Reporters get look inside Vienna prison

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VIENNA (AP) – An Illinois prison that had been slammed by a watchdog as overcrowded and squalid was opened to reporters Friday, and the warden said he was confident that previous shortcomings, which he didn’t entirely discount, have been fixed.

The 2-hour tour of the minimum-security Vienna Correctional Center in deep southern Illinois comes just weeks after Gov. Pat Quinn’s office relented on a decision to block journalists from touring the state’s prisons. The visit was tightly controlled: The state’s top prison chief barred cameras of any kind during the walkthrough, insisting that allowing them would be a security issue.

“Quite honestly, some of these people [inmates] don’t want to be on camera,” Tony Godinez, the Illinois Department of Corrections director, told about a dozen reporters before the tour.

Giving the media access to the lockup with 1,670 inmates – about 700 more than Godinez says it was designed to handle – was months in the making, and happened more than a year after the nonprofit John Howard Association issued a report about flooding, vermin, inoperable toilets, mold and more. The group called living conditions at Vienna “deplorable,” following years of complaints about overcrowding and understaffing at the prison.

Chicago’s WBEZ Radio and other media outlets had pressed for months for a tour, but the administration refused to let them in. In August, Quinn publicly declared that “prisons aren’t country clubs. They’re not there to be visited and looked at,” drawing Republican Treasurer Dan Rutherford’s rebuke that the approach was “uncalled for and out of touch.”

On Friday, Godinez insisted “we are a transparent agency” that did the best it could to accommodate reporters while focusing on weighty budget constraints.

“I regret we didn’t represent ourselves better than we did in the past,” Godinez said when peppered by reporters about the administration’s position about media accessibility and prison security. He said reporters have never been impeded visiting prisons to interview specific inmates, though arranging tours can be a trickier matter.

“It makes sense journalists would want to see this,” John Maki, executive director of the Chicago-based John Howard Association, told The Associated Press by telephone before the tour. “I think it’s in the governor’s interest, the public’s interest to fully understand what life is like in our prison system.

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