired with a bench, shelves and bedside tables. Sunlight enters the chamber through a barred window.

As for the conditions of detention, the rise of prisoners falls at 6 in the morning. After the bell signaling this, it is forbidden to lie on the bunk until 10 pm. During these hours, until lights out, the prisoner has no right to leave the cell, except for 15 minutes water procedures, walks and visits by his lawyer.

The rest of the time, entertaining himself between three meals, the prisoner spends in the cell, playing board games reading or talking to other prisoners.

The prisoner is allowed to occupy himself with writing letters, which will be sent to the addressee only if they pass the censorship.

Being in a pre-trial detention center is unpleasant, but it is even more overshadowed by the inability to ventilate the room, to retire to cope with natural needs, since the bathroom is in full view, and constant checks employees for possession of illegal items.

You can see how the cells of the Kresty pre-trial detention center look like from the inside, and you can find photos of the cells of the Butyrka pre-trial detention center in.

ShIZO - punishment cell (punishment cell)

This section of the prison is specialized for prisoners who violated the regime of detention, went against the norms of behavior with other prisoners or attacked a prison officer.

ShIZO is an unimaginably small room with a tiny window under the ceiling, which is not only barred, but also sometimes covered with a piece of wood or iron. Folding bunks are attached to the walls - this is all the furniture. Sometimes there is a table. There is no bathroom, because the prisoner in handcuffs is taken to hygiene procedures and to cope with natural needs by a security officer.

Most often, there is no heating in such cells, so it is very damp inside. Moreover, if there is only one prisoner in the punishment cell, then during the daytime the bunks are folded, forcing him to spend the whole day standing or sitting on the wet floor.

Despite the harsh conditions of detention, which exclude visits, shopping in the prison store, reading books, receiving parcels, a prisoner in the ShIZO is allowed some "privileges". These include hourly walks and 15-minute hygiene procedures. The prisoner is placed there not for the entire time of imprisonment, but for a maximum of 15 days.

Single

From the name it follows that only 1 prisoner serving a sentence under a special regime can be in this cell. Unlike ShIZO, where a criminal is placed for a maximum of 15 days, a prisoner in a single cell has to serve the entire sentence, respectively, to one. He does not even have the opportunity to communicate with other prisoners.

Solitary cell - this small room with a single window under bars, like in a punishment cell. Everything here is designed for one: a bed, wooden or metal, screwed to the floor, and a small table, also attached to the wall, paired with a chair, and one lighting point, usually protected by a grate. There is also a bathroom in the cell, consisting of a sink, toilet bowl and personal hygiene products.


The tightened conditions of detention, in addition to the device of the solitary cell itself, include the following points:

  • Just 1.5 hours of walking in a fenced yard where sunlight does not fall.
  • Receiving no more than 1 parcel and 1 parcel per year.
  • The possibility of only 2 short dates per year (long ones are allowed only in special cases).

In the Russian Federation there are only 2 penitentiary institutions with this type of content.

VIP

Today they are present in pre-trial detention centers throughout the country.. Here the atmosphere and conditions are no worse than in hotels with 3-4 stars. It looks like a spacious and comfortable room with all the conditions for a comfortable stay.

Here and upholstered furniture, and carpets, and a double bed with fresh linen. From equipment - a TV with an audio system, and from electrical appliances - a refrigerator stuffed with food, a microwave oven and a kettle. And this is at least.


It is worth saying that all this is not in a typical prison cell with barely painted walls, but in a renovated room with new wallpaper and parquet. Checking into a high-comfort cell may be a tactic for an investigator interested in testifying. In other words, if the prisoner helps the investigation, then he is settled in one of these cells more like a 2 or 3 room apartment than a prison. Well, or two other variants: a bribe or the authority of a thief in law.


Colony-settlement

The institution is intended for those who have committed a crime not of their own free will or negligence. Also here are people whose criminal acts are recognized as light or moderate.

There are no cameras, as such, in Russian colonies-settlements. What counts as them here is a spacious, long room with light-coloured walls and a wooden floor. There is a lot of light here - there are no bars on the windows. The furniture is the simplest - a dozen bunk beds, each of which is attached to a stool and a bedside table. There are even elements of decor: curtains and greenery of indoor plants make the prisoners' bedroom very cozy.











The conditions of detention of prisoners are the usual form of living without any restrictions on freedom. People live and work like shift method. They have the right to move freely around the territory of the institution, the settlement itself and wear civilian clothes. There is no prohibition on receiving packages, the only exceptions are those that contain drugs or alcohol. The administration has the right to conduct an inspection of residential premises without warning.

