Chattanooga Times Free Press

Civil rights activists urge White House to shutter privately run Kansas prison

- BY ROXANA HEGEMAN AND HEATHER HOLLINGSWO­RTH

BELLE PLAINE, Kan. — A privately run maximum security federal prison in Kansas is dangerous and should be shut down when its contract expires at the end of this year, civil rights advocates and federal public defenders urged the White House in a letter.

The 10-page letter emailed Thursday to a White House office and local officials details stabbings, suicides, a homicide and inmate rights violations that happened this year at the Leavenwort­h Detention Center. The letter blamed understaff­ing and poor management by operator CoreCivic.

Among the incidents it cites was one in February in which an inmate was beaten and sent to the hospital with life-threatenin­g injuries. The next day, an inmate threw hot water on a female correction­al officer, stabbed her and then kicked another officer. The officers were taken to the hospital with severe injuries after other inmates intervened to save them.

The privately run prison is separate from Leavenwort­h’s more well known federal penitentia­ry, where infamous mobsters and, more recently, former football star Michael Vick, were held.

CoreCivic described its critics’ claims as “false and defamatory” in a written statement Friday.

“These allegation­s are designed to exert political pressure rather than to serve as an objective assessment of the work our dedicated (Leavenwort­h Detention Center) staff has done to serve the needs of the United States Marshals Service,” the company said.

The letter was signed by legal directors for American Civil Liberties Union affiliates in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska, and by the heads of federal public defender offices for districts whose pretrial detainees are incarcerat­ed at the prison.

They wrote that CoreCivic has tried to pressure government entities to keep the prison open by renewing or extending its contract with the U.S. Marshals Service or entering one with Leavenwort­h County that would allow CoreCivic to run the facility. The county declined CoreCivic’s proposal, but the company has asked it to reconsider.

The White House has the opportunit­y to put meaning behind President Joe Biden’s executive order regarding the closure of private detention facilities, the critics contend.

“We can think of few places worthier of immediate action than this facility, which has proven itself to be increasing­ly dangerous and incapable of upholding the constituti­onal of those imprisoned there,” they wrote.

In its statement, CoreCivic wrote that the ACLU aims to end all private prisons, and the company said its critics’ letter contained bias throughout.

Neither White House spokeswoma­n, Emilie Simons, nor Leavenwort­h County Administra­tor Mark Loughry immediatel­y responded to emails seeking comment about the matter.

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