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August 20, 2025 at 3:15 am #10487
Kris Marker
KeymasterWe post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
Summer is ending with back-to-school, football, and cooler days upon us. In commemoration of a short summer, I am condensing a surprising amount of news from last week into ‘shorts’.
BOP ‘SHORTS’
Hot Fun in the Summertime: Forty House Democrats signed a letter from Rep Alma Adams (D-NC) last week to Bureau of Prisons Director William K. Marshall III expressing concern over the effects of extreme heat on BOP prisoners.
The letter asked 13 detailed questions about air conditioning in BOP facilities, including about prisons without AC or with broken systems, how many heat-related health incidents (illnesses, strokes, and deaths) have occurred since 2022, and any mitigation strategies used where prisoners and staff are in excessive heat.
The letter seeks a response by September 10, 2025.
Letter to William K. Marshall III (August 11, 2025)
BOP Unions Continue ‘Drug Poisoning’ Drumbeat: It’s been a year since BOP employee Marc Fischer died after coming in contact with purported legal mail to a USP Atwater inmate that was soaked in a liquid “spice” mixture. The death sparked a flurry of hand-wringing over BOP employees in danger that was not even quelled by autopsy results showing Mr. Fischer died of a heart attack, not exposure to any drugs.
The facts have not detained BOP staff unions, who last week issued a press release asking, “Does another staff member have to die before the Federal Bureau of Prisons finally takes the crisis of drugs entering prisons through the mail seriously? It’s now been a year since Marc Fischer—a longtime mailroom supervisor at U.S. Penitentiary Atwater and former Coast Guard member—lost his life after being exposed to contaminated mail, just before his planned retirement. Since then, nothing has changed. Dangerous substances continue to pour into federal prisons weekly, and staff are left to fight this epidemic with outdated technology and little support from the Bureau.”
The press release asserted that in recent incidents, “17 officers at Thomson were hospitalized after exposure to dangerous substances in the mailroom and required Narcan to survive. Days earlier, ten staff members at FCC Victorville suffered exposures over a four-day stretch.”
The BOP was a bit more circumspect: “We can confirm that several employees at the Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Thomson have begun feeling unwell following a possible exposure to an unknown substance. Some employees were transported to a local hospital by emergency medical services (EMS).”
In a separate report, WDTV reported that 5 FCI Hazelton employees were taken to the hospital last Wednesday morning, according to the BOP, after being exposed to drugs. The report said, “Any time fentanyl or carfentanil is found, the officers are being sent to the hospital as a precaution…”
WTTV, Federal Prison Staff Still at Risk as Drugs Continue Flooding Through the Mail (August 13, 2025)
WDTV, Multiple FCI Hazelton employees exposed to carfentanil for 4th time this week (August 11, 2025)
Dublin Scandal Nets More Guilty Pleas: Former BOP correctional officers Jeffrey Wilson and Lawrence Gacad have pled to sexually abusing female inmates at FCI Dublin, formerly a low-security female prison.
Wilson and Gacad were charged last June and entered pleas on August 4. They are the eighth and ninth BOP staffers to have either pled guilty or been convicted involving sexual abuse of Dublin inmates. The BOP has already agreed to a $116 million payout to abused women.
Dept of Justice, Two More FCI Dublin Correctional Officers Plead Guilty To Sexually Abusing Female Inmates (August 7, 2025)
~ Thomas L. Root
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