Alabama’s notoriously inhumane and overcrowded prisons are to be investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice, in an unusual move the agency announced late Thursday.
“Only the most egregious of conditions would prompt the federal government to open a major investigation into the state’s prison system,” said Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) president Richard Cohen, which is currently suing the state of Alabama for its treatment of prisoners. “We welcome the investigation.”
“It’s a giant investigation. This is rare,” Lisa Graybill, a staff attorney for the SPLC, told the Guardian. The newspaper noted that previously “Graybill worked for the federal unit that will investigate Alabama, and said the closest comparison in memory was an examination of Puerto Rico’s juvenile jails.”
“Taking on a whole state is unusual and possibly unprecedented,” Graybill said.
Alabama’s prisons, currently operating at 183 percent of capacity, are the most overcrowded in the country and some of the most unsafe and violent.
“The Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) is profoundly overcrowded, dangerously understaffed and simply incapable of running safe and secure prisons that protect the physical and mental health of the people in custody,” said Eldon Vail, a former corrections administrator, in a report (pdf) on Alabama’s prison system that was published in July. “It is a system in a state of perpetual collapse.”
“[M]ost Alabama prisons use large dormitories that house between 90 and 150 prisoners. Underneath large incandescent lights and large fans, single beds and bunks are just 2 feet apart, while rival gangs occupy different corners of the rooms that more or less resemble large barns,” explained local news outlet AL.com. “Adding to that, lack of space, bathroom facilities, and almost non-existent recreational time has increased tensions inside the dorms.”
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT