Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
dc-3939804Dept. of Justice

11 MAY 25-MAY 27 901_Redacted.pdf

Date
August 22, 2017
Source
Dept. of Justice
Reference
dc-3939804
Pages
186
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Kristen M. Simkins From: Irons, Janet Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 11-29 AM To: Richard C. Smith Cc: Jeffrey T. We Subject: Meeting with Prison Society tomorrow Hello Warden Smith, I'm writing in preparation for our meeting with you and Director Hite tomorrow at 9:30 to talk about the Law Library. We have been in touch with Kim Kelmor, Assistant Director ofthe Law Library at Penn State, who has experience with prison libraries. She has helpfully provided us with some questions and guida

Ask AI about this document

Search 264K+ documents with AI-powered analysis

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Kristen M. Simkins From: Irons, Janet Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 11-29 AM To: Richard C. Smith Cc: Jeffrey T. We Subject: Meeting with Prison Society tomorrow Hello Warden Smith, I'm writing in preparation for our meeting with you and Director Hite tomorrow at 9:30 to talk about the Law Library. We have been in touch with Kim Kelmor, Assistant Director ofthe Law Library at Penn State, who has experience with prison libraries. She has helpfully provided us with some questions and guidance, which we would like to share with you. In addition, there are two other items we would like to discuss, but I don't know ifthere wiil be time. One is that we have a ?nished quilt design, and we wouid like y0ur approval to go forward. The second is that we have gotten some questions from inmates aboutthe PRIDE program, and we wanted to follow up on those. Thank you for being willing to meet with Mark and me. i appreciate it very much, and we look forward to seeing you tomorrow. Janet Janet Irons Co~convener Prison Society Centre County Chapter Box 1294 State College PA 15801 814?574-9052 (cell) Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: C. Kay Woodring Wednesday. May 25, 2016 12:36 PM Bryan L. Sampsel; Denise L. Elbeli: Eileen B. Mckinney, Jeffrey T. Hite; Jonathan D. Grime, Judge; Joseph S. Koleno; Mark Higgins; Melanie L. Gordon; Michael Pipe; Richard C. Smith; Stacy Parks Miller, Steve Dershem daily pop reportdocx daily pop reportdocx (gaunt? ?g ?Centre Melanie Gordon 700 Rishel Hill Road Deputy Warden of Operations Richard C. Smith, CCHP Bellefonte. 16823 Joseph Koieno Warden Telephone {814} 355?6794 Dapunymim 17me Fax (814) 543.1 1 so jef?ey Hit: Director of Treatment DAILY POPULATION REPORT May 25, 2016 HOUSING STATUS Total usable beds: 397 Empty beds: . 80 Occupied beds: 317 TOTAL POPULATION BREAKDOWN Inmates currently housed in the Facility Male: 242 Female: 75 Total: W317 Contracted inmates from other counties Clear?eld: 13 Eik: 2 Fayette: 0 Huntingdon: 26 Juniata ..2 Lycoming: Mif'flin: 1 Montour: 0 Northumberland: 33 Perry: 0 Schuylkill: . 10 Union: 5 Total: TOTALS Total number contracted inmates (County State) 112 Total number of exchange inmates: Total number of out of County warrants: Total number of Centre County inmates: 205 Total Population: 317 FEMALE POPULATEON BREAKDOWN Female inmates housed for other counties Clear?eld: 1 Elk: .0 Fayette: 0 Huntingdon: 16 Juniata .. Lycoming: 3 Perry: 0 Montour: 0 Northumberland: 12 Total: 43 Total Female Population: 75 Total female Centre County inmates: 32 Total female contracted inmates: 43 OUTSIDE VOLUNTEER STATUS BREAKDOWN Total with Outside Clearance: 17 Maie: 12 Female: 5 ASSIGNMENTS County Maintenance: Centre Peace: 6 On Grounds: 3 Work Release: 5 *Cemetery *Garden Project Awaiting Placement: TOTAL NUMBER OF THE SENTENCED POPULATION ON OUTSIDE WORK ASSIGNMENTS 17 ofthe 101 Centre County sentenced inmates, or 16% have outside clearance and assignment and are actually eligible for outside clearance by Approved Policy. *Snow removal workers are not counted as they have other work assignments. CENTRE COUNTY SENTENCED Total: 205 Sentenced to Centre County 101 Unsentenced: .. 95 State Sentence/Pending Transfer: 9 *Post Sent Motions: *On Appeal: *Other: Pending transfers include 2 from Northumberland Co To: Melanie L. Gordon Kristen M. Simkins Subgect: FW: From: Melanie L. Gordon Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:57 PM . . To: Richard C. Smith LT M'H'?der Subject: RE: From: Mark T. Waite Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:44 PM How concerned are we about hitting 40 hours? Give the option of using leave time to meet it? Allow them to go T0: Jonathan M- Millinder unpaid? Use them on shift to get to 40? Let the of?cer choose? Melanie 607%": CCE Let?s say dude comes back on Friday, what happens to the schedules ofthose who volunteer? Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Beliefonte, PA 16823 (814) 35543794 (814) 543-1150 (fax) From: Jonathan M. Millinder Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:50 PM To: Melanie L. Gordon Subject: RE: Waite took the Thursday, Friday off Of?cer 3 option. He was originally offSaturclay, Sunday, Monday. If we put him back on normal he will not have his hours for the week. LT Miliinder From: Melanie L. Gordon Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:49 PM To: Jonathan M. Mi nder Subject: RE: We put them back on their shift to make the most sense in their schedule to get hours for the week Nathalie Gordon, CJIM, Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (314) 355-6794 (814) 548-1150 (fax) From: Jonathan M. Millinder Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:46 PM may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sending party if you believe you received Kristen M. Simkins this transmissron in error. From: Gene Lauri Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 1:09 PM To: Cathy I. Arbogast: Danielle Minarchick; Denise McCann Diane Eileen B. Mckinney; Gene Lauri; Jeannine Lozier Mark S. Smith, Esquire: Rich Kelley Scott A Sayers; Steve Dershem: Tara Peters; Thomas J. McDermott: Thomas J. Young Cc: Michael Pipe; Mark Higgins; Thomas King Kistler, PresidentJudge; Pamela A. Ruest, Judge; Jonathan D. Grins. Jud e: Katherine V. Oliver, Judge; Stacy Parks Miller, Julia A. Sprinkle; Andrea Fisher Richard C. Smith: Karri Hull - Subject: WJAC TV - Your Voice, Your Future Town Hall: "The Heroin Epidemic" Importance: High Good Afternoon Ail: Just an WJAC-TV, channel 6 News, wiil be hosting a live Town Hall Meeting this evening from 7:00 to 8:00 PM. The live event is titled Your Voice, Your Future Town Hall: "The Heroin Epidemic". Heroin has become the drug of choice. It's more accessible, stronger, and cheaper than ever. Drug users cross all boundaries: race, religion, and socioeconomic lines. Families and governments are dealing with the resuits. Live audiences in Washington DC, West Paim Beach Florida, and Johnstown and a panel of experts and will take part in this live discussion about the "Heroin Epidemic". The panelists are listed below. .Jim Pyles from Maryland Department of Health Mental Hygiene Dan Morhaim (D) Maryland Delegate Health Government Committee Mark Herring, Virginia Attorney General Dr. Robert DuPont, Founding President of institute for Behavior Health, Former White House Drug Chief Former Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse lsrael Cason, President Founder of "l Can't We Can" Counseling Center ene Gene Lauri. M.S. Director Criminai Justice Planning Department Centre County Correctiona! Facility 700 Rishel Hi1! Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 Tel: 814-355-6794, menu option 6 FAX: 814-548-1150 Email:? The information contained in this electronic transmission may inciude con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for use by the individual[s] to which it is addressed, if you are not the intended recipient. you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure, copying. fomarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and 1 2 Kristen M. Simkins From: Wilmer Andrews Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 1:14 PM To: Richard C. Smith Subject RE: Megan's Law/Walsh Act Thank you! Wilmer (Andy) Andrews Central Booking Coordinator 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte, PA 16813 814-548-1184 814548?1178 Emu-? The informatlon contained in or attached to this electronic transmission may Include con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for use by the individual?] to whom it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified any disciosure, copying, forwarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sending party if you believe you received this transmission in error. From: Richard C. Smith Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:40 PM To: Wilmer Andrews Cc: C. Kay Woodring Subject: FW: Megan's Law/Walsh Act Andy, As we discussed. Warden Smith helm-dd. ?nal, as will?, Wm Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Beliefonte, PA 16823 fax Cc: Subject: FW: Megan's Law/Walsh Act This is the third attempt related to Megan?s Law/ Walsh ActAudit which is mandatory. If this is not completed I would have your department placed uncompliant status. Complete the attached form and return. Thank You SENIOR SPECIAL AGENT OFFICE OF ATTORNEY GENERAL Commonwealth of BUREAU OF SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS REGULATORY COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT UNIT 106 Low?ncr Street Lemoyne, PA 17043 MAIN TEL: 717-712-2020 DESK Tel: 717-712-2031 Fax: 717-712-1249 From: soda, David maili- Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2 To: Richard C. Smith From: Seda, David Sent: Friday, May 06, 2016 1:48 PM To: 'rcsmith@centrecountypa.gov? Cc: 'rsmith@centrecountypa.gov? Subject: Megan's Law/Walsh Act Warden Richard C. Smith, I trust this communication finds you and yours in good health and spirits. My names is David Seda, I am employed as a criminal investigative Special Agent assigned to the Regulatory Compliance Unit of the Ojj?ice of Attorney General. I can be reached at Ph. 717-712-2020. My email address is: The O?ice of Attorney General is mandated bylaw to perform audits associated with particular changes in Title 42, Subsection H, {Megan's Law registration and notification requirements). These changes went into effect in December of 2012. The County Prison has speci?c duties under Title 42, and a responsibility to respond accordingly. Your agency, along with all responsible agencies throughout the state will be audited accordingly. Some of the agencies are 2 personally visited by criminal investigative agents of the others are required to respond via email. Your agency was selected to respond by email. This audit is designed to analyze all responsible to ensure compliance and assist agencies with compliance where an agency is lacking the required response. Your agency's response to this audit is mandatory. i appreciate your immediate attention and i thank you in advance for you attention to this audit and timely response. Please complete the attachment questions and return. Please contact me if you have any questions SENIOR SPECIAL AGENT OFFICE OF ATTORNEY GENERAL Commonwealth of BUREAU OF SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS REGULATORY COMPLIANCE UNIT 106 Lowther Street Lemoyne, PA 17043 MAIN 717?712-2020 DFSK Tel: 717-712?2031 Fax: 717-712-1249 Email: The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to whom it is addressed and may contain con?dential and/or privileged material. Any use of this information other than by the intended recipient is prohibited. Ifyou receive this message in error, please send a reply e?mail to the sender and delete the material from any and all computers. Unintended transmissions shall not constitute waiver of any applicable attorney- client or any other applicable privilege. PA-OAG Kristen M. Simkins From: Joseph S. Koleno Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 1:26 PM To: Richard C. Smith: Melanie L. Gordo n; Jeffrey T. Hite Subject: FBoot Repair Attachments: BOOT REPAER AS OF FEB 16.cfocx All: I would like to discuss getting the boots sent to Huntingdon to get re-soled. Once we get the hospital coverage completed we can arrange for a date to have someone take them to Huntingdon. The question is do we send an Of?cer, someone from Maintenance, or other staff so I thought I would give you time to ponder that before our discussion. The attached iist is from February and would be a good starting point as we will need to keep enough in circulation. Money is set aside in the budget so that can continue re-soling them next year. Joseph Koieno Deputy Warden of Administration Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd. Bellefonte, PA 16823 Internal extension: 2046 Phone: 814-355n6794 Fax: 814-5484 151 This e-mail is con?dential and may contain legally privileged information. This message is intended for the recipient and is not to be duplicated or reproduced without written consent from the sender. If you are not the intended recipient, it may be unlawful for you to read, copy, distribute, disclose, or otherwise make use of the information herein. If you have received this e?mail in error, please contact the sender immediately. BOOT REPAIR AS OF: 02/01/2016 SIZE NEEDED SIZE Total Re-sole: 134 Total Re-stitching: 12 Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: ereishaw. Thomas Wednesday, May 25, 2016 1:55 PM Adams Co Warden Brian Ciark; Allegheny Co Warden Orlando Harper; Co Warden Phillip Shaffer; Beaver Co Warden [William Schouppe; Bedford Co Warden Troy Nelson; Berks Co Warden [Janine Quigiey; Blair Co Warden Michael Johnston; Bradford Co Warden Don Stewart; Bucks Co Dep Director/ Christopher Pirol Bucks Co Director William Plantier; Bucks Co Warden Terrance Moore; Butler Co Warden Joseph DeMore; Cambria Co Warden Christian Smith: Carbon Co Warden [Timothy Fritz: Richard C. Smith; Chester Co Warden D. Edward McFadden; Clarion Co Warden Jeff Hornberger; Clear?eld Co Warden Gregory Coilins; Clinton Co Warden [John Rowley; Columbia Co (A) Warden David Varano; Crawford Co (A) Warden Kenneth Saulsbery; Cumberland Co Warden Earl Reitz, Jr.; Dauphin Co Warden Dominick DeRose; Delaware Co Warden David Byrne; Elk Co Warden Greg Gebauer; En'e Co Warden Kevin Sutter; Fayette Co Warden Brian Miller; Franklin Co Warden Bill Bechtold; Greene Co Warden Harry 'spie; Huntingdon Co Warden/ Duane Black; Indiana Co Warden Samuei Buzzinotti; Jefferson Co Warden [Thomas Elbel; Lackawanna Co Warden Robert McMillan; Lancaster Co Warden Cheryl Steberger, Lawrence Co Warden Brian Covert, Lebanon Co Warden Robert Karnes: Lehigh Co Cindy Egizio; Lehigh Co Director/ Edward Sweeney Lehigh Co Warden [Janine Donate; Luzerne Co (Interim) Warden [James Larson; Lycoming Co Warden Kevin DeParEos; McKean Co Sheriff Warden Danie! Woods; Mercer Co Warden Erna Craig; Mifflin Co Warden Bernie Zook; Monroe Co Warden Garry Haidle; Montgomery Co Warden Julio Algarin; Montour Co Warden Gerald Cutchall; Northampton Co Director/ Daniel Keen: Kovach, Bruce: Perry Co Business Manager/ Karen Barclay, Phila ASD Warden Juanita Goodman; Phila CFCF Warden Gerald May; Phila DC at PICC Warden [John Delaney, Phila Dep Warden Pierre Lacombe Phila HOC Warden William Lawton; Phila RCF Warden Michele Farrell; Pike Co Warden Craig Lowe; Potter Co Dep Warden Angela Milford; Potter Co Sheriff Warden Glenn C. Drake; Schuylkill Co Warden Gene Berdanier, Snyder Co Warden Shawn Cooper; Somerset Co Warden Gregory Briggs; Susquehanna Co Warden Mark Shelp :Tioga Co Warden Terry Browning; Union Co Warden Douglas Shaffer; Venango Co Warden [Jeffrey Rud' Warren Co Sheriff Warden Kenneth Klakamp; Washington Co Warden [John Temas; Wayne Co Warden Kevin Bishop; Westmoreland Co Warden [John Walton; Wyoming Co Warden Ken Repsher: York Co Warden Mary Sabol; Adams Co Dep Warden Dzung Luong; Adams Co Dep Warden Michael Giglio; Adams Co Director of Tx/ Robert Stevens; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Latoya Warren; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Monica Long; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Simon Wainwright; Co Dep Warden Matt Roofner; Beaver Co Dep Warden Carol Steele?Smith: Bedford Co Dep Warden [Jason Moore; Bedford Co Dep Warden Rocky Bernazzoli; Berks Co Dep Warden [Jeffrey Smith; Berks Co Dep Warden Kyle Russell; Berks Co Dep Warden Stephanie Smith; Blair Co Dep Warden Marc Masucci; Bradford Co Dep Warden Peter Quattrini; Bucks Co Adm Asst Sue Ott; Bucks Co Asst Warden Lillian Budd; Bucks Co Superintendent Kevin Rousset; Bucks Co Dep Warden Clifton Mitchell; Butler Co Dep Warden Beau Sneddon; Butler Co Dep Warden [Jennifer Passarelli; Ca mbria Co Dep Warden Craig Descavish; Cambria Co Dep Warden [William Patterson; Carbon Co Dep Warden Ryan Long;Jeffrey T. Hire; Joseph S. Koleno; Melanie L. Gordon; Chester Co Dep Warden Ronald Phillips; Chester Co Dep Warden Walter Reed; Clarion Co Dep Warden Ronald Owens; Clear?eld Co Admin Asst Sherry Bell; Clearfield Co Dep Warden Stephen Smith; Clear?eld Co Dep Warden [Zachary Murone; Clinton Co Dep Warden [Angela Hoover; Clinton Co Dep Warden Susan Watt: Columbia Co Dep 1 To: Warden Doug Meyer; Cumberland Co Dep Warden [Janet Kreider Scott: Cumberland Co Dep Warden [Jeffrey Iigenfritz; Cumberland Co Dep Warden Michael Carey; Dauphin Co Dep Warden Elizabeth Nichols; Dauphin Co Dep Warden Leonard Carroll; Delaware Co Dep Warden Henry Sladek; Delaware Co Dep Warden [James Mattera; Delaware Co Dep Warden Mario Colucci; Elk Co Dep Warden Edward Warmbrodt; Erie Co Dep Warden David Sanner, Erie Co Dep Warden Gary Seymour, Erie Co Dep Warden Michael Holman; Erie Co Dep Warden Ronald Bryant Fayette Co Dep Warden Barry Croftcheck; Fayette Co Dep Warden Michael Zavada; Franklin Co Dep Warden [James Sullen; Franklin Co Dep Warden Michelle Weller; Greene Co Dep Warden Michael Kraus; Huntingdon Co Dep Warden Bradley Glover; Indiana Co Dep Warden Lesley Simmons; Indiana Co Dep Warden Lori Hamilton: Jefferson Co Dep Warden Dustin Myers; Lackawanna Co Dep Warden David Langan; Lancaster Co Dep Warden Alexander Croci; Lancaster Co Dep Warden [Joseph Shiffer: Lancaster Co Dir of Adm Tammy Moyer, Lawrence Co Dep Warden [Jason Hilton; Lebanon Co Dep Warden Anthony Hauck; Lebanon Co Dep Warden [Timothy Clements; Lehigh Co Director/ Laura Kuykendall; Lehigh Co Dep Warden Carol Sommers; Lehigh Co Dep Warden Robert McFadden; Lycoming Co Dep Warden Brad Shoemaker, Lycoming Co Dep Warden Christopher Ebner, McKean Co Asst Warden Dave Stahlman; McKean Co Asst Warden Rick Austin; Mercer Co Dep Warden Joe Reichard; Mercer Co Dep Warden Mac McDuf?e; Miffiin Co Dep Warden [James Crisswell; Monroe Co Dep Warden [Joseph McCoy; Monroe Co Dep Warden Philip Diliberto; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Mark Murray; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Martha D'Orazio; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Sean McGee; Montour Co Lt. Scott Davis; Northampton Co Dep Warden [David Penchishen; Northampton Co Dep Warden James Kostura; Wheary, Brian; Smink, James; Perry Co Dep Warden [Thomas Long; Phila ASD Dep Warden Cathy Talmadge; Phila ASD Dep Warden [James McCants; Phiia CFCF Dep Warden (CMR) Christopher Thomas; Phiia CFCF Dep Warden Frederick Abello; Phila CFCF Dep Warden [Joseph Slocum; Phila CFCF Dep Warden Rodica Craescu; Phila DC 8L PICC Dep Warden Eugene Thompson; Phila DC Dep Warden Adrian Christmas; Phila HOC Dep Warden Edward Miranda; Phila HOC Dep Warden Marvin Porter: Phila PBLA Director Dep Warden Patricia Powers; Phila Sgt/ Alessia Smith?Israel; Phila Sgt. Dorthea Hackney; Phila PICC Dep Warden Claudette Martin; Phila PICC Dep Warden [William Vetter; Phila RCF Dep Warden Marceiia Moore; Phila RCF Dep Warden Sharon Hatcher; Pike Co Asst Warden Jonathan Romance; Pike Co Asst Warden Robert McLaughlin; Schuylkiil Co Dep Warden David Wapinsky; Snyder Co Dep Warden Adam Wagner; Somerset Co Dep Warden Adele Bauer, Susquehanna Co Dep Warden [Joshua Weller; Tioga Co Dep Warden Mike Reid; Union Co Lt. [Jamie Cutchall; Venango Co Chief Dep Warden Kelly McKenzie; Venango Co Lt [James McCall; Warren Co Dep Warden [Jon Collins; Washington Co Dep Warden Donald Waugh; Washington Co Dep Warden Edward Strawn; Washington Co Major/ Christopher Cain; Wayne Co Dep Warden [John Masco; Westmoreland Co Dep Warden Eric Schwartz, Westrnoreland Co Dep Warden Steven Cmar, Wyoming Co Dep Warden Gordon Traveny; York Co Dep Warden Clair Doll; York Co Dep Warden [John Steiner; York Co Dep Warden Michael Buono Subject: FW: DOC NEWS Attachments: County Colleagues, Please ?nd the attached recent news posts provided by the Department?s Press Of?ce. Raga rd 5, Tom Thomas E. Greishaw Director PA Department of Corrections Of?ce of County Inspections and Services 1920 Technoiogy Parkway 1 Mechanicsburg PA 17050 Phone: 717.728.4057 1 Fax: 717.728.4180 From: Worden, Amy Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 10:48 AM To: Greishaw, Thomas <tgreishaw@pa.gov> Subject: DOC NEWS Mentions Corrections Secretary Weizel The Washington Post (05/25/201 6) Dept. of Corrections to discard terms offender and felon in describing ex? prisoners ton /2016/05/25/ enns Ivania-de t-of? -ex? tw The discussion started on the i'rue Crime biog eariier this month, when Assistant Attorney General Karol Mason announced that the Justice Department?s Of?ce of Justice Programs would no longer use terms such as ?felon" or ?offender" when discussing those who had served jail or prison time and been released. Some thought that was political correctness run amok. Now the head of the Department of Corrections in Secretary John E. Wetzel, is moving toward a similar policy for his entire statewide agency. He participated in a Washington Post Live panel earlier this year titled, ?Out of Jail, into Society," in which he said, ?i think it?s critical that we set these individuals up for success." Here he biames himself for making that transition more dif?cult, in an essay he titled ?1 Am an Offender." By John E. Wetzel Words count. . . l?ve offended friends, family. co-workers, colleagues and even thousands of peopie I?ve never met. it happens embarrassingly often. Fortunately I?m not de?ned by my worst day or even by one of my ?off days.? Nope, not me. I?m de?ned by the sum of my days and my title Secretary of Corrections. It?s high time that I extend this courtesy to others, which is why I?m embracing ?people first? language for everyone including those who committed a crime. Surely, the language we use more accurately defines us than it does those we seek to describe and I need to be better. Retraining from referring to those who have committed a crime as offenders, i do not excuse their behavior or minimize the impact they?ve had on those they've offended, nor do disrespect victims, by respecting those who have victimized. Rather, i acknowledge the humanity of incarcerated individuals despite their damaging behavior, and, as importantly, acknowiedge their capacity to change. After ail, we, all of us, are invested in the future success of those who have committed crimes. We call our system the ?corrections system," and surely respect for humanity is an essential element ofthat. So if we?re really going to embrace rehabilitation, then we can?t send re-entrants back home wearing a label that dehumanizes them such as ?offender? or ?felon? or ?ex- con." They (and we) already know why they?re in our system. We add nothing by placing a label on a person?s chest that says, ?Hello, l?m an other than making an already daunting task next to impossible. Frankly, negative labels work against the expectation of success and are inconsistent with what we?re trying to achieve in our corrections policy: less crime and fewer victims. Assisting those who have committed a crime with walking a path of restoration furthers that goal. it makes us safer and makes us better. Think about it. One of the de?nitions of the word ?offend,? means ?to cause pain.? While acknowledging that those who have committed a crime have caused pain, mustn?t we also acknowledge the path to less communal pain is the transformation of these same individuals? If iabeis don't further THAT goal, then we have no business using them. Because words count They count when we say ?You?re a failure" or ?i love you? or ?You are smart? or ?You are worthless." They also count when we say ?i respect your humanity, and i believe in your capacity to change.? Proper word choice leads to proper practice, which leads to better outcomes, less crime, and a better us. When we create an inspirational narrative, that also has a positive effect. So i won?t keep using words that impede our goals. i know that words have the powerto create significant change. The impact from words can be painful and damaging or positive and elevating. As for me, I will be less of an offender. i will be cognizant of my word choices and the subsequent impact that they have. If! must choose a word to describe these individuals, I choose ?reentrant,? a term that will be adopted in our system. I was ?rst challenged to think about this by my coileague, Doug Burris, the Chief U.S. Probation Of?cer, who spoke about the term "offender? and how it's inconsistent with expecting success. More recently, Nancy La Vigne from the Urban lnstitute?s Justice Policy Center and the Colson Task Force, asked me to read and consider what she wrote about using ?People First" language. Last, W. Roseberry, oi the Clemency Project 2014 and the Colson Task Force, challenged me to understand that the path to redemption really starts with valuing an individual?s humanity and validating their hope for a second chance and only then can we achieve our goal to lower recidivism. At the end of the day, everything they said is consistent with the direction we?re headed. Absent a value shift, corrections reform wiil always come up short. i want my marker my legacy to meet football coach Herman Edwards's imperative, that ?our words and our life match.? A truism is that once a word is said, it can?t be taken back, much like the effect wine has after being spilled on a white shirt, a stain that We all have a choice to make. Me? Hi choose to eievate. in the words of TS. Eliot, ?Between the idea and the reality falls the shadow.? Let's all walk out of this shadow together. Newswo (05123/2016) hoping halfway house is recipe for helping parolees By Anne Hoffman About 9 percent of prisoners in have a severe mental illness. And for more than a year, the state Department of Corrections has been under a mandate to offer better options to inmates needing mental health care. Now, a new, Department of Corrections-ted program called Pathways Transitional Wellness Center is trying to help former prisoners transition back to life on the outside. Open since October, it's the ?rst program of its kind in the state, and part of an intentional change following scrutiny the department has faced over its treatment of mentally ill inmates. One participant, Jeremy Gordon has persistent depression, also known as For a tong time, he self?medicated with opiates. Eventually, a theft landed him in prison. Instead of going right back into the community after his time was up, Gordon went to live at the Pathways Transitional Wellness Center in bucolic Wernersville. it's a halfway house run by the Department of Corrections not far from Reading. Staffed by and social workers, the goal is to help mentally parolees make a soft landing back in the communityw? through employment help, medical assistance and housing aid. ?it's nice to have somebody else there to at least tell you what your options are, and help you along the way," Gordon said. At 8 am. most days, there's a support group and some time in the computer lab, then a peer support group around 11 am. After lunch, residents get a few hours to leave the facility and go to work at a part-time job. "Having that structure makes it a lot easier for myself to stay sober, and stay clean, even having the depression," he said. That kind of staggered transition to re-entry will ultimately lead to better outcomes, says Secretary of Corrections John Wetzel. "If we're deliberate about the conditions under which they get out, that's our best likelihood for them, being successful, staying in the community and not committing other crimes," Wetzel said. Once Jeremy Gordon gets out, he?d like to become an addictions counselor? a process he?s already started at the facility. "l've gone through a lot of things, you know, personally and through the addiction, and I'd like to help some other people," Gordon said. Secretary Wetzel says he'd like to eventually replicate the program in the rest of the state. State 8: Countv Corrections State Pittsburgh Post?Gazette (05123/2016) ned-to? rotectwres ect?trans New prison policies designed to respect transgender inmates By Michael Fuoco Superintendent Robert Gilmore and other top staff at the state prison in Waynesburg formally known as State Correctional institution at Greene passed around a bag and blindly pulled out a pin reading either ?Team Blue," ?Team Pink? or ?Team Both." Jezebel Bebbington D?Opulence had asked them to do so as part of an exercise, explaining that regardless of the gender they had been assigned at birth to imagine they identi?ed with the gender the pins represented, even if it differed from their reality. ?Imagine you are still you but your gender is this,? Ms. D?Opulence, a transgender woman, said to those who chose pins signifying a gender that differed from the one they identify with. ?Imagine you have absolutely no choice in the matter. That?s pretty much how transgender people feel.? Point taken, the staff indicated with nodding heads and knowing looks. For the next 90 minutes Ms. D'Opuience told her story of transitioning from male to female. And then she ?elded questions from the staff about how they could better show dignity and respect to transgender prisoners in their custody and control. ?They were very curious," she recalled later. hey don?t want to commit mistakes. They said, ?We want to treat everyone with the utmost respect.? didn?t go there because I wanted to tell my story again, but because if it heips one person sitting in a ceil receive help and compassion, then it was worth it.? Ms. D'Opulence?s experience at SCI Greene is but one exampie of an effort by the Department of Corrections to use community resources to educate staff at all of its state about transgender issues. The initiative is part of broader changes in a series of policy updates that has brought the corrections department into compliance with the ?nal regulations issued in May 2012 by the US. Department of Justice to implement the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003. PREA was unanimously passed by Congress to comprehensively address prison operations as they relate to preventing, protecting and responding to sexuai abuse, for which transgender people are dramatically more at risk than other prisoners. A Bureau of Justice Statistics survey in 2011-12 found that 39.9 percent of transgender prison inmates reported unwanted sexual activity with other inmates or staff members ?1 0 times higher than for the general prison population. Last year, to comply with PREA, the state corrections department established a new individual assessment policy to determine the best place to house each transgender inmate. Under the policy, ?serious consideration" must be given to a transgender or intersex inmate?s concerns about safety. Among other policy changes were the rescinding of a prohibition of sex?reassignment surgery; creation of new commissary lists that permit transgender prisoners to buy genderwappropriate underwear and makeup; and the opportunity to shower alone, if desired. While appiauding the changes here and in local jails and state prisons nationally, transgender advocates say real change will only occur when transgender prisoners are housed in facilities that correspond with the gender they identify with. At present, houses 111 transgender women and ?ve transgender men in its prisons. All but one are housed in facilities that match the gender they were assigned at birth but to which they do not identify. Shirtey Moore Smeal, executive deputy secretary of the Department of Corrections, said in an interview that those housing decisions were made by using the new PREA-required screening policy in which each prison has a gender review committee to ascertain risk as determined by both staff and the inmate. That input ?is reviewed by multidisciplinary teams about where the best housing would be for the individual as weil as the best educational and employment opportunities," she said. Moreover, she noted that her department has consulted with Physician General Rachel Levine, the highest?ranking openly transgender person in state government history. ?She gave presentations to the secretary, the executive staff as well as all of the superintendents of the so that there would be a better understanding of transgender issues," Ms. Smeal said. "We?ve also consulted with other experts in the ?eid to write policies that address different issues and the executive staff is making videos for staff education." From a national perspective, Harper Jean Tobin, policy director for the National Center for Transgender Equality, said that while some progress has occurred because of implementation four years ago, think we had hoped for a lot more progress by now." She said that while most state prison systems may be following the letter of PREA ruies when it comes to placement of transgender inmates, many are not following the spirit. ?Overwhelmingly, across the country what is actually happening is it's very, very rare that transgender people are incarcerated in a manner consistent with their gender identity," Ms. Tobin said. "That suggests a tot of non-compliance. It also suggests a lot of danger. ?Justice Department guidance is that if you are making the same decision 99 or 100 percent of the time, you are not making meaningful case-by-case decisions.? She suggested that the prisons adopt the same policies as those used by pubtic schools, homeless shelters, health care facilities and domestic violence shelters among other institutions in which gender self-identi?cation is the guiding force. ?All of those institutions moved much more swiftly in treating people by the gender they identify as a rule," she said. Correction facilities have a great deal more discretion in how they treat transgender people, but it does not appear they are making good use of that discretion." Ms. Smeal noted that her corrections department is committed to adopting best practices. "The whole approach of the Corrections Department is to humanize the department and recognize everyone as individuals, providing for the needs of each, not only to enhance institutionai safety but pubiic safety," she said. Ms. Tobin said she is hopes that more prison reform will occur given the attention being given by the Justice Department and the courts, the greater amount of research about transgender people, the higher public visibility of transgender peopie and the increased attention society is now paying to their issues. "All of those trends, 1 hope, will bring about more progress and more understanding that transgender people need to be protected," she said. ?And part of protecting them is treating them according to gender identity, which should be the rule rather than the exception it is now." PennLive (05/23/2016) who raped teen during homehtml Man who raped teen during home invasion deserved his 25-50~year sentence, PA Court says By Matt Miller A man who went on the lam for 15 years after raping a teenage girl during a home invasion deserved the 25- to 50-year prison sentence he received for the crime, a state appeals court panel ruled. Jose Elia Diaz could just as easily be dead, since the victim tried to shoot him. Diaz, now 54, claimed in his appeal to the Superior Court that his sentence for the April 1997 rape in Allentown was excessive. The court rejected that argument in a recent opinion by Senior Judge Patricia H. Jenkins. Police said Diaz was wearing a mask and had a knife when he crept into the home of the 15-yearmold victim. He bound and gagged the teen and another woman who was in the house, then raped the teen twice. A friend of the girl entered the bedroom where the attacks occurred, saw the teen bound and gagged, saw and recognized Diaz, then ran away screaming. As Diaz chased and grabbed her friend, the 15-year-old broke free of her restraints, grabbed a gun from a drawer in the room and pointed it at Diaz. The teen ordered Diaz to release her friend, and when he did she tried to shoot him but the pistol?s safety was on, investigators said. She then started throwing things at Diaz, including vases and perfume bottles, until he fled, Jenkins wrote. Diaz wasn't apprehended until 2011. A year later, he pleaded guilty in Lehigh County Court to charges of rape, burglary and aggravated assault and received his state prison sentence. On appeal, Diaz claimed the county judge wrongly sentenced him based solely on the severity of his crime without considering other mitigating factors. Jenkins disagreed, ?nding that the county judge fashioned a punishment that "was consistent with the protection of the public (and) took into account the gravity of the offense as it related to the impact on the life of the victim and on the community." Allentown Morning Call (05/24/2016) corrections center i a.html State closing Allentown corrections center, making way for Tower 6 By Sarah Cassi After 30 years in Downtown Allentown, the state Department of Corrections announced Tuesday it is closing its Community Corrections Center later this summer. The center at 608?610 Hamilton St. houses about 90 residents and employs 16 people. The lease on the location expires in July, and of?cials said they anticipate the center will be completely ciosed by Aug. 31. The move paves the way for City Center's planned Tower 6 of?ce building at Sixth and Hamilton streets. The 12-story, building, located in the Neighborhood Improvement Zone, is projected to open in early 2018. "Over the next several months, we will focus our efforts on closing the center. During this time, the department will work cooperatively with the respective unions, and employees will be offered jobs elsewhere in the system. Residents will be transitioned to their new locations," Corrections Secretary John Wetzel said in a news release. A majority of center's residents will be transferred to the Lehigh County Jail's work release facility, while some may be transferred to other state centers, such as Scranton or Wernersville in Berks County. Lehigh County Director of Corrections Ed Sweeney said the county will only house state parolees who were originally sentenced by Lehigh or Northampton county courts, and who are returning to the Lehigh Valley after serving state prison terms. Daily American/Somerset (0512412016) Prison guard charged with planting drugs in vehicle By Judy Ellich A suspended state prison guard who is accused of smuggiing narcotics to inmates was arrested and charged Saturday with planting drugs in another man's vehicle in Bedford County. State police said Christian DeWitt, 40, Cedar Lane, Bedford, is dating Stephen Shaffer?s ex?wife. He allegedly placed the drugs in Shaffer?s car while it was parked along Briar Valley Road in Redford Township in March. On March 14, Mariene Shaffer, 32, told state police that her ex?husband was following her in violation of a protection from abuse order. The following day, police went to Stephen Shaffer?s home for a report of roo?ng nails in his driveway. On March 15, Marlene Shaffer told police that she wanted a trooper to smell her daughter?s clothing because she believed it smelled like marijuana. Her ex?husband did not know of this report, according to police. Three days later, Stephen Shaffertold police he found drugs in his vehicle on his way to work. He said he found Suboxone tablets in his console and a marijuana smoking bowl under the driver?s seat. State police told him to bring the vehicle to the police station in Bedford. Shaffer told police he believed the drugs were planted in his vehicle between March 14 and March 18. He said he does not do drugs. Police said that the drugs were placed in a manner consistent with being ?planted to frame someone." Of?cers found a glass smoking pipe with suspected marijuana residue under the front driver?s seat and a Crown Royal bag containing a digital scale, 13 plastic packets containing a white substance and two packets of suspected marijuana under a child?s car seat. The Suboxone tablets had already been removed from the console by Shaffer, according to a probable-cause affidavit. On Wednesday police spoke with an informant from the state prison case. The informant told police that Dewitt stopped at her residence a few months ago and talked about an argument he was having with Marlene Shaffer. "She advised that while he was venting about her, he made the statement that ?he had even planted drugs in Steve's car for her,? Trooper Matthew Bonin wrote in the af?davit. The informant said DeWitt told her that he traveied to Philadelphia with Mariene Shaffer to pick up the drugs and that he could "get $300 for every Suboxone strip he gets into the jail,? according to the af?davit. No charges have been ?led against Marlene Shaffer. DeWitt is free on a $50,000 bond. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for 9 am. Wednesday in Everett. DeWitt was charged May 17 with conspiring to deliver drugs to inmates at the State Correctional Institution at Somerset. A preliminary hearing in that case is scheduied for 2 pm. June 28 before District Judge Ken Johnson in Somerset. He has hired defense attorney Thomas Dickey of Altoona, according to court of?cials (Subscription required) County Lehighton Times News (5/19/2016) l19/carbon?count acit Carbon County just over capacity By Amy Miller Warden Timothy Fritz said that the inmate population at the Carbon County Correctional Facility as of Wednesday was 231. ?The numbers have come down a little over the last few weeks,? he said. A few weeks ago, thejail was averaging 240 inmates in the 223-bed facility. ?Hopefully we can get underthat 223 mark shortly," Fritz said. Fritz said that laws allow the prisons to provide temporary beds to inmates for up to 30 days. He said that they have been shifting inmates around in certain blocks to alleviate some overcrowding in some areas. Fritz asked the prison board for a letter of support for a grant to start the re?entry program at the prison. Sheriff Tony Harvilla said the re-entry coalition has been working on the county re?entry strategic plan since last September. Pinebrook Famiiy Answers has offered to write for a grant that the Commission on Crime and Delinquency announced recently. Lehighton Times News (5/19/2016) Schuylkill judge pushes for pre-release center: Jail continues to be over the state capacity By Chris Parker With a projected cost of up to $2 million to house inmates out of the county to comply with a state cap on the prison population, Schuylkill County President Judge William E. Baldwin on Wednesday underscored the need for a pre?reiease center. ?Until we get another facility of our own, the county is going to be paying to keep maybe 80 people in other prisons, maybe more than that, on an ongoing basis. That?s going to be $1.5 or maybe $2 miltion dollars a year, not counting transportation costs," he said. ?We made this case before. think it's evident now: We need to have another facility, a pre?release center where we can move people out of prison and into an area where we can supervise them, and they can start to assimilate back into the community after we give counseling and treatment,? Baldwin said at a county prison board meeting. The state Department of Corrections on May 4 ordered the county to stop jailing people whose sentences are a maximum of six months to five years until it attains an average daily population of 277 or fewer. Almost every defendant on whom a jail sentence is imposed serves a maximum of six months, Baldwin noted. As of Wednesday morning, the population stood at 298, said Warden Eugene Berdanier. Thirty-two inmates, 22 men and 10 women, were being housed in jails in Delaware and Centre counties, respectively. Housing inmates in other counties costs $60 a day each, not including transportation. Prison board chairman and Commissioners? Chairman George F. Halcovage Jr. said the county is negotiating with Columbia and Berks counties to house the Schuylkill inmate over?ow. Despite the diversion, 49 inmates were triple-celled as of Wednesday morning. Berdanier said of?cials were screening inmates to determine which ones could be sent to otherjails. The county is doing what it can to comply with-the state order, Baldwin said. Wednesday was plea court, and about 29 defendants who will be sentenced will be given medical screenings, then ordered to report to jail on June 15. But they will not enter the old stone jali on Sanderson Street in Pottsville, across the street from the county courthouse. Instead, when they report forjait, they?ll be loaded onto the sheriff's 15-seat van and taken to other counties. ?They?ll just get on the bus and go wherever we decide to take them,? he said. Also, of?cials are working to speed the process by which pleas are negotiated and to get defendants to trial. Baldwin said the county should aim to reduce the average population to 250 so it can absorb additional inmates in the event of a major drug bust. County judicial of?ces, lnctudtng the district attorney, adult probation, and public defender, are being overtaxed by the requirements of comptying with the state?s order, he said. ?It?s a real strain. We can?t continue to operate?like this," Baldwin said. Commissioner Gary J. Hess agreed. Responding to Baidwin?s observation that the county needs to ?nd a way to get better treatment for those addicted to heroin and other drugs drug epidemic is fueling the prison pollution explosion ?to keep addicts from returning to jail, Hess said a "long term solution" is needed. ?It?s pay now or pay later,? he said. Commissioners about 10 years ago ended a plan to buiid a center near the state prison in West Mahanoy Township because it would have cost too much. The county also created a ?virtual" pre?release program that involves electronic monitoring and strict supervision of some quali?ed inmates. Less than an hour earlier, commissioners approved an application to the Commission on Crime and Delinquency for $100,000 grant to pay for a full-time drug court coordinator of?cer. The county expects to have a drug court operating later this year or by early 2017. Baldwin also said that, contrary to rumor, people can still bejailed until trial, and probation and parole violators will still be jailed but in out-of-county prisons, if their sentences carry a maximum of six months or more. if they've committed new crimes, their sentences will likely be ordered to be served after the sentences for the visitors, meaning they may qualify for state prison time. Nor is the prison being vacated, Baldwin said. PennLive/Patriot snafu derails riv er home Records snafu derails convicted sex offender?s child rape trial By Matt Miller A failure by Dauphin County Children and Youth Services to provide records to the prosecution and defense has forced a two-month delay in the triai of a convicted sex offender accused of raping an 8-year?old girl. The snafu was discovered only at the last minute, a week after a jury was selected to hear the case against Jonathan Tyrrell. 53, of Harrisburg. During a brief court hearing Tuesday morning, Chief Deputy District Attorney Jennifer Gettle toid Judge Deborah E. Curcillo that testimony a children?s services of?cial gave during a pretrial hearing Monday afternoon revealed the problem. As that of?cial testi?ed, Gettle said it became clearthe of?cial was discussing records that neither she nor Tyrrell's attorney, First Assistant Public Defender Ari Weitzman had seen, despite orders to turn overthose tiles. Gettle said it is believed at least 700 pages of records weren't provided to either attorney. The cause of the error wasn't immediately known, she said. Weitzman told Curcillo that he has skimmed some of the newly~discovered records and concluded they may contain information useful to the defense. Curciilo, who had spoken with and released the jurors due to the probiem, rescheduled Tyrreil's trial for July at the request of Weitzman. The judge obviously wasn't pleased with the turn of events. "We will be determining how this happened," she said. Meanwhile, Tyrrell will sit in county prison in lieu of $500,000 bail. He is accused of raping the giri so brutally in April 2014 that she needed reconstructive surgery. Tyrrell has a prior rape conviction dating from 1983, records show. He also is awaiting prosecution on a separate charge of failing to register with state poiice. Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (0512312016) Veteran lieutenant's ?ring sparks discussion about Westmoreland lockup management BY Richard Cholodofsky The ?ring of a veteran lieutenant at the Westmoreland County prison on Monday sparked discussion among prison board members about overall management problems at the facility. After a 90-minute executive session, the prison board voted unanimously to release Lt. Mark Gergas, who has worked at the facility since 1993 and had an annual salary of $47,132, according to county payroil records. No reason was given for the action. Commission Chairwoman Gina Cerilli, a member of the prison board, said after the vote that she had concerns, noting that the ?ring was the second of a managerial staff member since January. "l'm losing con?dence in the management of the prison,? Cerilli said. Ceri i would not elaborate but said she would closely monitor thejail's management team led by Warden John Walton and would not hesitate to propose changes in its leadership if she thought it was warranted. Other commissioners on the board said they had not discussed Cerilli's concerns with her. Commissioner Ted Kopas said Walton has his support. ?We routinely discipline employees there when it's appropriate. To the warden?s credit, he?s always been forthright about the issues and he's never hidden any of these from us,? Kopas said. Sheriff Jonathan Held, prison board chairman, said he has long questioned the warden?s leadership. ?The board has made some management changes that i feel were necessary to improve the operations of the facility," Heid said. will support any further changes in the management staff of Westmoreland County Prison that I feel will continue to bene?t the operations of the facility. I'm not at the stage to consider firing him yet." Waiton, who has been the warden since 2003 and earns about $81 ,000 a year, declined comment. Walton survived a challenge four years ago when Held and former commissioner Tyler Courtney publicly criticized his job performance. At their urging, an independent investigation into prison operations was conducted by the National Institute of Corrections. That report found no issues of concern and praised Walton's leadership. As a result, Held backed off his efforts to have Walton removed. District Attorney John Peck, who also serves on the prison board, said his of?ce is investigating allegations that an unnamed jail employee engaged in inappropriate behavior with other staffers. He declined to identify the target of the investigation. ?No charges have been ?led, but the investigation is continuing," Peck said. Casey Mullooly, a former guard at the jail, serves as a district representative for the United Mine Workers of America Local 522, which represents about 150 staffers at the prison. He said union leadership has been critical of the facility's management for some time. ?Some of our union employees are under more scrutiny than management employees," Mullooly said. ?We're hoping it's getting cleaned up." KYW-Radio (05/23/2016) 229th?anniversa Prison Society celebrates 229th anniversary By Kim Glovas HILADELPHIA (CBS) The Prison Society has just marked it's 229th anniversary. The PPS celebrated the event at the Eastern State Penitentiary recently. PPS works for inmate advocacy and is hoping one new board member will help reform the prison?industrial complex. Biil DeWeese, former Speaker of the House, hasjoined the board and says he is ?utterly rewed up for the challenge." He says he?s looking fowvard to working with juveniles serving life sentences, as well as: ?Life without parole, seems to be a backward position that we have. Many of these individuals that have served 25, 30, 35 years should at least have a parole hearing," he said. And, DeWeese says, it?s expensive to house them. ?We?re spending 40?thousand dollars per inmate in and if you?re overthe age of 50, the number elevates to ESQ-thousand doliars per inmate,? he said. DeWeese also says 46% of the state prison population are in for non-violent offenses. State Senator Shirley Kitchen was also honored at the anniversary. She received the Criminal Justice Award for her work in helping inmates get a second chance after release. She says her interest stemmed from real life experience when she was ?rst elected 15 years ago. ?i had so many people asking forjobs, so we talked to various companies and they were willing to give us a few jobs here and there, but it was the background checks that were stopping people,? said Kitchen. Kitchen began working on eliminating background checks, starting with summary offenses. ?1 did introduce bills, mine was not able to get through but we were looking for change, not credit," she said. Recently, the Clean Slate bill was signed into law, which erases non- violent crimes from the records of those who have served their time. i The Lansdale Reporter (05/20/2016) Montgomery Countyjudge, drug treatment court lauded by county of?cials By Carl Hesler Calling the judge who launched a drug treatment court in the county 10 years ago ?a trailblazer,? Montgomery County commissioners publicly lauded the program during National Drug Court Month. applaud you for being a trailblazer in that effort and I applaud you for being a visionary at a time when very few people had a broad vision, they were much more myopic in how they approached this," county commissioners? Chairman Josh Shapiro addressed Judge Steven T. O'Neill this week. The commissioners presented O?Neill with a proclamation in recognition of National Drug Court Month. Shapiro said the county's drug treatment court has become the model for other counties designing problem-solving courts across the state. ?You are now as a result of the leadership you've demonstrated affecting the lives of people all across our commonwealth because they seek to emulate what you?ve done here. We could not be more proud of the work that your team has clone,? Shapiro said. O?Neiil, who has presided over the drug treatment court since founding the court in April 2006, thanked the commissioners and the law enforcement community for their support. ?It is the compassion and the caring of our county government that makes this possible," O?Neill said as he proudly accepted the proclamation. O'Neill re?ected on the start of the program 10 years ago. ?It was born out of a need, a recognition back at a time of the criminal justice system of what we were really dealing with, not with a criminal problem, but a disease, the disease of addiction where the of that disease were the