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Open prison inmates brush up on world’s top crimes

HMP Castle Huntly.
HMP Castle Huntly.

Inmates at Scotland’s only open prison have been studying the ‘best’ crimes of the last hundred years.

Alan J. Whiticker’s 101 Crimes of the Century was the most popular book loaned to prisoners in Castle Huntly last year, according to documents released under freedom of information powers.

The book was loaned out eight times in Castle Huntly which holds around 280 ‘low supervision’ male offenders.

The book “covers the shocking truth behind murders, assassinations, robberies and theft. It includes crimes of passion, terrorism, assassination, underworld murder, sex crimes, society crimes, kidnapping, theft, serial murder and society scandals.”

The figures cover all of the items borrowed and requested from inmates from October 2017 to October 2018.

Hitler’s autobiographical and anti-Semitic tract Mein Kampf was joint fourth most popular book borrowed at the prison with five inmates taking out the highly controversial 1925 polemic.

Ian Rankin was the most borrowed author in the prison, with authors Lee Child, Jack Campbell and Jo Nesbo also featuring highly.

One Castle Huntly prisoner’s request for a boxset of the much-loved prison sitcom Porridge at Christmas was turned down due to lack availability.

Respect! by Michaela Morgan was the most popular book requested at HMP Perth – criticised earlier this month for being one of Scotland’s most violent jails.

The novel tells the true story of Walter Tull, who overcame a tough childhood in a children’s home to become the first black Premier League football player and the first black infantry officer in the British Army.

It has been especially written for struggling, reluctant and dyslexic readers aged 12 and over.

One Day In the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn – which focuses on the immense hardship suffered by those attempting to survive in one of Stalin’s soviet gulags – was the fourth most popular book in Perth prison.

Multi-million selling US novelist James Patterson was the most borrowed author with 153 requests for his work – more than double his nearest competitor armed forces writer Andy McNab with 65 books loaned.

A spokesperson for the Scottish Prison Service said: “We actively encourages those in our care to engage in activities that develop reading and literacy skills and welcome any interest shown by offenders in accessing library services.

“Our library provisions are as varied as libraries in the wider community, reflecting a wide range of interests among those in our care.”