Newton County Correctional Center

The Newton County Correctional Center (originally Fillyaw Correctional Center) was a privately operated prison located in Newton, Newton County, Texas, owned by the county. From 1995 until its permanent closure in 2012, the county contracted with the Bobby Ross Group, Correctional Services Corporation, the GEO Group, and other prison operation companies.

Newton County Correctional Center
LocationNewton, Texas
Statusclosed
Opened1995
Closed2012
Managed byBobby Ross Group (1995-May 1998)
Correctional Services Corporation (1998-2005)
GEO Group (2005-Nov 2009)
Community Education Centers (2009-March 2012)

In its history it housed inmates for a list of state corrections departments (Virginia, Oklahoma, Missouri, Montana, Hawaii, Arizona, Idaho), for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and other agencies.

History

In 1995 the facility was operated by the Bobby Ross Group, and housed 150 male inmates from the Virginia Department of Corrections.[1]

From December 1995, about half of the facility's 832 beds were occupied by inmates exported from Hawaii. NCCC housed 435 Hawaiians, 211 Virginians, 134 Oklahomans, one Montanan and five prisoners from the county as of December 1997.[2]

A string of fires, riots, escapes, conflicts and legal action throughout 1996 and 1997 caused the Texas Commission on Jail Standards to step in and enforce state standards at the institution in February 1998. In March 1998, Oklahoma pulled out its 134 inmates. In May the Bobby Ross Group was fired and replaced by Correctional Services Corporation. The Hawaii prisoners stayed.[3]

In April through June 2006 the facility experienced another set of incidents (allegations of inmate abuse, an escape, the resignation of a deputy warden) related to the movement of about 250 Idaho Department of Correction prisoners into the facility.[4] Idaho prisoners were removed in July.

Newton County terminated the contract with GEO Group as of November 9, 2009. Operations continued under Community Education Centers until the last inmates departed in November 2011, and the unit closed permanently in March 2012.[5]

gollark: That's possible, yes. Most Node.js applications use a lot of packages, because npm.
gollark: Most communication already isn't done by satellites, but tons of stuff relies on GPS - not even just for navigation, I think phone towers and stuff use it for timing too.
gollark: It's apparently part of a series of similar pieces, which seems interesting.
gollark: Personally, I'm running actual Linux instead of "Linux" on Windows, because I dislike Windows for a bunch of other reasons, but it's nice for some workflows I guess.
gollark: You could try the windows subsystem for Linux, apparently it mostly works.

References

  1. "Families have electronic visit with Va. inmates sent to Texas". The Free Lance-Star. Associated Press. 27 March 1995. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  2. Gregg K., Kakesako (8 December 1997). "Texas Prison Lockdown". Honolulu Star Bulletin. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  3. Kakesako, Greeg K. (4 May 1998). "Ross group loses Newton jail contract". Honolulu Star Bulletin. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  4. Clarke, Matthew (15 November 2006). "Private Geo Prison in Texas Rocked By Prisoner Abuse, Disturbance and Escape". Prison Legal News. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  5. "Newton County Texas Financial Report Y/E 12/31/2012" (PDF). Retrieved 31 August 2016.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.