APNewsBreak: FBI Investigates Prison Company
The FBI has launched an investigation of the Corrections Corporation of
America over the company's running of an Idaho prison with a reputation
so violent that inmates dubbed it "Gladiator School."
The Nashville, Tenn.-based CCA has operated Idaho's largest prison for
more than a decade, but last year, CCA officials acknowledged it had
understaffed the Idaho Correctional Center by thousands of hours in
violation of the state contract. CCA also said employees falsified
reports to cover up the vacancies. The announcement came after an
Associated Press investigation showed CCA sometimes listed guards as
working 48 hours straight to meet minimum staffing requirements.
The Idaho State Police was asked to investigate the company last year
but didn't, until amid increasing political pressure, the governor
ordered the agency to do so last month. Democratic state lawmakers asked
the FBI to take up the case last month.
Idaho Department of Correction spokesman Jeff Ray confirmed Friday that
the FBI met with department director Brent Reinke on Thursday to inform
him about the investigation. Idaho State Police spokeswoman Teresa Baker
said her agency was no longer involved with the investigation and the
FBI has taken it over entirely.
"They (the FBI) have other cases that are tied to this one so it worked out better for them to handle it from here," Baker said.
Baker wouldn't comment on what the other cases entailed. U.S. Attorney
Wendy Olson in Boise also declined to comment on the scope of the FBI
investigation, but did say the agency was looking into fraud.
"The FBI is investigating CCA and looking at whether various federal
fraud statutes were violated and possibly other federal statutes
connected with the fraud," Olson said. "They will be working in close
consultation with our office. Beyond that I can't comment."
CCA spokesman Steve Owen said his company would cooperate with investigators.
"Our own internal investigation concluded that this was not a criminal
matter, and we remain confident in those findings," Owen said in a
prepared statement.
The understaffing has been the subject of federal lawsuits and a
contempt of court action against CCA. The ACLU sued on behalf of inmates
at the Idaho Correctional Center in 2010, saying the facility was so
violent that inmates called it "Gladiator School" and that understaffing
contributed to the high levels of violence there.
In 2012, a Boise law firm sued on behalf of inmates contending that CCA
had ceded control to prison gangs so that they could understaff the
prison and save money on employee wages, and that the understaffing led
to an attack by one prison gang on another group of inmates that left
some of them badly injured.
The Department of Justice requested a copy of a forensic audit done for
the Idaho Department of Correction earlier this year. That audit showed
that CCA understaffed the prison by as much as 26,000 hours in 2012
alone; CCA is strongly contesting those findings. CCA's Owen has said
the company believes the audit overestimates the staffing issues by more
than a third.
CCA's contract with Idaho was worth about $29 million a year. In
February the company agreed to pay Idaho $1 million to settle the
understaffing claims.
Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter initially resisted the suggestion that a
criminal investigation was needed and earlier this year, rebuffed a
suggestion from Idaho Attorney General Lawrence Wasden that he order
state law enforcement agencies to investigate. But on Friday, Otter's
spokesman, Jon Hanian, said the governor thought the FBI's involvement
was "great."
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