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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Prison will get new leadership

Warden, assistant gone on heels of ACLU lawsuit

Rebecca Boone Associated Press

BOISE – The Corrections Corporation of America is replacing the top two officials at Idaho’s only private prison after the American Civil Liberties Union sued over claims of brutal inmate-on-inmate violence, state corrections officials said Wednesday.

Idaho Department of Correction Director Brent Reinke said in a memo to department staffers that the company will name a new warden and assistant warden at the Idaho Correctional Center near Boise.

The announcement comes just days after the ACLU filed a lawsuit asking for class-action status and $155 million in damages, alleging the prison is extremely violent and that guards deliberately expose inmates to beatings from other prisoners as a management tool. It names both the company and the state department.

In the lawsuit filed March 11, the ACLU said the prison was so violent it was known as “gladiator school” among inmates and that guards denied medical care and X-rays to injured prisoners as a way to save money and hide injuries.

Steve Owen, the prison company’s director of public affairs, said former warden Phillip Valdez and former assistant warden Dan Prado both remain employed with the company and would be reassigned.

He said Timothy Wengler, who has been with CCA since 1996 and most recently worked as interim warden at the Prairie Correctional Facility in Appleton, Minn., would serve as interim warden at the Idaho lockup until a permanent warden is named.

Owen said CCA initiated the management change with the support of Idaho officials.

In his memo, Reinke said his department has three monitors in charge of overseeing CCA’s contract to run the Idaho Correctional Center. Under the contract, CCA will recommend a new warden and assistant warden, who will be approved or rejected by the Department of Correction.