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Texas Locks Up Market in Spare Jail Beds : Penology: Lone Star State rents its surplus cells to other states and could even make a profit.

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THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR

You might call them itinerant inmates. Prisoners from North Carolina are serving time in Oklahoma. Colorado has sent some of its inmates to Minnesota. Virginia sent inmates to Texas. Nearly a dozen other states are comparison shopping, looking for the least expensive way to feed, house and clothe inmates in out-of-state lockups.

Welcome to the overcrowded U.S. prison system, where inmates are serving time in whatever state has room for them. And right now, the state with the most vacant beds behind bars is Texas.

A year ago, no one would have expected the Lone Star State to have surplus jail beds. County jails were so crowded that inmates were sleeping on floors, in hallways, and even in tents.

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Today, those same jails have thousands of empty beds and rather than let them stay empty, county sheriffs have become innkeepers. Utah, Missouri, Colorado and Virginia have already sent a total of 1,400 inmates to Texas jails and states will likely ship several thousand more inmates to Texas over the coming months.

For the last few years, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice paid counties to house inmates that it didn’t have room for. But the state recently completed a $1.5-billion building binge that doubled the size of the state’s prison system. As the new prison beds became available, the state took back its prisoners, and jails that used to be packed with inmates were suddenly empty.

Meanwhile, states with too many prisoners and too few beds have been eager to take advantage of the surplus.

“It makes a lot of sense to the taxpayers to keep those spaces utilized,” said Bobby Ross, a private prison contractor who helped arrange the deal that brought prisoners from Virginia and Colorado to Texas.

“It’s a good deal for everyone, including states with an overcrowding problem. They can incarcerate their inmates until they can complete their building programs,” he said.

In June, the Colorado Department of Corrections sent 500 convicted felons to Bowie County, Tex. The inmates will stay there for two years while Colorado adds 3,000 new prison beds. “We had nowhere else to put them,” said Ben Griego, director of offender services for the Colorado prison system.

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The trend toward shipping inmates out of state to serve time is increasing, said Griego, who has been shipping inmates to other states since 1987. “A lot of states are seeing this as a temporary measure they can use,” he said.

Sending inmates to Texas may be cheaper than keeping them in Colorado, Griego said. Bowie County charges Colorado $40 a day per inmate, compared with $55 a day per inmate in Colorado.

Although the program saves the state money, it has been somewhat controversial. Griego said that inmates’ families don’t like having their loved ones sent so far away.

Dallas County may soon have the biggest jail-leasing program in the country. Jim Ewell, a spokesman for the Dallas County Sheriff’s Department, said the county is talking with prison officials from Oregon, Virginia, Tennessee and Washington, D.C. He expects the county to sign a contract over the next few weeks to bring 2,000 out-of-state inmates to Dallas.

Filling the empty beds makes financial sense. Two years ago, Dallas County completed an $80-million, 3,300-bed facility near downtown Dallas.

But the state’s prison construction program has left the new jail with a surfeit of beds. The county has a contract with the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service to house up to 400 inmates. If it can fill all its unused beds, Ewell said, “our staff is projecting that we would make a profit.” He said gross revenues “could be in excess of $15 million a year, and I’ve heard as high as $30 million.”

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“Bed brokers” like Ross handle much of Texas’ business. Ross has fielded calls from 10 states interested in sending inmates to Texas.

In all, he estimates that Texas jails have between 5,000 and 8,000 jail beds available for lease. And he says all of them could be put to use. “This morning we heard from one state that may have to move as many as 8,000 inmates due to a court order.”

“All those beds will be needed,” Ross said. “It’s just a question of when.”

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