criminal behaviors," O'Neill told the commissioners. ?We began to get smart on crime and smart on crime meant treat the disease for what it is, it?s a disease of addiction. ?Back when [started drug treatment courtthat was a tough thing to do because most people wanted to deal with what were the consequences to the community. itwas easierto lock them up and try to incarcerate away the problem but it was clear that there was no change and in fact those participants who suffered the disease and were in the criminal justice system got worse,? O?Neill explained. O?Neill said statistics estimate that about 80 percent of offenders involved in the criminal justice system have substance abuse disorder. ?It affects every county in this country. The newest version of it is called the opioid overdose epidemic crisis and it has suddenly exptoded on the national stage. People are dying in record numbers," said O?Neill, referring to the addictions to prescription painkillers that often lead to heroin addiction. ?It is not isolated to marginalized sections of our communities or areas of our cities. It's in every community in this country." The treatment court program, funded by the county commissioners, is an innovative approach to disposing of drug-fueled criminal offenses in a way that offers participants intensive help to ?ght their addictions, encourages them to change their lifestyles and offers them the opportunity to earn a dismissal of the charges against them or to have their court supervision terminated early. Underthe program, a drug court treatment team - consisting of probation of?cers, treatment provider representatives, the judge, a defense lawyer and a prosecutor - meets weekly to discuss an offender's progress and to develop an individualized strategy to assist an offender in dealing with their addiction. The program includes inpatient treatment. After inpatient treatment a halfway house is likeiy, to prepare for independent living. "then it?s on to outpatient treatment, group and individual, three times a week. To ensure accountability, participants are regularly and randomly tested for substance use, required to appear frequently in court for the judge to review their progress, rewarded for meeting goals, and sanctioned for not meeting clearly stated obligations. The court participants must meet obligations to themselves, their families, and society. ?It's about saving and changing lives while keeping your community safe and saving the taxpayer doliars," O?Neill said. Participation in the program, which is voluntary, is at least 15 months long and may last as long as three years. The program typically has 130 participants at any given time. Proponents of drug court programs refer to them as a ?common sense approach" that not only cuts crime and saves taxpayers money but also improves employment and keeps families together. ?As a physician, I know that substance abuse disorder is a lifelong chronic disease with no real cure and it truly takes our entire community, multiple people in multiple different areas of expertise to support each individuai that struggles with this problem to get them to a place where they can live successfully with this chronic disease," said commissioner Val Arkoosh, calling the program ?unique and groundbreaking." The county?s treatment court program has over 360 graduates with 70 percent of those individuals remaining arrest free after graduation, officials said. ?The impact you made on their lives is incredible,? commissioner Joe Gale addressed O'Neill. ?I?m glad it continues to be successful and I look forward to working with you to continue to make that happen in the future.? Celebrating the court?s tenth year anniversary, O?Neill, on May 4, presided over the court?s 82nd graduation ceremony. There were 500 people in attendance. ?It was astounding," O?Neill said. ?People want to celebrate things that work. Treatment courts, problem?solving courts, they work." As he accepted the prociamation, O?Neill proudty introduced his team of prosecutors, public defenders, probation of?cers and treatment counselors to the commissioners. ?Drug treatment courts only work as a collaboration. It?s a team and that?s why it works," O?Neili said. ?i couldn?t have done this without them." ?You?re doing incredible work and I will always have your back," Arkoosh told O?Neill and his team. Today, 2,966 treatment courts are in operation in all 50 states, plus US. territories, successfully treating close to 150,000 substance?addicted individuals each year. Since 1989, these courts have saved over 1.4 million lives and billions of tax dollars, the commissioners said. National Drug Court Month is coordinated by the National Association of Court Professionals. National Corrections The Baton Rouge Advocate (05/23/2016) dvo cate?reborterwdecries-doc Angola prisoner transferred to another prison after corresponding with Advocate reporter, decries DOC explanation for move By Steve Hardy A Louisiana inmate who was transferred to another prison and put in soiitary con?nement after he corresponded with a reporter for The Advocate says in a new letter that corrections of?cials? claims he was moved for his own protection are bunk. William Kissinger, who is serving a life sentence for murder, was moved from the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola to Eiayn Hunt Correctional Center in St. Gabriel after he exchanged a series of emails with reporter Maya Lau. Many of Kissinger?s messages were critical of prison administrators, in particular former longtime Warden Burl Cain, and he suggested various avenues of inquiry for the newspaper. ?The ?2nd and come?lately? rationale (state Department of Public Safety and Corrections spokeswoman) Pam Laborde gave for the DOC moving me and cellblocking me ?that it was done out of protection concerns? is absoiutely ludicrous!? he said in a recent handwritten letter to Lau, underlining the ?nal word twice. Kissinger claims his chief tormentor is Seth Smith, the No. 2 of?cial in the corrections department and Cain?s son-in?law. He also points a ?nger at another member of Cain?s extended family, Tim Hooper, the deputy warden at Hunt. Hooper?s son is married to Kristen Hooper, Cain?s granddaughter and Seth Smith?s stepdaughter. This April 22, 2009 photo shows a view of the front entrance of the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, La. (AP ?le photo/Judi Bottoni) internal emails: Inmate corresponding with Advocate moved from Angola out of concern for convict?s safety Angola inmate punished for dialogue with Advocate reporter amid series of critical stories . Smith and Hooper did not respond to requests for comment. ?Seth Smith is ?remote controlling? everything that?s happening with me here at Hunt,? Kissinger wrote. ?He is using Deputy Warden Hooper to carry out his ?reach.? Every negative thing that has occurred since i was moved here has been done by him or at his direction." While records show Smith signed off on the transfer, a corrections department spokeswoman has said Smith must sign off on all transfers and that he took no particular interest in Kissinger?s case. Kissinger says in an appeal challenging his treatment that he has been improperly stripped of his coveted trusty status; his phone, mail and email access; and personal property and tools worth thousands of dollars. Correctional of?cials have said they initially m0ved Kissinger for his own protection and then determined he had broken two prison rules one covering de?ance and the other covering ?general prohibited behavior." Kissinger has run afoul of prison of?cials for speaking out before. When he alerted federal health of?cials about questionable dealings at Angola in the late 19905, he faced retribution from Cain for his whistleblowing. A federal judge ordered Cain to leave Kissinger alone. Kissinger began his correspondence with Lau late last year as the newspaper published a series of stories examining possible improprieties in the prison system. Cain, the focus of those articles, retired in December. Kissinger was abruptly moved to Hunt in February ?snatched up" in the middle of the night and thrown into a "lockdown" cell, according to the inmate. Of?ciats have offered a variety of rationales for the move, ?rst saying it was for his own protection and then saying he broke the two rules for which he eventually was cited. They also have suggested that some of his speci?c communications could have gotten him in trouble. For instance, in a recent interview, Corrections Secretary Jimmy LeBIanc said Kissinger couid have been attacked by inmates who are loyal to Cain, but he said he knew of no threats made against Kissinger. It?s also unclear how LeBlanc surmised that other inmates would have immediately known aboui Kissinger?s emails. Kissinger said in a recent missive that he has begun speaking with a lawyer. And questions persist about whether Angola staff had a right to read his emails in the ?rst place. The 5th US. Circuit Court of Appeals which has jurisdiction over Louisiana m- has ruled that prisoners have ?a right to send media mail unopened and to receive media mail that has been opened oniy for the inspection of contraband." Minneapolis Live (05/20/2016) brotherhood we have is th .html 'This brotherhood we have is the right thing,? says prison inmate in group of college grads By Leanne Smith JACKSON, MI ?Three years ago, going to college was the farthest thing from Clifford Brouster's mind. Today, he is a Jackson College graduate. But Brouster?s journey to this point wasn't typical or traditional. did the wrong thing selling drugs in Detroit," he said. That landed him in Jackson?s Pamall Correctional Facility. And that's where Brouster said he found something he never knew existed "people who want to help you be a better person." Brouster is among 26 inmates from Pamall who graduated from Jackson College's Pathways from Prison Program on Friday, May 20. They are the first group of graduates from the college's Prison Education Initiative since the mid~19903, when the state Legislature banned providing coilege courses to inmates unless they paid for them. Two of the graduates, Shawn Birman and Timothy Buss, had enough credits to earn associate's degrees. The rest received general transfer certi?cates. "There are brotherhoods created in prison that are not always the right thing," said WC Morris, another of Friday?s graduates. "This brotherhood we have is the right thing." The program, which began in 2013, aims to show that access to a college education during and after prison, combined with supportive re-entry services, can lead to self? esteem, employment and reduced recidivism. Funded through a nearly $1 million grant from the Vera Institute of Justice, the program, which began in 2013, aims to show that access to a college education during and after prison, combined with supportive re-entry services, can lead to self-esteem, employment and reduced recidivism. "This has not only changed me, it's changed the attitude about education in my children and my grandchildren," said Franklin Wilson, another of the graduates. "We all have a chance for a better life." Through the Vera program, which received funding from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, JC has had about 140 inmates enrolled in classes at Parnall and the Macomb Correctional Facility, said Kevin Rose, the college?s Prison Education Initiative director. Many of them already have been paroled, he said. About 250 more inmates also are enrolled in self?pay classes at Jackson's G. Robert Cotton and Cooper Street correctional facilities, Rose said. In alt, about 400 inmates in eight correctional facilities, including the Gus Harrison Correctional Facility in Adrian, the Women's Huron Valley Correctional Facility in Ypsilanti and the Jackson County Jail, are taking JC classes, Rose said. Syracusecom (05/24/2016) county prison employee ha sex with inmate smuooled drugs. police sav.html Cayuga County prison employee had sex with inmate, smuggled drugs, police say MORAVIA, N.Y. A prison employee in southern Cayuga County is accused of repeatedly having sex with an inmate and smuggling drugs, the New York State Police said. Margaret A. Jones, 38, was charged with third?degree rape, of?cial misconduct, second? degree promoting prison contraband and unlawful possession of marijuana. Authorities did not provide an address for Jones. State poiice said that on Thursday troopers and staff from the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision worked on an investigation into Jones. Investigators found that over several months she repeatedly has sex with an inmate and smuggled marijuana into Cayuga Correctional Facility where she worked. Jones was a civilian employee at the prison. Cayuga Correctional Facility in Moravia is a medium-security prison that houses about 1,000 men. State police did not say what led them to begin investigating Jones. Jones was arraigned in Owasco Town Court and ordered held at the Cayuga County jail in lieu of $5,000 bail or bail bond. Slate (0512312016) and alito an clarence thomas are sore Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas are still trying to keep juvenile lifers behind bars By Mark Joseph Stern The Supreme Court is an egalitarian place in at least one sense: At some point, everybody loses. Most terms in recent decades, the liberals lose disproportionately. Some terms, the conservatives take a loss. Even Justice Anthony Kennedy loses every once in a while, and until recently he was basically a king. Mostjustices accept their loss, pen biting dissents, and get back on the horse to wage future battles?but this term, something very odd is happening. Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas lost a major constitutional case back in January. And now, four months later, it is alarmingly clear that neither man accepts the reality of his defeat. Alito and Thomas? diagnosable denial came to a head on Monday, when the court took care of the routine business of applying a recent decision to cases stiil on the docket. Here on planet Earth, that decision, Montgomery v. Louisiana, is settled law. Montgomery held that a 2012 decision barring mandatory life without parole forjuvenile offenders applies retroactively, creating a new ?substantive right" for convicts who were once juveniles sentenced to life. Under Montgomery, prisoners sentenced to life as juveniles have a right to present evidence that they have shed their youthful criminality and deserve to be released. Only the ?rarest of juvenile offenders? may be imprisoned for life, the court found; all must be given an opportunity to demonstrate rehabilitation, and ?all but the rarest," most depraved offenders must eventually be set free. Predictably, Alito and Thomas dissented from both Montgomery and its predecessor, Miller v. Alabama. The trouble began when the former was decided earlier this year: In his dissent, Thomas actually encouraged state courts to refuse to hear Montgomery appeals. This was bizarre, but at least it came'during the course of the routine business of dissenting from a major opinion. But shortly after Montgomery, things got way weirder. The Supreme Court reversed nearly two-dozen lower court decisions prohibiting juvenile defenders'from appealing their life sentence, as the new precedent would demand; but Alito and Thomas kept pinning a curt caveat to each new order, urging courts to consider other grounds on which they could reject the appeal and keep the prisoners sentenced as juveniles locked up for life. To what end does Alito recount these horri?c facts? To arouse the reader?s ire, of course. On Monday, Alito and Thomas went a step further, attempting to perform an act of prestidigitation that would effectively make Montgomery disappear altogether. In an opinion ioined only by Thomas, Alito noted that several juvenile offenders appealing their life sentences had originally been sentenced to death?back before the Supreme Court outlawed capital punishment for minors. (When the court ?nally found that executing juvenile offenders violated the Constitution, these offenders? death sentences were converted to life sentences without the possibility of parole.) In that era, special rules applied to a minor in a capital case: A jury was required to consider ?all relevant mitigating evidence," including the offender?s age. That means these offenders already had one opportunity to explain why their age reduces their guilt. Because juries might have ?considered but rejected youth as a mitigating factor," Alito writes, courts should feel free to refuse these juvenile offenders a chance to appeal their life sentences under Montgomery. Taken seriously, his opinion Monday provides conservative judges with a road map to wriggle out from under Montgomery's central command, illegally depriving juvenile offenders of their constitutional right. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor points out in a separate opinion joined by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, this is dangerously wrongheaded. ?There is no indication,? Sotomayor writes, ?that, when the fact?nders in these cases considered petitioners? youth, they even asked the question Miller required them not only to answer, but to answer correctly: whether petitioners? crimes re?ected ?transient immaturity? or ?irreparable corruption.? There is an enormous difference between a jury maybe considering a juvenile?s age? as was acceptable back then?~and a jury knowing that virtually all juvenile offenders have a substantive constitutional right to request parole, as is required today. Even worse, Sotomayor notes, these speci?c offenders hardly had an opportunity to show that their young age diminished their culpability: The sentencing proceedings in these cases are a product of that pro-Miller era. in one typical case, a judge?s sentencing order?overruling a unanimous jury verdict recommending life without parole instead of death?refers to youth only once, noting ?the court ?nds that the age of the defendant at the time of the crime is a mitigating circumstance" and then that ?[t]he [c]ourt rejects the advisory verdict of the jury, and ?nds that the aggravating circumstances in this case outweigh the mitigating circumstances and that the punishment should be death." Other sentencing orders are similarly terse. [n at least two cases, there is no indication that youth was considered as a standalone mitigating factor. in two others, factfinders did not put ?great weight? on considerations that we have described as particularly important in evaluating the culpability of juveniles, such as intellectual disability, an abusive upbringing, and evidence of impulsivity and immaturity. Sotomayor debunks Alito?s incarceration ?xation so thoroughly, in fact, that you might wonder why he didn?t retract his concurrence altogether. i suspect there are two possibilities here. The ?rst is that Alito, along with Thomas, still really hate both Miller and Montgomery. They?re sore losers, and they want to undermine the impact of both cases as they ripple through the criminai justice system. The second explanation is arguably more perverse: Both justices adore dwelling on the grisliest, goriest details of gruesome crimes?as if to shame any justices who might dare to believe that the offenders ever deserve to regain their liberty. Thomas pulled this trick to egregious effect last term, and he joins Alito here as the justice describes child rape, stabbings, shootings, beatings, strangulation, and immolation. To what end does Alito recount these horri?c facts? To arouse the reader?s ire, of course?and to humiliate the justices who voted to give these murderers a second chance. (In response, Sotomayor simply reminds Alito of the court's ?repeated exhortation that the gruesomeness of a crime is not suf?cient to demonstrate that a juvenile offender is beyond redemption") Here, Alito may well be targeting Chief Justice John Roberts more so than the rest of his coileagues. Roberts dissented from Miller in 2012, but he joined the Montgomery majority in January, apparently accepting Milter as valid precedent. Alito refuses to do the same, and Roberts' willingness to follow and apply the law?even where he disagrees with it?may register as yet another defection from the court?s shrinking conservative wing. The United States is currently the only country in the world where juvenile offenders may legally be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Miller and Montgomery cut back on the practice, bringing America more in line with a near~globai consensus in international law. Even John Roberts sees the writing on the wall. And yet still, in 2016, two of our Supreme Courtjustices strive to keep as manyjuvenile offenders in prison as possible, intentionaliy blurring the law to bend it toward their penological preferences. That's an outrage. The law on juveniie tife without parole is perfectly clear. And Alito and Thomas are on the wrong side of it. (05/23/2016) (Traing The Return (Synopsis) In 2012, California amended its ?Three Strikes" law one of the harshest criminal sentencing policies in the country. The passage of Prop. 36 marked the ?rst time in US. history that citizens voted to shorten sentences of those currently incarcerated. Within days, the reintegration of thousands of "lifers" was undenNay. The Return examines this unprecedented reform through the eyes of those on the front lines prisoners suddenly freed, famitles turned upside down, reentry providers helping navigate complex transitions and attorneys and judges wrestling with an untested taw. At a moment of reckoning on mass incarceration, what can California's experiment teach the nation? A co-production of American Documentary POV and ITVS. A co-presentation with the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC). Of?cial Selection of the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival. (05/23/2016) inmates/39697966?utm medium=twitter&utm camoaiqn=wqa Escapee returns to pick up feliow inmates 20?year?old man gets away second time and still on loose Alaska state troopers say a 20?year?old man escaped from a correctional facility oniy to return three hours later to try and heip other inmates escape. Joshua Yaska returned to the North Star Center, a minimum~security correctional facility in Fairbanks, Alaska, driving an SUV after escaping the the facility on a bicycle, according to troopers. Upon his return, troopers said Yaska attempted to strike a facility employee with the vehicle. Yaska, who is facing charges of escape in the fourth degree and assault in the third degree, is stilt on the loose. Orange County Register (05/22/2016) Gov. Brown turns in signatures forinitiative to reduce prison population By Rich Pedrocelli SACRAMENTO Gov. Jerry Brown turned in nearly a million signatures on Friday backing his bid to ask voters to approve new ways to reduce Califomia?s prison population, a spokesman said. Brown wants voters in November to increase credits that allow adult inmates to get out of prison more quickly and to allow earlier parole for non-vioient felons. The measure ?will give voters a chance to improve public safety by providing incentives for peopie to turn their lives around," said Dan Newman, campaign spokesman Dan Newman said in an email. The Democratic governor submitted the higher number of signatures to ensure that he has the more than 585,000 valid signatures required for a constitutional ballot measure this year. California's district attorneys say his initiative would increase crime and undermine laws designed to protect crime victims' rights. ?With crime rates rising dramatically across the state of California for the ?rst time in decades we believe the voters will be extremely reiuctant to pass a measure that allows violent felons who have committed crimes along the likes of domestic violence, human traf?cking, rape of an unconscious person and assault with a deadly weapon to be let back out on the streets before serving the time sentenced by a Judge," California District Attorneys Association chief executive Mark Zahner said in a statement. Zahner said opponents will begin campaigning next week ?to oppose this and protect victims and the future safety of Californians.? Opponents said previously that they may not be able to ?nancially match the $24 million that Brown has in his campaign account. But they enlisted support from critics including Marc Klaas. a national advocate for abducted children whose 12?year-old daughter Polly was kidnapped and murdered in 1993. They also challenged the governor?s proposal in a lawsuit that is awaiting a ruling from the state Supreme Court. The district attorneys say Brown acted improperly when he amended his plan onto a baliot measure dealing with the juvenile justice system. The justices let Brown?s supporters collect signatures while they consider whether his amendments were so different and came so late that they violated state law. Brown argues that his initiative is necessary to avert the possibility that federal judges could orderthe release of inmates to avoid crowded conditions. He also wants to cement into state law several judges' orders that already help reduce the prison population by speeding how quickly felons can be paroled. Brown told business leaders earlierthis week that his measure would partially reverse the fixed sentencing system that he signed into law nearly 40 years ago when he was governor for his ?rst two terms. ?What i didn?t take into account was that if you tell someone on the day of sentencing, ?You have years and you can?t do anything to change that,? you do take away incentive and you do create more violence in prison and you do create more rule breaking," he said. Brown said his proposal, among other things, would allow inmates to earn time of;= their sentences ?by good behavior, by really changing your life." Stateline (05/25/2016) fen/research-and-anal sis/bio By Christine Vestel Rikers island: A legacy of medication assisted opioid treatment NEW YORK For Dr. Ross MacDonald, every person who enters New York City?s main jail with an opioid addiction represents an opportunity for treatment, and the possibility of saving a life. As the medical director of the city?s correctional health program, he ensures that offenders who come in on methadone continue to receive it. And he and his staff try to persuade as many addicted inmates as possible to get started on methadone before they leave the jail. Rikers Island Correctional Facility has run a model opioid treatment program since 1987, and it has assisted tens of thousands of inmates in maintaining treatment after they return to their communities. Medical researchers have repeatedly found that the jail?s methadone treatment program has resulted in overall health care cost savings, reduced crime and recidivism, reduced HIV and hepatitis 0 transmission, and better than average rates of recovery from drug use. But despite Rikers? well documented success, few U.S. jails and prisons have emulated the program. The vast majority of correctional facilities reject the use of methadone, used for addiction treatment since 1964 and approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for addiction treatment in 1972, as well as a newer anti?addiction drug called buprenorphine, approved in 2002. That?s despite a history of research showing both medicines are highly effective at keeping people in recovery from opioid addiction with few side effects. lronicaily, the subjects of the ?rst major study of methadone?s effectiveness were federal prisoners. Two-thirds of the nation?s 2.3 million inmates are addicted to or alcohol, compared to 9 percent in the general population, according to a study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. From MacDonaid?s perspective, prisons and jails are the perfect place to start addiction treatment. In the general population, only 11 percent of people with a substance use disorder seek treatment at a specialty facility. Opioid addicts who commit crimes to pay fortheir habit are no different. But once they show up at Rikers, they are cut off from their usual supply and it can be easier to persuade them to get treatment. Few corrections of?ciais see things the same way. The problem, many say, is that both medications are themselves narcotics, something the criminal justice system works hard to keep out of its facilities. As with any controlled substance, coriections officials are wary of methadone and buprenorphine being diverted to other inmates who are not in drug treatment or leaking out of the prison to illicit drug markets. There's another reason fortheir resistance: a common belief? among the public, as well as treatment providers and criminal justice of?cials ?that methadone merely substitutes one addiction for another and is not a true tool of recovery. But now that the opioid overdose epidemic, which killed more than 28,000 people in 2014, has become a top political priority, a few correctional authorities are rethinking long-held biases against the oldest and most widely researched anti-addiction medication. Connecticut tested methadone treatment programs atjaiis in New Haven and Bridgeport, and is looking to expand them to jails statewide. Rhode Island already offers the other two federally approved addiction medications, methadone and buprenorphine, at its prisons. And it is poised to add Vivitrol, which was federaliy approved in 2010, this year. Vermont plans to expand a limited correctional methadone program it started 10 years ago. The Standard of Care Here in New York, where methadone was first researched at The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in the 1960s and methadone clinics are more plentiful than Broadway theaters, use of the in the city?s jails has never been controversial. ?It?s the standard of care in the community, so why would it not be in a jail setting where the problem of addiction affects a huge percentage of our patients?? MacDonald said. At Rikers, 75 percent of people who enter thejail are addicted to drugs, with 20 percent addicted to heroin or painkillers. For those who aren't already on anti-addiction medications when they arrive, the jail?s addiction treatment team offers all three available medications and counseling. Most choose methadone. But for the vast majority of the nation?s more than 5,000 prisons and jails, use of the reiatively cheap medication is a nonstarter. Methadone is offered in correctional institutions in only a few other urban centers, such as Baltimore, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Washington, 0.0., that have battled heroin addiction for decades, as well as in a handful of smallerjurisdictions. In ail, fewer than 40 correctional facilities are offering methadone to inmates for addiction treatment, according to data from the us. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and Stateline interviews with addiction and corrections experts. Even fewer facilities are administering buprenorphine, which like methadone blocks the brain?s cravings for drugs and eliminates withdrawal Jaiis and prisons routinely force inmates who come in on addiction medications to withdraw from them abruptly and remain abstinent while behind bars. Abrupt withdrawal, without tapering off methadone over a period of weeks, is considered inhumane and has resulted in numerous deaths inside prisons and jails. include vomiting, diarrhea and insomnia. Abstinence from all opioids during con?nement has aiso resulted in thousands of overdose deaths when inmates are released. They return to either heroin or prescription drug use after losing their tolerance to the powerful drugs. All three addiction medications protect inmates from overdosing as long as they continue to take them. Stigma and Pubiic Safety The Obama administration strongly supports the use of evidence?based addiction treatment, including medications. But in the nation's 102 federal prisons, methadone and buprenorphine are not routinely used to treat opioid addiction. Instead, the Federal Bureau of Prisons is considering the use of Vivitrol in some of its facilities for opioid addicted inmates before release. Vivitroi was shown to reduce drug cravings before approval by the FDA. But addiction specialists say there is little evidence of its long-term effectiveness at keeping people in recovery. In contrast, many studies have shown the long-term effectiveness of methadone and buprenorphine. ?When we have two agents that work, why would you not use them?" said Dr. Kevin Fiscella, an addiction specialist who advises the National Commission on Correctional Health Care, which accredits prison health programs. ?i can?t imagine anywhere else in medicine where anyone would use an unproven agent instead of a proven one.? The Bureau of Prisons chose Vivitrol for re?entry drug treatment because it "provides some pharmacological advantages" over other medicines in reducing the risk of overdose and relapse when inmates return to the community, Justin Long, an agency spokesman, said in an email. More than 100 state prisons and jails have also opted to use Vivitrol in re-entry drug treatment programs in the last four years. Barnstable County Correctional Facility on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, was among the ?rst. Sheriff James Cummings said buprenorphine was not included in the jail?s drug treatment program because it is a narcotic and- therefore considered contraband. ?We?re trying to keep it out of our facility." Dr. Josiah Rich, a Brown University researcher who works with opioid-addicted inmates, said more education is needed to convince corrections of?cials that methadone and buprenorphine can effectively treat opioid addiction in criminal justice populations. Their experience tells them othenNise, he said. Health care workers in prisons and jails who witness inmates withdrawing from methadone, with agonizing that appear to be the same as heroin withdrawal, understandably develop a negative attitude toward the drug, he said. The only people on methadone they see are those who cycle in and out of prisons and jails after being arrested for drug-related crimes. No wonder they think it doesn?t work, he said. What they don?t see, Rich said, are the thousands of people who stay in recovery, lead productive lives and don?t get arrested. The same goes for emergency room physicians, who also tend to frown on methadone. They only see people who relapse whiie in drug treatment, not those who succeed, Rich said. People who stay in recovery by taking daily doses of methadone or buprenorphine tend to keep their therapy to themselves because of widespread stigma against addiction. If you?re taking methadone, you were once addicted to an illicit drug, which is not something most people want to advertise. Room for improvement At the sprawling Rikers facility across the East River from La Guardia Airport, about 2,400 inmates were treated with methadone last year, according to New York?s health and hospitals agency, which oversees the city?s public hospitals and corrections health program. A much smaller number were treated with buprenorphine and a handful received Vivitrol. The number of inmates taking daiiy doses of methadone while in Rikers, on average for less than 30 days, has declined over the past three years. Fewer people are being incarcerated for drug use and drug-related crimes under a citywide program aimed at diverting drug users to treatment rather than jails, according to Levi Fishman, a spokesman forthe state agency. In a separate effort to reduce overdose deaths, Democratic Mayor Bili de Blasio recently launched a $5.5 miilion initiative to increase the of treatment in the city. And in April, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, became the ?rst governor to seek federal approval to provide Medicaid coverage for inmates 30 days before release, which would boost funding for addiction treatment in the city's jails. Although Rikers has done more than any other correctional facility to treat inmates for addiction and help them follow through with treatment when they leave the jail, MacDonald says he sees room for improvement. Last year, the 13?person addiction treatment staff at Rikers started putting inmates who agreed to quitting drugs on the medication of their choice, a practice considered the gold standard in addiction medicine. MacDonald also wants to do a betterjob of ensuring that inmates who start on methadone are stabilized at the proper dose before they leave the jail so they are more likely to stay in treatment. And he wants to launch a major, long-term study of Rikers? drug treatment alumni to see how they fare on the outside. The last time its drug treatment program was examined, in 2001 the jail was treating 4,000 inmates a year with methadone. The study by the University of Western Michigan found that as many as 80 percent of inmates reported to tocal clinics to continue their treatment after being released. Kristen M. Simkins From: Krista Davis . - . .. . - . . Sent: Wednesday, May 25,2016 2:44 PM - . . - To: Richard C. Smith; Melanie L. Gordon I I Subject RE: How TASER CEWs can reduce use of force and injuries Thank you for including me. I signed up. Krista. Davis Risk Manager Wellness Coordinator Centre County Govemm ent P. 814-548-1055 F. 814-548-1157 kldavis@centrecountypagov TOOLS YOU CAN TRUST Every day, we work to protect life and to protect truth. And all over the world, our TASER CEWS and Axon technologies have become some of law enforcement's most trusted tools-because agencies notice a return on investment when they adopt them. From: Richard C. Smith i?f??ii??fd?lag?y 25? 2016 9:58 AM UPCOMING WEBENAR: RISK MANAGEMENT Cc: KrEsta Davis FW: HOW TASER CEWS can use Of force and injuries Join our upcoming webinar with Steve Tattle, Vice President of Strategic . Communications, to team more about how our TASER CEWs have reduced the Melame, number of incidents of use of force and injuries to of?cers and suspects. I think you and I should attend and invite Krista Davis- May 31, 10am Paci?c! 1pm Eastern. Warden REGISTER Topiary karma #55 66%; (rue. Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hili Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 fax rcsmith centrecoun ARE YOU A CEW . . Does your agency use TASER From: TASER International, Inc. WM Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 8:54 AM If 50: we have a To: [Richard C. Smith . question for you: Are your Subject: How TASER CEWs can reduce use of force and Injuries CEWs more than 5 years old? lav issues? in re YESIN We're excited to announce that more than 50% of major U.S. cities - are now on the Axon platform. READ MORE TASER CEO Rick: Smith: ?Why 'Fin'ng' Myself Helped Me Build a Better Company." MORE ?The Right to Bear Arms That 1 Don't Kill.? READ MORE Our Seattle Axon of?ce was recently named the coolest of?ce space in I Seattle. READ MORE 00$ - ?2 -. new. pfoul'planscal'l -: Inc. All Rammed, bestmeetyou{agency's - A . TASER Ia lntumnuOnnl. Incl. raglutarad In the USA. he? PRIVACY POLICY 1 CONTACT US MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS Kristen M. Simkins From: Gene Lauri Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:11 PM To: Cathy I. Arbogast; Danielle Minarchick; Denise McCann Conrad Eileen B. Mckinney; ene Mark S. Smith, Esquire: Rich Keiley Scott A Sayers; Steve Dershem; Tara Peters: Thomas J. McDermott; Thomas J. Young Cc: Stacy Parks Miller, Richard C. Smith; Andrea Fisher Julia A. Sprinkle Subiect: Notes from May 24 Coalition Town Hall Subcommittee Meeting Attachments: Town Hall Planning Committee Notes 5.24.16 TWO.docx Diane un: eanmne Lozier Good Afternoon All: I?ve attached a copy of the notes from yesterday?s town hall subcommittee meeting. We can go over the recommendations contained therein at our coalition meeting next Tuesday morning at 9:00. Gene Gene Lauri. MS. Director Criminal Justice Planning Department Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 Tel: 814-355-6794, menu option 6 FAX: 814648-1150 Email: elauri@centrecountypa.gov The information contained in this electronic transmission may include con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for use by the individual[s} to which it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure. copying, forwarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sending party if you believe you received this transmission in error. Town Hall Planning Committee Notes 5.24.16 Town Hall Planning Committee Notes 5.24.16 DatelTime Tuesday, July 26?? from 7 pm. to 9 p.m. . Legislators . PSU President Eric Barron 1 2 Location 3. MNMC CEO 4 5 . Police Chiefs . PCCD Representatives MNMC Galen and Nancy Dreibelbis Auditorium Audience Media, people in the industry, people who have been affected by substance abuse, and the faith?based community. . Denise - reach out to Kelly Aston to see ifshe can be a panelist; and see about producing a short 5 - 10 minute video to show at the beginning. . Jeannine?see if an ER doctor would be willing to be a panelist, and if one cannot attend, see if Rich Kelly can. 3. Cathy contact DDAP to see if they can have a representative present as a panelist; and work Moderator with Gene on ?nding a short 5 - 10 minute video to show at the beginning ofthe meeting. . Steve Reach out to state/federal legislators to see if one of them can be on the panel. . Gene reach out to Jackie Weaknecht and/or Linda Rosenberg to see if one ofthem can be a panelist; work with Cathy on finding a short 5 10 minute video to show at the beginning; and contact Stephanie Bradley about being the panel moderator. . Law Enforcement . Eileen draft two articles (one on the background ofthe Coalition, and one speci?c to the ER physician or Rich Kelly heroin/opiate issue and the town hall meeting) for Gene and Cathy to review for CTC. The . A treatment and recovery individual from the County Of?ce articles to be to Denise bylune 21?- A representative from DDAP, Secretary Gary Tennis if avaiiabie . State/Federal legislator . PCCD Representative a. Jackie Weaknecht or Linda Rosenberg (or perhaps PCCD Chairman Josh Shapiro if available) Meeting Format Brie?ng by a panel with a moderator. Stephanie Bradley from the PSU EPISCenter. Ln Panelists Hde?mm Meetin Timeline I-l . Have Commissioner Dershem do a briefintroduction . Show a briefs 10 minute video a. Gene and Cathy to work on ?nding a video b. Denise is going to see about having a student produce a video 3. 10 - 15 minutes for each panelist 1 hour total for them to speak 4. 30 minutes for questions/feedback/discussion 5. 6. 10 minutes at the end to talk about the next step Have State Representative Kerry Benninghoff wrap the meeting up Materials to Pass Out 1. PA Stop Brochure with SCA information on it 2. Resource Page Kristen M. Simkins From: Gene Lauri Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:15 PM To: Cathy i. Arbogast; Danielle Minarchick; Denise McCann Diane Eileen B. Mckinney: Gene Lauri:Jeannine Lozier Mark S. Smith, Esquire; Rich Kelley :Scott A. Sayers; Steve Dershem; Tara Peters; Thomas J. McDermott: omas J. Young Cc: Stacy Parks Miller, Richard C. Smith: Andrea Fisher? Julia A. Sprinkle Subject: FW: Notes from May 24 Coalition Town Hall Subcommittee Meeting Attachments: Town Hall Planning Committee Notes 5.24.16 TWO.docx Correction, our meeting next week in on Wednesday Morning, June 1 at 9:00 AM, NOT Tuesday. Gene Lauri, MS. Director Criminal Justice Planning Department Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte. PA 16823 Tel: 3314?3556794. menu option 6 FAX: 8146484150 Email: elauri@centrecountypa.gov The information contained in this electronic transmission may include con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for use by the individual[s} to which it is addressed. if you are not the intended recipient. you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure. copying, fonivardin or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sending party if you believe you received this transmission in error. From: Gene Lauri Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:11 PM To: Cathy I. Arbogast; Danielle Minarchick; Denise McCann Eileen B. McKinney: Gene Lauri; Jeannine Lozier Mark S. ;Scott A. Sayers; Steve Ders em; are ers; omas J. Diane Conrad Smith, Esquire; Rich Kelley McDe'rmott; Thomas J. Young Cc: Stacy Parks Miller, Richard C. Smith; Andrea Fisher Julia A. Sprinkle Subject: Notes from May 24 Coalition Town Hall Subcommittee Meeting Good Afternoon All: I've attached a copy of the notes from yesterday?s town hall subcommittee meeting. We can go over the recommendations contained therein at our coalition meeting next Tuesday morning at 9:00. Gene Gene Lauri, M.S. Director Criminal Justice Planning Department Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte. PA 16823 Tel: 814355?6794. menu option 6 FAX: 814-548-1150 The information contained in this electronic transmission may include con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for use by the individual[s] to which it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure, copying. forwarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sen ding party if you believe you received this transmission in error. Town Hall Planning Committee Notes 5.24.16 DatelTime Tuesday, July 26th from 7 pm. to 9 pm. Location MNMC Galen and Nancy Dreibelbis Auditorium Audience Media, people in the industry, people who have been affected by substance abuse, and the faith-based community. Meeting Format Briefing by a panel with a moderator. Moderator Stephanie Bradley from the PSU EPISCenter. Panelists . Law Enforcement . ER Physician or Rich Keiiy . A treatment and recovery individual from the County Of?ce A representative from DDAP, Secretary Gary Tennis if available . State/Federaliegislator . PCCD Representative a. Jackie Weaknecht or Linda Rosenberg (or perhaps PCCD Chairman Josh Shapiro if available) Hmm?mm Meetin Timeline 1-1 . Have Commissioner Dershem do a briefintroduction . Show a brief 5 10 minute video a. Gene and Cathy to work on ?nding a video b. Denise is going to see about having a student produce a video . 10 15 minutes for each panelist 1 hour total for them to speak . 30 minutes for questions/feedback/discussion . 10 minutes at the end to talk about the next step . Have State Representative Kerry Benninghoff wrap the meeting up Materials to Pass Out 1. PA Stop Brochure with SCA information on it 2. Resource Page Town Hall Planning Committee Notes 5.24.16 . Legislators 1 2. PSU President Eric Barton 3. MNMC CEO 4. Police Chiefs 5. PCCD Representatives 1. Denise?reach out to Kelly Aston to see ifshe can be a panelist; and see about producing a short 5 - 10 minute video to show at the beginning. 2. Jeanninemsee if an ER doctor would be willingto be a panelist, and if one cannot attend, see if Rich Kelly can. 3. Cathy contact DDAP to see if they can have a representative present as a panelist; and work with Gene on ?nding a short 5 - 10 minute video to show at the beginning ofthe meeting. 4. Steve Reach out to state/federal legislators to see if one ofthem can be on the panel. 5. Gene reach out to Jackie Weaknecht and/or Linda Rosenbergto see if one ofthem can be a panelist; work with Cathy on ?nding a short 5 10 minute video to show at the beginning; and contact Stephanie Bradley about being the panel moderator. 6. Eileen draft two articles (one on the background ofthe Coalition, and one speci?c to the heroin/opiate issue and the town hall meeting) for Gene and Cathyto review for CTC. The articles to be to Denise by June 21?. Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Walter E. Jeirles Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:25 PM Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno: Melanie L. Gordon; Richard C. Smith; Jonathan M. Millinden Juan Mendez; Matthew T. Fisher, Michael S. Woods; Thomas S. Allen. Jr.; Amy Miller: Caitlyn D. Nefa?: Danielle Minarchick; Kevin T. Jeirles; Lorinda L. Brown: Stephanie D. McGhee: Karla A. Witherite: Amber M. Wolfgang; Ashley M. Burns; Dawn M. Walls; Elizabeth E. Woods: Erin M. Mosser; Larry Lidgett; Lindsey Hass: Stacy Smith Inmate Nixon, Keith He received his minor misconduct today 5/25/2016. CO Buckley wrote him up for entering into another inmates cell in 81. He will serve his 12hrs. In Al on Thursday 5/26/2016. Kristen M. Simkins From: Lydia E. Millard Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:36 PM To: Richard C. Smith Attachments: 2016.pdf Attached is the 2016 pay scale. Thanks, Lydia Millard HR Generalist Human Resources Centre County Government 81435545896 Ext. 1283 The information in this message may he privileged. con?dential. and protected from disclosure If the reader of this message is neither the intended recipient. or an employee or agent responsible for delivery of this message to the intended recipient. you are hereby noti?ed any dissemination. distribution unauthorized use. or copying of this communication is prohibited Ifyau have received this communication in error. please notify the sender immediately by replying to this message and delete the from your computer. Thank you! 0210599 00'9565' 0903 05?tt5! 08 00'5055? 0015500 00'560!? 055! 05?059! SL EVE: 66'3: 0! 00?00?? 00153?v 080?. 00?020! 03 05'50510 0010110 056?! 60 r- 0215505 0511.55? 00?00019 0003 0511.29! 00'0?! 00'309! 00 001151! 0551 5133059! 05?009! 00?555! 5L zs?or 05'01 B0 00'01520 091556! 050: 001:5! 00?955! 03 00'23009 057096! 0510505 056?! 007.59! 05150! 00160! 1. 91:0: 05's! 09"[0085 0003 051051 07'06?! 03155! DB 051225! 05'9255! 05505-3! 30 08199.1 03'07696 00'2615! 0301 031.05! 031$?! 00'Z6i! 09 05?91092 00'0565! 0551 5510!! 00?2?! 1111: Ob?Ll . 50 In oo'oiut 0015655 0"0559! 0905 00'000! 00?5001 00?0015! 057.1?! 0512928 056! 057,62! Dn?leT 537.921 00?s! 591.! 95'9! [9'91 t0 r. 09'0505! 000: 05'8?! 00?952! 00?0Lt! 00'055tt 00?5550! 055! 5L 93'9! nz'st 30'5! ?0 a :1 021.0555 0002 0210!! 00'953! 00?!!sz 0 0015012 096590! 056T it's! Z0 0002 05'5?! 05?05503 055T 52?0?! 00?501! 00'!00! 5L 10'5! 10 ~av~ -sv- -3- ammo (mm) same a - nt'a'z't - NOIM mu m5 Amvs star-1m '1 8.1.91 ":11 an gunman 1mm 59:60:" mum. um: 390d mm mm: [ma zalw m3 05'2505} 05?50550 09?299'0 09?6000? 00'05009 03'6590! Oi'l?sgt 001251! 0903 9! 00'205! 09'655! 00'095! 0215? 0012}! 09?860! 007.95! 00?0?! 09"C92'l? 0019? 00 05'0506! 00'6625! 001551.! 05?5509! 00?5552?2 05? 5211! 00'6!0'Kt 05'5020!? 001356? 007.165: 0551 ".51 52?2051 05'0?! 05'09?; 05'906! 53'5501 513502! 51320?! 99"? VET: 10?02 6"9! 33's! 50?s! 0! 00125?: 00'0050! 031600! 030: 09153! 00'032! 001811 0315!! 5L 50 03?56030 03?655?! 00'2531 oz?stst na'aast 08'955! 021151 051.60! 021'"! 0010!! 0015!! 03?520! 05519209 0019?! 00'3053! 051505! 001000! oo?stst 05'655! 051??! 05'5?! 0516!! 00'521! Iz'cz 50's! 59's! 60?6! 55'5? za?s?r 05'5! 55'5! 59'5?! LVN 00'3050? 05'5010? 0016!?: 00?19605 0:555! a: 09'3155: 09?!!01? 09'00!0! 031385! 050! 00'590! 0919!! 09'8?! 09180! 09 00181.9! 0510555 00115115 001050! 05'9655! 0510082 0010003 050559! 055! 09?0!? 52152! 00?2111 0519!! 53?2"! 5L 611! 00'9! 6"5! 95?s! 26"! 19"! 55'? 50?9! 30 0917.02! 08?92915 09'5200! 09'10t0! 0902 08'8031 09 55!! 050913 09'760! 05150! 001901 5 00?6600! 00'65?1?90 00'55152 056! 00'330! 00190! 05?500! 007.95 05196 EL L0 090! 091509! 0510190 091005! 001205! 00'905! 091'?! 0010!! 00'005! 02183! 00'0593! 00?51655 00?55515 007.53?: 05?5?50! 00?005'? 00'65005 0012!! 0010!! 00'5021 53?0?! 05'951! 00?550! 00? I 90'9! 59?51 50'91' H's! 051511! 0916660 0010553 00'00553 0"0511 0515!! 09'530?! 05?550! 091201 0"300! 00"05 00'55502 051551.! 001369! 0510053 056! 001:0! 00?555 05'356 09?025 5L 50 00'5910! 0015082 06'i6090 001555: 0002 05'1?! 00?560! 02'550! Drift)! 03166 023555 00 001!le 0511253 00105?! 00182? 05?0?! 057.30! 513000! 55'555 513555 05'6l'6 05'555 59'1?! S0 0015?! 001505!? 00'509'! 0015!! 091.53! 0511ch 001L525 00'6251! 00'500ti 05'0000: 05?0931 0515!! 55?691?! 05101! 161! 551'! 90's! 95"! 05'5! 55's! 51's! 06"! 0L'i! If"! 03?505?5! 00181.?! BEE 05?0351! 001.12?: 001550! 00' [2552 001569! 05?003! 0519!! 00' [L?st 55'5! 50'9'! 95'9! 55"! 091652! 00'5555: 001150! 00'05?! 021515! 091?.le 0302 09'552! 00'522! 00?i00! 05?151! 0015!! 05'0?0! 031201 05'606 02'156 0 05'5550! 0015552 0015052 00?0559! 05"555! 05'05502 0513101 0515553 00'6555?5 00'0i8Y8 Drum: 0015!! 0512!! 00'900! 51/550! 00?0'3 51 05'9! 55'5! 90'5! It"! 05?? 60'1! V0 001555! 091?le 00'0'592 00'02032 055'! 00?"le 0"55550 0802 00 00151! 00'021! 05'50? 00'530! 00?050! 00100! 03?020! 03?000! 0F :55 09'296 5'506 V050 001L152 05'90582 00'6l691 001095! 00'55550 0510sz 00'25802 0515053 05150:: ?551 51.1.91! 5219!! 0073!! 00'000! 00155 00'555 05'550 57.100 5" 56"! of?! ?t'tt 08'? 50'01: 53'01?. ED 0916le 0911.253 00?910fz 00?00522 0502 0 09?520 0 03?17000! 091020! 01905052 0016002 0215232 0015le 001550! 05"[1100 055! 00'10? 05?151! 05' 50! 00'250! 02'110! 00'165 00 2:5 os?tss 00?515 00'660 0?000 0511.03: 0012212 05'6?191 05'25952 0015152 00?8?9?: 00'00'"! 00'8? 00'0t5 00'015 00118 52?500 05'531- 5L Qt'936 05159 18?? zs?n iz?i! St'z?l 95'0! :0 007.052 08'02500 oz'uuz 021059! 0911991 09'5015?0 02115?! 09'550?! 001150! 00'95!05 000K 09'555 09'596 09'535 05'605 05150 05%.50 00"" 09?600 0070!! 0910!! 00'500! 02'510! Z'Lh?i 0 0 05?00592 05?5555: 0015?! DEW-LIZ: 00'10602 05?55002 05'0558! 055! 5 5E. 52-1901 os?atu ns'ouot sz'oas os-ova oo'vzs sz?sns 00-999 5L L58 ou'sra an-aoe 513991. 52-21; 00'651. st'n ss-n 6511: war Ln'tt are! zr'n :o-zt rs'u Ls-n Le-u u-n zs-az era: wot zrot use 1:0 4? -N- -H- 4% saws: - sans - ore-z'x - non-n ma - arms 55mm :aasn mu 1 2mm? =ur mu 533m mun 95mm: xaam. em I ?33 35%! mama-1m mm mu 0.. ao'sszaa uz'LoLaL oo'astLL 090a 05'906! au'aaLEL oa?zosoL oo'LEsse 0551 EL 09's: is'L: 9 5: DZ oo'vessa ov?srosL nauz no'visz ab?sasz ot?tatz oo?nth Ia os'thas oo'szsas ao'ouzss asst EL 03?: 00": SI as'aevtt nu'ssoOL nv?zoLaa uaoz aa'voaz 00?9658 ot'zysz 08 aa'Lacsa as?tzoLs ne'srass os?aniva us?oerss asst 5L 90's: :o?cc ss'zr SI uz?tsaas Ui'?il?9 030: uz'sLsz oh'zzs: Os 0561 nu?ausz os?ssrz us'utv: sz ESE: oo?sttz 9L it's: tt?cc TE aa?uc LT oa'isrss OO'zstta use: Di'i?} ?3 os'szozs nn?rnaos as?nasas 055! on'snzz 5L 5! neat ov'atyr nv'zatz uu'stcz uo'aazz 03 uu'tLaas us?stz us'czz: au?osxz oo?sbt: oo?tutz 5L 95'0: eL's: 02's: 09's: 90?s: st 00'03509 ua'tozss 09?15355 oaoz 05'622! BB as?svars 0561 uo'sLIz sz?:ctz sz'nco: sz'avo: SL'Louz 9L en's: 26's: Le?Lz Ic?tz If DBDZ au?lazz nl'nst: ov'altz aa'scoz oe'ovoz on 05?65925 00'55915 oo?zzsos ns-vyasv asst st'saoz 5L ss-L: to'Lz 55's: 15's: ct oa'vasts 05'55505 0303 os?sorz oe?vsoz ua?vzoz oa?vast as?ssSI oe 0561 5L zt?sz 19's: Is'vz Zr'vz at 09'53115 ot?azrts oo?ezlos as?szIEI oeoz GB 09'9aasi an-ssosa 056: 5L La?sa 35": zs?tz st'cz tr -uv~ vavA ~av~ ?vv- zuvun A 55315 2 Koran NON Bduas Auvwvs sang :uasn an: '1 3.1.511 EH m: mu 5132mm mm sstsowt ram; Km; 6 =memm as? mm mm am Hum Hm: 02'09th 00"8?l3 09'03309 05'55565 09'68'35 BED: os?ovaz oz'Lasz ua?vssz 09'5122 or'attz uo?Lnass oo?sczva os?LILts ns'astzs 05'9u555 an'vsavs os?zers nu?saszs ns'Lzsav oa-zLaav oo?ooes# DESI en'zzs: sn'wasz an'nnsl sz'ts 65?s: nt'z: sa't: sn'xs ni?n: 52's: Ls'sz ss'Lt zo'Lz 39?s: 96?s: 55's: ss?r: oo'?z oz 00'55669 oz'tbss! 02?so?oe 09'62655 Os?ttsti 00'99595 nanz ao'assz ot'itsa oz?tssz oz?stsz us'savz 03-65:: az'zztz ns'LLza os?sszz na?satz ou?vdtz ov'zsuz os?lzuz 05'1nst az'tvst 68'9061 uz?tsst OS as?ztnse oo?avaa oo?seaos os?sosas on?iiais os?thcs os?atczs oo?sazts oc'tazos ns'stsv 05'10:99 os?sart) 05'6z15+ asst Ez?tosz oo?tsvz OO'Eovz eo?sstz sz'sazz oa?aLt: sz'srxz ne?isuz sz'ztoz ns'ztst sz?ssat sz?ISLr 5L na'z: 29?02 tz'ot (9?33 GT uo?oaoss ns?tatcs Di?iszzs oc'Lzors uo'ssaas nz'tvas aa'aatss as?pozvs on'voxzs 05'550ns ?i'si??i nv'utter no-vvts? use: uu'uasz un?zslz us'tvrz uV'vssz Dz?Lrtz oo?ootz oo?ssaz az'ttz: oa'astz oa"rtz as $802 00'vvot oa?vaez Do 596! os?szsz OI?9aat ov?osat on'rvct a os'zhLos os'tazas co?t12L9 os'zsoss aa?ussrs aa'esszs as?raazs oo?Lraos as?znint 05'scasr us?tatsv DS'Eazb? no?astsv 00'0tszv asst sz'rasz sz'sctz no'sszz us?oozz sz?sstz oo?sttz oa?zsst as?vset sz'srst SL'aLar sz?IiaX sz'soat sL'rcat sz'oozr on'asst 5L st'tt 15'0: ts?sz tt?sz 02's: 'Lz It?Lz 55's: 96's: 59?s: 50?s: s5'v: Lo'vz rz?zz oe?ra at oi?itLIS or'sths 03'6ts?b DE'Eisvv 080! ov'aLE: oa?ezta t':azz os'cszz ot?osra 00?801: 03'9902 os?szaz ai'sast az'Lva? os?sas: oz'tLa: oo?rzat ov?asLT oa'vscr nn?uzat oa'rsst 09 00'5'055 OG?Es?ti 05'99559 05 OZEIF DESI oo?rLzz sz?tetz SL'sctz EL?Lsot og?ssaz uo?stoz sz'stsr sz-Lcst uu?ssa: 52'3531 os?szar sz'ner sn'srct nu'sast SL?tsst '?sst SL'Lssr EL sz'u: It's: ?32 (9?53 ai'zz {9?12 Lt 00'3616i 00?95555 ?i?iLSii ov?iL?ii 050! oo?oszz uo'stzz aa-thz un'iinz on'nvnz oa?nooz nz'LssI oo'zsat 02'5131 no?aiLI oi'itLI os'sbsr ot'rrst oz?isst 8 as?Lauss 00't962? 