Sunday, January 10, 2010

In order to shoot Mel Gibson's new movie, the state governor of Veracruz has agreed to transfer the prisoners of the Ignacio Allende prison to at least four different jails.


Wardens at a jail in Mexico have transferred 300 inmates to other prisons to make way for an upcoming Mel Gibson movie shoot, despite protests from the criminals' relatives. The "Braveheart" star is planning to film his next project at the Ignacio Allende prison in the eastern coastal city of Veracruz.

The state governor, Fidel Herrera Beltran, agreed to accommodate Gibson and relocate prisoners to make room for the actor/director's film crew - a decision which caused controversy with the loved ones of the incarcerated. Hundreds of family members staged a 24-hour demonstration outside the prison last month, December 2009 in a bid to stop the transfers until a new unit could be built to house the prisoners, but their efforts failed and 300 inmates were relocated last week.

The prison director confirmed the inmates had been sent to at least four different jails, leaving part of the facility empty for Gibson to use for his shoot. It is currently unknown which project Gibson is planning to film in Veracruz.

Gibson previously filmed his 2006 epic "Apocalypto" in the city and subsequently handed local authorities a $1 million donation to help build new homes for victims of 2005's Hurricane Stan.


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