Las Vegas Review-Journal

Safety concerns went unheeded at W.VA. prison

- By Michael Balsamo The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Long before notorious Boston mobster James “Whitey” Bulger was killed at a federal prison in West Virginia, lawmakers, advocates and even prison guards had been sounding the alarm about dangerous conditions there. But there has been no public indication that federal prison officials have taken action to address the safety concerns, even as Bulger’s killing marks the third at the facility in the past six months.

An independen­t government commission found that United States Penitentia­ry Hazelton has been overcrowde­d for years. Inmates have repeatedly expressed concerns about their safety at the high-security prison, which houses 1,270 male inmates. A 2016 report from the District of Columbia’s Correction­s Informatio­n Council said that prisoners warned officials, “Inmates can lose their lives quickly here.”

In April, 48-year-old Ian Thorne was killed during an altercatio­n with a fellow prisoner, and in September, Demario Porter was also killed in another fight with a fellow inmate.

Court records, oversight reports and news articles detail numerous violent incidents in recent years. In 2016, an inmate was charged with murder after prosecutor­s said he strangled another prisoner to death during a fight. In February 2015, an inmate stabbed a fellow prisoner with a hand-crafted weapon during a fight, according to court documents.

Another inmate received an extended sentence in May for assaulting a fellow prisoner and possessing a deadly weapon.

“There are a multitude of federal prisons that don’t have a homicide rate like that,” said Cameron Lindsay, a former federal prison warden who now works as a jail security consultant.

The federal Bureau of Prisons has not responded to requests for comment about safety concerns at USP Hazelton.

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