Labor in such colonies is obligatory, because it is aimed at correcting the behavior of the individual and serves as the basis for its formation on the right path.

common mode IR

The "rooms" in the general regime colonies do not differ from those in the colonies-settlements. All the same long bedrooms with bunk beds along the walls. From the rest of the furniture - stools and cabinets next to each bed. Conditions of detention oblige prisoners to spend a certain amount of money every month from their account.








The regime of a general regime colony allows the prisoner 6 or 2 short visits per year, conducted by phone. Long visits are also allowed here - no more than 6 times a year, depending on the conditions of the institution itself. Prisoners have the right to receive parcels and parcels, but their annual number again depends on the conditions of detention.

The correctional colony of general regime contains 2 zones: residential and working. There are also cell-type rooms and a punishment cell with a walking yard.

Strict

In colonies with a strict regime, convicts are kept in dormitories, the sleeping quarters of which in their layout do not differ from those in colonies with a general regime. Conditions of detention are strict, light and ordinary with the possibility of transferring from one condition to another.

Prisoners can use money from a personal account, but the amount allocated for spending depends on the conditions of a particular institution. Under normal or light conditions of detention, prisoners can receive parcels in the amount of 2, 4 and 6 per year, and parcels - 2, 4 and 6 times a year. Short dates are also allowed - 2, 3 or 4 times a year, long - in the same amount.

Strict living conditions - this is the presence of a prisoner in locked rooms, where he is subjected to increased control and supervision. He is also significantly limited in his movement around the territory of the institution.

Special

In such institutions contain convicts sentenced to life deprivation of liberty. There are also those for whom the death penalty in the order of pardon was replaced by a life sentence. In addition, there are also persons convicted of crimes of particular gravity.

In a special regime colony, cells for prisoners are located behind a metal grill. Usually the walls here are painted white. In the middle of the central wall is a window without bars. Of the furniture, there are only a couple of bunk beds, between which there is a cabinet.





The conditions of detention in special regime colonies are characterized by cruel measures. In some of these colonies of the Russian Federation, all prisoners are under constant video surveillance, they sleep in bright light, and they move around the territory of the institution only blindfolded, accompanied by guards.

Other types

In the prisons of the Russian Federation, the official classification divides the cells into the following types:

  • Boxes- these are the rooms where newly arrived prisoners are left until they are assigned to cells, where they will spend the main period of time of arrest.
  • transit- this is a room for the general maintenance of new prisoners who have undergone sanitary procedures and prepared for divorce in permanent cells.
  • Three-ruble camera- a place where a new convict is left for several days with one or more cellmates, waiting, for example, for supporting documents.

The above cells have a similar layout and look much the same as the standard prison rooms, which have already been shown in the photo. As it turned out, the cells and conditions in prisons and colonies are in many ways different from those that are shown with such romanticization in films and TV shows.

People who are outside the zone of deprivation of liberty cannot understand all the discomfort of a person who has fallen behind bars. And, if they had a chance to get acquainted with the life of the convicts in more detail, then perhaps the number of conscious crimes would decrease.

The Ministry of Justice has officially allowed the so-called rubber cells in pre-trial detention centers in Russia. Relevant amendments to the laws were approved a few days ago. People with a nervous breakdown will be sent to such cells, who can mutilate themselves and others, as well as all violent and malingerers. Their future fate will be decided by civilian doctors. Human rights activists do not like the idea of ​​the Ministry of Justice: they consider rubber cells to be torture for prisoners.

According to Life, on July 29, the Ministry of Justice approved and registered changes to the Internal Rules of Detention Centers dated October 14, 2005. A new paragraph has been added to paragraph 18, which talks about how and on what basis to distribute prisoners to cells. Now, if a prisoner makes it clear with all his behavior that he is unbalanced, he is not all right with his head, he can cripple himself or others, he will be transferred to a special cell for temporary isolation. A written order about this must be given by the head of the pre-trial detention center or a person acting in his capacity.

What to do next with a violent prisoner will no longer be decided by the prison leadership, but by civilian doctors. "The administration of the pre-trial detention center immediately calls an ambulance team to make a decision by the ambulance worker on the advisability of his hospitalization," reads the document, which Life has read.

Life's sources in the Federal Penitentiary Service, which includes prisons, told why rubber chambers are needed.

