[Vision2020] its not a joke
Mark Solomon
msolomon at moscow.com
Mon May 23 17:37:10 PDT 2005
This just in from Betsy Russell's blog. Betsy is the Spokesman-Review
reporter in Boise.
Mark Solomon
Bus riding may SEEM like prison, but...
This is just absolutely incredible, unbelievable. According to the
San Diego Union-Tribune, federal prison officials have been sending
federal inmates on Greyhound buses - unescorted - across the country
to transfer them from one prison to another. Surprise, surprise -
some got off before their final destination.
One was Dwayne Fitzen, a motorcycle gang member and cocaine dealer
convicted in Idaho and sentenced to 24 years in prison back in 1992.
Last fall, the feds put Fitzen on a bus in Waseca, Minn., bound for
the federal prison in Lompoc, Calif. Fitzen got on the bus on Sept.
14, but didn't arrive as scheduled at the minimum-security Lompoc
lock-up two days later. He was last seen in Las Vegas, where he
withdrew $12,000 from a bank account and disappeared. A press release
from the U.S. Marshals Service says the 55-year-old dealer, known as
"Shadow," is "considered armed and dangerous," and U.S. Marshals have
"made the apprehension of this fugitive a top priority."
The San Diego newspaper reported that eight prisoners bound for San
Diego alone have escaped during their Greyhound rides since 1996.
That's when federal prison officials started the bus-transfer program
as a money-saving move. It releases prisoners who are being
transferred to low-security facilities on a furlough for their bus
ride, after they sign a letter promising they won't try to escape,
according to the Union-Tribune's report. The feds call the program
"voluntary surrenders." But when the San Diego newspaper's reporters
checked with Greyhound, the bus line's spokeswoman said Greyhound had
never been told that it was carrying unescorted prisoners alongside
its regular passengers. "If this is happening, we are going to ask
that it stop," spokeswoman Kim Plaskett told the newspaper.
Federal prosecutor Monte Stiles, who prosecuted Fitzen in Idaho, told
the Union-Tribune, "When I first heard it, I couldn't believe it. I
thought it was a joke."
The San Diego newspaper reported that Federal Bureau of Prisons
officials wouldn't say how many of their convicts have escaped during
bus transfers, but the paper documented "dozens" who are still at
large.
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