Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Prisoners do get bus tickets No evidence from Vinehout

- Tom Kertscher Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Does Wisconsin leave justreleas­ed inmates stranded outside the prison gates?

State Sen. Kathleen Vinehout, an Alma Democrat who is running for governor, painted that picture in a May 1 interview with Earl Ingram, a liberal radio talk show host on WRRD-AM (1510) in Milwaukee.

Saying she wants to provide better substance abuse and mental health services in prisons because so many inmates suffer from those problems, Vinehout declared:

These folks need help. They need the ability to be able to deal with their addiction and the health care they need to heal from their mental health issues. And instead, the state doesn’t even give them a bus ticket to get home, let alone help them reintegrat­e into their community.

We thought we should check the bus-ticket claim.

Ingram seemed startled. He followed up by asking: “You mean to tell me, when a person gets out of prison, the state doesn’t even give them a bus ticket to get home?”

Vinehout responded vaguely, alluding to legislativ­e hearings on prisons from years earlier. “Well, we heard a lot of stories,”

she replied. “I have to give” state Sen. Lena Taylor, D-Milwaukee, “credit for my education about what’s happening in our prison system.”

When we asked Vinehout’s campaign spokesman for evidence to back Vinehout’s claim, we were told she was simply relating what others had told her, “not talking on her authority.”

But in the interview, Vinehout stated the claim as fact.

And she didn’t backtrack on it when she was asked the follow-up question.

State policy

The state describes its policy on releasing inmates this way:

Transition from incarcerat­ion to community is carefully planned collaborat­ively by both institutio­n and community correction­s staff, coordinate­d with inmates and community stakeholde­rs and developed in full considerat­ion of the concerns of victims.

State Department of Correction­s spokesman Tristan Cook told us that transition planning with a social worker and, if necessary, probation staff begins three months before an inmate’s release.

That includes transporta­tion from the prison. If an inmate doesn’t have transporta­tion from family or friends, the department will provide a ride or a bus ticket, he said.

It’s worth noting that inmates generally are returned to the county where the crime was committed — which may or may not be where they lived or now have family.

Dameon Payton told us the state gave him a bus ticket back to Milwaukee when he was released in March. He said he knew other inmates who were transporte­d by the state.

But in practice ...

There are some exceptions, according to nonprofit groups that help transition inmates.

Andre Brown, an employment specialist at Project Return in Milwaukee, estimated that his agency gets calls twice a month from inmates who need rides. He said his agency provides them bus tickets.

Linda Ketcham, executive director of Madison Area Urban Ministry, said her agency has never received calls like those. Inmates who will be supervised on extended supervisio­n get a ride or a bus ticket from the Department of Correction­s, she said. But released inmates who do not go on extended supervisio­n are on their own to arrange transporta­tion, she said.

The Rev. Jerry Hancock, director of prison ministry for First Congregati­onal Church of Christ in Madison, said in some cases the Department of Correction­s drops inmates at the Capitol Square in Madison.

Our rating

Vinehout says Wisconsin “doesn’t even give” released prison inmates “a bus ticket to get home.”

She did not provide any evidence and her claim certainly is not the state’s policy or general practice.

What we found is that the state typically provides a ride, or a bus ticket, to released inmates.

But occasional­ly, there are inmates without transporta­tion who get a bus ticket from a nonprofit agency.

Vinehout’s statement has only an element of truth and ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. That’s our definition of Mostly False.

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