Posted on 04/29/2007 4:37:28 PM PDT by Stoat
Inside America's toughest jailGrim ... Tent City in Arizona Pictures: MARK PETERMAN |
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in Arizona April 28, 2007 HIGH above the Arizona desert, a pink neon sign flashes the word vacancy from a watch tower manned by armed guards.
Surrounded by 25ft barbed wire fences, this is the welcome offered by Americas toughest jail Tent City in Phoenix. Inside, nearly 1,000 prisoners live in army surplus tents, baking in temperatures of 122°F (50°C) in summer and freezing during winter. No matter how many criminals are locked up here, the vacancy sign is never turned off. Instead, if prisoner numbers increase, jail supremo Sheriff Joe Arpaio simply orders extra tents. He says: I will build tents to house 100,000 people before I ever let anybody out of jail early. If I have to, I will put up tents from here to Mexico.
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The contrast to Britains creaking and overflowing jail system, run by Home Office pen-pushers who insist that it takes years to create new jail places, could not be sharper.
Home Secretary John Reid blew £23million temporarily housing prisoners in police cells after jails overflowed last October.
Yet Tent City part of Estrella Jail on the outskirts of the city of Phoenix took just six months to build next to a stinking rubbish tip.
The total cost to Arizona taxpayers was just £55,000 compared to the typical £20million price tag for a modern British jail.
Lags face working on a chain gang as punishment if they are caught enjoying any of the luxuries pampered British cons take for granted such as coffee, cigarettes and porn. There is no heating or air conditioning in the tents and inmates live on a vile diet of rotting food past its sell-by date donated for free to save taxpayers money.
Last Christmas Day just 2p per person was spent on lunch less than the cost of rations for the guard dogs which patrol the compound with shotgun-toting guards.
This brutal regime is the brainchild of Arpaio, credited with being Americas toughest lawman. The 76-year-old elected sheriff has built his career by delivering on his pledge to voters to get tough on crime.
He says: Today, I report directly to 3.8million people who vote for a sheriff.
Pride ... members of sheriff's posse wear T-shirts in praise of their chief |
I dont have to report to anybody else like a bureaucrat to a boss.
If I want something done like building Tent City I can do it quick.
When I want to put prisoners on a chain gang, it takes me 24 hours to do it.
No appointed bureaucrat would ever set up a chain gang. They wouldnt have the guts to take these sort of decisions.
Arpaios popularity is underlined by a 3,000-strong posse of public volunteers who help to police his patch and proudly wear Toughest Sheriff in America T-shirts.
Last year, the no-nonsense sheriff was left appalled by a tour of Londons Wormwood Scrubs prison during a trip to Britain.
He recalls: It was like a hotel compared to my jails. You couldnt see because there was so much cigarette smoke. There was a TV in each cell. They had their freedom, good food.
That experience has prompted Arpaio to argue that Britain MUST rebalance its system of law and order in favour of victims.
Prisoner's attire ... Sun man Harry kitted in striped suit ready for chain gang work |
Later this week, telly viewers will witness the impact on ten British bad lads who had a stint inside Arpaios Tent City.
The unique social experiment is being captured on film for a new series on Bravo TV offering a glimpse into how Arpaios tough regime could work in the UK. Arpaio explains: It was risky to allow these British lads into my jail but I did it to help England. Two of them went home during the filming. That was pathetic.
But a lot of the inmates learned from the experience. I have even received a letter from one of the Brits saying he would now like to come out to Phoenix to work here as a prison officer.
Among the Brits was maintenance worker Dan Cadwell, 27, who went off the rails following years of heavy boozing.
He says: It was one of the hardest things I have ever done in my life. But by the end I felt good. It was like a detox off the drink and off the dope.
My experience in Tent City was a wake-up call. It made me realise how easy crime is in Britain.
We should try some of the ideas I saw in Arizona in our jail system. My stay there really made me think. This could have a big impact on my mates who are always in and out of jail. To reinforce his powerful message, Arpaio invited The Sun to serve time in Tent City.
The experience laid bare a regime devoid of the cocky bravado exhibited by British crooks who style themselves as amateur experts in exploiting human rights law.
Before being driven to the jail, I endured a 40-minute ordeal of cavity searches, fingerprinting, DNA sampling and answering questions in detail. Then I was issued with a striped uniform.
A few hours later I was lying on a bunk in a tent. Close by, hordes of tattooed inmates hurled abuse at me in a grim welcome they give to new prisoners.
