Chattanooga Times Free Press

Jail begins moving inmates

- BY ROSANA HUGHES STAFF WRITER

Under strict orders from the state to reduce and eliminate its overpopula­tion, the Rhea County Jail on Wednesday began transferri­ng inmates to counties around Tennessee.

The transfers began around 6 p.m., said Pam Hixson, bookkeeper for the jail. She estimated 50-60 inmates would be moved, and as of Thursday afternoon, she said the jail population was down to 157 from Wednesday’s 205. The jail, built in 1962, is only approved to house 87 inmates.

The Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance, the state agency that sets minimum standards for jails, on Tuesday ordered the jail to reduce its inmate overpopula­tion by 50 percent within the next 30 days and completely eliminate overcrowdi­ng within 60 days.

Up to 11 men were crammed into four-bed cells

Wednesday afternoon, and 25 women were in an eight-bed cell with what appeared to be an air conditioni­ng leak in the ceiling that wet the inmates’ sleeping mats. Men who had to sleep by toilets complained they couldn’t sleep without getting urine splashed on them. Offices that were built in the 1960s were converted to cells, and men in one area were sleeping on mats in the hallways.

During a tour of the Rhea County Jail on Wednesday afternoon, Sheriff Mike Neal said the ceiling in the intake area fell through, soaking files and records. The ceiling appeared to have leak stains, but it was not apparent how much of it may have caved in or if any records were permanentl­y ruined.

“People don’t have any idea what we’ve been through here,” said Administra­tor of Correction­s Lt. Melba Huffman. “I’ve been here [for 12 hours], and we’ve just been covered up. I’ve just been trying to do paperwork as fast as I can to get it ready for [Friday].”

Hixson said more inmates will continue to be transferre­d in the following days.

According to the Rhea County Jail’s website, 29 inmates were released in the last 24 hours. Huffman, speaking on behalf of Neal, who was busy balancing the number of inmates per cell, said those inmates are the same ones who are being transferre­d to other counties, as well as a few who are being put on house arrest.

“They are showing ‘released,’ as being booked out of here because they are no longer in this jail, but we have to keep up with them because they have to come back to court here,” Huffman said.

Hixson said inmates were being sent to jails in Sequatchie, McMinn, Bledsoe, Robertson (north of Nashville) and Perry (southwest of Nashville) counties, in addition to a few going back to the Bledsoe County Correction­al Complex.

The Grundy County Jail was asked to take inmates but declined, Grundy County Sheriff Clint Shrum said.

“They sent us sex offenders and we could not house them,” he wrote in a text message, adding that his special holding area is full.

He said if nonsex offenders were sent, the jail could have accepted them.

Huffman said Rhea County tried to send two other inmates who were not sex offenders, but they were not accepted.

The Grundy County Jail, which was built in 2016, can hold 114 inmates and was at 81 as of Thursday afternoon.

Sequatchie County Sheriff Ronnie Hitchcock said his jail received 10 Rhea County inmates.

“We’re trying to help them out a little bit,” he said. “If we start getting overpopula­ted ourselves, they’ll have to move them somewhere else, but right now we plan on keeping them.”

On Thursday, the Sequatchie County Jail had 92 inmates, just under the 100-or-so it is approved to house, Hitchcock said.

Four inmates were on their way to the Perry County Jail in Linden, Tenn., on Thursday evening, Sheriff Nick Weems said.

“We’re going to house them as long as we can for them,” he said. “We try to help each other out when someone is overcrowde­d.”

Weems said his 54-bed jail’s population was at 48 Thursday evening.

Sheriff’s and jail administra­tors from other counties did not immediatel­y return calls or text messages before press time Thursday to confirm they’ve agreed to take Rhea County inmates.

“People don’t have any idea what we’ve been through here. I’ve been here [for 12 hours], and we’ve just been covered up. ” – MELBA HUFFMAN, ADMINISTRA­TOR OF CORRECTION­S

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ??
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? An inmate looks out of the bars of his cell at the Rhea County Jail on Wednesday in Dayton, Tenn. Eleven inmates share a four-bed cell there. More than 200 inmates are housed at the jail which is only approved to house 87.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER An inmate looks out of the bars of his cell at the Rhea County Jail on Wednesday in Dayton, Tenn. Eleven inmates share a four-bed cell there. More than 200 inmates are housed at the jail which is only approved to house 87.

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