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September 28, 2007 10:58 AM

Your Tax Dollars Held Captive

(CBS)
Sharyl Attkisson is investigative correspondent for CBS News.
Here's one of the strange things about the $100,000 Congressional earmark for a Prison Museum in Kansas, the subject of my report tonight on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric: the money is for the interior of the museum, presumably for things like display cases. But the museum planning isn't even far enough along for anyone to know how much is needed for the interior. In fact, before anyone can really think about the interior, the town of Lansing, Kansas has to raise about $3 million to build the outside of the museum, and the hard core fundraising hasn't even started.

Some would say giving $100,000 commitment of federal tax dollars to a local museum that may never be more than the current 3-D model... is putting the cart before the horse. What if I told you that the Kansas member of Congress who got the earmark, Nancy Boyda, actually asked for more than ten times that amount for the Prison Museum in her home state? It's true. She put in for $1.18 million tax dollars for the museum. That amount was apparently whittled down by her fellow Democrats.

When I asked Rep. Boyda why she wanted so much money for the Museum, she said it's simply because the Lansing, Kansas Mayor asked. "We get all kinds of requests (for earmarks) and, for the most part, we made the request that we were asked," Boyda told me.

It sure makes her sound generous with our tax dollars... as though all one needs to do is get Nancy Boyda's ear, ask for federal money for a project, and she'll comply.

When I asked Rep. Boyda why federal tax money should pay for a local project that is apparently designed to help the local economy, Boyda gave a big picture answer...

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Tags:
Katie Couric ,
Prison Museum
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Field Notes
September 12, 2007 11:07 AM

My Morning At Supermax

(CBS)
Lawyer Andrew Cohen analyzes legal affairs for CBS News and CBSNews.com.
I spent this 9-11 anniversary in the most unlikely of places—the so-called “Supermax” federal penitentiary complex in Florence, Colorado. I was part of a small group of journalists who were finally allowed by the Bureau of Prisons and the Justice Department to tour for about 100 minutes a few areas of a 640-acre compound that houses approximately 3,200 prisoners, including some of the best known and most notorious of our time.

No, we did not see Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols or the so-called “Shoe Bomber” Richard Reid or the so-called “Unabomber” Theodore Kaczynski or the so-called “20th Hijacker” Zacarious Moussaoui. We did not see any dank underground cells or other evidence that the men in the “Administrative Maximum Security” portion of the prison are simply left to rot in their cells. But we didn’t see a shiny happy place either—it is prison, after all, and it happens to house inmates who for one reason or another were kicked out of their “regular” penitentiaries.

We saw an eerily-quiet, sterile portion of the facility, a place where almost every single inmate was polite, if not particularly talkative, and where federal officials could best show us the vast majority of prisoners at this ADX house aren’t big-named convicts or high-profile terrorists—and that they all have a chance to “rehabilitate” themselves enough to warrant being placed back in a prison population somewhere. We saw what they wanted us to see, and only that, in an environment of control that extended to when we were allowed to sit down inside the “briefing room.”

We saw cement desks and bed frames and stainless steel toilets and sinks. We saw cages—straight out of the circus—where inmates who are going along with the warden’s “program” are allowed to “recreate” outside for about 10 hours a week. We saw that the windows in the cells are only a few inches wide and all look inward toward the other windows of other cells. No one has a view of the beautiful Rocky Mountains which surround the facility in the southern portion of Colorado.

(DAEMMRICH/AFP/Getty)
We were allowed to tour—the first ever formal media visit we were told—to help prison officials “destroy” some of those public “myths” and many others that have cropped up about the prison since the most-sensitive portion of the place opened in 1994. “Today is about education,” said ADX Warden Ron Wiley, who looks like a cross between Texas Rangers’ manager Ron Washington and comedian Eddie Murphy. “Ninety percent of the ADX mission is inmates taken out of other institutions,” he said, and the “20 or 30 inmates” who we would consider high-profile are “not my major mission...”

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Tags:
prison ,
supermax ,
andrew cohen
Topics:
Field Notes

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