Sunday 19 May 2019


WOODHAM’S DOG KENNEL

In the mid 1980’s, Ronald (Rotten Ron) George Woodham, who at the time was the Superintendent of the Internal Investigation Unit of the New South Wales Corrective Services, embarked on one of the most corrupt practices ever encountered in the New South Wales legal system.  He recruited some of the most dangerous, long term, drug affected prisoners as witnesses against prisoners, prison officers and police officers, in return for favours, ranging from extra visits, interstate transfers and assistance for early release. 

Woodham was not alone in this practice.  It also involved a number of police officers including the infamous Detective Inspector Aarne Tees.  The prisoners that were recruited often gave evidence in several criminal cases.  This practice was considered so corrupt that it came to the notice of the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).  The ICAC embarked on an investigation and was scathing in their report that was published in January 1993.  The practice of using prisoners as witnesses has since been refined and their input must be supported by other substantiated evidence.

Woodham had recruited so many prisoners willing to say “whatever was required”, that he had to build a special prison to hold these prisoner informers.  Prisoners who give evidence against other prisoners suffer the wrath of the main stream prisoners and are referred to by them as “dogs”, hence the nickname given to Woodham’s protection prison being “Woodham’s dog kennel”. 

One of the prisoners in the kennel was well known escapologist Raymond John Denning.  His crimes and the help given to him by Woodham and Tees are beyond human belief. 



Raymond John Denning
Sketch by Robert A Wood

A small example of the type of prisoner Raymond John Denning was is as follows:

On Saturday 14th September 1974, four extremely dangerous prisoners attempted to escape from Parramatta Gaol.  They were Raymond John Denning, Warwick James, John Bradley and Errol Manley.  Two were armed with knives and Raymond John Denning was armed with a hammer like implement.   Denning was reported as saying the previous day that he wanted, “To kill a screw” before he escaped.
 
Karl Faber, as he was commonly known within the prison officer fraternity, was on duty as an Overseer, which was equivalent to a First Class Prison Officer, only working in prison industries. The four dangerous cowards, Denning, James, Bradley and Manley, confronted the unarmed Mr Faber, with Denning hitting him so hard from behind with his hammer that he caused Mr Faber severe compound fractures to his skull.  They locked his unconscious body into the storeroom where they left him lying in a pool of his own blood, essentially leaving him to die.  Mr Faber never stood a chance.

Three of the failed escapees were quickly rounded up while Denning had managed to make his way into another yard but was quickly uncovered by an alert prison officer realising he was in the wrong location.  All four prisoners were transported to the OBS (Observation Section) in the Central Industrial Prison at Long Bay.   I was instructed to accompany Principal Prison Officer William “Bill” Bartlett to the OBS where the four prisoners were placed in single cells on the bottom floor.  Mr Bartlett and I were instructed to stay there until the Special Operations Division (SOD) officers came to collect them for their “trip north” as the saying went, referring to the Grafton Intractable Section.   We were to make sure that nothing was to happen to the prisoners, especially from officers who may want to take some form of revenge.   That thankfully did not become an issue.
To read more about Woodham’s dog kennel and Raymond John Denning, read my latest eBook “Officers, Criminals and Amazing Prison Stories”, available through this website or Amazon.