No. 17 February 1998 ISSN 1363-9552
Published in London by the Prison Reform Trust
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UKDS: How did Alton Manning die?
Alton Manning, a 33 year old black remand prisoner, died on 8 December
1995 at UK Detention Services-run HM Prison Blakenhurst in the English west
Midlands. An inquest started in January 1998 but was adjourned before the
coroner’s summing up at the request of UKDS lawyers who have applied to the
High Court for a ruling. Reporting on the reason for the application is not
allowed.That hearing will take place on 18 February 1998, after which the
coroner’s inquest will be resumed. No date has been scheduled.
The coroner and the jury heard
that Mr Manning died after UKDS staff attempted a body search for drugs. It also emerged in evidence that:
n A consultant forensic
pathologist established that the cause of death was respiratory
impairment/restriction during restraint leading to asphyxia. There was evidence
of airway occlusion due to pressure to the neck and restriction of chest
movement whilst on the ground with pressure applied to the back of the chest.
Mr Manning suffered bruising to
the neck, blood spots in the eyes, face and neck, and there was blood from the
ear and mouth consistent with the occlusion of the airway. Bruising found on his back was consistent
with the application of a knee in that area. Eight separate visible areas of
injury to the face, as well abrasions to the arms and legs, were noted.
The pathologist also confirmed that no drugs or alcohol were found in Mr
Manning’s body.
n Crucial evidence from UKDS was
missing. Prison cameras that would have recorded an unobstructed view of the
last moments of Mr Manning’s restraint were said to have recorded nothing due
to operational error. Staff reports containing the first written accounts of
the event could not be found by UKDS when sought on behalf of Mr Manning's
family.
n Five prisoners described how
they saw Mr Manning being restrained in a neck hold that was wholly consistent
with injuries to the neck and the cause of death as established by the
pathological evidence.
n None of the eight staff who
were directly involved in the restraint offered any explanation for the visible
injuries or the cause of death.
n The two most senior staff
involved ‑ one holding Mr Manning's head and the other kneeling on his back ‑ claimed to be
ignorant of Home Office guidance issued in August 1992 [the prison opened in
May 1993] warning of the dangers of restraining prisoners in the prone position
or applying pressure to the neck, chest or abdomen. But all the other officers
accepted that they had received the relevant warnings during their training in
control and restraint techniques at Blakenhurst.
According to INQUEST, a prisoners’ rights organisation supporting Mr
Manning’s family, lawyers representing the Home Office and the company worked as a team throughout the hearing with
the assistance of the Treasury Solicitor and the Home Office’s Controller at
Blakenhurst. Lawyers for Mr Manning’s family were denied access to much of the
relevant documentation.
Deborah Coles, co-director of INQUEST, told PPRI that: “The
evidence heard so far has been extremely disturbing. The jury will have to
consider whether or not Mr Manning was unlawfully killed.”
UKDS is now owned by Corrections Corporation of America and Sodexho, although at the time of Mr Manning’s death, CCA’s partners were John Mowlem and Sir Robert McAlpine.The Blakenhurst contract is being renewed for a further three years from May 1998. UKDS was also recently awarded a 25 year contract to run HM Prison Agecroft at Salford, north west England For a full briefing on the Alton Manning case, contact:INQUEST, Tel++44 181 802 7430.Email:inquest@compuerve.com
Big boost for
industry?
Twenty four new prisons at
a cost of over £2bn plus £300m in annual running costs could be needed in
England and Wales within the next seven years if the prison population
continues to grow at its present rate. The Director General of the Prison
Service warned in February that, if
existing sentencing patterns continue, the population could reach 82,000 - or
93,000 at worst. The population is
currently at 64,000, the highest level in modern history.
n Premier Prison Services Ltd’s
latest prison, HM Prison Lowdham Grange in Nottingham, has opened amidst
controversy. A proposed scheme for contracting with a number of firms to
provide employment for prisoners has
been criticised by trade unions for allowing those companies to undercut
existing local wage rates. The local employers’ association has welcomed the
scheme as long as “it isn’t providing unfair and subsidised competition to
local businesses and it develops the skill base of individuals.”
n Premier Prison Services Ltd
(with construction firm Kvaerner) hopes to win a 25 year, £60m contract to
finance, design, build and run a new prison at Marchington in Staffordshire.
