Chattanooga Times Free Press

Durbin calls for AG Garland to remove federal prisons director for misconduct

- BY MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON — The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee demanded Tuesday that Attorney General Merrick Garland immediatel­y fire the director of the beleaguere­d federal Bureau of Prisons after an Associated Press investigat­ion detailing serious misconduct involving correction­al officers.

Sen. Dick Durbin’s demand came two days after the AP revealed that more than 100 Bureau of Prisons workers have been arrested, convicted or sentenced for crimes since the start of 2019. The AP investigat­ion also found the agency has turned a blind eye to employees accused of misconduct and has failed to suspend officers who themselves had been arrested for crimes.

Durbin took particular aim at Director Michael Carvajal, who has been at the center of the agency’s myriad crises. Under Carvajal’s leadership, the agency has experience­d a multitude of crises from the rampant spread of coronaviru­s inside prisons and a failed response to the pandemic to dozens of escapes, deaths and critically low staffing levels that have hampered responses to emergencie­s.

Carvajal was appointed by then-Attorney General William Barr but Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said recently that she still had confidence in him despite the many serious issues during his tenure. The AP reported in June that senior officials in the Biden administra­tion had been weighing whether to oust him. He is one of the few remaining holdovers from the Trump administra­tion.

“Director Carvajal was handpicked by former Attorney General Bill Barr and has overseen a series of mounting crises, including failing to protect BOP staff and inmates from the COVID-19 pandemic, failing to address chronic understaff­ing, failing to implement the landmark First Step Act, and more,” Durbin said in a statement. “It is past time for Attorney General Garland to replace Director Carvajal with a reform-minded Director who is not a product of the BOP bureaucrac­y.”

Two-thirds of the criminal cases against Justice Department personnel in recent years have involved federal prison workers, who account for less than one-third of the department’s workforce. Of the 41 arrests this year, 28 were of BOP employees or contractor­s. The FBI had just five. The Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives each had two.

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