Among the prisoners, there are often inadequate and violent people - these are mentally ill, unbalanced, and drug addicts. When they have delirium tremens, psychosis or a breakdown, they can really smash the whole cell, mutilate themselves or others: someone tries to smash their head against the wall, others try to drive a wire into themselves or cut their veins, the source said. - And then there are professional self-mutilators who arrange high-profile performances with a suicide attempt for blackmail. All of them need to be temporarily isolated in a safe place for everyone.

The SIZO staff knows how to deal with such prisoners. There is an order from the Ministry of Justicedated November 3, 2005 N 204 "On the approval of the Instruction on the organization of a service to ensure supervision of suspects, accused and convicted persons held in pre-trial detention centers and criminal prisonsexternal executive system". However, this document is secret, so the details are unknown.

The Ministry of Justice also explained how the rubber chamber should look like. New paragraphs have been added to paragraph 42 on the equipment of the SIZO cells. So, chambers for temporary isolation from the inside should be sheathed with an elastic or springy coating, have artificial lighting, as well as ventilation equipment. "Chambers are equipped in accordance with the design standards for pre-trial detention centers and prisons," the instruction says.

A cell for prisoners with a nervous breakdown is equipped in the security building. The floor area must be at least 5 sq. m, and the height to the ceiling is 3 m. The chamber must be dry and ventilated, tair temperature - within 18-20°С. The camera is illuminatedan incandescent lamp on the ceiling, securely protected by a grill or mesh. There should be no exposed wires in the chamber.

All internal surfaces of the chamber are upholsteredan elastic or springy coating of rubber with a thickness of at least 5 mm or other elastic and durable material so that the prisoner cannot injure himself. The joints of all elements in the chamber should not have sharp corners. The door from the outside is upholstered with sheet metal, equipped with a peephole or a video camera for observation and a lock.For safety, there are no beds, chairs, furniture, objects in such a cell.

In some Russian pre-trial detention centers, including in Moscow, there are rubber cells, but they existed on the verge of myths and rarely fell under the control of human rights activists.

Over the past seven years, we have traveled all the pre-trial detention centers in the Moscow region, but I have not seen rubber cells anywhere, - human rights activist, executive secretary of the PMC for the Moscow region, Eduard Rudyk, told Life.

Andrey Babushkin, chairman of the committee "For Civil Rights" and member of the HRC commission on the reform of the penitentiary system, does not support the idea of ​​the Ministry of Justice.

I am against the activities of such cameras. They, thank God, are not in most pre-trial detention centers, and they miraculously manage without such cells. And in the pre-trial detention center, where there are such cells, they were always kept with some kind of violations: a strong smell of rubber, the black color of the walls, the prisoners lie there on the floor in a helpless state, and often in their excrement, because you can’t go to the toilet. These cameras will be used to punish someone, - Andrey Babushkin believes.

According to human rights activists, the problem of working with inadequate and violent prisoners was relevant for the 18th century.

We can do just fine without such cameras. You need to be able to work with the tools that now exist. Experienced staff in the prison system know how to do this. If there is a person among the prisoners who needs complex psychiatric care, he should be sent to a civilian psychiatric hospital. If he does not need such help, then during his rampage, soft isolation means should be used - straitjackets, soft knitting tools. It is difficult for an ordinary person to be in a state of aggression for a long time, so the measures should be temporary, they note.

According to them, in Russia there are modern techniques psychotherapeutic, medical and physical effects for violent prisoners to be used.

A year ago, a tragedy occurred in SIZO-1 in Ulyanovsk - four people died, five more were injured. As it turned out,two convicts were repairing a rubber chamber. According to the preliminary version, the cable in the chamber flared up, the material with which the walls were upholstered began to burn and exude acrid smoke. After this incident, Ella Panfilova, Commissioner for Human Rights in Russia, said that the presence of such cells in a pre-trial detention center was not provided for by law.

Starting last August, you will be able to voluntarily go to jail for a period of one and a half hours to a day. Another Moscow quest performance is located on a vast territory and imitates prison life in a very realistic way. MN immediately went to custody.

Now you don't have a name. You have a number!

This is shouting to me from a man dressed as a special forces soldier. Black uniform, club in hand. I don’t have the most rosy associations - a similar man once broke my nose after a football match: I behaved very decently, but a stampede began, and the riot police began to force people hard.

A man on duty gives me prison clothes (a jacket and trousers of a pretty blue color), only sneakers are knocked out of his formidable image famous brand and a black face mask - she looks a bit theatrical. We are standing in a small room, there are two guards, the second one is sitting at the table and just took my fingerprints.

