The old Parish Prison opened in 1837 on the square bound by Orleans,
Tremé, St. Ann, and Marais. During the day, prisoners were kept outside in the segregated courtyards. At night, most prisoners slept on the floor of crowded cells with only two blankets each. The last prisoners left in 1895. The location was later used to construct a building for the Sewerage and Water Board. In 1895,
The Times-Picayune described Orleans Parish Prison as: The prison closed in early 1895. In 1931, prison and court functions were relocated to new facilities at Tulane and Broad, over one mile straight back on Tulane Avenue. In 1967, the House of Detention complex opened, followed by the Community Corrections Center (CCC) complex in 1976. HOD closed in 2012, and CCC has since been abandoned since 2005. Just after midnight on May 16, 2025, ten inmates (including six charged with murder or attempted murder)
escaped from Orleans Parish Prison through a hole behind a toilet; eight of the ten would be recaptured by May 26. One of the two final inmates at large, Antoine Massey, would be recaptured on June 27, 2025. The final escapee, Derrick Groves, was recaptured on October 8, 2025, nearly five months after the jailbreak. ==Safety and conditions==