Inmate transfers from Tamms almost complete

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This April 6 file photo shows the Tamms Correctional Center, which is composed of two sections, a 200-bed minimum security facility and a 500-bed maximum security facility known as the Closed Maximum Security Unit (CMAX). Department of Corrections spokeswoman Stacey Solano said Monday that 124 inmates have been moved from the high-security Tamms prison since Thursday. There are 12 inmates remaining at the state's ìsupermax, and 48 inmates in Tamms' minimum-security unit. All residents also have been moved out of three halfway houses that will be closing. Gov. Pat Quinn ordered the facilities shuttered by Jan. 4, after a judge cleared the way for the closures in a ruling last week. (AP)
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CHICAGO (AP) – Illinois prison officials are moving quickly to empty the high-security Tamms prison – once home to hundreds of inmates called “the worst of the worst” – and other facilities slated to be closed early next month.

Department of Corrections spokeswoman Stacey Solano said Monday that 124 inmates have been moved from Tamms to segregation units at Pontiac Correctional Center since Thursday. As of Monday, 12 inmates remained in Tamms’ single-cell isolation area and 48 others still were housed in the prison’s minimum-security unit.

Former Dixon Correctional Center inmate John Spires was serving two mandatory life sentences in Tamms for taking a DCC psychologist hostage in a storage room in the facility’s X-House and raping her on May 11, 2006.

All residents also have been moved out of three halfway houses targeted for closing, Solano said.

Gov. Pat Quinn ordered the transfers after a judge on Dec. 19 lifted an injunction blocking the shutdowns.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which represents correctional workers, had sued to stop the closings. But the Illinois Supreme Court ordered a judge in Alexander County, where Tamms is located, to lift the injunction.

The facilities are scheduled to be shuttered by Jan. 4.

Tamms, in far southern Illinois, opened in 1998 as the state’s “supermax” prison, where gang leaders and other inmates who caused problems in general population could be housed.

Prisoners were isolated from one another and kept in their cells 23 hours a day – a practice that drew criticism for being too harsh.

Quinn targeted Tamms and six other facilities for closure as a way to save money for the cash-strapped state, saying the space was underutilized. The other facilities were a women’s lockup in Dwight; adult inmate transition centers in Chicago, Carbondale and Decatur and juvenile centers in Murphysboro and Joliet.

The transfers actually started in August, when eight Tamms inmates were moved. But the process was put on hold that same day, after AFSCME filed its lawsuit. The union argued, among other things, that the closings would endanger correctional employees, inmates and the public because the statewide system — with facilities designed for 33,700 inmates — has more than 49,000.

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