- Faster! Even faster.

The guards shout naturally, there is no affectation in their voices. As my friend, who spent three years in a penal colony near Petrozavodsk, will tell me later (for an extremely unsuccessful but fair fight): “This is a common trick among the guards - they try to immediately knock you out of psychological balance. They raise your voice, force you to quickly, urgently perform some actions so that you do not have time to recover - the usual tools, ways to suppress the will. When you have been sitting for a long time, they communicate with you more calmly. But the moment when you arrive at a new place is the most difficult. Their task is to show that not you, but they are the masters of the situation. The strongest pressure falls on the prisoner in the first weeks. It is, of course, not about remand prison(although here, of course, it’s different for anyone!), but about the correctional institution where you end up serving your term.

Well, performance guards, according to my friend, the role is successful.

I don’t really feel like a master of the situation when, urged on from behind by hails, they lead me along the corridor to the cell. They add sensations and masks on faces - no faces are visible, only eyes, from this everything looks even more intimidating.

Quest performance Iron Cage (or, as the organizers say, role-playing game in reality) is located in the south-eastern district of Moscow, near the Volgogradsky Prospekt metro station, on the territory shopping center. A lot of work has been done: the area occupied by the prison is 1,500 square meters. In addition to prison cells and corridors, there is a dining room, a library, a doctor's office, and a warehouse. While we were preparing the issue for printing, the organizers had not yet opened the quest for a mass client: the plot was being perfected, test groups were being invited, and the roles of the actors were being worked out. As a result, the organizers assure, it will be possible to spend a full 24 hours in prison. The goal is an escape that you need to make by cooperating with other prisoners, using the tips that are scattered throughout the locations. According to the plan of the organizers, you can interrupt at any time - go home, to work, and then come, and the story for you will continue exactly in the same place where you finished it last time. They say that in prison it will be possible to shave your head at a local barbershop or get into the electric chair (then the game will restart for you).

In the meantime, we are taken in turns to the cells, locked up. I change into prison clothes, and the guards pick me up and take me away.

The cell looks realistic: old brick walls, worn two-story iron bunks, a metal grill-door that closes the exit. There is no theatrics, it even feels like a cell in the Aeroportovsky district police department, where I somehow ended up when on March 8, suspiciously (according to the police patrol) walked around the area. The guards shout, quickly lead other prisoners into their cells, there are fifteen of us in all. Here the girl almost runs to her cell, there is some confusion in her eyes, then the man hurries on - also with a somewhat bewildered face. Yeah, it seems that the unusual environment and the screams affect everyone in one way or another. The unknown worries me the most. It is completely incomprehensible what they can come up with on a performance quest, wanting to entertain the satiated Moscow public.


For example, at one Moscow performance, you can be quite impressively hit with a stun gun or grabbed by the hair - clients even specifically ask for this.

What will they come up with here? My friend, a former convict, explains: “Uncertainty, misunderstanding of the rules of the game is the biggest torture. When I got to the pre-trial detention center, I was most traumatized by the fact that I did not understand at all what would happen to me, how everything was arranged here. Then, when you already understand the system by which everything works, it becomes easier.

I look at my fellow prisoners, who are standing at the bars opposite, most of them are visibly nervous. And it's the same for both men and women. Moscow psychologist Andrei Zelensky says: “It is not true that men are impenetrable. In fact, men often break faster than women. Most of us city dwellers don't deal with increased levels of aggression on a daily basis. Yelling at each other in traffic jams is not that. Most of the time we exist in greenhouse conditions, so even the same cry is already stressful for a person who is not used to such conditions. For example, I worked with a man who moved to another job - where the boss had the habit of often raising his voice. It was humiliating for my client, he became depressed. We worked for a long time to correct his condition (he did not want to quit, but in the end he had to).”


On the whole, I think, standing in my cell, all this is a good training of the psyche, you can get used to cramped conditions a little: in case of unforeseen circumstances that can happen to everyone. For example, not so long ago, one of my acquaintances went with groceries to his grandmother, but he was detained and taken to the police - as a participant in an unauthorized rally. I spent almost the whole day in the cell. The chicken that he brought to his grandmother was returned to him, but by that time it was already rotten. The guard shouts to me:

Why did you come to us? - For setting fire to a pig farm! - I answer the first thing that comes to mind.

He moves on to the next cell.

It is felt that Ivan also feels out of place. You just checked your email on your smartphone while walking along the avenue, and now you find yourself deprived of it, limited in movement. Psychologist Zelensky is right: all this is very different from the conditions to which I am accustomed in my daily life.