A SWAT squad carried out an inch-by-inch search of my sleeping area and began by ripping apart my bunk.
Meanwhile, a guard wearing rubber gloves spreadeagled me against a fence while doing a body search for drugs.
Chain gang ... Sun man Harry at work with the prisoners |
At 5.30am I was woken and told Id be in a chain gang, shackled with leg irons to three other prisoners. Its a painful experience. A jail bus then took us to the remote White Tanks Cemetery where our task was to lower corpses mainly of tramps and drug addicts into graves.
All the Maricopa County prisoners I spoke to said they hated the regime and every one seemed determined never to pick up a return ticket.
Sheriff Arpaio is convinced his methods offer society a powerful deterrent and he backed The Suns front page attack on brainless John Reid earlier this year.
He says: Who knows how many crimes I have prevented because people are frightened of spending time in my jails?
And he adds: Britain is a great country. But why cant the Home Secretary just build more jails. Why doesnt he get tents like me?
It only takes 60 days to build a prefabricated prison and how can you put a price on public safety?
You're welcome :-)
I live in Europe, and someone with the vision of Sheriff Joe is badly needed here.
Agreed. I have great concerns for the law-abiding people of Europe and of their safety from crime.
I think private prisons are only being discussed here at the moment, but prisoners have a very pampered existence at the moment. I assume Sheriff Js establishments are private?
No, the facilities run by Sheriff Arpaio are part of the State of Arizona's penal system, it's not a private entity. It's taxpayer-funded, and the taxpayers love him. :-) Here is his web page, which tells a little bit more about him as well as his program:
Maricopa County Sheriff's Office
By the way, welcome to Free Republic :-)
Thanks. Great to be here - feel right at home already. Thanks for the info... I had just assumed it was a private prison, because I know there are a lot of them in the US. Do you think they are a good idea? Enjoyed the link. Amazing that the average price of a meal is only 15 cents! No wonder the taxpayers love him... not sure about the prisoners tho! ;-)
You're quite welcome :-)
I had just assumed it was a private prison, because I know there are a lot of them in the US. Do you think they are a good idea?
I am an unrepentant Capitalist (who nurtures a visceral antipathy of Socialism) and so I will generally favor the private operation of most things. However, Sheriff Arpaio demonstrates that in this specific matter, what is most important is the management philosophy of the enterprise. He's doing the job far more efficiently than any private prison has managed managed to that I've heard of, but I suppose that doesn't mean that a private prison couldn't do things as well as he does.....we just have yet to see it. Actually, in a matter such as this, it might be easier for it to be accomplished under the umbrella of a Government entity because in Arizona and in many (or all? ) other US states a Sheriff is an elected position, and so would probably be more difficult for detractors to remove than a private company, who could conceivably be quickly replaced with another private company with a different management philosophy if a Government overseer were to be subjected to too much pressure. The ACLU has been after Sheriff Arpaio for years, but he just brushes them off like a mildly irritating mosquito and laughs in their faces.....something that a private company would probably not be able to do unless they had far more Government political support than what I've seen in the prison systems so far. The voters of Maricopa County love Sheriff Arpaio and they keep returning him to office.
Enjoyed the link. Amazing that the average price of a meal is only 15 cents! No wonder the taxpayers love him... not sure about the prisoners tho! ;-)
Fortunately, upholding the laws of the State of Arizona and maintaining the safety of the law-abiding citizens there is of considerably greater importance to Sheriff Arpaio than the happiness of the criminals under his care. He treats them in a humanitarian way and in accordance with the law, but he makes it abundantly clear that a term spent in his jail is not intended to be equivalent to a stay in a posh resort...it's to serve as due and appropriate punishment for crimes committed.
He'd be happy to have you. The Maricopa County Sheriff's Posse is one of the most active in the country. There is a mounted unit, jeep unit, EMT unit, airplane unit, mountain search & rescue unit, ham radio unit, etc. They patrol malls and sporting venues, look for fugitives and missing persons in the desert, and are called out for any kind of emergency. You can even get qualified to carry a pistol on-duty.
-ccm
That's very interesting, thank you for the info :-)
Please visit Sheriff Joe’s official Re-Election website. He appreciates your support. http://www.sheriffjoe.org
The way a man treats a dog or a cat or a horse is indicative of his morality, in my book.
/johnny
LMAO :-)
Well-stated and I agree on all counts.
I agree. Somebody famous said that, too. I think it was one of our founding fathers.
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