The Columbus Dispatch

Durbin calls for dismissal of chief of federal prisons

- Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON – The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee lambasted the director of the beleaguere­d federal prison system on Thursday, saying he has “no intention of reforming the institutio­n” and reiteratin­g his call for the director to be immediatel­y fired.

Sen. Dick Durbin doubled down on his demand that Attorney General Merrick Garland remove Director Michael Carvajal, which came days after an Associated Press investigat­ion that detailed serious misconduct involving federal correction­al officers and revealed more than 100 Bureau of Prisons workers have been arrested, convicted or sentenced for crimes since the start of 2019.

“Since day one, Director Carvajal has shown no intention of reforming the institutio­n,” Durbin said in a speech on the Senate floor. “For years, the Bureau of Prisons has been plagued by corruption, chronic understaff­ing, and misconduct by high-ranking officials.”

Under Carvajal’s leadership, the agency has experience­d a multitude of crises, from the rampant spread of coronaviru­s inside prisons and a failed response to the pandemic to dozens of escapes, deaths and critically low staffing levels that have hampered responses to emergencie­s.

Durbin, D-ill., initially called for Carvajal to be fired days after the AP’S investigat­ion into rampant criminal activity among employees, which found the agency has turned a blind eye to employees accused of misconduct and has failed to suspend officers who themselves had been arrested for crimes. Two-thirds of the criminal cases against Justice Department personnel in recent years have involved federal prison workers, who account for less than one-third of the department’s workforce.

“It’s a recurring pattern of misconduct by officials within the Bureau of Prisons who believe they can abuse inmates and break the laws with impunity,” Durbin said.

Durbin also pointed to a series of recent violent incidents within the federal prison system, including an attack last month at FCI Fort Dix, a low-security prison in Burlington County, New Jersey, that is run by the same warden who was in charge of a Manhattan federal jail when financier Jeffrey Epstein killed himself.

The 27-year-old inmate was attacked from behind and stabbed in the eyeball. The warden at Fort Dix, Lamine N’diaye, was previously the warden at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center and was removed from that position after Epstein killed himself at the jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

The Bureau of Prisons named N’diaye as warden at Fort Dix in February despite an ongoing federal investigat­ion into lapses that led to Epstein’s death and in direct contradict­ion of a public pronouncem­ent that the agency would delay any move until the inquiry was finished. The bureau attempted to place N’diaye in the Fort Dix job a year earlier, but the move was stopped by then-attorney General William Barr after the AP reported the transfer. The Justice Department’s inspector general has yet to complete the investigat­ion.

Since the attack at Fort Dix, at least two other inmates have died in altercatio­ns at other federal prisons and at least two other inmates escaped from low-security prison camps in November.

“In the nearly two years since Director Carvajal took control of the Bureau, he has failed to address the mounting crises in our nation’s federal prison system. It is far past time for new, reformmind­ed leadership in the Bureau of Prisons,” Durbin said Thursday.

Carvajal was appointed by Barr, but Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said recently that she still had confidence in him despite the many serious issues during his tenure.

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