Advanced Archive Search >>

Our Other Blogs


Receive e-mail updates

Browse by month

More Jail Yadda Yadda?

ja.jpg

That King County Council committee hearing yesterday was a start, at least, in making sure jail administrators and executive Ron Sims finally make changes at the downtown lockup. Council members seemed to agree with our report this week on how federal findings on jail deaths and civil rights violations were received with some of the same ol' bureaucratic shoulder shrugging of the past. "There's a huge divide between 'room for improvement' and what's in the report," council member Bob Ferguson said of the reaction to the Justice Department findings.

Still, will the message really sink in? The P-I reports that King County jailers will merely "re-examine" their use of hair-holds to subdue inmates, and the Times notes that corrections director Reed Holtgeerts says his jail administration is cooperating with the feds "as much as we can."

Ex-con Paul Wright, now editor of the Prison Legal News (which won $541,000 in a open-records lawsuit against the state this year as part of its probes of lockups), tells me in an e-mail that, "As a practical matter these DOJ suits against prisons and jails are not even a paper tiger. They are pretty meaningless." I agreed but said at least there's an embarrassment factor, which might prompt other officials to act. "Yes," he responded, "but the embarassment quickly passes and nothing changes."

Twitter Updates

Weekly Flickr Pool

Now Click This

National Features >

  • Village Voice

    The Great Walls of Chinatown

    With the exception of the electric rice cookers, this Bowery tenement could have come straight from the Nineteenth Century.

    By Elizabeth Dwoskin

  • Houston Press

    Getting Off

    DUI attorney Tyler Flood wins 80 percent of his trials--even if his clients were 100 percent drunk.

    By Mike Giglio

  • Miami New Times

    Park or Die Tryin'

    From the homeless parking mafia to the meter fairy, finding a spot in Miami has taken a turn toward the surreal.

    By Gus Garcia-Roberts

  • City Pages

    The Baddest Men on the Planet

    Straight from the Sam's Club tire shop, Brett Rogers prepares to meet Fedor Emelianenko in mortal combat.

    By Bradley Campbell