The facility will include a 200 place therapeutic community regime. The
company’s bid rests on Wackenhut’s experience at the Kyle New Vision Facility
in Texas which is run as a therapeutic community.
Alternative
plan for industries
Wackenhut UK Ltd’s contract
to operate prison industries at HM Prison Coldingley is to be independently
evaluated over two years. But Prison Service trade unions are still arguing
that the Prisons Minister should reconsider the issue. The unions have
recommended an alternative model for prison industries based upon the US
Federal Government’s UNICOR system. More details from: Larry O’Callaghan,
CPSA, c/o Room G30, Abell House, John Islip Street, London SW1P 4LH, England.
Fax: ++ 44 171 217 5916.
First
sponsored courts
Companies such as pharmaceutical and medical firms are being asked to sponsor special drugs courts in the north of England when public funds run out. In April 1998, the Substance Misuse Treatment & Enforcement Programme (STEP) will begin piloting courts which will fast-track offenders through the judicial system. A similar scheme operates in Miami, Florida. A STEP spokesperson told the Big Issue that the companies “will not have any clout and none of their representatives will be selected on the project board. Their involvement will be financial only.” Drugs charity Lifeline called the scheme “ill conceived”.
Borallon
breakout
Three inmates used bolt
cutters to escape from Corrections Corporation of Australia-run Borrallon Jail, near Ipswich in Queensland
on 2 February 1998. Three accomplices fired 27 shots from a rifle at a single
prison officer in a perimeter vehicle.
The officer returned fire using a revolver and a shotgun. Queensland’s
prisons minister is recommending that armoured vehicles be used to patrol all
prison perimeters from now on. A new maximum security prison is also likely to
be built.
n Queensland Corrective Services
Commission has called for Expressions of Interest from companies who want to
tender for a contract to design, construct and operate a new prison to replace
the existing Rockhampton Correctional Centre. The new prison will be a regional facility for male prisoners of all
security categories
No private
prison - magistrate
Mr Brian Barrow, deputy
chief magistrate at Victoria’s Melbourne Magistrates’ Court, has twice
recommended that Aboriginal offenders were too vulnerable to serve any part of
their sentences in a private prison. The Aboriginal Legal Aid Service Co‑operative
believes that the magistrate’s recommendations reflect community concern about
private prisons in general and recent deaths in custody in particular. However,
Mr Barrow’s recommendations are not legally binding, as the corrections
department decides where an offender
serves his/her sentence.
Escape from
Fulham fishing trip
A prisoner who escaped from
a fishing party of eight supervised by
Australasian Correctional Management (ACM) staff from Fulham Correctional
Centre in Victoria was on the run for six weeks and committed fifteen crimes
before being recaptured in January. ACM has threatened the officer who
supervised the trip with disciplinary action.
Victoria’s
private police cells
All cells in a new police,
courts and correctional facility complex being built at Sunshine in western
Victoria are to be privately run. The Police Minister has said that running
cells is not a core activity and contracting out will give police more time to
tackle crime in the area. Eventually, all police cells in the region will be
privatised.
Pressure in
Western Australia
Western Australia has one of the fastest growing prison populations in the country with 171 per 100,000 population behind bars. Its incarceration rate is higher than Victoria, which currently holds around 45 per cent of its prisoners in private prisons. Due to mandatory minimum sentencing the incarceration rate is expected to soar, increasing the need for a new prison. Finance has been allocated to plan one facility, but the Government has still to decide on public or private operation. Private companies are arguing that Western Australia should have at least two new facilities.
