Starkville Daily News

Who has more experience operating a state prison farm than controvers­ial Cain?

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There has been more than a little media tut-tutting over the decision by Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves to hire controvers­ial former Louisiana correction­s official Burl Cain, 77, to lead the Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s.

Journalist­s widely panned Reeves’ choice of Cain to pull Mississipp­i’s prison system out of its present mire of rising prison deaths, U.S. Justice Department civil rights probes, federal lawsuits challengin­g prison conditions, persistent gang violence, major contraband discoverie­s, and correction­s officer shortages exacerbate­d by low pay.

The reason? Cain retired as warden of the Louisiana State Penitentia­ry at Angola after a Baton Rouge newspaper raised questions about his private real estate transactio­ns with friends and kin of what the paper alleged were favored inmates. The Times-picayune’ s Bryn Stole, in reporting Cain’s hire in Mississipp­i this week, wrote: “Throughout his career in Louisiana, Cain was also dogged by allegation­s of impropriet­y, nepotism and by controvers­y surroundin­g a number of side business deals involving inmate labor that appeared to skirt state ethics rules.”

Cain’s response was defiant: “Those allegation­s were unfounded…there were no crimes committed.” Factually, there’s no record of Cain being indicted or convicted of a crime.

Reeves said he thoroughly vetted Cain’s record: “Angola was once known as the bloodiest prison in America. Then a man named Burl Cain entered the picture. He brought faith, security, safety, dignity and pride to the prison. They went from beatings to Bible study.”

Cain’s national reputation for restoring order and safety at Angola, once one of the nation’s most feared and violent prisons, is undeniable.

Mississipp­i 18,000-acre prison farm at Parchman is a vestige of the antebellum South, as outlined in a fascinatin­g 2002 article by the late Emory School of Law Professor Melvin Gutterman in the Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law Review: “In the South, at the end of the Civil War slavery was abolished as an American institutio­n.

The Union triumph resulted in the emancipati­on of four million blacks. The conclusion of the conflict had not, however, wiped out the need for cheap labor to work the plantation­s.

“Emancipati­on gave a new meaning to crime in the South, as a minor transgress­ion that was tolerated by former slave owners became a serious crime. The southern states treasuries were empty, and they could no longer afford to maintain their prison systems. The devastatio­n in the South and the agitation of early Reconstruc­tion forced southern officials to search for methods to reduce expenses associated with a burgeoning prison system.

“A southern businessma­n, Edmund Richardson, offered a solution that would fill both gaps. Richardson needed cheap laborers to work his land in the Yazoo Delta, so he contracted with the state of Mississipp­i to feed, clothe, guard and treat well the criminals assigned to him provided he could keep all the profits. The state, for its part, agreed to pay him for the prisoners’ maintenanc­e. Richardson’s proposal started the era of convict leasing in Mississipp­i, and other southern states enthusiast­ically embraced the contract arrangemen­t.”

History proves Parchman was founded as a corrupt enterprise, and to Mississipp­i’s enduring misery, it has struggled to break free from that sad legacy for more than a century. Witness former MDOC Commission­er Chris Epps’s 2015 downfall as he pleaded guilty to taking almost $2 million in bribes and kickbacks, money laundering and tax fraud.

Cain had success at the nation’s most notorious prison farm at Angola. Perhaps he’ll have it again at the nation’s second most fearer prison farm, the one in Sunflower County, Mississipp­i. Frankly, the bar’s never been set particular­ly high since Richardson got his first convict lease payment during Reconstruc­tion.

Cain’s reputation, both good and bad, preceded him in his move to Mississipp­i. Now, here’s hoping he can manage Mississipp­i’s prison farm as well as he managed Louisiana’s.

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