The quest industry in Russia is developing rapidly, for several years now our country has been a leader in this field. Battles with zombies, walks in psychiatric hospitals and medieval castles - there are more than a hundred quests and performances in Moscow alone. But you are unlikely to meet zombies in real life, but in real life - prison paraphernalia, it seems, and so with a vengeance. One has only to turn on the radio "Chanson", as you will be transported to some " White Swan or Black Dolphin. Today in Russia, according to the Federal Penitentiary Service, there are 595,728 people in prisons - these are data as of May 1, 2018. In the list of countries in terms of the number of prisoners, we are in 14th place (below us is Panama, and above is Rwanda, in first place in the list is the United States).

Why, with so many prisoners and those who have already served time (for whom imprisonment is not a game, but a reality), should prison be made as entertainment? I asked this question (when I got free) to one of the founders of Iron Cage. Maxim Babiy once worked at MTS, and recently he has taken up quests (for example, one of Maxim's brainchildren is the Pure Mind quest). Maxim says: “It seems to me that we have moved as far as possible from our Russian prison reality. Everyone who is at least a little in the subject will say that we do not have a prison. This is an abstract European-style penitentiary based on books and films about prisons. Prison Break is a classic story. When you get to us, there should not be any intersections and associations with a real prison - criminal slang, for example, our actors do not use. We have such a cultural prison. Well, in general, the main objective- not to survive, but to escape, using for this all the possibilities hidden on the territory of the quest: secret passages, things ... "

When the head of the prison appears in front of us, standing at the bars, I understand what Maxim was talking about: she is wearing a cap with a visor, something like the one I, for example, saw on the characters of the film The Shawshank Redemption based on the book by Stephen King. The girl stops in front of me and orders:

- This one - to work in the warehouse.

The guards lead me down the corridor to another location of the prison. Half a minute later we find ourselves in a spacious room, where empty plastic bottles and boxes are on the shelves - it looks like a warehouse. Here, among the shelves, stands another woman in uniform.

- Move those boxes!

I (to the shouts of the guard “faster, faster!”) start dragging empty boxes. I just move them from place to place. When I finish, the girl commands.

“Now count it!”

V cardboard box- a bunch of empty shells from under the cartridges. One, two, three, there are about a hundred of them in total.

My ex-prisoner friend will later comment on this point.

“Senseless work is something that also breaks psychologically. If in life we ​​are all proud, just a little - ready to be indignant and say “I won’t do this”, then in prison you have to do what they say.


For example, one of my acquaintances spent the whole day digging a hole five by five meters, and then filled it up.

You do something and you lose respect for yourself, become submissive - that's what it's designed for. In general, our correctional system is largely designed to break your will to resist. However, in fairness, it should be said that in most correctional institutions the work of prisoners is well organized - they earn money on it: convicts sew clothes, make some kind of sockets, then it all goes on sale.

I am returned to our prison barracks, where my fellow prisoners have already lined up. Roll call, we call our numbers. Mine is 0005467.

One of the prisoners, a tall blue-eyed guy, cannot stand it - he brings his head closer to the head of our warden and begins to aggressively shout out his number. She reacts:

You will go to the cell!

The issue of interaction between prisoners and guards is generally a separate genre. In 1971, as you know, the famous Stanford prison experiment was carried out: it was psychological research human reaction to the restriction of freedom, to the conditions of prison life and to the influence of imposed social role on behavior. Volunteer students played the roles of guards and prisoners and lived in a mock prison set up in the basement of the psychology department. Prisoners and guards quickly adapted to their roles, contrary to expectations, began to emerge truly dangerous situations. Sadistic inclinations were found in every third guard, and the prisoners were severely traumatized, two were excluded from the experiment ahead of time. The experiment was then completed ahead of time.

Maxim Babiy says: “We had the opposite situation - the prisoners began to put pressure on the actors. Began to behave very aggressively. And our actors (in total, from 1 to 14 people are involved in the quest) - they are not special forces, but actors of Moscow theaters, someone is acting in films. There is a doctor - a former military man, a woman, but she is not a fighter either. But then the audience got excited, felt like real convicts, began to press our actors.


An interesting moment - one of the guards runs out, shouting: “That's it, we need to stop the quest, the clients are inadequate, they smell of alcohol!”

But in fact, of course, no one drank there, I myself checked everyone, everyone was sober. It's just that the stress level of our prison staff has risen so much that the hell they start to think. With this incident in mind, we have introduced rules for clients: what not to do with regard to staff. That helped.