Privatisation
recommended
Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice is investigating the feasibility of what the Minister, Mr Liao Cheng‑hao, refers to as prisons built and run under BOT [build, operate and transfer] contracts. The Minister believes that privately run facilities would help ease overcrowding in Taiwan’s prisons and save public money. At this stage he envisages only using private prisons for low risk offenders.
Conflict in
Iowa
Residents f Forest City,
Iowa are campaigning to prevent the state’s first private prison being built.The city council has agreed to spend $360,000 connecting utilities to the
site - owned incidentally, by a city councillor - on which CCA wants to build a
prison. At a public meeting last year, residents voted 2-1 against the
proposal. But since then an acrimonious war of words has broken out in the newspapers, fuelled by full page
advertisements from the company and Forest City Future Improvement Inc, which
supports the prison plan on the basis of potential economic advantages.
Meanwhile, the No Prison campaign is pressurising the Iowa legislature
to implement legislation which prohibits the building of any private prisons.
Capital
leaves Texas
Capital Corrections
Resources Inc (CCRI) is selling its Texas prisons to CiviGenics Inc. Capital’s
business has declined since revelations on a training video tape showed guards at its Brazoria County Jail beating prisoners
and setting dogs on them. Following the video’s release, Missouri and other
states which sent prisoners to Capital’s Texas facilities, cancelled their
contracts and transferred the prisoners elsewhere. CiviGenics operates private
detention facilities in 13 other states.
Lawsuits in
Tulsa
The Oklahoma Sheriffs
Association is seeking to join a lawsuit filed by a Tulsa County sheriff in a
bid to prevent a new county jail being privatised. The original lawsuit claimed
that it would be unconstitutional for the state to delegate power from an
elected official to a private company. Since September 1997, the Criminal
Justice Authority has been negotiating
with CCA to operate the jail. The Tulsa County Deputy Sheriffs Fraternal Order
of Police also has a lawsuit pending
which claims that the Criminal Justice Authority was formed illegally and has
no power over the new jail.
n The State of Oklahoma’s first
private prison at Hinton has been sold to Cornell Corrections Inc but
Corrections Corporation of America will continue to operate the facility until
July 1998. CCA’s 191 staff are being offered alternative employment by the
company.
n Oklahoma will spend about $60m
on private prison beds this year. The state began using private prisons in
December 1995 when prison overcrowding had reached crisis levels. It now
contracts with nine private prisons, three of which are in Oklahoma itself.
New Mexico
wants to buy
CCA has filed a lawsuit in
the district court at Grants, New Mexico to try and prevent the state from
buying the women’s prison which the company built and runs. The original
contract allows the state the option to buy and the Governor wants to either operate it directly or
contract out the management and save around $3m a year. The Governor has
budgeted $12.2m to buy the prison. CCA has operated the facility since 1988. The contract was due for renewal
in June 1997 and, although the state missed the renewal date, CCA has continued
to receive prisoners and payment. If
CCA wins the case, the state could be forced to renegotiate a new contract and
lease.
The state would also like to buy two prisons currently being built by
Wackenhut but no provision has been made in the budget for the 1999 financial
year. The Governor has said that, ideally, the state should own the prisons but
the management could be contracted out. Wackenhut would agree to sell but only
if they were allowed to run the facilities for at least five years.
Since 1980, New Mexico has been under a court order to improve prison
conditions. Currently, the state sends hundreds of prisoners to Texas and
Arizona.
Complaint
under investigation
Last July, the Florida
Police Benevolent Association (FPBA), which represents Florida’s corrections
officers, filed a complaint with the state’s Commission on Ethics, alleging that there was a conflict of
interest between Dr Charles Thomas’s role as an independent academic, his
University of Florida Private Prisons Project being financed by corrections
companies, his directorship of CCA Prison Realty Trust and his work for the
Florida Commission on Privatisation. The FPBA has recently been informed that
the complaint is now under active investigation but it is not known when the
Commission’s findings will be reported.
