Light Rain
64°
DeKalb, IL
Light Rain|Forecast »

Mixing inmate groups close to reality in Illinois

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Corrections spokeswoman Stacey Solano called both procedures “temporary” and described them as routine when situations warrant them. The need for temporary space for low-level detainees should “decrease over the coming months,” she said, but she disclosed few other details.

“Safety and security is the department’s top priority and we will continue to manage the population efficiently and responsibly in order to ensure public safety,” Solano said.

Both relocation arrangements — there’s no indication they involve inmates Hernandez, Swickard or Spears — came to the fore last week after high-profile, post-Tamms assaults on guards and an inmate death being investigated as a murder. Critics claim violence has increased because of crowding 49,000 inmates into space designed for 33,000, while eliminating the threat of near ‘round-the-clock isolation that Tamms held.

On Wednesday, The Associated Press obtained a letter from the prison workers’ union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, worried about the movement of up to 15 hardened prisoners implicated in a Menard melee that injured two guards and a chaplain, to segregated medium-security cells.

It’s routine to move troublemakers to show remaining inmates the state means business, and to let angry staff members cool off while an investigation ensues. A year ago, throwing a punch at Menard could earn a trip to Tamms.

But the current setup is safe, said Solano: “Segregation units at all facilities are governed by the same department rules.”

Retired DOC administrator George Welborn, the first warden at Tamms when it opened in 1998, said it’s not that simple.

“I don’t mean to suggest that medium-security segregation units are not secure. They are. But they’re certainly run differently,” Welborn said. “The most important thing is staff at the medium-security segregation units are not used to dealing on a day-to-day basis with these inmates. They deal with reduced-security inmates.”

The day after the complaint about the Menard move, Corrections announced in a letter to AFSCME that gymnasiums in six mostly medium-security prisons would be outfitted with beds to house inmates from unspecified lower-level lockups. AFSCME officials said they were told it was in anticipation of Dwight’s mothballing, but Solano did not comment on that.

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

Reader Poll

Do you shop at farmers markets and farm stands?

Weekly
Once or twice a summer
Never