05"1605 05?6566? ?i'056L9 ?0?1525: asst sz'asst 53'5591 5L 69?s: sz?az aL?Lz It'sz ta'sz It's: 59'tz z?zz t'tz zn'tz Ls?oz at'oz sc'st 9t oe'zsats 00'zcazs uv'itias az?saLa} ua?taanv oa?vzsa) nt'atosv na':Lnsi nn'nozev or?)6bcv uz'Issar oeoz oa-ssr: oa?zLo: :66! ot?isSt oz'stst aa?sLar 09?1091 oa'iost ot'oaat oa?oont oa?ssat nv'$t9t oz?sost oz 1L5: oz'rrsr DE 05?sascs oo?stzs os?vzsus 00'tassv ou?saslr on?zssev as'LtyIs aa-atosc ou'nsza: 0561 oo-zzuz ns'tasr st?cvst oo?sost sz?ztat us'ssLI nn'zaat sz?szst sz-zzst oo?zusr oo'vaI sz?svrt SL'szbz 5L Ei?Lz 95's: ov?sz [D'iz ra?az 5t os?stts aa'otvos oa'tatsb oa?oitvt nu?aeast or'vtocr or'zatzb o?'eseti oo?ovVLE can: or'ssoz oe'Lsoz as?stst 09'1061 oe'vset ur'VSLt Oi'dltt oa'aisr ar?uss: 0:15:51 oe'azsr nz-ssv: ua?asox oo?orvt oa oa'pstas 00?5!Iti asst 00?8951 oo'stst us?sabt 52's: ta?sz sz'vz It's: ya'zz sz?zz 55'13 at'tz ss'nz '51 {1'51 pL'sI (?31 0?31 PI oa?ozozs cs'osaos ov'zessv ov-zasev oo?evosv oz?lsonv aa'avszv os?LroIv os?sstov oa?atvs: uo?vasa: an?stst 090: or'zzst 0 Gist oz'tt?t 00'905! 00 SSVI O?'tl?r ?3 os?secav os'rsaLv os'asasn os-raasv un'stasv us'ztizv en?asaov ou'ssts: no'isva: us?zs6st oo?uert uo'aBLv: os?sutvt os?avtt: 6561 52'srst sa'zust sL'vsat os?zsat oo?asst sz'rcsr os?Ltst os?Lost DD?Eiir ao?sasr oo-atsr sz?sszt EL :o?va ot?Oa 55's! 02?s: b??Lt 09?50599 00?3555} ?o'OBIti oo?aztzt 0&?915?? 00't330f 09?3L89f BED: oz?Lost os?sset os'zcar oi'zscr oz?Lth un'usSI ua'uzst aa'ssit ou'vsst oo?vos1 ls?itvr nt'slvt oa'tszt oa'sott DB os?aotzr os?ruztv os?zsvuv os?zassc ou?zzsat ns?zztez os?teth oo?naas: DS'atsst oo'LIzst os?tLat: asst sz?itLI 2?25! 5L va'tz Lt'tz ts?zz sr?zr to'zz 65'tz ?tz ?nz sr'uz 55's: 55's: oa'et Ei??t sn?at Lc'Lt zo'Lr 69's: ss'st at oa'ooset os'satsv aa?rtsyi us'rztIr uZ'asvsr as'azts: an'nnac: oa'san: oz?tuvv: os-sxazt ua'ZLurt oz?thzt one: oa?srat oa'neLI oa?tht ot?aLst oo?irat ao?zxsx o5'tsst os?srst uz-stst 09?555? oa'esvt aa?zzv: oo?vovl oa'ert na'avtr oz?szrt os?sszt uu'Zth nz'vaI as an'trsar 0 ao?:scz? 05'E09lf 553! os?anT us?tnst sz?rvsx SL'zsvt sL-zsst sz'vzvr as'sscr as?aszr sz'stct uo?oszt as?vszt as?ovct ns?zsII EL sz?zz zs?tz Ii'tz aa'nz s5'o: st'oa Lt'?t 66?st ts?at az'at os?ar ss?Lt oz'LT 93's: rs?SI 12?51 os?sr 65??t I: -N- -N- -1- -1- -H- -H- zuvws 55315 a - mum Hm - ms star-1mm samurai Imsn mm '1 um 1m :51: lax SHOW wmu 55560?! mu saws 38.5833 HRH 1 i1 4 00?2Lti9 09'89509 0903 DB na'sszas asst os'zttz sL?thz os?ovtz 5L ua'o: 2'0: oL'sz zt-az as 080! un'sszz ot'attz os'vszz os os?szLs 09'30295 oo?zttis asst EL'auzz no'ssrz sz?sztz oo?zauz ns?tsuz EL 59?52 5? az?Lzbas or'tast 00?05195 use: 00?0912 O8 ou?asazs 09'91915 05-2050; 0561 SL'aoIz 05'5502 oo?sza: 55?5361 60's: na-Lz 56?s: 9: 09'09355 ov'asats 080C os'nttz ov?esoz na'Lraz na 056! ao?szst ns?1ast SL?vsa: 5L :z?sz ZL?sz zz'sz Li ?l?ZotEE oz?tsots 09'5?005 030i uv?zruz uB'iZEt 08 os?anaui nn'tsaL) 0551 Di??dat 5L (S's: ta'sa sa?iz s?tz 99 or'sosas DZ'Issav Dv?vser uv'aSLsr aaoz ov'svsr on'aost nz?rLat ot'vcst ar'HSLz as 00?12595 ass: os?sant EL ES'iz 99?s: sc't: ev'zz 5r nn'sszas uu?athe oo?batsv ou'asvSt DEDE aa?asat DB ao'uvzsv un?sarcv ao'nunt! asst us'zzst os?stst ao?aasr 5L oz'tz 02-2: 92-12 b'tz st 08?98651 au'nozvs OBOE oo'ass! or?vsst as oa?stzv DESK sz?assl un?szet SL'Esst 5L It?ll St'tt 58'03 [5?03 EV ou?shicb og~avrzr Baez ai'aast 09'tssr oe?ozst os?sest oa?Lsst an aa'sattb us?sacar DESI oa'rast sa'osst os?sxst sz'osvT sz?ostt 5L ZP 080E oo?otsx ao?lisr uo?aabt 09 05'15595 055? 5L tr?nt it?s: sz'st '31 95's: -av* -av- -av- ?xA auvun rum) saws - or's'z'l - Mom-n no" mas 5W3 55mm??! :33er ?mi fuss?m aux 933mm! 1m 55:60:?; lam: mm mama amid ?mam ammo Hanan srnz-ar?zr Izwm x113 or?astss on?9sots os?szav: oi'saszs ov?ossas 05?sisav uo'zgsar oa'uoass aa'saasa oo?ssosv ov'osczv ai?asstv oo'stss: can: ov'v51z oz'xsxz oa?asuz 05'3zoz uz'Lasr ??'Ilsl na'sust on?ztst oz'stst oo?ooat 09'szL ov'ucst ar'asst 00'5251 09 un?avttv aa'rzsni DESI OS?azSt Da?ob?t 5L ?53 {?58 La'tt 05?s: 90'2: It's! 05 as':s:zs no'zazts aa'asisv or?zaELr ov?srbsa oz?tt55i os?voatr Oi?Dt?zi ai'ncozi oo?sarar us'satat use: oo?st: 00?0981 ov'tzat DB os?stozs 00'tsars oa?LGos ao?zsosv DS'Lsusa ns'saazn ns?asuts na'Lsoxv os?azzoi 05?85566 oo?seea: us'LzsL: os-tavs: ca?szss OSEI sc'Inaz ns'tsst us-vtst ao?Lnat st?avar 5L?rL9t SL?Ibst St?orst sz'Lvsr ao'ssbt sa':nv1 5L 69?98 93?s: 59'52 Ei'Zl ta'oz fi'EY 51's! 65 os'9r6ts or?etsos oa?ozssv oo?uuear oa?azeL! ni'aztsv uz?tezbv na'svt?v no?vttar ol'ZisaE ab?vtaL: us?ssoLE Dsoa nz'scoz na?azsr eo'aBHI os?v?ar oa'aca: ni'sLLt uz'raat as?sost oa'tcst 00'955! 09?:15t ar?zsvt ur'vsvt os'szr: on 00'3056? 0551 Oo??tbt SL vv'sz E'vz sv'vz a'vz Ia?z: et'zz at'tz sn?oz Lt'u: Ls?at 26's! ts?at st'st av au'utius os?sossb az'thsv na'sastv oi?btnti os?ztvxa os?sthc ua'oausc os?natst uo?uva: us?szos: 02'1t9v: 0802 OF 206! ar?isst av'zzs: us?zssr us'azsz 00?005! Ot'IttT 09 oo'tcsev ua'zzazv 05?)3t1i os?tzaur as?sooa: os?rasst ao?zoess no?nors: on?ivvzz asst sz'subt 5L as?o: 6?5! Si'?t L7 oz'tzesr oo'sov&v ou-vvzob 0302 cz'l??I E'Litt or'oazt OB oo?D?ttb es?ostzv os'zestb os?zseot es?tiont ns?zszs: aa'oLza: os'saav: os?tsrv: oo?stazt oo?osst: asst sz'oaLr on?nsst sz?vsst sz'tht 5L'scsr ng?oelt sz?1stt sc?zzvt oo?ssct SL?Iitt sz'sazt 00'51: Da'xstt EL LB?zi (5?03 19?s! 03?s! 9i Oi'ii?ii un?vsist na'anz: 0503 09'159 nz'SLit oo?tezt 03 os?sittv oo'tozrv ns?tasnv nS'Ist: os'xisst an'zrrat oo?tssv: oo?tsatt an'tvsr: 05'thut os?tasaz ass: SL?csst os?oast SL'stt oO'stt os?atrt oo'tact nu?sszt es?nezt os'tac: 09?5th au?bszt os?azzt SL?Eozt 5L sa'zz 19-1: LL'az Lt?u: Ls'at ur'sr zi'at Iv'at ao?et ec'Lt so?Lt zL?sr sn?s: sr'st Et?st sv Oi?t?tii 01'99fii OED: ub'zasr or?aast az'sts? au'rast un?zssr ns'xzsr o'zsit oz'Esvr op'v1vt or'eovt oe'eLcr oa'IstI 01'5zst ot?sszr ns'Eth ai'sizt os'szzt ao'oozl oz'sstr as 05?90015 0018518: 056! ns'evst sz?vtst ou'ssvr us?szyr sz?rvtt sz?zezr os?tizt oo?otzt on?vstt uo-svtr oo'szxx an?sutr o?seol 5L za?sr 59'91 'St ii?BI 5? av'zasti os?soaov nn?osnnv ov'ozzs: az?ssvat u9'zassr os'tszs: oz'cvss: oo'oaais on'oanzt nz'stzz: 09'2251: os'sasat oa?soto: na'ortsz or?assaz use: 09 orsr or'otst oz?scrt oz'tsrt at?zzt! as?csst Uo?uiEt oz?Lezt ul'oszt az?szzt oa?ztzt 03'9911 os'ssrt oz'trrt Da'ozzt or?ssor 09 05-3505: oo'sszar os?ssos: ao'thst os?zeszc uo'stoat oo?etLo: as?suzu: as'straz as?rLLs: asst os?ran Os'vvtt ?tslt 05?5111 5L to?oz zs?at 92's: aa?at sv?er tr?st so?Lr 5L?9r zi'sr sn'st 9L'sr st?st 98?11 Ls?tr sz'rt In?vt EV 0608 oz'Lsi: ab'nssr au-ztpr on'vszt ua'sszt av'uctr ar'zott oz SLZK oa?zszt na?lzzt oa?tozt oe'aett ov?sstt oa?zxtt oz?rsox us'ssnr na'nsot on Bs'szth oa?tsoss os?ttiv: os?zsocc na'Ltsat aa'zssiz oo?zaLaz uu?osst oo?soth asst SL'voit os?nvst sn?sztt sz'tht sz'vaI ao-rzzt sz'sstt ao?zsrr os'szlr ao?cott ou?saot oo?ssot uu'zzot SL'zao: sz'tss 5L 60'51 9?3! 55'51 93's: 90'51 Oz'bt tt?E! 3' nt'525L: ao'oabs: or'vthc as'sasvt 05'snott os?vecz: oe'zsrot ua'litsz aa?izcaz ac'istsz no'vsst oz'ssisz os'uzas: oaoz oz'?sbt DB'Sitt ?i'tztt 09?6921 00?5501 oz'stor 09 au'ssav: na'szrr: uo'itzz: os-swso: no'zrsoc ou?zatsz ?Lesue os'bISLz 'Ealsz as?autsz os'assvz 0551 ao?aszt ou-tvct 05'sazr uu'stzr sz?trzt sz'osrt oo?astr os?Esot 52'3501 sL'stor os?srnr 05'556 sz?ass 5L ae?Lt os?Lt at?Lt ze'st zs'st st?st Lc?st ss'st it's! 9t st'st I?vr te'st ot'tt [o?er vL'zt rs?zt It -L- -N- wn- -H- -9- -5- -V- zuvua fm?m mu zxaamu awe 515.15 2 - - ?0me 4 ms Awws Ema-mama 550W 1mm ME 5960:": MU Rn! oa'rsese oa?aasis can: uu?nanv 9'tzss oa'vvs: as?asLt 00'1699 oa nu?Lrass OS'bsats 00'15005 asst sz?:tsc 5L aa'us zo'sv 59's! Tr?Lv It'sr D9 on'grth a?'ostts oaoz au'azbt or?zas: ot'usst nz?ats: ca DESI sz'ZLst ns'zost SL ta'Lr oL'5t eL'sv I??ii ss'tt 55 00'88506 OBDZ 09 ng-arLss ou?nzoss ao'cvzta en'suLta osar 00?20?: SZ?Sitt OS?tht EL 5t?5i Le'la os?si vL?zv as nn'zrzs: al?ssess uB'oaLva ua?sltta oaoz 09?0985 DE DU'Lstva asst os-vrzc sz'zv tv?zv 9L?nv 96?6t L5 90'36958 use: nc?sszt uo'ssrt as?sutz oi?iiDE oe oa'oscna ns?o5Lst oo?ozzLL oo?Ltva asst ou'nsa: sz?azos no'nzsz os"?ar 9L 09?65 33's: 30?s: 95 Da?Tzvaa na'uasst osoz o:'cvtt os'taoc as'ozec oa?ossz oz?snsz as os?srsaL ao?zissL ns'ssLOL asst sa'sraz ou?sasz ou?zcaz 5L Ta?Lt $5 oz'staLL oz?ssarL ot?zatcn uo?aasrc can: us'atsz ar'zzaz au'aaLz oa DESI 00'3?3! 5L ri?Lr 65?s: sz's: os?v: as ot'ssazL oaoz or'vsaz nv'ssaz na?t?Lz ea?ssaz na-stsz on oa'aLssa 05'93559 osst 00'9Lsz us?tzsz SL'thz os?rzsz aa?zLiz 99 s: 62": C5 uo?ozLOL 07'11999 can: nn'osz uv'vrsz ?7-235: 09 on'aazaa oo?ests OS?asbts as?sazts 0561 DD OSSZ sz'zovz 25 nv'zutss ua'ztavs onoz ns'tssz ub'zisz Di'ziiz az?sstz a GEEK us?tzvz os'zncz ua'Ltcz as?svzz 5L at?I: ts?u: vs?sz ts ?uv- ~3v- -vv- -2- -L- -A- sauna 5&315 01'6'2'1 Not?n HON . ETVDS Luvuvs SIGZ-ILHSIM luasn 1 EISH an tar man ?vans ssrsutvt tear; Ha! mum arm: Luann: ammo stoz-st-zt lama um: oz?euzls ob'otrzs 09-53599 oa?nncsa no?erEG uZ'ILzua oz'ttaaL on'thsL aa'aszL osoz Oi'kiLZ ov'sas: 08 ou'tvsaa oa?vsava ao?LaItB oo?osisL 05'59239 os-cyozg 90-90909 os'azzt oa'iszs as'ssxs :z?sLsz EL SLEZ 5L 62?5b as?vv :s?tv ss?zt zn'xi to'Ii oz?ov v9'3t ee'Lt vt?L: ob?9t 10's: It'r: :a?tc cs'zt tt?zz as Ds'ntsta 09'50195 030: ub'asr: ez?sacz ua'att: ot'nsz: oz?tntr os?szt: oo?lsa o?zoot 09'955z uz-nsaz 09'6282 ar'vLLz uo'nsz oo?ssaz ob'vrsz uz?:ssz oz'srsz 09-59}: aa'atrz os'aatz as 05'59528 no'antss ua'aocts 00?66009 05'60685 GSSI gL'ttz: sz?Lvat oo'uasz st'ossz SL?rtsz sn?suLz sL?zssz oo?tosz on'ossz au'tsvz ao'tarz ao'astz sa?sszz 5L :t'cr az'zv :s'uv 50's: at's: ta'st 0's: Lr'st 59": ao'v: st'se as?zc co'tt tb't: za?n: Iz?ot a; oz?stsa ot?sttza aa'slsoa oa?oatvt ou'sxioL or'zotss nz?thLa oo'ovoss on'zSLis ns?tavta oz-Lzota ao?nnass can: uo?aatz 09 os?sooLL os?vavsL ou'zzovL oo?chss os?chss na'sovvs as?z?e15 as'szns oa?itsas os-casas oo-srst os?zsass 0551 00'3553 tL?Et vs'az nz'az 85 09'61569 08'36509 az?:scss o9'v50Ls 0802 ns-szxt nz'tta: aa'zssz or'vsee ov?utaz ov'szc: os?tasz ov?zzsz aa'uzsz oz 1L9: 09-92:: oz?:azz oi?eczz oy?tstz 02-15:: as oo?oaa?L 00'65159 DO DESI . 'uasz uo?zzaz sz'HSLz oo?rasz HE'susz ne'ulbz sz'tstz sn'srcz as?ovtz os?asoz sz'nsoz SL'srnz 5L 90"5 Zf?tf lt?zf 69's: 11?s: 59?92 LS 00?999f9 0902 09'219 03?6551 os'tstz az'tsu: GB ua'iLLzL ua?tzsas oo'zsses os?to9b3 GS'anzs as?stss; oo?ssth oo?eczss oo?bsuss os?taszs oo?Lasls oo?thos asst 00?995: 5L zt'Ls as?s: 53's: st'sc :t?tc Gi?zc sa'r: aa'u: ta'ot v'sz va'az z'sz zL?Lz 9'9: )t?sz 29?s: 55 oo?azcae os-thua nt'saoss no'zcazs G302 oZ'Lsaz or-nst aa?zrcz oa'nasz nn'azsz oa'LLsz ab?szsz oa'erz aa'szvz ou?astz ao?sizz az'stt: oz?sstz os'sstz oe'ztta en'zLuz nu?zzoa no ZEEI DE 05?00959 05'35t09 00'20265 un?uLLss uo?azsas os?sasts ua'sosos uo'atssi OSEI sz'sasz '319: o?zss sz?ttsz SL'Eshz ns'asiz sz?tzrz sz'ttzz EL?Latz ua'svtz on'c013 au?zzoa Oi?tist oo?sost os?Lsat EL aa'ac 09's: 6??Lz 96's: r'sz oy'sz Zi?iz 55 90'05169 05?95155 00'55lf9 05'32939 os'tth oo?osaz oe?aoaz oa'SSIa os'aoiz oa'asz: os?rzcz un'osxz oz'srzz as?tsaz az'ssoz aa'sznz ot?itst oz?taat DE 00'bbt95 as-saats us?zatzs nn'zucss Do'crIzs os?ssuos oa?avrso on?szta; DE?Elztb DSEE sL?tEiZ 5L'Sitt oo'Lzrz EL za'ic ct?tc It??t ta'L: sz'cz L'sz zz'sz 55?s: 05?s: ss?rz :z?iz sa?tz GZ'cz vs ov?vsass oa?aotze ov'zosos ne'ssavs oo?ovots oa'uzozs ns'ossas ar'zvsuy anuz ui'tzsz os'sav: 00'0302 09'000! 08'096t o?'tlat 05'33509 - 09?56915 ni'assus 00?50057 055! uc'szvz 00'9ch sz?azcz 05'vszz os?stzz us'sstz us'asnz sL'nzaz sa'aasr sz'avst sL'sLat sz'acet 05?1091 no?asst oo?sest 5L 53?62 66's: 10?s: 15": az?zz E5 nr-tvola uv~zatns aa'saIss un?ztoas oa'aosas oz?tasvs oa?tosts na-arszs ua'ou515 oa'raies oo?tossv oz?LiSlv oa'osst us'r?slv osoz dD?Stbt oo?zczz 0 05't90t 0 ?azuz ne?estr us ns'nvoos an'usaas nn'ozLLs ne'Lsiss un'sovvs oo-zeza? os'sztca aa'ntvav oo?sILri oa?uuszv oo?aiozt 0551 sa?socz 00'59zz sz'LLIz os?lstz ns'zsur UD'zsnz st'rcer sc?:r6t os?vser oo?Lsst sz?ozar ns'rast o?ossr on'LIsz ns?sasr EL sL'uE 02'0: ns'sz rn?sz a?'ez os?Lz ee'Lz 23?s: 62?s: sz-sz SL'vz Lz?vz 'tz vc?cz La'zz oo?tz ss?tz :5 on'avoxs os'ttass on?aztss or?srzis oa?iztzs an?ieets ov'saoos ou'aoxst oe'ZLtar an'atzts os?sa:55 oo'vILzb oaaz aa?ntzz os?tosz oa?Lsz: n9'63I: nu'az1: o?*ssaz aa?saoz us?vunt al'vsst ov'szsx os'zse: aa?stat oe?oeat os'srLt oo?tht DD?vlar ao?zISI as 00'52055 90'35505 as?scosb oo'oELI) 00'1160 DESI sz?rozz os'iLoz oa?btoz ao'zvat uc'soar ns'sast oo?sosr 05'5Lst sz?tvsr sz'tzsl 5L '93 05's: 30's: 30?s! 30"? ss'ot TS -.L- ?4 1- -1- 4? 41- ??315H?ua nu: 1&3 i 54m 2 ot?s'z?l mum Hm ms star-1mg?: whim 5333mm utmimadoo AEHKD EELNHJ 55am PEER NILE K113 or'svosst as 09 080E us'ttsa or'sasa oa?oszs L109 us 05'995592 aa?Luszst ao' i096?1 00 056! 05'5019 05'6985 oo us?tiss za?ta sz?aa zz'SL 0L 03'233191 at 900151 az?ttusbt uaoz uz'tozs os-tsos ar'2955 a?-swes a no~razrsr oo-cczevt oo?soszat asst os?stas oa?tats aa'rLss SL go's; Ei'bL ra'rL 55 ?z?sEsLtt 0:02 ua'auss oa?zsas uz?scss oo?aass Du?Laahit Di'atiBET 0251 05-5255 SL'oers ao'ozzs oo?stts ss?oc os'ss vz'ss as oO'atL991 Da?iiotit oa'ozcort can: na?vlss os'ces; on oa?nzss 0*?8615 03 ns'iaaver uo-Ithzt asst sL-LaIs os'Lssi 5L ss-nL ?1.59 ta'Ls 05'59 as'ts L9 nan: nu'uats oz'sszs oo?zszs z?tsas Dr'xsst ua'ussacr os?ssoazt on'ossazt oo?cztzar os?susozt DESI oo-szas SL'szes 00'ocsi sn'trsi au'Ls 69'59 r79 'rs 59?1?5 99 oaoz as suns oz?zusv oz 115? ?srLr a an treat: 00' ELCLII 055? as-saLI sc?zssv os-aoav s'axsv an?zzvi EL 2315 {.519 ?t '05 9515 59 uz'casszt o9'Izt6tx agnl or-zsar nz'LSLs as 09'tesv ua'tzSiII os?oozsxx os'sLsIIt oo~tLrsot asst 52?59ti os'tstv EZ'ssar DE'Dttl BL 09 55's: zv'es vt'as p9 aa-auzazt as-oecctt ouoz aa?azsv oa'ascv oz-stv oo?vosntr os?szvaot nS?r?zs?I 055? ns'scti oo'aszv sz?ssor oa-auab aa'Ls zL?ss 19's; is'vs E5 Dn'sEtatt oaaz oz'Lavv os?ozzv oo'eczs os'cstr no on os?svaoI ns-stesot ns'zsziot oo?bvatot oo'sszsa asst oo?tsa: os'Ltac 5L 50's; 55 as ns'as 9 oz~ersa1 00'956vat oa?saszox 00'08900t can: o:'sstv 08'9116 ou?SEOb us'sSEt os us-sstzot oo?chnet ao-erss use: sn'scs: ?5'553: 5L sv?zs 57'15 sw~us se'sv os?ar 19 -uv? ?av- ?vv- -2- -Mv -A- SOVVH ('Juma) saazs - nt's'z'! - soxun noa - auwas xuuwvs KERR furs-H313 nu ma 530an 99:60?? mu 5 1332mm: amid uranium-ms mm 31mm: ?81-?13 on vatost en'nsvasr oz'sesv-t 05'539tkt no?atcazt ns'sazszt 00'ossetr oo?lasctr oz Ititot or atzsot oaoz as'ssas oa-raLs oi?DtBE os~sr95 oz?:v:s oz-srzs or'ecss or-vtas uu?stsb ua?ovav as?sva? oz'Isar nu-ussv ov'ouae no-vaep 02?sszv ov'vtzv or ov??i? us os?sacsvt on 53505: os?sosstt au'vcatrr us?ovzocx uo's::ozt oS'tsaLrt oo?osasot ea?caLbar ao-sszor on assent as ezLee 0561 ns-zzns 00-9155 oo-sots sz-snns sz?Ltav as?Lzsv sz?acsv on'svvy os?nscv 00-0119 oS'otuv oo-tssc on ELBE s: 9L at-zL an'o; 69'65 zt'aa EL 59 it'vs cs'zs oL'Ia ts'os vr-ss 99's: na-ns 39?35 905 uL es'zsvovt ua?zssv51 o: ui?bssizt nu?naasxt ey?LsrLIt ev-arLorr uv'ssSaot os'ttvsot av?bszzot asuz oa?soss on $529 ns'eaos ar'vGLt oa'nnLv 00'309? n9'L1sv oV'ocvr 5-941? os-csai Oi'btst 09?959: oa us-sszett os'zestzr as-oLoszr ua'zasvrr as?atturr oo-tasLut ao'saasut os?s?ttnr novtstiot os-scovs 0561 sz?Lszs sz-ssra sa?vsos sa'rssv aS'saso sL'rsvb u0'azcr sz?szzv os'cstv aS'ZLuv sz*zsac sc?zscc as?aasc sL?stec 9L Ls?as zs-Ls 51's: os'ts 25-29 Ls-zs vt'ts :s?ss sc'ss oc'rs :2'cs Lt'ts ar'sv as oa?sacazt or az-zzsizt ee'st:z1 uz-LvLart oa?Ltistt us-LLsLar ne?ssrsat 09-19255 oaoz os'svzs oo?bvts at-zvos Di?sisi un'zva 'Lssv ae'LLvr oZ?rstt oa?aosv oo-ozzv no'ssni as'sLss os'Lsac 09?1255 au?ath a os'sevocr as'asvazt 05'sva51r os'titsot ns-szaLut 05'5z6&0t os?zsazot oo-vsaaor co?ssens oo?vouss no'}rsse 0961 5L'9t05 os?zzev ou?esz os?zvsa sL'ssvv 00 east :L-razv 9L'9ttv 5L~ssot oa-sLa: Ez?ast ua'vss: su'zasc SL'tts: 5L se?es 55's: oz?vs to?ca as 09 ti?ES so-Ls L5'ss sn'vs st?zs zL-ts eL'os zL?sv ss?sv zE?Si as aa's1sszt nz'saastt os?saoctr oa?isanzt OV'SLibot ns?roraar os?szans vs ?5596 02's15r5 au?aaLzs oz'cLsus use; oa'ssos oz'ssav ab'zoav uz?LaLs nz?519v oo'vzsv aa-stvv DB?sbtv ua'rszv ni'asov ov?stoy oa-scs: as'ssa: no 99;: oz?isr: as us'asaLII ao?thaot os?tzasot aa'srsnoz os?asass au'arass oo?cszsa asst sz'SLLt as?seyv oo'tssr sz?zusr oo'crys 5L'9zsr sz-Ivzv 05-551r sz?ozsr sz'zvet sz'LsL: sz'azac aa'evs: os-tsv: 60'svtz s?aaz: s; It'rs ab'zs rz'rs :u'ua ia'as se-as 55's: st'ss Lc'ts uc'ss tz'ns vz'av La'av it'Li zv-sv 55's; os'vr LS no oecczt ot?onozrr os?saasut ub'zoLLut or 291101 oa?stLs os?vass 0: stars 0i?9E105 ov'sscsa oo'ztsan oao: os'tsuv an?nsar oz?Lasv oo'sst us?snb) oa'sstt ov'ntsv s'szz) ob'zrtv oa?rsau as'zasc uv>zose or'eza: 92?5L9t oa'snac a:?9se: oo'zcr: as os'sotatr oo?szoatr un-ZLILot oa'ssoso? nu'rasuu: os?tsogs os?sszte os?saan as'oLrsa oo'sceze sz-ossr ns-zsvr en'aszv sz?sozv oo?zzrv an-xvov os'teac us use: sz??sst sz'svvt sz?oncc 5L'55zc 5L Ls'os os?ss Lo'ss ss-vs 93's; za'zs aL-sv 55'5v st'vv ar'zv 55'21 as oz':ozuzt az'seztrt ob'BIasox os?vzzsot oa'rrsrut ua'vsszot no assent at ??995 oe'vsavs on torts oz'stsaa aa?oznsn 00?9ztvs us':rsza oanz oo?zssr Dr?zili ov'OLav uv?saxv 09 veto na?vzow a'rva: ne'asa: os?tsc: os'vrsc- ot'rLst on bus: oz?ssv: aa~aasr no'scz: og'ch: an OS'osszII oa-astsox nu'16010f os?ctozot os'vso?nx os?pstas oa'saszs no'sesos 00'zrsea ao-stha na?otvsa us'sLoza ao?cssoa os?LLsaL 055t sz?vttv sL?erzr EL'Dsti ao'seoi os'soai sn'vzs: sz'erss sz'rLL: 52-259: sz'szsc un'sas: ua-ssz: os'ozzc 05'vsn: sa'cco: sz'SLsz sn ss-ss :5?55 v'is 95's: ss?zs tc?as It?s} i'L! it's? 95-59 oa'sv vs?zs so'z? Sz?ti sv'nv La'sc 59 ov-zaesrt on start: ot?Ii?Dit oz Lsstor os ELBES a: tease 09'18086 aa?zszos oz?caraa on stLaa oz-Isusa on sovts ot?zttos oa-tusaL oaoz ov':asi un'stcb uz?IEzr ne'ayrr uz?LsO9 or'ses: a: LDSE oa?:cac or'aSL: nu-sas: a: 1:9: os'rvsc os?zzv: uz'EObE an arc: on But: oa'rttc ev'zant uz'czac an us~nns?ox os?zozsn: ns'szrcur oo'attss ns?ssxas 00?95255 uo'vvizs oa?ezosa ns~satsa os'srsva 00'tssza oo'stcra oo-ssteL os-issaL asst sz?ths ou?vas: as'tzsc as'svsc sz?azss sz?aisa sZ'vca: 5L [0?55 ss'cs an?zs sa'ts us-os 23'59 se?sr 'Lv as'sr go's: It?Si Lz'vv rb'tr vs-zr 0L Ii sa?ov or'av It?s: t3 oa'zssaot ov ULEBOI ov?nsLeot up Etots ou?aozts an'nvwsa as-tazva as'Lrsza on-srers oe'vtveL or-sesrL oeaz ao?zstv u}'ott at'nznw 'ossc ug'tLa: ot'zth or'uss: a. ELSE uo?uos: oa'oiic uo?zzc: ov'sots as'tvzc oo?srre oa vso: ui'vss: en?scea or'szsz on no IEIBDI co'rtzas ou'xazsa os'soazs os'aLsaa aa?esnsa ns?zstze aa?vtasL os?tsasc os'issx: 0:51 ou?ossc 05 cent us?ELLs os?soa: sz'zzb: oo?szz: oo-stuc on'szsz sz'zzez os?tssz ar'Laaz sL nv'zs ac'os t'sv o?er s'sv (9'5v rL-vb st'zv tt-tv zs?av zL's: 55-3: 91?s: tn'sr 96's: :9 nz-ILLcnI oo-ovass os-Lsars ne'setzs oa'astas oa-azsaa a'nsasn 00?3L15s os'seats or'9rzoa oo'asrLL as sass; can: oz-1ssz nz-szss 'oaec oo'rsc: ow ass: us?Lt9: as'svs: ua'szv: a not: oa'oitt na'st: oa?ztze ab'seu: ua'assz us see: oa?zsaz an'sst ua'oILz on uo'nosts oS'LrLte os?stse oO'ELtes UO'Lvas 95?ssuca uo?ztite os-zsasc oo?sych oo'zosoa oa'Ltssa an ZLIBB ossr no-oos: sL-szs: st'esvc 05-15:: ua?vzit as 55:: sa?ssrc ca?zzr: oa?zxo: us~zsaz oo?acaz os'zaLz oo?Lsz os'rLaz aa?zzaz as 595: EL sn-sv rs'ar uu'av so?av tI'Sl zz'sr zt?vv sv'cv Is?zv 55'0! at?ov 5'3: va'L: ot'Lt sc's: 9-5: 55?s: as oe'rosas at 5:056 us ztzta oe'vasxs oa'aoLza ov-essLL oa'usvsL us'osozL or IEELS OBOE no rust oz 559: 00'vss: on zts: os'rvr: 03-91:: us'srz: ua?ontz oz-sso: oa-orsz ab?zeaz oe'rtnr ua?vssz at 1:5: as os':szs 05?56069 00'ostLe as'vzssa oo LSSES us?sotzs os?oteoa ?essva oo?ssorL os-sseas as?zozss asst on sat: 00'095: sz'csz: 0: star 5L'59rt 52'rut: sn?zro: oo-zasz sn?szsz Do'lssz 00'ttsa sa'zaLz sz'aisz sz?svsz as L6iz oo-nirz SL ss-L? us?si 59-5? oe-vv 'cr Ho' 'zv Gt?tr Ls~uv to'sc it?s: sr-L: 9L 3: en's: I 52 :9'99 ss~zr :9 v6- -0- -H- -1- ?27 suvvo A says a ot's'z't - norm-Luca - mm 1m stor-uumu 59mm :uasn em '1 am an lax mu mama m1; 551607?: 2:1er mm :13 awe .u we warm mu Kristen M. Simkins From: Melanie 1. Gordon Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:46 PM To: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, Larry L. Lidgett; Becky Ulrich; Linda Bernard, RN, CCH P-RN Cc: Richard C. Smith Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Ideally, yes. With Joe leaving next week imagine I'll have at least a temporarily increased role with Medical operations above the usual interaction. .?Mefanie 60765971, CJM, Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (814) 5484150 (fax) From: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 1:37 PM To: Larry L. Lidgett; Becky Ulrich; Linda Bernard, RN, Cc: Melanie L. Gordon Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Melanie Do you want to be present? Todd W. RN, BSN, CCHP ch President of Operations PrimeCare Medical, Inc. 3940 Locust Lane Harrisburg, PA 17109 (717) 545-5787 Ext. 1129 (300) 245-7277 FAX (717) 364-1224 Cell (610) 533?2505 From: CTR Health Services Admin Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 11:19 AM To: Becky Ulrich; Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, Linda Bernard, RN, Subject: FW: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith From: Melanie L. Gordon Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 9:47 AM To: Larry L. Lidgett; Richard C. Smith; Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith That?s the day ofthe Centre County Emergency Management Agency Annual Certi?cation Drill. I will be at the Emergency Operations Center from 12p-5p and unable to meet her. {Mefanie Gordon, Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (814) 54841150 (fax) From: Larry L. Lidgett Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 9:46 AM To: Richard C. Smith; Melanie L. Gordon; Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno Cc: Becky Ulrich; Todd Haskins; Unda Bernard Subject: FW: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Ms. Julie Simoni RN, candidate for has been interviewed by PrimeCare?s recruiter, Becky Ulrich and Todd Haskins. She will be coming to the facility on Wednesday, June 1 3:45 pm to meet with you as a prospective HSA. Thank you. From: Becky Ulrich Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2016 4:01 PM To: Larry L. Lidgett Cc: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP Subject: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Larry, Juiie Simoni will be in to meet Warden Smith on Wed. June 1?t at 3:45. If you have any questions please let me know. Thank you, Becky Becky Ulrich Human Resources Recruiter PrimeCare Medical, Inc. 800-245-7277 ext. 1109 717-364-1229 (Fax) a . bulnch nmecaremedrcal.com This communication, along with any and all attachments, contains PRIVILEGED and CONFIDENTIAL intended only for the use of the recipient named above. The information may be protected by 2 state and federal laws, including, without limitation, the provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 GHPAA), which prohibit unauthorized disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed that any use or dissemination of this information is strictly prohibited. If the reader or recipient of this communication is not the intended recipient, an employee or agent of the intended recipient or you believe that you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by return e?mail. The email should also be deleted. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or duplication of this email and/or attachments, will be considered unauthorized use and is prohibited. This communication, along with any and all attachments, contains PRIVILEGED and CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION intended only for the use of the recipient named above. The information may be protected by state and federal laws, inciuding, without limitation, the provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), which prohibit unauthorized disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed that any use or dissemination of this information is strictly prohibited. If the reader or recipient of this communication is not the intended recipient, an employee or agent of the intended recipient or you believe that you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by return e?mail. The email should also be deleted. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or duplication of this e-mail and/or attachments, will be considered unauthorized use and is prohibited. Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Waiter F. Jeirles Wednesday, May 25, 2016 5:00 PM Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno; Melanie L. Gordon; Richard C. Smith: Amy Miller; Caitlyn D. Nef?l?, Danielle Minarchick; Kevin T. Jeirles: Lorinda Brown; Stephanie D. McGhee; Amber M. Wolfgang; Ashley M. Burns; Dawn M. Walls: Elizabeth E. Woods; Erin M. Mosser?, Larry L. Lidgett; Lindsey Hass; Stacy Smith; Karla A. Witherite: Jonathan M. Millinder; Juan Mendez: Matthew T. Fisher". Michael S. Woods; Thomas S. Allen, Jr. Inmate Mazza - He received a Major Misconduct from RS Brown. While attending WorkKeys class here at the facility he was trying to look up pornographic material on the computer that was provided for him. Kristen M. Simkins From: Krista Davis Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 5:06 PM To: Melanie L. Gordon; Joseph S. Koleno; Richard C. Smith; Lee R. Sheaffer, Brenda A. McKinley: Jeffrey T. Hite Subject: bunk bed panels The potential date for delivery of bunk bed panels is next Thursday, June 2, 2016. If any changes arise, I will notify you. Thank you, Krista Davis Risk Manager Wellness Coordinator Centre County Government P. 814-548-1055 F. 2314-5484157 Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: Lr. Juan Mendez Juan Mendez Thursday, May 26, 2016 5:08 AM Allyson R. Duvall: Brenda A. C. Kay Woodring: Caitlyn D. Neff; Danielle Minarchick; Eric A. Lockridge; Jeffrey T. Hite; Jonathan M. Millinder;Joseph S. Koleno: Kevin T.Jeirles; Larry Lidgett; Lee R. Sheaffen Lorinda L. Brown; Matthew T. Fisher: Melanie L. Gordon; Michael S. Woods: Richard C. Smith; Stephanie D. McGhee: Thomas S. Allen, Jr.; Walter E. Jeirles Calendar and Status Report 5/26/2016 20160525002004637.pdf Centre County Correctional Facility goo Riohel Hill Road Beuefonte Pa 16825 814-555-6194 Ext- 5 Fax: 814-548-1150 Today's Date: 5126116 0:11 Status Expiration inmate Name 0 Electronic Calendar Centre County Correctional Facility Booking Page ?i of 4 Temporary Status Medical Status Primary Status Additional Status 1 Additional Status 2 Pro]. Release Date Potential Sentencing Releases inmate Name Today's Date: 5:26:16 0:11 Booking Case Min Date Max Date Fro]. Release Date Electronic Calendar Centre County Correctional Facility Page 4 of 4 Special Activities DatelTime Added Event DateiTime 05l25l16 13:56 emails uazao 0412mm 14:47 05/26/16 09:00 05125116 1520 05175116 11:00 Entry Type SEE NOTE BELOW SELF VISITOR EXPECTED Description TEMP REL INMATE To NORTHUMBERLAND CO MARTELL. SHANNON, BUS, 60 DAYS. DJ POSSIBLE IN HOME intern Cass in until 4pm. With RS Brown and Counselor Neff. Electronic Calendar Centre County Correctional Facility Electronic Calendar Centre County Correctional Facility Today's Date: 5/26/16 0:11 Page 2 of 4 Events Schedute A inmate Name Booking MOYER. EDDIE DEAN 15-1166 Category Court Event Type Police will pick up - See Note Below Title Sheritis Bringing in Location SEE NOTE BELOW Notes Sheriffs bringing from SCI Smilhiieid for 5/27 Court FINK. EMILY ANN 15.5230 Category Hold-In Event Type Inside Medical Appointment Title Dentist Location Notes Hold-in from work release?dentist appointment. ROSS, JAMIE LYNN 16-0241 Category Transport Event Type Medical Appointment Title Gyne Location SEE NOTE BELOW Notes 1850 E. Park Ave State College Gyno 237.3470 ANTHONY DAVID 1543552 Category Hold-in Event Type Held in From All Activities ?See Note Below Title Spiritual Adviser Visit Location Notes KYLEE DANYELLE 160645 Category Court Event Type Revocation Hearing Tltle RECORDS Location CENTRE COUNW COURTHOUSE Notes GOLD MAN. DAVID 16-0644 Category Cour: Event Type Revocation Hearing Title RECORDS Location CENTRE COUNTY COURTHOUSE Notes HENRY, TRAVIS JAMES 16-0654 Category Court Event Type Revocation Hearing Title RECORDS Location CENTRE COUNTY COURTHOUSE Notes FERLES. JESSICA DEANENE 15-0486 Category Hold-in Event Type Hold in From All Activities - See Note Below Title Call with Union Co. Probation Location Notes Report Date Range: 5/26/16 0:00 - 5/26/16 23:59 Start Date/Time 05/26/16 00:00 05/26/16 05:00 05/26/16 05:00 05/26/16 10:00 05/23/16 10:30 0512011 5 11:00 05/26/16 11:00 05/25/16 12:45 End Date/Time 05/26/16 23:59 05/26/16 10:00 05/26/16 09:00 05/26/16 11:00 05/26/16 11:00 05/26/16 12:00 05/26/16 12:00 05/25/16 13:15 All Day? Priority 111 201 400 200 115 115 115 200 Today's Date: 5/26/16 0:11 MCCARTNEY. JOY ASHLEY Category Visitation Event Type CYS Visit Title CYS Visit Location Notes CYS Case/worker Teneey Ochs. METER, THOMAS DONALD Category Court Event Type Revocation Hearing Title RECORDS Leeation CENTRE COUNTY COURTHOUSE Notes GIESEY. JONAS MATTHEW Category Court Event Type Revocation Hearing Title RECORDS Location CENTRE COUNTY COURTHOUSE Notes STEM, LYNN OLLEN Category Hold-in Event Type Held in From All Activities - See Note Below Title contact visit permitted Location SEE NOTE BELOW Notes Sister (JanetLucas) and three year old See e-mail dated 5/2/16 from DW Koleno REED. JAMIE LEE Category Visitation Event'i?ype SpecIaIVIsit Title VISIT Location Notes HEIMERL. ERIC Category Visitation Event'i'ype Special Visit Title VISIT Location Notes Total inmates: 14 Total Scheduled Events: 14 16-0513 05/26/1613200 16-0654 05/26/16 14:00 16-0583 05/26/15 14:15 16-0367 05/26/16 15:30 15-1342 05/26/16 18:45 160246 05/2611 6 18:45 05/25/16 14:00 05/26/16 14:30 05/26/16 1 5:00 05/26/16 16:30 05/26/16 19:45 05/26/16 19:45 Page 3 of 4 901 115 115 200 900 900 Kristen M. From: Sent: To: Subject Simkins Juan Mendez Thursday, May 26, 2016 5:18 AM Karla A Witherite; Brian J. Beals; David S. King; Dayne M. McKee; James A. Simler: John J. Mohier; Jonathan M. Ayers: Justine M. Addleman: Keya M. Kaiser: Kyle S. Miller, Matthew R. Orndorf; Michael D. Ishler; Randy L. Witherite; Ryan A. Cox; Shandell M. Posey: Thomas K. Hook; Wayne A. WarnerII; Ashlee M. Wagner; Carl 6. Gemmati; Christopher JW. Baughman; Crisanne M. Kelley; David Bryan; Douglas T. Weaver; Heather E. Beaver; James F. Meyer: Jason R. Muthersbaugh; Jennifer E. Eck; Kelly L. Evans; Levi R. Knoffsinger, Matthew J. Beck; Matthew J. Shawver, Ryan P. Taylor; Ryan S. Miller; Sage B. Lear: Tiffany A. McClenahan; Ty M. Carl; Vanessa C. Billett; Zachary S. Sayers; Amy L. Hampton; Carlton Henry; Charles R. Zimmerman; Dave L. Watson; David C. Knepp; David R. Zettle; Donald M. Smith; George F. Murphy, Henry Napoleon; Jason R. Buckley Jill C. Dickey, John M. Jones; Jonathan C. Rockey; Joseph E. Taylor: Kevin J. McCool; Kimberly N. Rupert: Lyden Hilliard: Mark T. Waite: Michael R. Shearer; Philip D. Calhoun; Ryan T. Pataky: Shane Billett: Tony M. Little; Walter E.Jeir!es: Jeffrey T. Hite: Joseph S. Koleno; Melanie Gordon; Richard C. Smith; Allyson R. Duvall; Amy Miller; Caitlyn D. Neff; Danielle Minarchick; Kevin T.Jeiries; Lorinda L. Brown; Stephanie D. McGhee; Ashley M. Burns; Dawn M. Walls; Elizabeth E. Woods; Eric A. Lockridge: Erin M. Mosser; Janet C. Snyder; Johnna Bilger: Larry Lidgett, Lindsey Hass; Milane Daughenbaugh: Stacy Smith; Bradley C. Kling; Dawn E. Goss; Dustin T. Henry: Jacob T. Love: John J. Scarborough; Joshua D. Reffner, Nick R. Smith; Sarah L. Prentice; Tanna L. Shirk: Whitney L. Wagner; Jonathan M. Millinder, Matthew T. Fisher; Michael S. Woods; Thomas S. Allen, Jr. Major Misconduct inmate Kuhns, Brannon 16-0185 received a major misconduct #16-0218 for failure to return a razor back to staff and then lying about it. C1 housing unit was searched, all inmate were unclothed searched, razor was not faund. Lt. Juan Mendez Centre County Comctioml Facility goo Riahel Hill Road Bulldontc Pa 16823 314-555-6794 Ext 5 Fax: 814-548-1150 Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: Lt. Juan Mendez Juan Mendez Thursday, May 26, 2016 632 AM Brenda A. McKinley; C. Kay Woodring; Denise A. Murphy;Jef?frey T. Hite: Jonathan M. Joseph S. Koleno: Matthew T. Fisher. Melanie L. Gordon; Michael S. Woods: Richard C. Smith; Thomas S. Allen, Jr.; Walter E. Jeirles Shift Packets 5/25/2016 20160526062501449.pdf Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Riahel Hill Road Bellefonte Pa 16823 ?lm-6794 Ext 5 Fax: 814643-1450 CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT PACIGET Routing Form DATE: 5/25/2015 SHIFT: 7-3 LIEUTENANT: Millinder UPON NAME Deputy Warden of Operations - Gordon Deputy Warden of Administration - Koleno Director ofTreaunent - Hite Lieutenant: Lieutenant: Intake: Release: Centrai Control: Central Control: SMU Control: Relief 1: Relief 2: Relief 3: Relief 4: Lobby: Housing Units: A1: A2: A3: A4: BI: BZ: CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT LOG 7:00 am to 3:00 pm Day: Wedneedav Miliinder Murphy Sayers W4. Cm" ?Zimmel:man Jc-rlam? 3094? SR. k. Knepp Dickey Pataky McCooI Jones Hilliard Waite Calhoun Rockey Buckley Rupert 01, 02, C3: Hampton Central Booking: Special Duty: Shearer Dr. Run - Beaver. Smith, N. ZLNAVMM A-glurj. Date: 5/25/2016 Pass Days: Billetl: Henry Napoleon Smith -Watson ZettIe Vacation: Overtime: Corl Sayers Beaver 9?1 2 - Smith, N. 9?12 Wad/56kg Call Offs (Sick, AIL, Other): Veri?ed?f/ 7/ I . Date/?ma: Ll 0791/ 05I25l2016 Misconduct Intake 1 female Pre-Class (Bottom Bunk) 1 female Medical isolation Other A1 computer is back up. Camp chairs Employee Appreciation Gift in Shift Commanders' Of?ce; pick it up before you leave and make sure you?re checked off the list. The weight limit is 250 pounds. Dr. Run?Miller. Sherry?1000am Hunt, LI 3'1\ inate 1030 ji LTMillinder . I The following is regarding a of the facility conducted on 5/25/2016: No issues. AZ- Maintenance was repairing a toilet. Inmate Hartman, Corey asked about making a phone call for parole. I told him that Counselor McGhee was his assigned Counselor and he needed to request to her. A3- Floors were being cleaned. No issues. A4- No issues. 131- There was a spill outside of the 131 outer doorTrustees mop it up. 32- Sheets were being exchanged. No issues. No issues. i?i?li?ffaM?tf?b?ESl?ri Centre County Correctional Facility Forwarded to Administration. InCideht Report . 45'4? .. - .. 4.- Date or Report 1 5/25/2015 2 Time Of Report 1 10: 253m I .4.. IrShift Commander barge eggeg? Eris/2515f? 7: Tithe OfInCIdentu1 8. 25am A. . A: war..- .. -.A 93.3 1? InCIdent LocatIon? tside .. .. i; .- .27.. I ?4 . AA 1? Lee Sheaffei: Rh.? 4 -u - A .I .A. .7A re?t- . I - 1 1 Person (5) Involved 1 A. A, .. I7. .4 7.A-.4r :4 Hair? :A7i.- I 7. 1 Wlti?185?es 4 lat-'444.-. .. .4 -A .5: . 4.4-. . .-.. 3-4.23- A- A. .Iu- 7,.4 .. .. 7.47.11 . Person Making Report 1? Lee Sheaffer 1:1 ?14?1?oneReport . On the above date and tirne was in the outside' In front of the visitatiori and?toad lying in the grass.The watch was passed to the shift commander. Agog.- ntesg..- .A.-..-. CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT PACKET Routing Form DATE: 5/25/2016 SHIFT: 3-11 SHIFT COMMANDEMS): Lt's Woods Jeirles INITIAL UPON NAME REVIEW Deputy 'Warden of Operations Gordon Deputy Warden of Administration - Koleno Director of Treatment - Hite Lieutena nt: Lieutenant: Intake: Release: Central Control: Central Control: SMU Control: Relief 1: Relief 2: Relief 3: Relief 4: Lobby: Housing Units: A1: A2: A3: A4: B1: BZ: CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT LOG 3:00 pm to 11:00pm Day: War Date: 05/25f2015 Jeirles Woods Wagner, A. Beck Shawver McClenahan Little Cori Lomison Baughman uthersbaug Billett, V. Weaver Goss Prentice Love Bryan Evans 01, CZ, C3: Taylor, R. Central Booking: Special Duty: Veri?ed Bx Sayers Pass Days: Beaver Eek Gemmati Lear Miller, R. Vacation: Kelley Overtime: Call Offs (Sick, AIL, Other): Meyer - FMLA 0512512016 Misconduct Nixon, Keith (B1) 2m1 Minor for entering another inmate's cell. Mazza. Roberto (Ci) Major for attempting to access pornographic material on the Work Keys computer. intake 1 female Pre-Class (Bottom Bunk). 1 female needs seen by Medical. ?1 female being removed from Medical Isolation A1 computer is back up. Camp chairs Employee Appreciation Gift in Shift Commanders? Of?ce; pick it up before you leave and make sure you?re checked off the list. The weight limit is 250 pcuuds. Dr. Run-Miller, Sherry-1000am CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY 1 6-0264 Large Classroom ?at-mil in: raw. ?i 2: Refusing to obey a staff members? order, and/or delayed compliance of the order 167: Violation of any rule contained in the inmate handbook or any properly posted regulation not speci?ed here I . an. ..- 1.- Upon reviewing tracking logs for Laptop #1 Workstation #4 discovered non-WorkKeys related sites, ie. Google. Bing, Microsoftcom and Youtube. The inmate using that computer attempted to use some of the sites to look up pornographic material. After checking the Workkeys sign?in sheets, it was con?rmed that inmate Mazza was assigned to this laptop. Prior to starting the class, inmates are informed that they must use the computers only for intended purposes. News - am- ?warm-,1. REQUEST FOR WESSES AND REPRESENTAION INMATE VERSION You be scheduled for a hearing on this allegation. You may remain silent if you wish Anything you any canlwlil be used agalnst you both at the misconduct hearing and In a court of iaw if this matter is referred for criminal prosecution. i! you choose to remain aiient. the Hearing CommitteefExemlner may use youralienca as evidence against you. if you indicate that you wish to remain silent. you will he asked no further questions. Updated 6-29?14 .r 5/25/2016 F'?m?'i'?fRe?drt l? 2105 ateiomh?c?ideri 5/25/2016 2000-2100 AWCidentiLooatioh-il Housing Units . A. i e' [lentil/laking Report-'3} FLieutenant Jeirles On the above mentioned date and Time. This Lieutenant and Lieutenant Woods conducted a walk? through of the Housing Units. A1- C0 Watch tour complete, no issues C0 Goss .. No issues C0 No issues A4- C0 No issues 31- CO No issues 82- CO Unable to enter due to inmates showering. CO No issues xx (330th CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY . 700 Road Richard C- Smiih. M3: Bailefonte. 16823 Ward? Telephone (314) 3555794 Fax (314) 543-1150 Property Request Date: Inmate Booking Number: No? 073? Inmate Name: L-E Item requested: ?Lks?es 4. A55. Purpose/reason: \j 'n a Melanie Gordon Deputy Warden of Operations Joseph Koleno Deputy Warden of Administration Jeffrey T. Hire Director 0! Treatment 1 . WSMW LPN Staff approval: (I) print name Administrative Staff denial/m /an EC (air: I print name Shift Commander durum 312 UP \lb wk ream?P?? (clrl: print nnme If denied, reason for denial: (W jot) Signature signature 6 Unnamre (copy goes to shift packet, original goes to records to be ?led) CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT PACKET Routing Form DATE: 5/25/2016 SHIFT: 11-7 SHIFT Mendez NAME INITIAL UPON REVIEW Deputy Warden of Operations - Gordon Deputy Warden of Administration Koleno Director of Treatment - Hits: Lieutenant: Lieutenant: Intake: Release: Central Control: Relief 1: Relief 2: Laundry: Housing Units: A1 A2: A3: A4: B1: 82: c1, 02. ca: Special Duty: CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT LOG 11:00 pm to 7:00 am Day: IMEDNESQEX MENDEZ 9 BEALS WARNER SIMLER a ?tm? uesaenrav I ORNDORF MILLER. mats Aye-59m)? ISHLER )8 5/7046 0 ADDLEMAN Total Beds: 39? Empty Beds: 8 .3 Decapied Beds: I If AME: ream?! 7,0 711?7? Corl/ Goeg ?15/0??in Van'?edBy: CT 47046;; Date: 5125/2016 Pass Days: HOOK 4 KING MCKEE POSEY . WITHERITE Vacation: . KEISER MOHLER Over?me: ?988 [ow WM TAYLOR, 44/ REFFNER ?fe/htn?w WW Call Offs (Sick. AIL. Other): Date/Time: g? ?124 913% 0512512016 Medical Isolation Cave. Tiffany (Intake) -- removed Hess. Chelsi (32) MRSA protocol Knipple, Anna (82) Head Lice Intake 1 male to be committed Camp chairs Employee Appreciation Gift in Shift Commanders' Of?ce; pick it up before you leave and make sure you're checked off the list. The Weight limit is 250 pounds. llil?Date? 5/25/2016 {J1me ny-lhpideh? 0127 Lde'nt'Lo?cat'Iohi?l I . On the above date and approximate time CO Addleman informed me that a razor was missing in the C1 housing unit. CO Addleman stated that she noticed an ID card in the razor slot at the desk belonging to inmate Kuhns, Brannon, when asked by CO Addleman where the razor was the inmate stated that he forgot where he put the razor, and then he said that he thought he turned it in to CO Taylor. I questioned Kuhns about the whereabouts of the razor and he said that he turned Et in to CO Taylor; I called CO Taylor, and asked him if Kuhns returned a razor to him and he said no. After further questioning he stated that he took the razor and laid the razor down at the table while playing cards and does not know what happened to the razor. Inmate Kuhns was moved to A1 pending a misconduct. A Shakedown was conducted in C1 and the razor was not found. Inmate Kuhn?s moved to was searched, all inmates were unclothed searched, razor not found Filed for reference li?St?i?f?Cosm?nerleSigh CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY REPORT masses 3 ?Inbid?ntaD'aYe'itil liDaI??ofER??u'?rtil 5/26/2016 5126/2015 deaTasnn iv; C1 01 Housing Unit CO Addleman Ere i. .5 137 Interfering with a sta?? member in the performance of their duties 149 Giving false information to a staff member On the above date and time, I CO Addieman noticed an Identi?cation Card in the razor slot by the desk in Work Release that was left from the previous shift. This inmate was questioned about where the location of the razor is. This inmate stated ?Oh shit I forget where I put it, i thought I turned it in." CO Taylor was contacted and asked whether or not Inmate Kuhns, Brannon retumed the razor to CO Taylor. CO Taylor stated that inmate Kuhns did not give the razor back. The inmate began to search for the razor. i contacted the shift commander on duty and made him aware that a razor was missing. After contacting the shift commander. Inmate Muivaney. Timothy (16-0338) began to state ?i saw him give the razor to CO Taylor." Inmate Kuhns began to state that he did turn the razor in after Inmate Muivaney stated that he turned it into CO Taylor. Lieutenant Mendez came down to the unit and questioned the Inmate about where the location of the razor is. This inmate stated turned the razor in." After further questioning, Inmate Kuhns stated, laid the razor down at the table while playing cards. I don't know what happened to the razor.? A Shakedown was conducted in C1 and the razor was not found. End of report. . . I Mvanlrratranpn t- an rigged 75 ?sanaah 44am? an: . ensues.? um: inlet-ear . an REQ ESTFORWITNESSES AND T1333 ?ll? A IN MATE VERSION . ?Witt PRINTED TITLE A REVIEWING SHIFT COMMANDER IE 345195.? OF. REVIEWING ?a g-II?l wider; .H) NOTICEE SERVE DATE: TIME: $9646 060) a. ?seen a ..- 1 You will be scheduled fora hearing on this allegation. You may remain silent if you wish. Anything you say canMill be used against you both at the misconduct hearing and in a court or iaw matter is referred for criminal prosecution. if you choose to remain silent. the Heartng Commi?oolExamlner may use your silence as evidence against you. It you indicate that you wish to remain silent. you wil! be asked no iurther quaslions. uin; Cocto modernise-par: i 05/25/2016 .?Wirniesses:i FCO Weaver . I On the above date and time, as I was attempting to leave the staff parking lot, I accidently pulled my vehicle forward, instead of driving in reverse, clipping one of the speed limit signs and knocked it over. I noti?ed Lt. Woods and wrote this incident report at his request. Updated 6-29-14 Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject The American Legion <cs@legion.org> Thursday, May 26, 2016 7:59 AM Richard C. Smith Flag Half?Staff Alert: Memorial Day, Monday, May 30, 2016 We ?ail ggm_'i_ [333% 53% Learn more oboui The Flog Alliance: Uhcible to lower your flag? Alidoh?m'g ll'iis black ribbon la lh? iop'grqus. fiagis cn? A accepicble alternative for flags ihai cannot be lowered i0? 2 -. half-slaiiShare this email: a I This email was sent to: rtzirmth@co.centre.pa.us This email was sent by: The American Legion National Headquarters 700 North Street Indianapolis, IN 46204 Kristen M. Simkins From: Jason R. Buckley Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2016 8:21 AM To: Melanie L. Gordon; Richard C. Smith Cc: Thomas K. Hook; Matthew J. Shawver; Judith Miller Subject: Discussion about covering medical runs Good morning, I have been approached by an of?cer off of 11:! asking if we could discuss and look at other possibilities into handle medical runs where someone is held over from 11-7. We are unable to meet starting June 6?h until after negotiations are done and I would like to, if possible, and at least share their concern and possibly see ifthere is a solution. I believe there is an understanding on our part that a majority of all medical runs occur on the 7-3 shift, but i would still like to see ifthere is a possible answer. Thank you, Jason Kristen M. Simkins From: Jonathan C. Rockey Sent Thursday, May 26,2016 8:59 AM To: Melanie L. Gordon; Amy L. Hampton; Ashlee M. Wagner; Bradley C. Kling: Brian J. Beals; Carl G. Gemmati; Carlton L. Henry, Charles R. meerman; Christopher JW. Baughma n: Crisanne M. Kelley; Dave L. Watson; David C. Knepp; David Bryan; David R. Zettle; David S. King; Dawn E. 6055; Dayne M. McKee; Donald M. Smith; Douglas T. Weaver: Dustin T. Henry; George F. Murphy; Heather E. Beaver, Henry Napoleon; Jacob T. Love; James A. Simler; James F. Meyer?. Jason Buckley; Jason R. Muthersbaugh; Jennifer E. Eck: Jill C. Dickey; John J. Mohler?, John J. Scarborough; John M. Jones; Jonathan M. Ayers; Joseph E. Taylor, Joshua D. Reffner, Justine M. Addleman; N. Lomison; Kelly Evans; Kevin J. McCool; Keya M. Keiser, Kimberly N. Rupert; Kyle S. Miller; Lyden rd; Mark T. Waite; MatthewJ. Beck; Matthew J. Shawver: Matthew R. Orndor? Michael D. Ishler; Michael R. Shearer: Nick R. Philip D. Calhoun; Randy L. Witherite; Ryan A. Cox; Ryan P. Taylor; Ryan S. Mil er, Ryan T. Pataky, Sage B. Lear; Sarah L. Prentice: Shandell M. Posey; Shane Billeti: Tanna L. Shirk; Thomas Hook: Thomas S. Allen, Jr.; Tiffany A. McClenahan; Tony M. Little; Ty M. Cor]; Vanessa C. Billet-t; Wayne A. Warner 11; Whitney L. Wagner; Zachary S. Sayers; Amber M. Wolfgang; Ashley L. Aurand; Ashley M. Burns; Elizabeth E. Woods; Erin M. Mosser; Kyle S. Smith; Leonard Verbeck; Lindsey Hass: Lorinda L. Brown; Kevin T. Jeirles; Kevin Wenriclc Danielle Minarchick; Caitlyn D. Neff; Marlene E. Summers; Milane Daughenbaugh; Stephanie D. McGhee; Kevin J. Brindle; Heather D. Eckley Cc: Brenda A. McKinley; Jeffrey T. Hite; Jonathan M. Millinder; Joseph S. Koleno; Juan Mendez; Matthew T. Fisher; Michael S. Woods; Richard C. Smith; Wilmer Andrews: Walter E. Jeirles; Larry L. Lidgett Subject Marianna's Hoagies's Hello, My wife is the Chair ofthe State College chapter of the national Free to Breathe Organization She is selling Marianna's hoagles and pizza for her team fundraiser for the October 16th SK run/1 mile walk in memory of her father, Joseph Kresovich who passed away from lung cancer in 2013. Orders and money are due byJune and orders will be delivered Thursday, June 16. If you want to order, the order form is on Denise Murphy's desk and when the order comes in it will be placed in Admin refrigerator if you don't want to order but would like to make a donation or register to participate and run or walk, you may do so here: Thanks in advance! Kristen M. Simkins From: Sandy Confer Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 9:13 AM To: Sllsupervisor: Barb Gallo; Cheryl GRubb; Clifton Vikara: Diane Conrad; douclark@pa.gov, Jeffrey L. Shomo: John Patrick; Kara Holliday; Karen Garner ?Kendra J. Miknis; Mark S. Smith, Esquire; MBane mdanneker@s n?ngtownshiporg; Melanie I. Gordon; Michelle Irvin: Patricia A. Gre Polly A. Clontz: Richard C. Smith: Scott A. Sayers: Thomas J. Young; Tom King; Wilmer Andrews Subject Updated Radio Number and Misc List Attachments: Centre County Radio Numbers and Misc. 26MAY163dsx Hi. Attached is the updated radio number and misc. list. The format has changed and some information included on the former list is not on this list lf you have any corrections or questions pEease email me. Thanks and have a safe and happy Memorial Day weekend. Sandy Confer Department Secretary Centre County Government Office of 911lEmergency Communications 814-355-6800 Willowbank Office Building 420 Holmes Street Bellefonte PA 16323 Dogs Iii-aye given us their absolute all. We are the center their unlverse. we are the Focus oFtneir love. Falth. and trusc. They serve us in return For soraps. It Is lulthOUt a doubt the bESt deal man has ever made? :Rpger Caras . CE Kin Thomas R. (ChIef) CENTRE COUNTY RADIO Weaver, Shawn (Chief) Walker Ethan Lyons Michael (SRO) Snyder Samuel A. Waiter, M. Todd Vl?nkelblech, Kevin .J. Brewer, Jason (SCI) Albri ht Kn's M. Det) Foster, Brian S. Hubler, Ted J. Rover Heather J. Lose, Shawn A CENTRE COUNTY RADIO Weaver. Todd (Lt) Brown, MIchael Clark, Ben'amin J. Stare, Kurt (Sgt) 1044 Ammerrnan. Ty C. Buchheit Nicholas 4948 11075 Bacher Gre Bickel RED C. Clark Douglas (Sgt) Kabilko. Kevin 7840 Barrows. Leigh A. (CPL) Danko Trevor Stautfer. Trevor Dillon, Thadd 1 0393 11233 Bush Te Duga_n. Aaron 0. Tooley, Christopher as Robert S. Walk Thomas Troutman Emma Sim Andrew M. Holt Robert E. Ebeck Jeffrey 10790 Guenot Timoth S. Gaus Frank Jr Rusnak. Mark Croyie Michael E. Gamer Karen Admin Asst. Foley. Nicole K. Gibson. Jeremy R. Tlumac John 0. Paul, Donald A. (Dot) Dale MatthewT. Rals?ton Ral hW. Dot) Schail. Ronald J. Hoover, Miohaci Glentzer Elizabeth R. 10951 8603 Ha onski Justin E. Hoover. Richard C. Glentzer Michael D. Fisher Jon Knoffsinqer. Levi 6041 Jenkins, Euqene c. (CPL) Granville ThomasR. Hebdon Jacob Booher. Jordan 6640 5372 WM Muran'k John W. Hertlein Thomas Cramer, Bryan _Hookenben-y. Charles W. Florey, David Hay Jeremy D. Comali Bradley A. Moore. Daie P. McGinn Kalli Bowes Kathleen Smith, Barrett C. (Lt) Lesher Eric M. Wolfe John R. Hill Christogher t. (S gt) An ellotii Michael J. Roefaro, Anthony Dickey Shane Nelson Lucas (PI) Witmer William W. Snare, Christopher Nadois Biil Ingram, Jared B. Ryan J. Smith Richard Bowes Rick Pacella Derek P. CPL. PleroMew J. Sovich, Steghen N. Shaffer Jason D. Showers, Prestyn K. Thomas, Robert F. (CPL) Robb Jim 7794 IMorey, MarcusJ (Col) Wasilko Michael N. McCloskey. VIcky Brauser. Gregory M. (Lei) Scharf, Josegh F. Sal?rds, Adam R. Small Wiliiarn W. Pe man Greer Secrets Conrad Diane (Chief) Ault. Laura 8044 Plerson,8radW 10559 Pifer.C hnstogher S. Gra'ales Juan SSRA Rania, Abby Poitick, Jay Esteg, Amanda R. Albri ht Christa herA. Rusnak Scott A. Clause Caleb MM Hazel, Don Rowland Barry Cooper, Ross SA Rossman, Scott (Col) Collins Steve SA Higgins Rich 8 hive Cramer Gary SA Christa her L. Clause. Dirk MM Jr Keen, Robert S. (SRO) Morrison. Shawn Rhodes. Mark L. Lamb Michael White. David M. Glenny. Robert 6.. Jr. (Sgt) Roo?ng/June 3 Ammerman. Merle Bulavko Matthew SA Vikara Clifton SA Steager. Baron Reite Christian BreonLThomas Tiracorda. Aaron wl K9 Torn Huerbin. Ed lA Davis. Larry Vanorden WIlIiam Aston, Kelly L. Lewis, Dan Thai, Thomas Wake?eld Brian Hamilton, Chad (Sgt) Bosak Ste hen M. Det White Jeffrey Chambers William WIIliams Am L. Hendrick. Ryan L. (Sgt) Mamolen, Michael S. Stringer, TIrnothy (Col) Hanes. Martin S. Plunkett, Ryan Glunt Tom WIlson, RED 3 Sa ers Scott Pleskonko, Judy Arglra. Mark J. (Lt) Ettaro AndrewJ. Gardner. John F. (Asst Chief) Albright, Eric Youn Thomas J. ackman Norm Asst. Direct. Ext6580 Rowles Dave Su ervlsor Tech mm Weaver. Thomas A. Rawson, Scott Baakenstoe Thomas E. RE ka Crai L. Slater Shawn Stet: Terrence M. (SRO) Martin Joshua (Det.) Pieniazek M. Jordan Bemier Crai J. SRO) Park Travis Laudensla er Kevin J. Shaffer, Kenneth E. Moran Devan M. (Det) McDannel, Michael T. Mayer, Jonathan H. (Dem Raia Nicholas A. ?shel Christian D. Smail Bradle J. Lt he L. Robb Keith C. Lt \Mlliams Michael D. Deirdri A. Scicchitano David Rose, Brian (Col) Sac .Richard L. (Det) Aston, John W. (Det) Ferron, Ken R. Argiro, Nichoias Albright, Sean M. (Sgt) Swindell Mark E. Soohoo. Sunchu! Bums, Brian Millward, Ron Beaver. Joyce Shift Su ervisor Walters. Jenn (CIA Sugenrisor) Shook, Todd Watson, Michael P. Dauberman Amber Shift Su ervisor McCool, Karla Gilham Cia Shift Su ervisor Grieb Dan Trude. Terry Command Vehicle Mann, Haylee Gamm Auman Rich Howe Todd (On-Cali) Warefield Colleen Jordan. Kyle Sha less 'T'Irn Younq. Cody Staufter Antonio Shomo Jeff Arnold Jeff Norfolk Stacy Wei Tim Seraski Julie Smeltz Shelle Bamhart Lester Gm Long, Glenda Shomo. Rosanne Ri ica Kath Marshall Am Crawford Jr., Lany C. Basalla Katcl M. Wilson, Matthew E. (C gt) Federinko Christo her S. Det State College Base Centre County CorrectionalF aIc ility- 355-6794 700 Rlshel Hill Rd. Bellefunte. PA 16823 Warden Richard C. Smith Deputy Warden Melanie Gordon Director of Treatment - Jeff Hite Tuskovich, Bradley Shoemaker Jeftre G. Haas, Erik J. (Dot) Jolie er 8. McElrath, Jeffrey C. Snyder Thomas E. Stover Connie Caggarelle Ca?ty 814-355-6735 Veneziano Edward On?Call Burd, Kyley Mi er Ross Wertz, Page Hetrick. Rayme Schmoeller On-Cal FAX 814-355?6756 Baldwin, Judy Sta Parks Miller DA Shu enko MetthewJ. Sunderland Justin Stroud Scott R. Shaffer. Brian Cenoal Booking Center d?nator: Mr. Andrews: 548?1 184 548?1185 Fax: 548-1178 Carter Rob MW Albn' ht Ma Secrets Mark Smith Stottle, Greq Cameron Kimbra McClintock Shaun Auman Dustin Me an McGoron Ciystal Hundt ADA ADA Horn Chuck _W_Bane Mark On?Call Hoffman. Aaron John McCaul ADA Confer Sand 355-6800 Michael Osterberq ADA Kendra Mians: 355-6727 Elizabeth Wmner - Disoove Clerk Faith Border - Advocate Mayer, Mike (Ext 6772) Kaschalk Martin MSAG Tech Lauren Miller - VNV Advocate 512752016 Kristen M. Simkins From: Melanie Gordon Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 9:35 AM To: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, Larry L. Lidgett; Becky Ulrich: Linda Bernard, RN, Cc: Richard C. Smith Subject RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Sorry for the delay this morning, small security issue that had to be handled here. Warden Smith will be unavailable Monday May 30 (Memorial Day) as well as all day Wednesday June 1 and Thursday June 2. We are all available Tuesday May 31 from 11:30a on, and Friday June 3 from 10a on. Melanie Gordon, CCE Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Beilefonte, PA 16823 (814) 3556794 (814) 548-1150 (fax) ?