
Jailed singer Boy George has been transferred to Edmunds Hill Prison in Suffolk - the same detention centre which housed Amy Winehouse's husband, Blake Fielder-Civil, last year.
It is there where he will serve 15 months for the false imprisonment of Norwegian escort Audun Carlsen.
The rueful prison, which holds up to 400 men, is made of three H-shaped buildings, each housing 67 men in single and shared rooms with 24-hour access to sanitation.
Three residential treatment units, with single cells and en-suite facilities, house 160 men.
The move will be a welcome change for the former Culture Club star, real name George O'Dowd, who was previously detained at Her Majesty's pleasure in North London's tough Pentonville prison.
In contrast to the former, Edmunds Hill does not allow seriously mentally ill patients, lifers - those serving a life sentence - or what the service call Score 3 prisoners, those under 25 years of age who are likely to cause a disturbance.
From 1938 to 1970 the site of the prison was a Royal Air Force base. It
was then used as a transit camp for Ugandan Asian refugees, before
opening in 1977 as a prison. During the 1980s there were a number of
alternations to the fabric of the prison, and in November 1997, part of it was converted to hold female prisoners.