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Subject: Misconduct by federal prison guards rose sharply over last decade, report finds


Author:
I wonder why?
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Date Posted: 19:24:50 10/05/11 Wed

Misconduct by federal prison guards rose sharply over last decade, report finds
By Alexa Vaughn / Tribune Washington Bureau
Friday, September 30, 2011 - Added 5 days ago

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WASHINGTON — Arrests of federal prison guards soared nearly 90 percent over the last decade, possibly because of poor hiring practices during a 25 percent spike in prison growth, the Department of Justice’s Inspector General reported.

Misconduct investigations doubled, and more than half of the offenses were committed during the officers’ first two years on the job. The IG recommended that the Bureau of Prisons improve its background investigation of job applicants and find better ways to assess rookie officers.

But other factors have contributed to the problem, including private prisons and increasing numbers of female prisoners and young offenders in federal facilities, the IG found.

The report did not specify how many misconduct cases came out of private federal prisons, which have increased their populations by 120 percent in the last decade, according to the Justice Policy Institute, a Washington prison issues think tank.

"Private prisons aren’t always held to the same standards as public ones," said Joe Baumann, a corrections officer at the state California Rehabilitation Center in Norco. "That’s where so much of the stuff I come across is from, the private contractors."

But within both public and private systems, some guards think their actions have no consequences because the process for punishing them is so convoluted, said Barry Krisberg, a law professor at the Berkeley Center for Criminal Justice.

"Screenings are a good start, but what we need is far better training in terms of what the expectations of the jobs are, better supervision to identify potential problems and ways to deal with complaints about their behavior," Krisberg said.

Changing prison demographics could be responsible for the rise in inappropriate behavior, said Robert Perkinson, author of a book about Texas prisons. As the number of female prisoners grows, so does the rate of sexual harassment between officers and prisoners. And federal prisoners are getting younger, creating a more unruly prison population, Perkinson said.

"In federal prisons, it used to just be drug kingpins, tax-fraud prisoners, assassins," Perkinson said. "But now it’s become full of more low-level offenders, which ironically makes for more violent prisoners. A middle-aged kingpin is a relatively calm, responsible guy, whereas an 18-year-old who was selling meth out in Nebraska is going to be a lot more impulsive."

Baumann, a 27-year veteran and the prison’s top union official, said extended training and better pay make a huge difference. In 1998, California doubled its training from eight to 16 weeks and pay went up around the same time.

"The caliber of person just went up. More people had degrees, previous employment or previous careers when the pay scale went up. We started getting a lot more people from private enterprise," Baumann said. "Prior to that, we got a lot of people who worked fast food, manual labor jobs."

A spokesman for the Bureau of Federal Prisons had no comment on the report.

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