"Shouldn't we have as a sanction, prison officials in the cells dealing with the same temperatures as the prisoners?" Ellison asked Leah O'Leary, a lawyer with the Texas Attorney General's Office, which represented the state's prison system.
O'Leary disagreed with Ellison's idea and said the state was working to fix the problems.
"You have our attention," said O'Leary, who spoke at the hearing by phone.
"I'm afraid I don't," Ellison replied.
Ellison delayed making a ruling on possible sanctions until he heard from officials, including prison wardens, at a hearing on Tuesday.Further, "Ellison said while the settlement only covers prisoners from the Pack Unit, he believes the Texas prison system should air condition all of its units."
MORE: See Texas Tribune coverage.
UPDATE: The agency has now admitted it violated the settlement agreement. Also, "the prison agency has identified 13,000 inmates in the prison system that are heat vulnerable and it has already put 8,000 of them in air-conditioned beds. The remaining 5,000 will be placed in air-conditioned beds in 12 to 24 months."
3 comments:
It wouldn't disappoint me if the leaders of Texas prisons were sentenced to spend time in their own overheated prisons for contempt of court. they've been deliberately playing games with a federal judge (NEVER a good idea) and got caught.
I wouldn't mind seeing Ken Paxton join the prison officials in their own overheated prisons either. Once the contempt citations are over, they can leave Paxton there for his security fraud issues.
@ 12:10, I agree completely except that if any of the state officials were to serve time, it would most likely not be in a state prison since any sanctions/sentence would come from the federal level.
Cara main togel secara online kali ini akan memandu kamu untuk lebih paham lagi cara pasang jenis bet Colok Bebas Togel klik4d. Bila sebelumnya sudah dijelaskan cara bet 2 angka sampai 4 angka, maka kali ini kamu perlu tahu (Baca Selengkapnya Disini...)
Post a Comment