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Quinn mum on who gets prison tours

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“It’s a closed environment, literally, and the public (doesn’t) understand,” Hall said. “And when there is a problem, I’ve always felt it was good if the media has had access before, for various reasons — one, to educate the community about how tough our jobs are. It’s not an easy world.”

Quinn has ordered the closing of two major penitentiaries, though his original plan to have it done by Aug. 31 was thwarted by an ongoing union lawsuit. One of the facilities is the high-security Tamms, which holds the state’s most dangerous prisoners. They would be transferred to Pontiac prison, where workers say there’s insufficient space and safeguards.

A shutdown of a women’s prison in Dwight would initiate a complicated movement of 5,000 inmates among a half-dozen prisons.

The administration has not volunteered much about how this will happen, even when media have requested information through open-records laws. The AP has filed 12 FOIA requests to the governor’s office and Corrections since July, but three-quarters of them were denied.

The AP is asking for an on-site look at the state’s segregation units, particularly Pontiac’s, where more than two dozen inmates have already been transferred from Tamms. Among other media outlets rebuffed on tour requests is WBEZ, a public radio outlet in Chicago.

Corrections’ denial of information about tours also raises accountability questions. How severe is the purported “security risk” if only individual prison wardens, and not their bosses in Springfield, have records of who’s getting inside?

“If the governor is claiming there are legitimate security concerns, I do think it would be important for his senior staff or administrators to know who is or who is not being admitted for a tour,” said Rep. Jason Barickman, a Republican whose district includes the Dwight and Pontiac prisons.

He and other members of the General Assembly say they have been allowed to visit various lockups within the past year. Lawmakers have not embraced Quinn’s closure plan and included money in the budget to keep the prisons open.

The AP requested information on organized tours by community groups, lawmakers, reporters or others. Corrections responded that “there is no central repository for these documents” and offered, under the law, to consider a “narrowed” request — in this case, information from just two prisons out of two dozen.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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