The Commercial Appeal

US prisons director resigning after tenure filled with crises

- Michael Balsamo and Michael R. Sisak

WASHINGTON – The director of the federal Bureau of Prisons is resigning amid increasing scrutiny over his leadership after Associated Press reporting that uncovered widespread problems at the agency, including a recent story detailing serious misconduct involving correction­al officers.

Michael Carvajal, a Trump administra­tion holdover who’s been at the center of myriad crises within the federal prison system, told Attorney General Merrick Garland he is resigning, the Justice Department said. Carvajal will stay on for an interim period until a successor is in place.

His exit comes just weeks after the AP revealed that more than 100 Bureau of Prisons workers have been arrested, convicted or sentenced for crimes since the start of 2019, including a warden charged with sexually abusing an inmate. The AP stories pushed Congress into investigat­ing and prompted increased calls to resign by lawmakers, including the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Carvajal’s tumultuous tenure included the rampant spread of coronaviru­s inside federal prisons, a failed response to the pandemic, dozens of escapes, deaths and critically low staffing levels that have hampered responses to emergencie­s.

“We are very appreciati­ve of Director Carvajal’s service to the department over the last three decades,” Justice Department spokesman Anthony Coley said in a statement. “His operationa­l experience and intimate knowledge of the Bureau of Prisons – the department’s largest component – helped steer it during critical times, including during this historic pandemic.”

The administra­tion had faced increasing pressure to remove Carvajal and do more to fix the federal prison system after President Joe Biden’s campaign promise to push criminal justice reforms. The Bureau of Prisons is the largest Justice Department agency, budgeted for around 37,500 employees and over 150,000 federal prisoners. Carvajal presided over an extraordin­ary time of increased federal executions and a pandemic that ravaged the system.

After the AP’S story was published in November, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin demanded Carvajal’s firing.

“It is past time for Attorney General (Merrick) Garland to replace Director Carvajal with a reform-minded Director who is not a product of the BOP bureaucrac­y,” Durbin, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Carvajal, 54, was appointed director in February 2020 by then-attorney General William Barr, just before the COVID-19 pandemic began raging in federal prisons nationwide.

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