CCA’s REIT
track
hen Corrections
Corporation of America (CCA) wanted to build a prison in Youngstown, Ohio, the
city sold the company a 101 acre site
for just one dollar, gave it a five year partial tax break, free utility
connections and protection against losses and court damages. CCA spent $57m
building the 2,016 bed Northeast Ohio Correctional Center. Then in July 1997
CCA sold the facility to its affiliated company, CCA Prison Realty Trust[a Real
Estate Investment Trust, REIT] for $70m, making a $13m profit.
But only recently city officials have called into question CCA’s
business practices, accusing the company of alleged profit-taking at the
expense of local taxpayers.
The company argues that this [selling its own prisons] is “part of CCA's
business strategy”.
In August 1997, analysts Legg Mason Wood Walker listed one of the possible risks to Prison Realty Trust
investors as the “... close ties between the management of CCA Prison Realty
Trust and CCA. These ties could create conflicts of interest for [Realty Trust]
management.”
The formation of CCA’s REIT last year was heralded as the “third milestone in the corrections industry” by
analysts. Its aim is to build new and acquire existing correctional and
detention facilities from both private prison managers (including CCA) and
public authorities and lease them back with a yield of 11 per cent. The
rationale being that with prison overcrowding, increasing incarceration rates
and lack of public funds for new prisons, the company could cash in on buying
and financing publicly managed prisons.
CCA Prison Realty Trust can own correctional and detention facilities,
but cannot manage the facilities it owns.
It currently owns thirteen, including five in Texas, two in Arizona, two
in Oklahoma and one each in Tennessee, Kansas, Ohio and New Mexico. According
to analysts Genesis Merchant Group Securities, there are nine more CCA facilities in the pipeline at
a cost of $390m and the company is “aggressively pursuing” other acquisitions.
The company has recently raised some $96.3m through its sale of shares to help finance this. The value of Prison Realty Trust shares has more
than doubled since they were first offered for public sale in July 1997. So far
only CCA has formed a corrections REIT but Wackenhut is also reported to be
considering the idea.
n According to industry analysts
Scott & Stringfellow, CCA’s prisons now form the sixth‑largest
correctional system in the US behind
California, Texas, Florida, New York and the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
Now Ohio
wants control
CCA’s Northeast Ohio
Correctional Center at Youngstown - a sign outside the prison shows CCA’s daily
share price - has had numerous problems
since it opened in May 1997. Following a series of stabbings, some of the 2,000
prisoners from Washington, DC, and Nevada have filed a lawsuit alleging unsafe
conditions. State and local officials have also complained that they have no
authority over the prison as the prisoners are from other states.
A proposal to introduce legislation which would give Ohio authorities powers to oversee
private prisons is being opposed by CCA. The regulations would set standards
for prisoner care, clarify who is responsible for an inmate escape and allow
local authorities to investigate any problems. Prison companies would have to
adhere to guidelines such as the classification of prisoners permitted in the
facility and to accept financial penalties if those requirements were unmet.
The legislation would also require the city of Youngstown to negotiate a new contract with CCA. Some politicians
are now saying that a percentage of private prison companies’ profits should be
paid to the contracting authority. Youngstown’s Mayor, George McKelvey, says
that he "will not be held hostage" to the possibility that jobs will
be lost if the city “cracks down” on CCA’s operations.
n The Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association is campaigning to prevent a second private prison being built in Ohio. A 500 bed prison for
offenders convicted of drink driving is being planned at Grafton.
Pittsburgh’s
prison hospital
Corrections National Corporation of Texas is proposing to build and run a 700 bed high security geriatric and special needs prison hospital in Pittsburgh. Federal, state and county prison authorities would pay for secure treatment as an alternative to sending prisoners to other hospitals. The facility could be open in 1999.
Correction: In the last issue of PPRI, the report on Wackenhut should have stated that as at 12 January 1998, the company had awards/contracts to manage 45 facilities with a total of 29,644 beds in North America, Australia and the UK.
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