That’s what was found during a recent 30-day sweep at FCI-Miami, according to the Sun-Sentinel. More:
On Jan. 24 this year, unrest broke out in the camp. According to corrections officers who work at the facility, the discovery of more than 50 prohibited cellphones in a single day triggered a lockdown, which in turn led to an inmate strike.
The labor strike, according to corrections officers, included a mass refusal by inmates to eat in the facilities’ food hall.
A Jan. 25 police report of a possible escaped inmate, documented in Federal Bureau of Prison’s documents, only increased tensions. A headcount showed there was no escape, but corrections officers suspect it was someone actually breaking into the compound to deliver contraband.
There have been lots of reports about the lockdown at FCI-Miami. Inmates thinking they were serving time at a low or a camp have been subjected to conditions more like a medium or high.
Plus 57 channels and nothing on.
ReplyDelete(Springsteen)
I can confirm there was a ten day lockdown that ended when the inmates in the camp went on a hunger strike.
Are you that starved for attention that you need to comment on every post here?
ReplyDeleteLet them not eat. Cell phones shouldn't be in there. They should have cell signal blockers, but then what would the guards do with their time while trying to avoid their job?
ReplyDelete