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Jennie Lancaster started her career in 1972 and she
retired in 2004 after managing prisons for 32 years. More specifically
she held the following positions during this time:
- Warden of North Carolina Correctional Institution for
Women (NCCIW)
- Chief of Program Services - Division of Prisons
- Female Command Manager - She developed this role and it directly
supervised all 6 female prisons and several transition houses. During
this time Ms. Lancaster opened the Mary
Frances Center,
which provided substance abuse treatment for women, developed the NC
Travel and Tourism program operated at NCCIW, opened the Black Mountain
Correctional
Center
for Women and became a nationally recognized expert in the field of
female correction management and programs.
- In 1998 she became the first Central Region director and supervised 12
prisons that included Central Prison, Caledonia and Polk institutions and the 3 largest prisons
housing women. She retired from this position in September 2004.
During her career, Ms. Lancaster designed the
following prisons:
- Neuse
Correctional Institution
- Dan River and Tyrrell Prison Work
Farms
- North Piedmont Correctional Center for Women
- Death row housing unit at Central Prison
- Medical and mental health facilities at Central Prison and North
Carolina Correctional Institution for Women.
In 2002, Ms Lancaster began and completed
the development of the training program we know now as ‘Undue
Familiarity” and it became a cornerstone of national efforts to provide
training to corrections staff in this important operational area.
Ms Lancaster has been a trainer for the
National Institute of Corrections in 12 states. She has served as an
expert witness in class action lawsuits in four states. She is
considered a national expert in the field of female corrections and the
areas of prison sexual assault and undue familiarity.
Ms. Lancaster has received several
outstanding awards in her career.
1976 Correctional Officer of the year
1987 Governor’s Award for Excellence
1994 Meredith
College Alumnae of the
Year
2004 Order of the Long Leaf Pine from Governor Easley.
She is a graduate of executive training programs at
the UNC School of Government and also was a graduate of the first
National Institute of Corrections training program for “Executive Women
in Corrections”
She holds a Bachelor of Arts from
Meredith
College in Religion and completed
graduate work at
Duke
Divinity
School in
pastoral counseling.
Ms. Lancaster came out of retirement in January 2009
at the request of Governor Perdue to assume the role of Chief Deputy
Secretary of the NC Department of Correction.
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