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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Terror inmates' mail still goes unread

    Oct. 3, 2006, 4:18 PM
    Terror inmates' mail still goes unread

    By LARA JAKES JORDAN Associated Press Writer
    © 2006 The Associated Press

    WASHINGTON — Mail for convicted terrorists and other dangerous federal inmates isn't being fully read by prison authorities, and that is a risk to national security, a Justice Department review concluded Tuesday.

    The U.S. Bureau of Prisons is supposed to translate and screen all mail to and from the highest-risk inmates _ including terrorists, gang members and spies _ for evidence of criminal activity. But that target was not being met consistently at 10 federal prisons and detention centers surveyed by the Justice Department's inspector general.

    "The threat remains that terrorist and other high-risk inmates can use mail and verbal communications to conduct terrorist or criminal activities while incarcerated," concluded the report by Inspector General Glenn A. Fine. It urged the Bureau of Prisons to correct quickly the security gap, including putting tracking systems in place to ensure all high-risk inmate mail is read and analyzed.

    A Bureau of Prisons spokesman said the agency agrees with the review's recommendations in whole or in part. But it is largely too cash-strapped to afford enough staff to sort through the thousands of letters and other pieces of mail federal prisons receive each week _ what Bureau of Prisons Director Harley G. Lappin described to inspectors as searching for "a needle in a haystack."

    Experts fear that a new generation of homegrown terrorists is being bred in prison and, after release, they will seek guidance from Islamic extremists still behind bars.

    The Justice Department's mail investigation was spurred, in part, after three convicted terrorists at a federal maximum-security prison in Florence, Colo., were found to have written an estimated 90 letters between 2002 and 2004 to Islamic extremists _ some with links to the March 11, 2004, attacks on commuter trains in Madrid. Some of the letters later surfaced in the hands of a terror suspect who used them to recruit suicide operatives.

    The Madrid attacks killed 191 people and wounded more than 1,700.

    Following that discovery, the Bureau of Prisons took steps to limit high-risk inmates' mail and telephone calls, the inspector general found. It also hired more Arabic translators and sought to better analyze mail.

    Limited funding, in the face of a growing inmate population, has hindered those efforts, the inspector general's report concluded. About 10 percent of an estimated 191,000 federal inmates, as of July, are considered high risk. The number of high-risk inmates has grown by 60 percent over the last decade; by contrast, federal prisons' staff increased by 14 percent, from an estimated 30,200 to 34,600.

    Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., called the findings "inexcusable."

    The Bureau of Prisons "continues to be incompetent when it comes to detecting possible terrorist activity in federal prisons," said Schumer, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee that oversees the agency.

    Courts have largely deferred to prison officials seeking to limit inmates' communications or other rights, said David L. Hudson Jr., an attorney with the First Amendment Center in Nashville, Tenn.

    "Unfortunately, they essentially have no First Amendment rights _ or very few," Hudson said.

    The review examined mail monitoring systems at 10 federal prisons and detention centers: in Brooklyn and Manhattan, N.Y., and Sheridan, Ore.; two each in Florence, Colo., and Beaumont, Texas; and three in Allenwood, Pa.

    The maximum-security prison in Florence, for example, houses about 400 of the most dangerous and violent inmates in the federal system. Among them are the 1993 World Trade Center bombers, convicted Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, convicted spy Robert Hanssen, and leaders of violent street gangs.

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/...s/4233578.html
    Breukelen advocaat Reviewed by Breukelen advocaat on . Terror inmates' mail still goes unread Oct. 3, 2006, 4:18 PM Terror inmates' mail still goes unread By LARA JAKES JORDAN Associated Press Writer © 2006 The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Mail for convicted terrorists and other dangerous federal inmates isn't being fully read by prison authorities, and that is a risk to national security, a Justice Department review concluded Tuesday. The U.S. Bureau of Prisons is supposed to translate and screen all mail to and from the highest-risk inmates _ including terrorists, gang Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Terror inmates' mail still goes unread

    well duh no offence but there trying to make more terror not less. Why do you think when we were under attack (9/11) bush didn't get into his protective plaine? why do you think our boarders are still wide open? why do you think they have no reasons for being in iraq? Why do you think bush is passing all sorts of laws agenst us? they can come get you with out a warrent and torture us for no good reason.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Terror inmates' mail still goes unread

    My favorite part,


    Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., called the findings "inexcusable."

    The Bureau of Prisons "continues to be incompetent when it comes to detecting possible terrorist activity in federal prisons," said Schumer, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee that oversees the agency.
    I wonder what he's doing about it the 364 days a year that some reporter isn't writing a story about it ?

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