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KSR

Kentucky State Reformatory

​​Mission

We are committed to the protection of public safety, staff safety, and inmate safety. We are committed to preparing inmates to return to society by mending minds, bodies, and spirits. We will accomplish our mission by adhering to these core values: Discipline, Respect, Fairness, Accountability, Learning, and Teamwork. We understand that public safety truly begins when the inmate is released.

About KSR

The Kentucky State Reformatory is located in LaGrange, Kentucky which is approximately 30 miles North-East of Louisville. It is a medium security facility under the administration of the Kentucky Justice Cabinet, Department of Corrections with a 1051 bed capacity.

The Kentucky State Reformatory was the third prison built in the Commonwealth of Kentucky following the establishment of a penal system by Kentucky's Legislature in 1798. The Reformatory, whose history is closely linked with Kentucky's political history and correctional philosophy, has undergone many changes during its existence.

The concept of the Kentucky State Reformatory was made possible through the appropriation of funds by the 1936 General Assembly and matching federal funds from the Public Works Administration. A committee chosen by Governor A.B. "Happy" Chandler toured the country seeking ideas to bring back to Kentucky so that the new institution being planned would be the correctional showplace of America. The committee returned with a blueprint that was innovative as far as prison construction of the time was concerned. Architecturally, it appeared similar to schools and hospitals of that era. Instead of having individual cells for inmates, the plans called for open-wing dormitories. There was liberal space for each man and the design committee believed this would encourage the men to return to the community and lead crime-free lives. The prison hospital was said to be the best-equipped facility with a 15-state area. Overall, the Chandler Administration believed that the construction of the new buildings couples with the adjacent area of farmland were Kentucky's answer to rehabilitation

Up to the present day the physical plant has essentially retained its original configuration. The 12-story administration building was designed to house the offices of key staff members, a hospital and medical offices, together with living quarters for correctional staff. The eleventh floor houses the machinery of the elevator; the twelfth floor houses a now-defunct 150,000-gallon water tank.

There are five (5) dormitories made up of individual rooms. KSR maintain 148 beds in the correctional psychiatric treatment unit (CPTU). it is divided into a 50 bed program wing, 25 bed program wing, 50 bed stabilization wing, and 23 bed restrictive housing unit. The Reformatory also maintains a 75 bed Nursing Care Facility (NCF), a 20 bed open wing maintained in the Medical Service Building, a 50 bed open wing Daily Assisted Living Unit (DAL), and 5 temporary holding cells.

KSR's primary mission is to be a specialized institution to provide extensive mental health and medical services to inmates within the system. The Medical Department provides on-site chemotherapy and dialysis treatments. Additionally, they coordinate Health Care Services which includes the direct provision of routine and emergency medical and dental care and the provision of medical care of outside hospitals and private practitioners.

Other buildings making up the Kentucky State Reformatory include an Academic/Vocational School, Gymnasium, Chapel, Dining Facility, Inmate Canteen, Correctional Industries, Visitation Building and Medical Services Buildings.

In the early 1980's, inmates at the Kentucky State Penitentiary and the Kentucky State Reformatory brought a Federal lawsuit against the 2 prisons over living conditions. They alleged that the living conditions at both institutions violated their civil rights. Judging that it would not be prudent to litigate, the Department of Corrections entered into a Consent Degree. The Reformatory has obtained a ruling of substantial compliance with the Federal Court Consent Decree under which it has operated since 1980. The institution underwent many changes and improvements during the past years to meet the requirements of the Consent Decree and presented evidence of substantial compliance at a trial held in July, 1986 receiving the final ruling from Chief Judge Edward Johnstone on March 13, 1987. This ruling of substantial compliance has been the most expedient in the history of U.S. Corrections thus far.

To provide an efficient and effective service delivery system, the Kentucky State Reformatory is divided into individual departments specializing in an area of service or institutional support. Each department is directed by a department head who answers to a Deputy Warden responsible for the administration and management of that general service area. The Deputy Warden's also coordinate the service provided by the Department of Corrections Division of Mental Health, the Kentucky Community and Technical College System, Correctional Industries, the Oldham County Public Library, the Division of Probation and Parole, Public Advocacy, and the Inmate Canteen.

All totaled, the Kentucky State Reformatory has 325 funded positions. Staff employed by other agencies at the Kentucky State Reformatory totals 130 employees.

Kentucky State Reformatory
3001 W Hwy 146
LaGrange, Kentucky 40032
(Oldham County)

​Warden: Anna Valentine
Secretary: Kimberly Campbell
ADA Coordinator: McKenzie Morris 
Phone: (502) 222-9441
Fax: (502) 222-0240 

Institutional Information

​Security Status​Medium
​Date Opened​1939​
​Population​1,051
​Total Acreage​43
​Total Staff​455
​Black Inmates​30%
​White Inmates​70%
​Annual Cost Per Inmate​$28,289.01
​Daily Cost Per Inmate​$77.5
​Annual Operating Budget​$28 Million


Accredited by the American Correctional Association (ACA)