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Corrections in America An Introduction Eleventh Edition. Allen, Latessa, Ponder and Simonsen. Chapter 11: The Federal System . History. Prior to 1870, federal offenders sentenced to at least a year in prison were committed to State prisons
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Corrections in AmericaAn IntroductionEleventh Edition Allen, Latessa, Ponder and Simonsen Chapter 11: The Federal System
History • Prior to 1870, federal offenders sentenced to at least a year in prison were committed to State prisons • In 1891, Congress acted to create Federal penitentiaries
History: cont. First Federal Prisons • Fort Leavenworth (Kansas) 1895 • Leavenworth Penitentiary • 1896 Congress appropriated funds • Opened 1906; completed 1928 • McNeil Island, Washington • 1872 – 1875 • Atlanta, Georgia • 1899 – 1902 • Alderson, W. Virginia (1927) • Female federal penitentiary
History: cont. • The BOP was created because Congress passed major federal laws creating federal offenders (1930): • White Slave Act (1910: interstate commerce of prostitution) • Harrison Narcotic Act (1914: taxes on controlled substances) • Volstead Act (1918: Prohibition/ alcohol) • Dyer Act: (1919: Interstate transportation of stolen motor vehicles)
Sanford Bates • First Director of the BOP • Deemed to be the “Parent of Modern Penology” • Experienced in State correctional systems • Great organizer and administrator
Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) • The prison system falls within the U.S. Department of Justice • Responsible for the safekeeping, care protection, instruction, and discipline of all persons charged with or convicted of offenses against the United States
Federal Bureau of Prisons: cont. • A system entirely separate from State and local correctional agencies • An innovator and leader in correctional management and operations • The largest single correctional system in the nation
Mary Belle Harris • First female superintendent of the first federal prison for women in Alderson, West Virginia, 1925
Directors of the BOP • Sanford Bates (1930-1937) • James Bennett (1937-1964) • Myrl Alexander (1964-1970) • Norman Carlson (1970-1987) • Michael Quinlan (1987-1992) • Kathleen Hawk Sawyer (1992-present)
Organization and Administration • Central Office: Washington D.C. • Director’s Office and eight divisions • Responsible for establishing national policy • Developing and reviewing programs • Providing training and technical assistance to the field • Coordinating agency operations
Organization and Administration • Regional Offices (6) • Oversee day to day operations • Headed by an Assistant Director • Atlanta, Dallas, Philadelphia, Kansas City, Dublin (S.F.), Annapolis Junction (MD) • Provide administrative oversight and support • Institutional Wardens • Responsible for managing the prisons • Report to Regional Directors
Inmate Populations Explodes • Totaled over 182,000 in 2005 • At 139% of highest capacity • Growth due to: • Longer terms of confinement • The “War on Drugs” • Efforts to combat organized crime • Illegal immigration Inmates
Inmate Classification System • Severity of offense • History of escape or violence • Expected length of incarceration • Type of prior commitments
Minimum-Security Level • Federal Prison Camps • Dormitory housing • Low staff-to inmate ratio • Limited or no perimeter fences • Work and program oriented
Low-Security Level • Federal Correctional Institutions • Double-fenced perimeters • Dormitory housing • Strong work and program components • Staff-to-inmate ratio higher then minimum security
Medium-Security Level • Strengthened perimeters (double fences and electronic detection systems) • Cell-type housing • Wide variety of work and treatment programs • Higher staff to inmate ratio • Greater internal controls
High-Security Level • U.S. Penitentiaries • High-security perimeters • Multiple and single occupant cell housing • Close staff supervision • Close control of inmate movement
Administrative-Security Level • Facilities with special missions • Detention of pretrial offenders • Treatment of inmates with serious or chronic medical problems • Containment of extremely dangerous, violent, or escape-prone inmates
Available Programs • BOP is responsible for carrying out the judgments of Federal courts when confinement is ordered • All medically able inmates are required to work • All inmates are required to work toward a 12th grade literacy level
Available Programs: cont. • Programs open to all inmates: • Educational • Vocational training • Work • Religious • Counseling, etc.
BOP Staff • Over 33,500 employees in 2005 (and increasing) • Some 7 in 10 are male • All are “correctional workers first,” regardless of job specialty
Female Offenders in BOP • Number of females in BOP facilities continues to increase • Rose to 12,354 in mid-2005 • Represent 7% of BOP inmates
Special Programs for Women • Stress reduction • Prevention of medical problems • Obtaining and managing treatment for medical problems • Improvement of personal relationships
Special Programs: cont. • Parenting skills • Grief management • Victimization reduction • Sexual • Emotional • Physical abuse
Summary • BOP is the largest and arguably best of the nation’s correctional systems • It is undergoing rapid growth • Many innovative programs have been introduced • BOP is vastly overcrowded