Seven volunteers went undercover as prisoners inside Clark County Jail in Jefferson, Indiana, for two months Inmates found making their own drugs by smoking crushed e-cigarette filters wrapped in coffee-soaked toilet roll
Documentary also discovered convicts regularly had trivial fights over food - including one brawl over hash browns
Weapons were stashed all over the jail - even inside lighting fixtures - and gay prostitution was rife in cells
Trusted prisoners allowed to help in the kitchens were found to be smuggling in illegal drugs inside food trays
Undercover inmates were not discovered but did find themselves in danger from fellow prisoners
Homemade drugs, violent attacks over food and rampant gay prostitution have been exposed at one of America's toughest jails after seven people went in undercover as prisoners.
The brave civilians posed as inmates for a documentary as they spent two months behind bars alongside dangerous thugs and drug dealers at Clark County Jail in Jefferson, Indiana.
The volunteers were sent in with fake identities and were treated like prisoners for the full two months, with none of the inmates and hardly any of the jail's staff knowing they were not convicts.
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