Tent City Jail - true?

Del Boy

Active member
Is this report true and accurate?


Sheriff Joe Arpaio created the 'tent city jail' to save Arizona from spending tens of millions of dollars on another expensive prison complex.

He has jail meals down to 20 cents a serving and charges the inmates for them.

He banned smoking and pornographic magazines in the jails, and took away their weightlifting equipment and cut off all but 'G' movies. He says:
'They're in jail to pay a debt to society not to build muscles so they can assault innocent people when they leave.'

cid:3.2618101317@web87002.mail.ird.yahoo.com


He started chain gangs to use the inmates to do free work on county and city projects and save taxpayer's money.


cid:4.2618101317@web87002.mail.ird.yahoo.com


Then he started chain gangs for women so he wouldn't get sued for discrimination.

He took away cable TV until he found out there was a federal court order that required cable TV for jails. So he hooked up the cable TV again but only allows the Disney channel and the weather channel.

When asked why the weather channel, he replied: 'So these morons will know how hot it's gonna be while they are working on my chain gangs.'
He cut off coffee because it has zero nutritional value and is therefore a waste of taxpayer money. When the inmates complained, he told them, 'This isn't the Ritz/Carlton. If you don't like it, don't come back.'
He also bought the Newt Gingrich lecture series on US history that he pipes into the jails. When asked by a reporter if he had any lecture series by a Democrat, he replied that a democratic lecture series that actually tells the truth for a change would be welcome and that it might even explain why 95% of the inmates were in his jails in the first place.

With temperatures being even hotter than usual in Phoenix (116 degrees just set a new record for June 2nd 2007), the Associated Press reported: About 2,000 inmates living in a barbed wire surrounded tent encampment at the Maricopa County Jail have been given permission to strip down to their government-issued pink boxer shorts.


cid:5.2618101317@web87002.mail.ird.yahoo.com


On the Wednesday, hundreds of men wearing pink boxer shorts were overheard chatting in the tents, where temperatures reached 128 degrees.
'This is hell. It feels like we live in a furnace,' said Ernesto Gonzales, an inmate for 2 years with 10 more to go. 'It's inhumane.'
Joe Arpaio, who makes his prisoners wear pink, and eat bologna sandwiches, is not one bit sympathetic. 'Criminals should be punished for their crimes - not live in luxury until it's time for parole, only to go out and commit more crimes so they can come back in to live on taxpayers money and enjoy things many taxpayers can't afford to have for themselves.'

The same day he told all the inmates who were complaining of the heat in the tents: 'It's between 120 to 130 degrees in Iraq and our soldiers are living in tents too, and they have to walk all day in the sun, wearing full battle gear and get shot at, and they have not committed any crimes, so shut your damned mouths!'

Way to go, Sheriff! If all prisons were like yours there would be a lot less crime and we would not be in the current position of running out of prison spaces.

Sheriff Joe was just re-elected as Sheriff in Maricopa County, Arizona







 
Yes, it is very much true. You can type his name into your browser and get all kinds of info.

Two of his main critics: You guessed it.

Amnesty International and the ACLU.

He had to put the televisions back in as there is some kind of prison law saying the prisoners are entitled to TV. He put them back but only allows Disney channel and the weather channel.
 
Well if it IS true, I'm planning a road trip to Arizona to take pictures of Billy Bob in pink underwear and to shake that sheriffs hand.
 
Either this works brilliantly and the number of repeat offenders dwindles or it doubles as people want to avenge alleged wrongdoings done to them or their family.

It's not a gamble worth taking. Why do you think chain gangs were disbanded 100 years ago?
 
Either this works brilliantly and the number of repeat offenders dwindles or it doubles as people want to avenge alleged wrongdoings done to them or their family.

They probably just move to another state where the accommodations are better.

It's not a gamble worth taking. Why do you think chain gangs were disbanded 100 years ago?

At least the juvenile offenders earn high school credits.
 
It's not a gamble worth taking. Why do you think chain gangs were disbanded 100 years ago?

Not true. Chain Gangs were temporarily out of fashion and discontinued in the 1950s. States began re instituting them in 1995. Alabama and Arizona to name a few.

While not technically a Chain gang (wearing chains) You can see that California did not do away with inmate labor camps.

Conservation Camps

"In addition to the industries operating within California prisons, convicts have worked in that state's fire control and forest conservation in the Conservation Camp system since 1915. The CDoC now operates 33 male Conservation Camps and 3 female conservation camps, providing "the backbone of the state's wild land fire fighting crews." The prisoners work for the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and the Los Angeles County Fire Department. [SIZE=-1][21][/SIZE] Since it is low-security imprisonment, the Camps program is considered a privilege by many prisoners, though the work is extremely dangerous and many prisoners are injured in the program. And, of course, the prisoners are still denied the right to organize collectively. The average prisoner working in the conservation camps is paid 25 to 75 cents an hour. The Department of Corrections considers the program a tremendous success, because the Department of Forestry saves over $70 million annually using convict labor. [SIZE=-1][22][/SIZE]" quoted from the angelfire web site.

You can view more history about prisoner labor at the following liberal site. Will it advocates against prisoner labor it seems to give a somewhat unbiased history:

http://www.angelfire.com/sc2/mplu/time.html

While "chain gangs" were gone from the mix of prison labor for about 45 years the were not "disbanded 100 years ago".

It does not bother me one bit to hear of prisoners having to work. Even if it does not reform them.
 
Last edited:
Not true. Chain Gangs were temporarily out of fashion and discontinued in the 1950s. States began re instituting them in 1995. Alabama and Arizona to name a few.
Tennessee too

your little report failed to mention that those chain gang are 100% Voluntary. I think an inmate gets half a day off their sentence for every day on the chain gang. Personally, I love his ways. He has been sued a few times and come up on top every time.
 
Tennessee too

your little report failed to mention that those chain gang are 100% Voluntary. I think an inmate gets half a day off their sentence for every day on the chain gang. Personally, I love his ways. He has been sued a few times and come up on top every time.

Yes, it wasn't a complete report. People could go to the link for more information or go to other sites. There probably will be some bleeding hearts who say the poor prisoners are being "coerced" into participating because they get paid (even though less than minimum wage) or time off their sentence.

I did not do enough research to verify that all chain gangs were voluntary, but I suspect that is the case.

I think that the people in his county agree that he is doing a good job as he has been relected 3 times and counting.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top