Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i prisons nominee faces Senate scrutiny

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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The nominee to lead Mississipp­i’s troubled prison system, Burl Cain, spent 21 years as warden of Louisiana’s Angola penitentia­ry, resigning in early 2016 amid ethics questions about how public money was spent during his tenure. Advocates for inmates’ rights have also condemned his work.

“Burl Cain left a legacy of corruption, cruelty and callous disregard for the human lives in his custody,” the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, Alanah Odoms Hebert, said Thursday.

She issued the statement a day after Mississipp­i Gov. Tate

Reeves announced he’s nominating Cain to become correction­s commission­er in this state. Reeves said he has “zero reservatio­ns” about Cain’s work in Louisiana and that under Cain’s guidance, Angola “went from beatings to Bible study.”

“I have absolute, full confidence in Burl Cain’s ability to change the culture at the Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s,” Reeves said.

For years, Mississipp­i prisons have operated with tight budgets and have struggled to hire enough guards because of low pay, long hours and dangerous conditions. Outbursts of violence in late December and early January left several inmates dead or injured. Lawsuits filed on behalf of prisoners say living conditions are unsanitary. And the U.S. Justice Department announced in February that it is investigat­ing the Mississipp­i prison system.

Reeves became governor in mid-january, about two weeks after the previous correction­s commission­er, Pelicia Hall, resigned. Reeves soon appointed a committee to search for a new commission­er. He recalled on Wednesday: “I asked them to find me the best possible person in America.”

Cain thanked Reeves and the search committee.

“I promise to do a great job, to help the Department of Correction­s and to do the four components that’s essential to have a good prison — that’s good food, good praying, good playing and good medicine,” Cain said.

In the next few weeks, Cain will face a confirmati­on hearing in the state Senate Correction­s Committee. Chairman Juan Barnett, a Democrat from Heidelberg, told The Associated Press on Friday that he will review Cain’s record and would like to have a private conversati­on with him in addition to at least one hearing that will be open to the public.

Barnett said he thinks Reeves and the search committee would not have chosen Cain if they thought the former warden would “damage” or embarrass Mississipp­i.

“I think the whole of America, we’re going to have to start trusting in somebody,” Barnett said.

A 2017 Louisiana Legislativ­e Auditor’s Office report said nearly $28,000 in public money was used for the unauthoriz­ed purchase of appliances and household furnishing­s for Cain’s home on prison grounds at Angola. It also said Cain’s relatives stayed overnight in state-owned homes at the prison nearly 200 times.

Cain resigned a year before the audit was issued, after the Baton Rouge newspaper, The Advocate, reported that he had sold interest in tracts of land to two developers who were friends or family of two murder convicts at Angola.

Cain said in Mississipp­i last week that allegation­s against him in Louisiana were “unfounded” and that “there were no crimes committed.”

Mississipp­i has one of the highest incarcerat­ion rates in the nation. The director of the Macarthur Justice Center at the University of Mississipp­i, Cliff Johnson, said Friday that crowded prisons and long sentences are “a recipe for chaos and violence.”

Johnson is not taking a public position on whether lawmakers should confirm Cain, but said he wants legislator­s to change some sentencing laws and to expand eligibilit­y for parole.

“If the Legislatur­e doesn’t give the new commission­er the tools, then it doesn’t much matter who we hire,” Johnson said.

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