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From Gitmo to Montana?

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Ed Quillen | May 23, 2009 06:40 AM

    During the presidential campaign, both Barack Obama and John McCain promised to close the detainee prison at the Marine Corps base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
 
    Obama won, and he's been looking at ways to fulfill his promise. One complication is that there are people in custody who should stay in custody -- where can they be kept if not at Gitmo?
 
    Not many communities have raised their hands and said "We'd like those prisoners," but one has: Hardin, Montana. It has a new state-of-the-art high-security prison that's sitting empty, along with a high unemployment rate and a fading town.
 
    But U.S. Senator Max Baucus doesn't want them in his Montana. Similarly, Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter said it wouldn't bother him if they were housed at the federal "SuperMax" facility in Florence, Colo. However, Ritter may have been the only elected official in Colorado who wasn't up in arms about it, and the story is much the same in other states.
 
    Now, there may be practical reasons, like capacity, not to put them in SuperMax.  But the place already has some of the worst of the worst, like Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols and various of the plotters of the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center.


    It's only 65 miles away from me, one of four federal prisons in Fremont County, Colo., which also has nine state prisons, making about 7,500 inmates altogether.
 
    That's down the river from Salida, where I live. Up the river, about 25 miles away, is another state prison, the Buena Vista Correctional Facility, with about 1,200 inmates.

 
    There are a lot of bad guys locked up around here. But I've never lost a moment's sleep on that account. Prisoners aren't a danger to the community unless they escape, and as Obama pointed out, no one has ever escaped from a SuperMax. So if Hardin is ready, willing, and able to help close Gitmo, why not?

 

 

 

New state-of-the-art high-security prison "EMPTY"
Dusty_Roads
Dusty_Roads
May 27, 2009 10:44 AM
Well Montana, scroll down to your state. Change is on its way!
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/camps.htm
Hardin "prison"
Frank Smith
Frank Smith
Jan 26, 2010 01:50 PM
Hardin didn't have a prison. It had an artifact that is testament to the foolishness and naivety of its town "leaders."

It's industrial development authority and bond holders were ripped off for this prison. The Texan con men who sold it to them made off with millions, in the time-dishonored Rocky Mountain tradition of Soapy Smith.

It couldn't hold Guantanamo detainees. In a pool to guess how long it would have taken to develop a hostage situation, I would have put my money on 28 seconds. It would have been unsuitable for holding all but a minority of the DUI offenders from around SE Montana, short termers whom the windowless warehouse wouldn't have driven nuts.

The term "state of the art" was coined by the grifters who foisted this off on Hardin and was parroted by the AP writer who showed himself incapable of independent thought. The description is non-referent: It has no basis in reality.

HCN should be more aware of a situation like this before it runs an article whose author doesn't understand the salient differences. The Hardin jail was a cheap crackerbox imitation of a real prison.

It is still empty, 32 months after completion. Another jail build by these same scam artists in Pioche, NV, was empty for 11 years before being sold for seven cents on the original inflation adjusted dollar.

Now Hardin is talking about putting a horse slaughterhouse in the same industrial park. They'd have a boom in motel room rentals if they did, with PETA members coming in from around the U.S., converging like the zombies in "Night of the Living Dead."

Plus, it would stink to high heaven, not just metaphorically as does the empty jail.

You can do better. You usually do. Much better.
 

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