Prison staff rep: Pritzker admin ‘placates social justice at expense of
accountability’
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[September 03, 2022]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Fentanyl-laced mail
is making its way into Illinois' corrections system and some are
demanding a change in policy to make it stop.
Scot Ward, president of the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police
Corrections Lodge 263, said there are ongoing issues concerning safety
of staff and inmates.
“There’s always a staffing issue, there’s always mental health for the
offenders and the officers,” Ward told The Center Square. “There’s all
kinds of things going on in the [Illinois Department of Corrections]
that needs to be spoken about.”
But, Friday, in a statement Ward was critical of what he characterized
as a system being watered down to appease special interest groups.
“[T]he Governor’s appointee Camile Lindsay, who gives direction to IDOC,
has dangerously shifted focus to an anti-law enforcement,
criminal-centered environment that placates social justice advocates at
the expense of accountability for criminal behavior,” the statement
said.
“Offenders are no longer concerned about being punished for their
violent acts, and that means they literally have nothing to lose by
assaulting any human being they encounter in prison,” Ward said in a
statement. “And if they are not accountable on the inside, how can you
ever hope to safely return them to society once their sentences are
over?”
A spokesperson with the Illinois Department of Corrections said they
“strongly disagree” with Ward’s representation.
“The information provided by Fraternal Order of Police Corrections Lodge
263 is inaccurate,” Kim Garecht wrote in an email to The Center Square.
“The Department’s evolution to an incentive-based corrections model is
an administration-wide initiative and has resulted in a reduction of
violence within our facilities.”
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Another major issue is becoming more common, Ward told The Center
Square, and that’s inmates receiving mail laced with fentanyl.
“Six offenders overdosed in one day,” Ward said of one downstate
facility. “I know Western Illinois, Illinois River, Menard, they’ve had
offenders and staff several times in a day's time frame, and then all
your tactical teams that are going in after it’s been found gloving up
and trying to find these drugs. The chance of exposure is daily.”
Inmates get mail, which corrections staff check while using personal
protective gear, but Ward said the attempts to get in paper laced with
deadly drugs is also coming in through fraudulent attorney-client
correspondence, which may not be as thoroughly evaluated.
It’s gotten to the point where he got an alarming call from members at
the Pinckneyville Correctional Facility last month.
“Six in one day, I got a call from the Pinckneyville people and they
were telling me that they need some help, nothing’s being done,” Ward
said. “Five shanks in a month they found. Staff assaults and then the
six people getting [revived with overdose reversal drugs].”
IDOC said the introduction of contraband into correctional facilities is
a nationwide concern and the department "continues to monitor
individuals’ use of the US Postal System to attempt to introduce
contraband into our facilities."
Ward said what may have been shown to work is a pilot at the Thomson
federal facility in Illinois where photocopied mail was given to
inmates.
“Nothing happened for a 90-day period, it went to zero,” Ward said. “The
first month after that pilot program was gone, someone died at Thomson
with an overdose.”
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other
issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning
broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of
Springfield. |