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Federal government will buy Ill. prison for $165M

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He explained that $151 million would come from the department’s assets forfeiture fund, $9 million from the Bureau of Prison’s salaries and expenses account and $5 million from the bureau’s modernizations and repair account. He said no money would be taken from four other prisons scheduled to open in Alabama, Mississippi, West Virginia and New Hampshire.

Spokesmen with the Justice Department and Bureau of Prisons didn’t immediately have further details.

Wolf immediately blasted the move calling it “deeply troubling” and an “unprecedented directive to ... circumvent Congress.”

“I am concerned that this purchase will set in motion the administration’s plan to close the terrorist detention facility in Guantanamo Bay by transferring terrorist detainees to U.S. maximum security prisons, like Thomson,” he said in a statement.

U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers, the Kentucky Republican who chairs the House Appropriations Committee, concurred.

“This back-door move by the Obama Administration to open Thomson and reject the will of Congress and the American people is dangerously irresponsible, and will be met with the full and unfettered opposition of the Appropriations Committee,” he said in a statement.

Thomson prison was built in 2001. But budget troubles kept it from fully opening and its 1,600 cells housed fewer than 200 inmates before the facility was closed in preparation for a sale. The last inmates were moved out in 2010.

The Bureau of Prisons first proposed buying the prison in 2009. At that time, the proposal included using some of the prison for transfers from Guantanamo Bay. That idea was dropped after vocal public opposition.

Federal appraisals on the value of Thomson have varied, but an average of three appraisals in 2012 was $220 million. Federal officials have said that building a new prison instead of buying Thomson would cost about $400 million and take years.

Illinois officials estimated the state could get the money by the end of the year.

Quinn called Tuesday’s court action an important step. He said lawmakers would ultimately decide what would be done with the money but that some of it would likely be used to pay down Illinois’ massive backlog of unpaid bills.

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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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