Families, former inmates, and staff testified about ongoing violence, extortion, and unsafe conditions in Alabama prisons. They detailed instances of inmate abuse, lack of basic necessities, and financial exploitation. Lawmakers are considering a bill to increase oversight, including an independent coordinator and oversight board, but law enforcement officials warn of resource challenges.
) - Families, former inmates and former corrections staff packed a State House committee room to describe what they called ongoing violence, extortion and unsafe, overcrowded conditions inside Alabama’s prisons.
During testimony, former corrections officer Stacy George said some inmates were subjected to what he described as a “tune-up.” “’Tune-up’ means if they don’t do right and act right for whatever reason, they beat them up,” George said. Former inmate Rachel Elledge told lawmakers that women at Tutwiler Prison for Women sometimes went weeks without basic hygiene supplies. “We went several weeks without toilet paper,” Elledge said. ”We went several weeks without having feminine hygiene products." One mother, Sylvia Wright, said her son has been extorted for money while incarcerated and feared for his life. “My son pled with me and said ‘Mama, please help, they’re going to kill me,’ I owed him $650. I’m retired. I’m on Social Security,” Wright said.Lawmakers advancing Senate Bill 316 say the measure is designed to increase oversight of Alabama’s corrections system. The bill would create an independent prison oversight coordinator tasked with inspecting prisons and investigating complaints. It would also establish a Corrections Oversight Board, requiring regular inspections and public reports on prison conditions.State law enforcement officials cautioned that the proposal could require significant additional resources. Sam Adams with the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency said the agency estimates it would need to hire at least 60 additional special agents to handle the volume of investigations. “Based on the numbers we’ve received, we estimate we’d have to hire at least 60 additional special agents to handle this tremendous caseload,” Adams said.Instead of launching the full oversight program immediately, lawmakers reached a compromise to begin with a one-year pilot program. Under the pilot, the state would review conditions at Tutwiler Prison for Women and three men’s facilities over the next year. Lawmakers said information collected during the pilot could help determine whether broader oversight is needed across Alabama’s entire prison system.The legislation now heads to the Alabama House. If approved there and signed by the governor, the new prison oversight system would take effect Oct. 1.Suspect indicted in 2023 death of Montgomery musician3 bodies found in investigation of missing Choc family, Mobile County officials say
Alabama Prisons Prison Conditions Prison Oversight Inmate Abuse Senate Bill 316
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