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Corrections Connection: This Week In Corrections

EDITOR'S CORNER

It would be ghoulish of us to miss a story about a warden’s program that fosters respect among inmates both living and dead. Fortunately, in-house reporter, and suspected witch, Ann Coppola, was able to catch up with Louisiana's Warden Burl Cain to discuss his facility’s unique coffin-making project.

If you’re looking for the “horror of it all,” in this week’s story, you probably won’t find any. However, the idea that someone is building a casket that very well could be his own is quite frightening!
Jim

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FEATURED STORY

Simple place for a simple man

By Ann Coppola

Respect for the dead and living alike

The nondescript setting that is Point Lookout Cemetery seems fitting for those who rest here. Austere columns support a wired arch above its entrance that holds the word “cemetery” in large white letters. They match the stark, cross-shaped grave markers, which tell nothing of those buried beneath them. Perhaps there is no story to be told for the dead here, but for Louisiana State Penitentiary inmates this facility's cemetery still serves as a symbol of dignity.

Of Angola’s 5,000 inmates, 90 percent are expected to die in prison because of their life sentences. For a time, those who died and were unclaimed by family were handled rather unceremoniously. When Warden Burl Cain arrived at the facility he sought to change that through a program that would instill more respect for the dead and create a sense of dignity for those still alive. Read the full story

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READER FEEDBACK

Regarding Eyes on the skies, 9/29/07

Just thought to say how inspiring it is to hear about what’s happening in some prisons in the USA. I am really impressed by the Transforming Lives Network and the potential it has to support prisoners and, quite literally, transform their lives.

I work as a teacher in a UK prison and we have nothing to match this. Prisoners have TVs in their cells to keep them from going insane due to lack of meaningful activities. However, just like the rest of us, they are mostly brought down by the kind of rubbish that gets broadcast these days, and many of them choose instead to listen to the radio or to their own diskman – at least they can get some inspiration out of music.

Yes, I wish that we had some such tool in UK prisons. Perhaps it will come at some point in the future. Hope so!!
Roz Ffitch (HMP Camp Hill, Isle of Wight, UK)

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LOOKING AHEAD

Developing Stories

Upcoming stories on Corrections.com and the Corrections Connection ezine

  • Michigan Inside Out Program
  • Podcast on terrorism in prisons
  • Gang culture from the inside out

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Focus Issues 2007


November
Legal roundup/review of current cases

We are currently accepting articles.
Click here to submit your article


December
The corrections impact on the community

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CORRECTIONS.COM FEATURE STORIES

Heavy lifting

Being a woman working in corrections takes strength. So does pulling a Ford F-150 truck. Rarely do you find those two feats in the same person, until you walk into one South Carolina prison. Full story

Understanding aggressive youth

When communicating in a juvenile correctional facility we must first understand what sets juvenile inmates off and why their behaviors are aggressive. When you first start working in a correctional environment you get hit with a culture shock. You realize that the inmates are not locked in their cells and get more than bread and water to eat. Your ingrained perceived values of what criminals should and should not have are taken to task. Now is when you might to ask yourself, “What have I gotten myself into?” Full story

Managing the "other" inmate

The American Psychiatric Association reports that up to 20 percent of the inmates currently incarcerated in our prisons and jails are seriously mentally ill. That equates to more than 300,000 inmates and represents a rate of mental illness that is four times higher than that of the general population. Full story

BUSINESS NEWS

Med101store.com

Med101store.com, a leading supplier of disposable medical supplies, sells directly from the warehouse to health care departments and prisons in 48 states. It’s an unprecedented move that promises to impact the way medical supplies are purchased in this country.

“With the Internet, a lot of manufacturers like Dell computers have already successfully eliminated the middle man to save the customer money,” says Joe Giovinco, President of Med 101, “now we are the first to do it for medical supplies.” Learn more.

Allen County Sheriff's Dept. signs 5-year phone contract with PCS

Public Communications Services, Inc. (PCS) a leading provider of inmate communications services to the corrections industry, is pleased to announce that Allen County, Fort Wayne Indiana Sheriff's Department has signed a 5-year contract with PCS for their inmate telephone services. More

Syscon Presents Prison Gangs’ Management Solution To National Major Gangs Task Force

Syscon Justice Systems, the world’s leader in offender management systems, announced today that it will officially launch its new Security Threat Groups (TAG STG) application during a luncheon speech and presentation More

DuPont Personal Protection Introduces Tychem® QC for Corrections

DuPont, the maker of Kevlar® and a leader in protective apparel for nearly 40 years, has introduced a new garment for corrections officers, DuPont™ Tychem® QC for Corrections. More

CAREER WATCH

Warden appointed for NH women’s prison

Joanne H. Fortier has become Warden of New Hampshire’s State Prison for Women. The twenty-one-year NHDOC veteran, who was nominated by Governor John H. Lynch and approved by the New Hampshire Executive Council, has been this facility’s acting warden since last February. Full story

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EVENTS

Anger Management Certification Training

Date: 11/8 - 11/9/07
40-hour certification training programs. Option 1- Live training (2 days) followed by online training modules. Option 2- Home study program. Consists of DVD plus online training modules. More

The Problem Student Problem-Solver Workshop, St. Louis, Mo.

Date: 11/8 - 11/9/07
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Date: 11/15/07
This course is designed to help you understand the world of deception. We give you insight to uncover truths or lies during your interviews and casual conversations. More

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

"Sleep, those little slices of death; Oh how I loathe them."
- Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849)


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