At some point, when the rules of the game become clear (we get used to screaming, we understand that they are not going to do anything special with us in prison), most prisoners relax. Someone climbs onto the bunk and starts beating his chest. Lawyer Ivan sings a song. I end up in a punishment cell (a dark cell with soft fabric walls) - for demanding whiskey for the whole barrack. There is another prisoner with me.

We need to search everything here! Suddenly there is something!

We begin to scour the cell. As Maxim Babiy says, interaction with other prisoners - important point for communication. You need to pass notes, look for secret passages. And among your cellmates, too, there may be actors, not clients. “The quest is designed for 30 people, our task now is to finalize the plot so that every minute the game is interesting for all participants, so that everyone is involved without exception.

In an hour and a half of the game, I manage to forget the first unpleasant sensations (and with good mood visit the punishment cell again). And also to receive a note from a nearby cell from lawyer Vanya: when he went to the prison hospital, he noticed a strange passage and was now sure that he could escape through it. At some point, when we are already absolutely aware that our conclusion is a game, it ends. An hour and a half has come to an end. One of the guards peacefully shouts: “Thank you all, the conclusion is over!”

We, dressed in our clothes, go with Ivan to the subway. He says: “The first half hour in detention was really uncomfortable for me - all these elements of pressure seriously got on my nerves. And when it became clear that they couldn’t do anything to us (even seriously shove), I relaxed. Although in general, it seems to me that prison and imprisonment are not the most pleasant experience. Zombies are closer.

From a taxi standing on the side of the road, a radio rushes: “Don’t cry and wait for me to go home, I have endured a lot - and this is my destiny ...”

    bed in a prison cell

    Alternative descriptions

    prison bed

    prison bed

    Sleeping deck

    Boardwalk for sleeping at some elevation from the floor

    Prison reserved seat

    . "Two-story" bed

    . "Two-story" bed

    . "Bed from Themis"

    . "sofa" convict

    Butyrka lodge

    Bunk beds

    Prisoner's plank bed

    Boardwalk for sleeping

    Boardwalk for sleeping at some elevation from the floor

    Zh. pl. in barracks and similar dwellings, that the peasants have a kutnik; a plank wide platform for sleeping, not along the walls, as on a bench, but across; ryaz. rear wide bench, kutnik, conic; masonry across the river; bonfire Vologda put; a shelf, a shelf around the walls. Kur. bunks vm. wounds; the same word is distorted. maras, stretchers for the dead. narovy, narny, belonging to the bunks, belonging to

    Barbed sunbed

    Prisoner's barred bed

    Zekovskaya bed

    Casemate bunk

    chamber box

    Prisoner's bunk

    Bed without amenities

    Bed in custody

    Bed in the cell

    Bunk for sitting

    Bunk behind bars

    Prisoner's bunk

    Bed from Themis

    Bed godfather

    A bunk that ended up behind bars

    Bed-place in the zone

    Bed behind barbed wire

    Bed in a prison

    Bed in custody

    Bed in solitary confinement

    Bed under guard

    Bed of the prisoner

    Bed in the cell

    Bed in a hutch

    Bed in prison

    convict bed

    Bed by sentence

    Sunbed on the other side of the lattice

    Imprisoned bunk

    Lodge in prison

    Prisoner's bed

    bed convict

    Bed of boards

    prison-type lodge

    The prisoner's bed

    A bed deprived of liberty

    Multi-bed - all in a crowd to sleep

    On which bed they wind the term

    What do they lie on when they "sit"

    involuntary bed

    Involuntarily barrack bed

    involuntary bed

    Security bed

    Bed in the cell

    prison bed

    The most popular sleeping place among the people during the Stalinist repressions

    Sleeping place in jail

    Sleeping area for seated

    Sleeping place of the prisoner

    Sleeping place for convict

    Sleeping place by court order

    Sleeping place for viewing dreams of freedom

    Sleeping camera set

    prison bunk

    prison bed

    prison bed

    prison bed

    prison bed

    Prison reserved seat

    Ridge of the Southern Urals

    Worse than the Canaries

    What a bed replaces a convict

    prison bed

    colonial lodge

    Bed from Themis

    Sunbed on the other side of the lattice

    Prison barracks

    Prisoner's barred bed

    What bed do they spend time on?

    What do they lie on when they "sit"?

    What does a bed replace for a prisoner?

    . "sofa" convict

    . bunk bed

    . bunk bed