-Original Message?- From: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP (mailto? Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 11:04 PM To: Melanie L. Gordon; Larry L. Lidgett; Becky Ulrich; Linda Bernard, RN, CCHP-RN Cc: Richard C. Smith Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Melanie Ok I will have to get another date. I know she has other offers. Can you provide Becky with some dates that you kn0w you, the warden and .ieff are open? Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP Vice President of Operations PrimeCare Medical, inc. 3940 Locust Lane Harrisburg, PA 17109 Of?ce: (717) 545-5787 Ext 1129 Cell: (610) 533-2505 From: Melanie L. Gordon Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 3:45 PM To: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CTR Health Services Admin; Becky Ulrich; Linda Bernard, RN, CCHP-RN Cc: Richard C. Smith Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Ideally, yes. With Joe leaving next week I imagine I'll have at least a temporarily increased role with Medical operations above the usuai interaction. Melanie Gordon, CJM, CCE Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (814) 548-1150 (fax) From: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP [maiIto? Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 1:37 PM To: Larry L. Lidgett; Becky Ulrich; Linda Bernard, RN, CCHP-RN . Cc: Melanie L. Gordon Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Melanie Do you want to be present? Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP Vice President of Operations PrimeCare Medical, Inc. 3940 Locust Lane Harrisburg, PA 17109 (717) 545-5787 Ext. 1129 (800) 245-7277 FAX (717) 364-1224 Cal! (610) 533-2505 From: CTR Health Services Admin Sent: Wednesday, May 25. 2016 11:19 AM To: Becky Ulrich; Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, Linda Bernard, RN, Subject: FW: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith From: Melanie L. Gordon Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 203.6 9:47 AM To: Larry Lidgett; Richard C. Smith; Jeffrey T. I-iite; Joseph S. Koleno Subject: RE: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith That?s the day ofthe Centre County Emergency Management Agency Annual Certi?cation Drill. I will be at the Emergency Operations Center from 12p~5p and unable to meet her. Melanie Gordon, CJM, CCE Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (814) 548-1150 (fax) From: Larry L. Lidgett Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 9:46 AM To: Richard C. Smith; Melanie L. Gordon; Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno Cc: Becky Ulrich; Todd Haskins; Linda Bernard Subject: FW: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Ms. Julie Simoni RN, candidate for has been interviewed by PrimeCare?s recruiter, Becky Ulrich and Todd Haskins. She will be comingto the facility on Wednesday, June 1 3:45 pm to meet with you as a prospective HSA. Thank you. From: Becky Ulrich [mailto Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 20 To: Larry Lidgett Cc: Todd W. Haskins, RN, BSN, CCHP Subject: CNTR HSA interview with Warden Smith Larry, Julie Simoni will be in to meet Warden Smith on Wed. iune at 3:45. If you have any questions please let me know. Thank you, Becky Becky Ulrich Human Resources Recruiter PrimeCare Medical, Inc. 8002497277 ext. 1109 717-364-1229 Fax This communication, along with any and all attachments, contains PRIVILEGED and CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION intended only for the use ofthe recipient named above. The information may be protected by state and federal laws, including, without limitation, the provisions of the Health Insurance and Act of 1996 (HIPAA), 3 which prohibit unauthorized disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any use or dissemination ofthis information is strictly prohibited. If the reader or recipient of this communication is not the intended recipient, an employee or agent of the intended recipient or you believe that you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by return email. The email should also be deleted. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or duplication of this e-mail and/or attachments, will be considered unauthorized use and is prohibited. This communication, along with any and all attachments, contains PRIVILEGED and CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION intended only for the use of the recipient named above. The information may be protected by state and federal iaws, including, without limitation, the provisions ofthe Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), which prohibit unauthorized disclosure. Ifyou are not the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed that any use or dissemination ofthis information is strictly prohibited. If the reader or recipient of this communication is not the intended recipient, an employee or agent of the intended recipient or you believe that you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by return e-rnail. The email should also be deleted. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or duplication of this e?mail and] or attachments, will be considered unauthorized use and is prohibited. This communication, along with any and all attachments, contains PRIVILEGED and CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION intended only for the use ofthe recipient named above. The information may be protected by state and federal laws, including, without Ii itation, the provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), which prohibit unauthorized disclosure. Ifyou are not the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed that any use or dissemination ofthis information is strictly prohibited. lfthe reader or recipient of this communication is not the intended recipient, an employee or agent of the intended recipient or you believe that you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by return e-mail. The email should aiso be deleted. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or duplication ofthis e-mail and/or attachments, wiil be considered unauthorized use and is prohibited. Kristen M. Simkins From: Caraway, Shelby Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 9:50 AM To: Richard C. Smith;Jeffrey T. Hire; Danielle Melanie Gordon Subject: Christmas in the Jail 2016 Hello Everyone, I know it's only May, and I'm not sure who all should be included in this question, but I am already starting to plan what Christmas might look like in the jail again this year. I wanted to start by asking if Calvary would be allowed to do presents for every inmate similar to what we did in 2015? And if so could we come up with a plan soon for what would be approved this year. I have a few ideas, but don't want to pursue donations or ?indraising for the gifts until they've been approved. Thanks so much! Shelby Caraway Community Outreach Coordinator, Calvary Harvest Fields Assistant Director of ThirdPlace Calvary Church Calvaggsgorg third laceseor Kristen M. Simkins From: Toni L. Davis Sent: Th ursday, May 26, 2016 10:20 AM To: Melanie Gordon;JefFrey T. Hite Cc: Richard C. Smith: Brad L. Taylor, Lee R. Sheaffer Subject: Memorial Day Flags Hi All: Flags will need :0 be lowered to on Monday May30th at: sunset and remain until noon. Thanks, Centre County Government Maintenance: 814.355.6815 ext 1191 Risk Management: 814.548.1173 ONE KYND WORD COULD CHANGE SOMEONE ENTIRE DA - Kristen M. Simkins From: Toni L. Davis Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 10:21 AM Subject: Wellness Tip May 26, 2016 How to Walk By Free Donuts in the BreakRoom It?s there after every meeting. And remembers to fill up her candy iar. The two most dangerous words to the subconscious of someone trying to lose weight: Free Food. on iridays. And birthdays; And every day-that the of?ce manager But it?s never really free, is it? Free food gets digested in the gut the same way the food you pay for does, but ?free? gets digested differently in the brain. studies mindless eating at the Cornell Food Lab, and he has actually tested free office food consumption. It turns out every time we see it?or get near it?wwe spend a little bit of our limited willpower resisting it. And the 30th time you walk by that plate of donuts, you?re much more likely to say, ?Screw it. I?m hungry!? It doesn?t even matter what the food ismin one experiment, Wansink left out trays of plain, 2?week?old popcorn and watched people reach for more as they walked by the tray again! Tired of struggling with your willpower? Try these tips to avoid those free of?ce snacks. 1. Take the long way Wansink placed candy jars of chocolate in people?s cubicles tor a month, then moved them a mere 6 feet away. Simply having the candy closer meant people reached for five more treats a day. That adds up to 125 calories daily, or 12 pounds a year. We often snack because it?s convenient, so taking the long way to the copy machine could make you less likely to grab that candy. 2. Reward your resistance Every time you walk by the break room and don?t stop for donut is a victory. Treat it that way: do a little spin, teil yourself, ?Good job!? or hum a happy tune. By rewarding yourself (non-calorically) whenever you are externally triggered and don?t give in, you are actually creating a small habit loop that will make further resistance easier. 3. Be mindful instead of mindless instead of immediately popping that mini~Snickers into your mouth, carry it back to your desk and place it in an inconvenient drawer. At the end of the week, look at how much candy is there and think about eating all of it in one sitting without getting a tummy ache. 4. Spend all of your willpower on meals The most effective habit I teach people who want to avoid snacking is very simple: eat 3 or 4 meals a day. (Keeping in mind that a ?meal? is when you sit down and don?t do anything except eat.) Since most people have no idea how many calories they are sneaking in between meals, this habit eliminates all of them at once, and puts all the willpower you have into 3 or4 decisions. Sometimes it really can be as easy as that. (burl-11M ngyc?messealm Krista ?Dmns Risk Manager Wellness Coordinator Centre County Government P. 814548-1055 F. 814?548-1157 kldavis@centrecountypa.gov Kristen M. Simkins From: Melanie L. Gordon Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 10:25 AM To: Richard C. Smith; C. Kay Woodring; Jonathan M. Millinder: Juan Mendez; Matthew T. Fisher: Michael S. Woods: Thomas S. Allen, Jr.: Walter E. Jeirles; Brenda A. McKinley; Jeffrey T. Hite: Joseph S. Koleno Subject FW: Schuylkill County transfers These are the two Warden Smith emailed about previously. Methnie Gorr?m, CJJVI, CCE Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 3556794 (314) 548-1150 (fax) From: Berdanier, Eugene Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 10:23 AM To: Melanie Gordon Subject: Schuylkill County transfers Melanie, Our Sheriffs recently departed enroute to your facility to commit 2 females, Nicole Brobst and Ashley Renninger. My parole/ probation department is still working on a couple cases with unapproved addresses for release which you currently have, but nothing at this time. As soon as get the approval to bring anyone back we will make arrangements. Thank you and Warden Smith for helping us out, Gene Eugene H. Berdanier, Warden Schuylkill County Prison 230 Sanderson Street Pottsville, PA 17901 Direct: 570?628-1456 Fax: 570-628-1015 Kristen M. Simkins From: Brad Taylor Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 11:06 AM To: Toni L. Davis; Melanie L. Gordon; Jeffrey T. Hite Cc: Richard C. Smith: Lee R. Sheaffer Subject RE: Memorial Day Flags Importance: High Correction. Flags need to be iowered to half-staff Monday morning before sunrise and then raised to fuil staff at noon. Thanks My! 7574.? Director of Maintenance Centre County Government 814?355?6815 PLEASE NOTE MY EMAIL ADDRESS HAS CHANGED TO: bitavlor@centrecountvpa.iZov The information contained in or attached to this electronic n'ansmission may include con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for the use to the individual[s] to which it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure, copying. forwarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sending party if you believe you received this transmission in error. From: Toni L. Davis Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 10:20 AM To: Melanie L. Gordon; Jeffrey T. Hite Cc: Richard C. Smith; Brad L. Taylor; Lee R. Sheaffer Subject: Memorial Day Flags Hi All: Flags will need to be lowered to half?staff on Monday May30th at sunset and remain until noon. Thanks, Zm'? 10m? Centre County Government Maintenance: 814.355.6315 ext; 1191 Risk Management: 814.548 .1173 ONE IUND WORD C0 DID CHANGE SOMEONE ENTIRE DA 1This"eLm gsenttor?smichQcocentratpams Kristen M.Srmk ns A- r- . Please?add ma of?cer com to you'raddreSsbookior'safe sende? to receivefour?em ls From: Of?cer.com - - . 2' Sent Thursday, May 26, 2016 11:14 AM To: Richard C. Smith Subject: Of?cermm Product Showcase: May 2016 BustnessiMe ra, LLC 7 ?1233i?Jeres?lehve Fort 53538 Premium ln-Car Video 8: Body-Worn Camera Systems Patron/?tness?, is a premium supplier& manufacturer of police in-oar video systems, body- worn cameras. and ?eet management solutions. Our experience in mgged electronics manufacturing, combined with law-enforcement and transportation management aliow us to offer the most advanced video systems in the industry. CCS Industries Inc. I Specter Tactical Slings With more than 1500 individual sling variations, COS/Specter currentiy has the most comprehensive sling selection in the industry. With multiple versions and variations of1 point. 2 point and 3 point slings there is a COS/Specter sling to suit every need. Whether your needs are small or large, custom or OEM, we are your one stop tactical sling sourcing solution. And all 100% made in the USA. Officehcoml Contact Us I Advertise 2016 All rights reserved SouthComm Business Media. LLC Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: To: PA Prison Wardens Association <ppwa.org@gmail.com> Thursday, May 26, 2016 11:15 AM Adam Wagner/Snyder Adams Co Dep Warden Dzung Luong; Adams Co Director of Tx Robert Stevens; Adele Bauer/So merset; Alexander Cred/Lancaster, Allegheny Co Dep Warden Latoya Warren; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Monica Long; Allegheny Co Warden Orlando Harper; Alyssa Harris; Angela Hoover/Clinton County Anthony Haws/Lancaster IM Sup; Co Dep Warden Matt Roofner; Co Warden Phillip Shaffer: Beau Sneddon: Beaver Co Dep Warden Carol Steele-Smith; Beaver Co Warden [William Schouppe: Berks Co Warden [Janine Quigiey; Bill Patterson: Blair Co Dep Warden Marc Masucci: Blair Co Warden Michael Johnston; Blanche Carney/Phila; Bradford Co Dep Warden Peter Quattrini; Bradford Co Warden Don Stewart: Brenda A. Mcl?nley; Brian Clark/Adams; Bruce Kovach/Northumberland; Bucks Co Asst Warden ian Budd: Bucks Co Dep Superintendent/ Kevin Rousset: Bucks Co Dep Director] Christopher Pirol Bucks Co Dep Warden Clifton Mitchell; Bucks Co Director W: iam Plantier; Bucks Co Warden Terrance Moore: Cambria Co Dep Warden Christian Smith; Carol Sommers/Lehigh; Jeffrey T. Hite; Richard C. Smith; Cheryl Steberg/Lancaster Warden; Chester Co Dep Warden Ronald Phillips; Chester Co Dep Warden Walter Reed; Chester Co Warden D. Edward McFadden; Chris Ebner/Lycoming; Christopher Cain/Washingto n; Christopher Thomas/Phila; Clair Doll/York; Clarion Co Dep Warden Ronald Owens: Clarion Co Warden [Jeff Hornberger: Ciear?eld Co Warden Gregory Collins: Columbia Co Warden \Mlliam Campbell; Craig Descavish/Cambria; Craig Lowe; Crawford Co Dep Warden Kenneth Saulsbery: Crawford Co Warden Tim Lewis; Cumberland Co Dep Warden Janet Kreider Scott: Cumberland Co Dep Warden Jeffrey Ilgenfritz; Cumberland Co Dep Warden Michael Carey, Cumberland Co Warden Earl Reiiz, Jr.; Daniel Keen; Daniel Keen; Dauphin Co Dep Warden Elizabeth Nichols; Dauphin Co Dep Warden Leonard Carroll; Dauphin Co Warden Dominick DeRose; Dave Collins/Captain Northampton: David Varano/Columbia; David Wapinsky/Schuylkill; Delaware Co Dep Warden Mario Coiucci: Delaware Co Warden David Byrne; Donald Waugh/Washington; Doug Burger/Franklin Captain; Douglas Deputy: Dustin Myers/Jefferson Edward Shawn/Washington; Elk Co Dep Warden Edward Warmbrodt: Elk Co Warden Greg Gebauer. Eric Schwartz/Westmoreland: Erie Co Dep Warden Gary Seymour, Erie Co Dep Warden Michael Holman; Erie Co Warden Kevin Sutter: Eugene Caldwell Farina, Eugene J.: Fayette Co Dep Warden Barry Croftcheck; Fayette Co Dep Warden Michael Zavada; Fayette Co Warden Brian Miller; Frances Moyer: Franklin Co Dep Warden Michelle Weller; George Roberts/Chester Manager, George Rozum/Cambria Captain; Gerald May; Gerald Rozum: Gordon Traveny; Greene Co Dep Warden Michael Kraus; Greene Co Warden Harry Gillispie; Greg Briggs; Harry Griswold/Chester Captian; Henry Sladek/Delaware; Huntingdon Co Dep Warden Bradley Glover; Huntingdon Co Warden/ Duane Black; Indiana Co Dep Warden Lesley Simmons; Indiana Co Dep Warden Lori Hamilton: Indiana Co Warden Samuel Buzzinotti; Indiana Co Warden Samuel Buzzinotti: Jack Healy; James Mattera/Delaware; James Sullen; Jason Beasom/Allegheny Major; Jason Moore/Bedford; Jefferson Co Warden Thomas Elbel; Jeffrey Smith/Berks; Jennifer Passarelli/Butler Jessica Lensbower; Joe Reichard/Mercer Co: John Masco: John Rowley/Clinton; John Steiner/York: John Williams/Alleheny County Major; Jon Collins/Warren; Jonathan Romance; Jose Colon/Northampton Joseph Demore; Joseph McCoy/Monroe Joshua weller/susquehanna: Kelly McKenzie/Venango; Kyle Russell/Berks; Lackawanna Co Dep Warden David Langan; Lackawanna Co Warden Robert McMillan; Lancaster Subject: Co Dep Warden [Joseph Shiffer: Lawrence Co Dep Warden [Jason Hilton; Lawrence Co Attachments: 1 Warden Brian Covert: Lebanon Co Dep Warden [Anthony Hauck; Lebanon Co Dep Warden [Timothy Clements; Lebanon Co Warden Robert Kames: Lehigh Co Cindy Egizio: Lehigh Co Dep Warden Robert McFadden; Lehigh Co Director Edward Sweeney; Lehigh Co Timothy Carver. Lehigh Co Warden [Janine Donate; Linda Comfort: Lionel Pierre; Luzerne Co Dep Warden [James Larson: Luzerne Co Warden J. Allan Nesbitt; Lycoming Co Dep Warden Brad Shoemaker; Lycoming Co Warden Kevin DeParlos; Marcella Moore; Mark Murray/Montgomery; Mary Sabol/York; McKean Co Asst Warden Dave Stahlrna n; McKean Co Asst Warden Rick Austin; Melanie L. Gordon: Melyssa Flud; Mercer Co Dep Warden Mac McDuf?e; Mercer Co Warden Erna Craig; Michael Buono/York; Michael Giglio; Michael Reid; Michael Resnick/Phila: Mifflin Co Dep Warden [James Crisswell; Mifflin Co Warden Bernie Zook; Monroe Co Dep Warden Garry Haidle; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Sean McGee; Montgomery Co Warden [Julio Algarin; Montour Co Warden Gerald Cutchall: Morgan Taylor/Chester Captain: Nancy Giannetta/Phila; Northampton Co Dep Warden David Penchishen; Northampton Co Dep Warden [James Kostura: Northampton Co Warden [Todd Buskirk; Northumberland Co Administrator/ Brian Wheary; Ocie Miller/Chester Captain; Pamela Saunders/Chester Ca ptain; Patricia Powers; Perry Co Dep Warden [Thomas Long; Phila?Alt/Spec Det Warden /Juanita Goodman; Phila ASD Dep Warden [James McCants: Phila ASD Dep Warden Norman Williams; Phila CFCF Dep Warden Frederick Abello; Phila CFCF Warden Michele Farrell: Phila DC Dep Warden Adrian Christmas; Phila DC Dep Warden Eugene Thompson; Phila DC Warden [John Delaney: Phila HOC Dep Warden Edward Miranda; Phila HOC Dep Warden Marvin Porter; Phila HOC Warden [William Lawton; Phila PICC Dep Warden Claudette Martin: Phila PICC Warden Karen Bryant; Phila RCF Warden [Terence Clark; Philip Potter Co Dep Warden Angela Milford; Potter Co Sheriff Warden Kenneth Sauley; Robert E. McLaughlin; Robert Tomaszewski/Phila; Rocky Bernazzoli/Bedford: Rodica Craescu/Phila: Ron Philips/Chester Captain; Ronald Bryant/Erie; Rusty Barr/Warren L1: Ryan Long/Carbon Schuylkill Co Warden Gene Berdanier; Sharon Hatcher, Simon Wainright/Allegheny; Snyder Co Warden Shawn Cooper; Stephen Smith/Berks; Stephen Smith/Clearfield; Steven J. Cmar: Susan Watt/Clinton County Susquehanna Co Warden Mark Shelp; Tammy Heckman; Tammy Moyer/Lancaster; Timothy Fritz/Carbon: Tioga Co Warden /Terry Browning; Troy Nelson/Bedford; Union Co Warden Douglas Shaffer, Venango Co Warden Jeffrey Ruditis; Warren Co Sheriff Warden Kenneth Klakamp; Washington Co Warden John Temas; Wayne Co Warden Kevin Bishop: Westmoreland Co Warden JOhn Walton; Wi 'am Bechtold; William Vetter/Phila; Wyoming Co Warden Ken Repsher: Zachary Murone/Clearfield; Anthony Petruccio: Charles B. Shovlin; Charles Erickson; Charles Zimmerman: Dave Hogue; David J. Good; David Pitkins; David Roberts: Edgar M. Kneiss; Edward Cox; Edward J. Kiem; Edward T. Brennan: FatherJoseph Whalen: Francis Royer, Fred J. Ruffo; Fred Rosemeyer, Gary Luchi: George N. Patrick; George N. Patrick; George Nye; Greg Gaertner, Gregory R. White: Harry Wilson; Henry Tatum;J Barry Johnson; Jack Brickner, James C. Henderson: James Robinson: James Wynder, Jerome Walsh;Jerome Walsh;Joel Dickson;John A. Palakovich;John K. Murray: John Prebish; John S. Shaffer, John Werlz; Joseph F. Desuta; Joseph Nish; Ken Cameron; Martin L. Dragovich: Michael Barone; Michael Kloptoski/Retired Nancy Giroux: Paul J. Descano; Raymond J. Sobina; Richard P. Gigliotti; Richard Shaffer/Retired Butler Warden; Robert Fink: Robert L. Raiger; Robert M. Novotney, Terry L. Whitman; Thomas Costello: Thomas Deioughery: Thomas?Duran; Thomas Duran: Timothy Engiish: William J. Laughner: William Reznor: DOC DOC DOC DOC ExecStaff, DOC Majors; DOC Superintendents: Launa Kowalcyk; Rebecca Reifen Steve Noll/County Inspections And Services; Tom Greishaw/Dir. County Inspections PREA Specialized Security Training - Free PREA Specialized Security Training Agenda (4 25 Pike County PPWA PREA 2 Attachments: Training Announcmentdocx Training Announcement PREA SPECIALIZED SECURITY TRAINING JUNE 13, 2016 0800 -1700 Location: Pike County Correctional Facility 175 Pike County Blvd. HaWIey, PA 18428 Contact: Sgt. Tom Wetklow (570) 775?5500 Instructors: Patrick J. Zirpoli Certi?ed PREA Auditor Jennifer Feicht Certi?ed PREA Auditor Cost: FREE The Prison Wardens Association in conjunction with Pike County Correctional Facility will be hosting a joint PREA Specialized Security Training on June 13, 2016 from 0800-1700. This will be the ?rst of ?ve trainings that will be hosted by the PPWA in 2016. Please contact Sgt. Tom Weddow of Pike County Correctional Facility (contact information above) to reserve your seat. **Please see the attached forms for additional detaiis on this FREE training? Prison Wardens Association, 100 Rishel Hi3 Road, Bellefonte, Pa 16823 Phone [any Fax (814] 553?1150 Email mail. Website To unsubscribe from PPWA email distributions, please go to and enter your email address with the word "unsubscribg" on the contact us form. Please allow up to 48 hours of your submission forthe removal to take place. Mondayl June 13?" 8:00 8:20 AM 8:20 9:30 AM 9:30 9:45 AM 9:45 11:15 PM 11:15 12:15 PM 12:15 1:45 PM 1:45 - 2:00 PM 2:00 3:00 PM 3:00 3:15 PM 3:15 - 4545 PM 4:45 5:00 PM PREA Specialized Security Training Agenda Pike County Correctional Facility June 13, 2016 WELCO E, INTRODUCTIONS AND OVERVIEW - Introductions (Faculty, Participants) . Logistics 0 Overview of Training Goals and Agenda 0 "Parking Lot? Issues Exercise Module 1: PREA INFORMATIN AND OVERVIEW OF THE PREA INVESTIGATIVE STANDARDS Jennifer L. Feicht BREAK Module 2: TRAUMA AND VICTIM RESPONSE Jennifer Feicht LUNCH Module 3: PREA INVESTIGATIONS AND INTERVIEWING Patrick Zirpoli BREAK Module 3 (Cont?d) BREAK Module 4: LEGAL LIABILITIES AND PROSECUTORIAL COLLABORATION Patrick Zirpoli Jennifer Feicht WRAP UP AND QUESTIONS Prison Wardens Association Training Announcement PREA SPECIALIZED SECURITY TRAINING JUNE 13, 2016 0800 -1700 Location: Pike County Correctionai Facility 175 Pike County Blvd. Hawley, PA 18428 Contact: Sgt. Tom Wetklow (570) 775?5500 twetk! ow ike a.or Instructors: Patrick J. Zirpoli Certi?ed PREA Auditor Jennifer Feicht Certi?ed PREA Auditor The Prison Wardens Association in conjunction with Pike County Correctional Facility will be hosting a joint PREA Specialized Security Training on June 13, 2016 from 0800? 1700. This will be the first of five trainings that will be hosted by the PPWA in 2016. Please contact Sgt. Tom Wetklow of Pike County Correctional Facility (contact information above) to reserve your seat. Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: To: Greishaw, Thomas <tgreishaw@pa.gov> Thursday, May 26, 2016 1137 AM Adams Co Warden Brian Clark; Allegheny Co Warden Orlando Harper; Co Warden Phillip Shaffer; Beaver Co Warden [William Schouppe; Bedford Co Warden Troy Nelson; Berks Co Warden [Janine Quiglew Blair Co Warden Michael Johnston: Bradford Co Warden Don Stewart; Bucks Co Dep Director/ Christopher Pirolli; Bucks Co Director/William Plantier; Bucks Co Warden [Terrance Moore; Butler Co Warden Joseph DeMore; Cambria Co Warden Christian Smith: Carbon Co Warden [Timothy Fritz; Richard C. Smith; Chester Co Warden D. Edward McFadden; Clarion Co Warden Jeff i-lornberger, Clear?eld Co Warden Gregory Collins; Clinton Co Warden [John Rowley; Columbia Co (A) Warden David Varano; Crawford Co (A) Warden Kenneth Saulsbery; Cumberland Co Warden Earl Rei12,.lr.; Dauphin Co Warden Dominick DeRose; Delaware Co Warden David Byrne: Elk Co Warden Greg Gebauer; Erie Co Warden Kevin Sutter; Fayette Co Warden Brian Miller, Franklin Co Warden Bill Bechtold; Greene Co Warden Harry GE pie; Huntingdon Co Warden] Duane Black; Indiana Co Warden Samuel Buzzinotti; Jefferson Co Warden [Thomas Elbel; Lackawanna Co Warden Robert McMillan; Lancaster Co Warden Cheryl Steberger; Lawrence Co Warden Brian Covert; Lebanon Co Warden Robert Karnes; Lehigh Co Cindy Egizio; Lehigh Co Director/ Edward Sweeney; Lehigh Co Warden [Janine Donate; Luzerne Co (Interim) Warden [James Larson; Lycoming Co Warden Kevin DeParlos; McKean Co Sheriff Warden Daniel Woods; Mercer Co Warden Erna Craig; Mifflin Co Warden Bernie Zook; Monroe Co Warden Garry Haidle; Montgomery Co Warden Julio Algarin; Montour Co Warden Gerald Cutchall: Northampton Co Director/ Daniel Keen; Kovach, Bruce; Perry Co Business Manager Karen Barclay; Phila ASD Warden Juanita Goodman: Phila CFCF Warden Gera!d May; Phila DC 8L PICC Warden [John Delaney; Phila Dep Warden Pierre Lacombe Phila HOC Warden William Lawton; Phila RCF Warden Michele Farrell; Pike Co Warden [Craig Lowe; Potter Co Dep Warden [Angela Milford; Potter Co Sheriff Warden Glenn C. Drake; Schuylkill Co Warden Gene Berdanier; Snyder Co Warden [Shawn Cooper; Somerset Co Warden Gregmy Briggs; Susquehanna Co Warden Mark Shelp Tioga Co Warden [Terry Browning; Union Co Warden Douglas Shaffer; Venango Co Warden [Jeffrey Ruditis; Warren Co Sheriff Warden Kenneth Klakamp; Washington Co Warden [John Temas; Wayne Co Warden Kevin Bishop; Westmoreland Co Warden [John Walton; Wyoming Co Warden Ken Repsher; York Co Warden Mary Sabol; Adams Co Dep Warden Dzung Luong: Adams Co Dep Warden Michael Gigiio; Adams Co Director of Tx Robert Stevens; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Latoya Warren; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Monica Long; Allegheny Co Dep Warden Simon Wainwright Co Dep Warden Matt Roofner; Beaver Co Dep Warden Carol Steele?Smith; Bedford Co Dep Warden [Jason Moore; Bedford Co Dep Warden Rocky Bernazzoli; Berks Co Dep Warden [Jeffrey Smith; Berks Co Dep Warden Kyle Russell; Berks Co Dep Warden Stephanie Smith; Blair Co Dep Warden Marc Masucci; Bradford Co Dep Warden Peter Quattrini; Bucks Co Adm Asst/ Sue Oti: Bucks Co Asst Warden Lillian Budd; Bucks Co Subject: Superintendent/ Kevin Rousset: Bucks Co Dep Warden Clifton Mitchell; Butler Co Attachments: Dep Warden Beau Sneddon; Butler Co Dep Warden [Jennifer Passarelli; Cambria Co Dep Warden Craig Descavish; Cambria Co Dep Warden William Patterson; Carbon Co Dep Warden Ryan Long; Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno; Melanie L. Gordon; Chester Co Dep Warden Ronald Phiilips; Chester Co Dep Warden Walter Reed; Clarion Co Dep Warden Ronald Owens; Clearlield Co Admin Asst/ Sherry Bell; Clear?eld Co Dep Warden Stephen Smith; Cleariield Co Dep Warden [Zachary Murone; Clinton Co Dep Warden Angela Hoover; Clinton Co Dep Warden Susan Watt; Columbia Co Dep I Greetings County Colleagues, Warden Doug Meyer; Cumberland Co Dep Warden [Janet Kreider Scott; Cumberland Co Dep Warden [Jeffrey Ilgenfritz; Cumberland Co Dep Warden Michael Carey; Dauphin Co Dep Warden Elizabeth Nichois; Dauphin Co Dep Warden Leonard Carroll; Delaware Co Dep Warden Henry Siadek; Delaware Co Dep Warden James Mattera; Delaware Co Dep Warden Mario Colucci; Elk Co Dep Warden Edward Warmbrodt Erie Co Dep Warden David Sanner. Erie Co Dep Warden Gary Seymour; Erie Co Dep Warden Michael Holman; Erie Co Dep Warden Ronald Bryant; Fayette Co Dep Warden Barry Croftcheck' Fayette Co Dep Warden Michael Zavada; Franklin Co Dep Warden [James Sullen; Franklin Co Dep Warden Michelle Weiler; Greene Co Dep Warden Michael Kraus; Huntingdon Co Dep Warden Bradley Glover, Indiana Co Dep Warden Lesley Simmons; Indiana Co Dep Warden Lori Hamilton; Jefferson Co Dep Warden Dustin Myers; Lackawanna Co Dep Warden David Langan; Lancaster Co Dep Warden [Alexander Croci; Lancaster Co Dep Warden [Joseph Shifier, Lancaster Co Dir of Adm [Tammy Moyer, Lawrence Co Dep Warden [Jason Hilton: Lebanon Co Dep Warden Anthony Hauck; Lebanon Co Dep Warden Timothy Clements; Lehigh Co Director/ Laura Kuykendall; Lehigh Co Dep Warden Carol Sommers; Lehigh Co Dep Warden Robert McFadden; Lycoming Co Dep Warden Brad Shoemaker, Lycoming Co Dep Warden Christopher Ebner, McKean Co Asst Warden Dave Stahlman; McKean Co Asst Warden Rick Austin; Mercer Co Dep Warden [Joe Reichard: Mercer Co Dep Warden Mac McDuf?e; Mifflin Co Dep Warden [James Crisswell; Monroe Co Dep Warden [Joseph McCoy; Monroe Co Dep Warden Philip Diliberto; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Mark Murray; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Martha D'Orazio; Montgomery Co Asst Warden Sean McGee; Montour Co LL Scott Davis; Northampton Co Dep Warden David Penchishen; Northampton Co Dep Warden James Kostura; Wheary, Brian; Smink, James; Perry Co Dep Warden [Thomas Long; Phila ASD Dep Warden Cathy Talmadge; Phila ASD Dep Warden [James McCants; Phila CFCF Dep Warden (CMR) Christopher Thomas; Phila CFCF Dep Warden Frederick Abello; Phila CFCF Dep Warden [Joseph Slocum; Phila CFCF Dep Warden Rodica Craescu; Phila DC 8L PICC Dep Warden Eugene Thompso n; Phila DC Dep Warden Adrian Christmas; Phila HOC Dep Warden Edward Miranda; Phila HOC Dep Warden Marvin Porter; Phila Director Dep Warden Patricia Powers; Phila P8LA Sgt. Alessia Smith?Israel; Phila Sgt./ Dorthea Hackney; Phila PICC Dep Warden Claudette Martin; Phila PICC Dep Warden [William Vetter; Phila RCF Dep Warden Marcella Moore; Phila RCF Dep Warden Sharon Matcher: Pike Co Asst Warden Jonathan Romance; Pike Co Asst Warden Robert McLaughlin; Schuylkill Co Dep Warden David Wapinsky; Snyder Co Dep Warden Adam Wagner; Somerset Co Dep Warden Adele Bauer; Susquehanna Co Dep Warden [Joshua Weller; Tioga Co Dep Warden Mike Reid; Union Co LL/Jamie Cutchall: Venango Co Chief Dep Warden Kelly McKenzie; Venango Co Lt. [James McCall; Warren Co Dep Warden [Jon Collins; Washington Co Dep Warden Donald Waugh; Washington Co Dep Warden Edward Strawn; Washington Co Major] Christopher Cain; Wayne Co Dep Warden [John Masco; Westmoreland Co Dep Warden Eric Schwartz; Westmoreland Co Dep Warden Steven Cmar; Wyoming Co Dep Warden Gordon Traveny; York Co Dep Warden Clair Doll; York Co Dep Warden [John Steiner, York Co Dep Warden Michael Buono FW: PREA Specialized Security Training - Free Pike County PPWA PREA Training Announcment.docx; PREA Specialized Security Training Agenda (4.25.16).docx This may be a duplicate for many of you included in the distribution below from PPWA membership; however, I have been informed that this training is offered to non-members as well. Please ?nd the attached for invitation to the training. Regards, Tom Thomas E. Greishaw Director PA Department of Corrections Of?ce of County Inspections and Services 1920 Technology Parkway Mechanicsburg PA 17050 Phone: 717.728.4057 Fax: 717.728.4180 wwcongagov From: PA Prison Wardens Association Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 11:15 AM To: Greishaw, Thomas <tgreishaw@pa.gov> Subject: PREA Specialized Security Training Free Training Announcement PREA SPECIALIZED SECURITY TRAINING JUNE 13, 2016 0800 -l700 Location: Pike County Correctional Facility 175 Pike County Blvd. Hawley, PA 18428 Contact: Sgt. Tom Wetklow (570) 775-5500 twetklow ike a.0r Instructors: Patrick 5. Zirpoli Certi?ed PREA Auditor conifer Fcicht Certi?ed PREA Auditor Cost: FREE The Prison Wardens Association in conjunction with Pike County Correctional Facility will be hosting a joint PREA Specialized Security Training on June 13, 2016 from 08004700. This wiil be the ?rst of ?ve trainings that will be hosted by the PPWA in 2016. Please contact Sgt. Torn Wetklow of Pike County Correctional Facility (contact information above) to reserve your seat. **Please see the attached forms for additional details on this FREE training** Prison Wardens Association, 700 Rishel Hill Road, Bellefonte, Pa 16823 Phone18141355-?794 Fax [814] Email . Website To unsubscribe from PPWA email distributions, please go to and enter your email address with the word "unsubsgribg" on the contact us form. Please allow up to 48 hours ofyour submission forthe removal to take place. Prison Wardens Association Training Announcement PREA SPECIALIZED SECURITY TRAINING JUNE 13, 2016 0800 ?1700 Location: Pike County Correctional Facility 175 Pike County Blvd. Hawley, PA 18428 Mass: Sgt. Torn Wetklow (570) 7756500 Instructors: PatrickJ. Zirpoli Certi?ed PREA Auditor Jennifer Feicht Certified PREA Auditor Cost: FREE The Prison Wardens Association in conjunction with Pike County Correctional Facility will be hosting a joint PREA Specialized Security Training on June 13, 2016 from 0800- 1700. This will be the ?rst of five trainings that will be hosted by the PPWA in 2016. Please contact Sgt. Tom Wetklow of Pike County Correctional Facility (contact information above) to reserve your seat. Monday, June 13'? 8:00 8:20 AM 8:20 9:30 AM 9:30 -- 9:45 AM 9:45 - 11:15 PM 11:15 12:15 PM 12:15 1:45 PM 1:45 2:00 PM 2:00 3:00 PM 3:00 - 3:15 PM 3:15 4:45 PM 4:45 - 5:00 PM PREA Specialized Security Training Agenda Pike County Correctional Facility June 13, 2015 WELCOME, NS AND OVERVIEW - Introductions (Faculty, Participants) 0 Logistics 0 Overview ofTraining Goals and Agenda - ?Parking Lot? issues Exercise Module 1: PREA INFORMATIN AND OVERVIEW OF THE PREA INVESTIGATIVE STANDARDS Jennifer L. Feicht BREAK Module 2: TRAUMA AND VICTIM RESPONSE Jennifer L. Feicht LUNCH Module 3: PREA AND INTERVIEWING Patrick Zirpoli BREAK Module 3 (Cont?d) BREAK Module 4: LEGAL AND PROSECUTORIAL COLLABORATION Patrick Zirpoli Jennifer Feicht WRAP UP AND QUESTIONS Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent To: Subject: Attachments: C. Kay Woodring Thursday, May 26. 2016 12:37 PM Bryan L. Sampsel; Denise Elbe?; Eileen 3. Mckinney: Jeffrey T. Hite; Jonathan D. Grine, Judge; Joseph S. Koleno: Mark Higgins; Melanie L. Gordon; Michael Pipe; Richard C. Smith: Stacy Parks Miller, DA: Steve Dershem daily pop reportdocx daily pop reportdocx CORRECTIONAL FACILITY 700 Rishei Hill Road Richard C. Smith. MS, CCHF Bellefonte, 16323 Wmvden Telephone (814) 355?6794 Fax (814) 548?1150 Melanie Gordon Dapn?ly Warden of Opmhm' Joseph KoIeno Deputy Warden of Adminiau-n?an Jeffrey T. Hite Diameter of DAILY REPORT May 26, 2015 HOUSING STATUS Total usabIe beds: 397 Empty beds: 85 Occupied beds: TOTAL POPULATION BREAKDOWN Inmates currently housed in the Facility Male: .. 237 Female: 75 Total: 312 Contracted inmates from other counties Clear?eld: 13 Huntingdon: 27 luniata Lycoming: 20 Mif??in: 1 Montour: 0 Northumberland: Perry: Union: .. 5 Total: 112 TOTALS Total number contracted inmates (County State) Total number of exchange inmates: Total number of out of County warrants: Total number of Centre County inmates: Total Population: 0 200 312 FEMALE POPULATION BREAKDOWN Female inmates haused for other counties Clear?eld: 1 Elk: 0 Fayette: 0 Huntingdon: 17 Juniata 1 Lycoming: 3 Montour: . Northumberland: 10 Union: .. 0 Total: 44 Total Female Population: 75 Total female Centre Countyinmates: Total female contracted inmates: . 44 OUTSIDE VOLUNTEER STATUS BREAKDOWN Total with Outside Clearance: 17 Male: 12 Female: .. 5 ASSIGNMENTS Caunty Maintenance: 3 Centre Peace: On Grounds: 3 Work Release: 5 6 *Garden Project Awaiting Placement: TOTAL NUMBER OF THE POPULATION ON OUTSIDE WORK ASSIGNMENTS 17 ofthe 103 Centre County sentenced inmates, or 16% have outside clearance and assignment and are actually eligible for outside clearance by Approved Policy. *Snow rem oval workers are not counted as they have other work assignments. CENTRE COUNTY POPULATION Total: 200 Sentenced to Centre County 103 Unsentenced: 88 State Sentence/ Pending Transfer: 9 *Post Sent Motions: 0 *On Appeal: . 0 *Other: Pending transfers include 2 from Northumberland Co Kristen M. Simkins From: Gene Lauri Sent: Thursday. May 26, 2016 1:52 PM To: Richard C. Smith; Melanie Gordon: Jeffrey T. Hite Subject: White House Initiative: Using Data to Safely Reduce Incarceration and Improve Outcomes Attachments: DDJ TeamData slides 5 16.ppt:x: White House DDJ Samplejoin Ietter.docx Warden Smith. Deputy Gordon. and Director Hite: Information on a White House Initiative aimed at Using Data to Safely Reduce Incarceration and Improve Outcomes was recently passed on to me from the commissioners? of?ce. This initiative is described in the attached DDJ summary and the attached PowerPoint titled Team Data Slides. Apparently the federal government is looking to ?Partner with cities, counties, and states wiiling to adopt voluntary. data-driven approaches to improve public health and safety and reduce unnecessary incarceration". The initiative cites two key populations which local systems struggle to address and which account for a lot of the overcrowding in jail jurisdictions. These populations are 1. ?Super-utilizers," who are often chronically homeless individuals, with mental illness, substance abuse and heaith problems who repeatedly cycle through multiple systems. including jails, hospital emergency rooms, shelters and other services: and 2. People held in jail before trial on lowdevel. non-violent misdemeanors because they cannot afford to bond out, not because they are a risk to the community or a risk of ?ight. Vl?th regard to Category 1. we recently reviewed a report that Melanie ran on the number of commitments for the period 1/1/2013 through 1213112015 and determined there were 169 individuals committed 3 or more times during that three-year period. They would be "frequent fliers" but I don't know if I would categorize them as ?Super?utilizers?, which the DDJ Summary gave an example of in New York where 473 Super-utilizers were each admitted to jail 18 times or more over a ?veyear period and where "85% of them were charged with misdemeanors or violations, 21% had a serious mental illness and 99.4% had a substance use disorder". I don't think we ever took a detailed look at those in Category 2. My initial thought is that we don't have a lot of people in this category, but that?s just a gut feeling. If we wanted to. how would we identify people being held ?before trial on low- ievel, non-violent misdemeanors because they cannot afford to bond out." is there a report in the OMS that could be run to Identify inmates being held pretrial that would include what they are charged with and the amount of bail set by the if there is such a report then we could manually go through the list generated to get a count of how many people might fall under this category. Communities wishing to take part ?should be willing to address the following three goals: (1) creating or expanding real or near-real time local data exchanges which combine justice. health or other system data, as appropriate and consistent with applicable legal and privacy protections. to enable identi?cation of multiple system "super-utilizers;" diverting this population from the criminal justice system prior to arrest, where appropriate, and linking them to care management or other community-based services; and (3) implementing data-driven risk assessment tools to ensure decisions on pre-trial release are informed by empirically-validated methods of gauging defendants? risk to the community. not ability to pay or other extraneous information. Anyway. before responding to the commissioners whether this is an initiative we want to get involved with I wanted to get your impressions. You now know as much about it as I do. Thoughts? Gene Lauri, M.S. Director Criminal Justice Planning Department Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte. PA 16823 Tel: 814-355-6794, menu option 6 FAX: 8 150 Email: The information contained in this electronic transmission may include con?dential information which is legally privileged. This information is intended only for use by the you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure. copying may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. this transmission in error. individual[s] to which it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient. forwarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and Please immediately advise the sending party if you beiieve you received THE WHITE HOUSE .- unsulssmos Doublin Down on Existin Innovation: Using Data to Safely Reduce Incarceration and Improve Outcomes Every year, more than 11 million people move through Amenca 3,100 local jails largely on low-level, non-violent misdemeanors The average length of stay is 23 days and 95% of the cases are resolved at the local level without aprison sentence On any given day, more than 450,3 000 people are held 1n jail 5efore trial, even though they have not been convicted of a crime Research shows that even a short stay in jail can impact a person? health, and family stability and can also increase the likelihood that they Will ornmit funnelcrimes. The costs of administering local criminal justic systemsare Slgm?cant both 113 terms of actual dollars to taxpayers and 1n the disruptive on children, The White House reCently hosted onme Justice leaders ?om over 23 counties across the country and they identi?ed two key populations which local systems struggle to address: - per-utilizers Who are often chronically homeless individuals with ental illness, substance ?abuse and health problems who repeatedly cycle through multiple systems, including jails, hospital emergency rooms, shelters and others 'rvices; and - People jai1?l?before trial because they cannot afford to bond out, not because the: area risk to the community or a risk of ?ight. These pepuiations represent an opportunity for targeted, resource-saving interventions since they comprise a signi?cant percentage of many jail populations: 0 A relatively small percentage of inmates, many with mental health and substance abuse challenges, are responsible for an outsized proportion of jail admissions and jail days. In New York, for example, 473 people were admitted to jail 18 times or more, accounting for more than 10,000 jail admissions and 300,000 days over a ?ve year period; 85% of them were charged with misdemeanors or violations, 21% had a serious mental illness and 99.4% had a substance use disorder. - Nearly 63% of all individuals held in jail are being held pre-trial, meaning they have not yet been convicted of a crime. Many are there on misdemeanor or traf?c offenses. New innovations demonstrate that ?nding better alternatives to jail for individuals in these categories can not only save resources, but also help stabilize families and make communities safer. Scaling Effective Innovations from Across the Country There 15 a signi?cant opportunity to scale and expand three key innovanons at the local level that use data to reduce dramatically the number of people who enter or stay in jail, white improving human outcomes, increasing public safety, and generating signi?cant cost savings Identify and divert people with manta ealth challenges who do not need to be' in jail to reduce jail, admissions; and Improve treatment and outcomes: - Real-time Data Sharing to Addressi?i?ie Needs of ?Super Utilizers? and Other At?Risir Individuals througi Alternatives to Incarceration Goal hare data across health, ducation and criminal justice to identify peeple Who ar h1gh system and link them with supportive services and care management that are more effective at treating mental health and health needs than additional jail stays Example: Camden NJ. Camden combines cross- system data from the health and criminal justice systems to identify people who have multiple arrests and hospitalizations, and uses case management and care coordlnation approaches to intervene with the target population In health care, Camden 5 costs for these? super users? decreased more than 50%, emergency room visits declined, and patients? health and quality of life improved. - Pre-Arrest Mental Health Diversion Goal: Create tools, training and capacity to support pre-arrest mental health diversion. Example: Miami-Dado, FL. Miami provided mental health crisis response training to its police and 911 dispatchers and created a dedicated hospital emergency room as an alternative to jail for people in mental health crisis. Over the past 4 years, police have responded to nearly 50,000 mental health crisis calls and have made only 109 arrests. The jail population has shrunk from 7,800 to 4,400, allowing the county to close a jail, saving $12 million annually. - Data-driven Pre?Trial Risk Assessment Tools Goal: Identify low-risk defendants who can be released with no bond or low bond before trial by using ongoing data analysis and pro-trial risk assessment tools. Example: Charlotte-Mecldenbur NC and the state=of Kentucky have implemented a race? and gender?neutral pre?trial risk assessment tool, which uses data to predict the risk that a defendant will engage 1n violence commit a new crime Or fail to return to court. The jail population has gone down 20%, s1gnificant1y more low-risk individuals have been released from ja11 fthout any increase in crime. Kentucky has Implemented the same tool state-wide and has seen pre?tnal.._ crime decrease, even W1111e judges are reieasing a greater percentage of: defendants?than they did'beftjre. Jo an Innovative Community ,?lcounty and states willing to adopt en approaches to improve'public health and safety, and reduce Communities should be Willmg to address the following three goals: (1) creating or expanding real or near~realtin1e local data exchanges which combine justice, health or other system data, as appropriate and consistent with applicable legal and privacy protections, to enab1e identi?cation of multiple system ?super-utilizers; (2) diverting this population from the Criminal justice system prior to arrest, where appropriate, and Iinking them to care management or other community?based services; and (3) implementing data-driven risk assessment tools to ensure decisions on pro-trial release are informed by empirically-validated methods of gauging defendants? risk to the community, not ability to pay or other extraneous information We anticipate that participating communities will share best practices and build capacity in: Data?Driven Solutions - Real Time Data Exchange and Risk Assessment El Sharing data across health and criminal justice to identify system ?super utilizers? 13 Creating a ?Data Map? to identify existing data-sharing, gaps and barriers 3 El Implementing data-driven risk based pro-trial assessment tools to inform pre-trial release decisions Community Capacity/Pre?Arrest Mental Health Diversion Commitments [1 Providing Crisis Intervention Training to law enforcement and 911 dispatchers Creating a ?Services Map? to identify community based treatment options, including gaps and barriers to service delivery, in mental health crisis El E3 Identifying an alternate, non?jail location(s) for people to receive treatment while 1] Identifying or creating an approach to provide care management and social supports for ?super ut11 12ers System Stakeholder Engagement El Demonstrating commitment from key system stakeholders, who may include. 0 City, County or State Executive Police Chief/Executive District Attorney/Chief Prosecu or Administrative Judge Public Defender Sherif??lail Warden Head of the public health m, and Owners of any data system where data W111 be shared We are joining the Data-Driven Justice initiative to address two key populations: (1) ?Super-utilizers,? often chronically homeless individuals, with mental illness, substance abuse and health problems who repeatedly cycle through multiple systems, including jails, hospital emergency rooms, shelters and other services; and (2) people held in jail before trial because they cannot afford to bond out, not because they are a risk to the community or a risk of ?ight. We commit to advance three innovative solutions that can better serve these populations, while stabilizing communities, and generating savings to tax payers: 1. Creating or expanding real or near-real time local data exchanges that combine justice, health or other system data, as appropriate and consistent with applicable legal and privacy protections, to enable identification of multiple system ?super-utilizers;? Diverting this population, as well as people who may be committing low level Crimes primarily due to mental illness, from the criminal justice system prior to arrest, where appropriate, and linking them to care management or other communitybased services; 3. Implementing data-driven risk assessment tools to ensure decisions on pre-trial release are informed by empirically validated methods of gauging defendants? risk to the community, not ability to pay or other extraneous information. oi While multiple components of our government and other systems will participate, person} will coordinate the initiative on my behalf, will report directly to me with respect to this initiative, and will be the lead point of contact for the White House. Over the coming weeks, in coordination with the White House, we will outline a plan to advance the strategies in (jurisdiction name). In addition, Gurisdiction name) will participate in regular check-in calls, engage with the White House and fellow communities on our progress, and participate in communications and public engagement that make sense for (jurisdiction). Sincerely, Coumy Executive Designated DDJ Point of Contact Innovation, Technology Criminal Justice Reform Using Data-?Driven Interventions to Reduce the Size of Our Jail Population The United States locks up more people, per capita, than any other nation. Every year, more than 11 million people cycle through local jails, many on low-level, nonviolent crimes, held in jail as a result of their mental illness or because they cannot afford to pay a bond. The average length of stay is 23 days and 95% of these cases are resolved at the local level without a prison sentence. An opportunity for targeted, resource-saving interventions Two Key Populations Currently sent to Jail that Shouldn?t Be CD ?Super-Utilizers? who are responsible for Individuals who pose no risk to the an outsized proportion ofjail admissions community but can?t afford to bond out. and jail days. A relatively small percentage Neariy 63% of ail individuals heid in jail are of inmates, often chronically homeless, with being held pre?trial, meaning they have not mental illness, substance abuse, and yet been convicted of a crime. Many are health problems, who repeatedly cycle there on misdemeanor or traf?c offenses. through muitiple systems, including jails, Research shows that even a short stay in hospital emergency rooms, shelters, and jail can impact a person?s health, job, and other services. famiiy stability. An opportunity for targeted, resource-saving interventions Participating communities agree to meet the following goals: Facilitate data sharing Implement proven pre- between criminal justice arrest mental health and heaith/social service diversion programs to providers to identify ?super- keep people with mentai utilizers? who repeatedly illness out of jaii and link cycle through jail, them to effective, com? PDI emergency heaith, and initiative other public services. munity?based services. These initiatives aiign with health sector efforts to identify and provide better services to people with high health care costs and multiple chronic conditions Implement data-driven risk assessment tools to ensure decisions on pretrial release are informed by empiricaily validated methods of gauging defendants? risk to the community rather than ability to pay. Partner with cities, counties, and states willing to adopt voluntary, data-driven approaches to improve public health and safety and reduce unnecessary incarceration. Spatial Analysis sf ySte Camden Hospital Costs ig ti I i rs Severaibeiidings . )anneeiiy generate million in hospital -oets. jsp?ial i?i v33 police M, .t bl arrest data and a yr ores accoun 13355 for 36 or patients and memes ms of {eceipts Patients 205 individuals were identified to be dual?system high utilizers (10visits 6+ police encounters overfive 1 . years). 5% men?s 73% {11585513 5% er; wears a 53% a; were 5 PERCENTAGE OF ALL COSTS 3.1; r: my:- - Beaufl?mans Risk 0? ?mice enwunier Prevalence of Substance Abuse, Mental Health, and Homelessness* Visit the Emergency Departments otimes in a .. '2?89 year (8.8x for women). i more likely if you have a substance abuse related hospitai visit (2.0x for women). i more likely if you visit the hospital with a violence- related diagnosis (2.5x for women}. of Police a. HDSDEEHE 1 Utviizers Substance Abuse Mental Health Homelessness ave at least one substance-apuse . Ponce om related hospitalization ?We Hi U?lizers Population Drier to their first ?was? encounter with the police department. Police at Hospital 10+ ED Visits; 11-1205) Project 25: Housing First, Health Homefor Serious Mentally Ill and Chronically Homeless 8 . . In 2010: 2 .people the Praje?. 25?s impact: ea Public community 5335 Service Expenses Jail 20w BASE to 20:3 Jail [lays 911 Hospitals Ambulance Trans Arrests Gifted ER Visits ArreSts . Total i i Oil, 46% 46% 43:54?; a *includes: Crisis House, detox centers. homeless shelters. legal assisteace an: amalgam); Response Team Total Cost Savings 7 million over 2 years (net ROI of 207% In 2012 and 262% In 2013) All Project 25 individuals housed in their own apartments, have acquired health care insurance, and are receiving necessary supportive services and care on an ongoing basis. a Annual Cost In 2012 Doilars Pre? and Post-Housing Costs for it?llh Patients Housed - $70,000 $60,000 $50,000 5 $40,000 $39,000 15? $20,000 swoon '5 $53,808 Probation a Sheriff mental health tail ISheriff medical jail BSheriff general . LAHSA homeiess srv. II GR Housing Vouchers General Reiief Food Stamps Paramedics so Housing a Substance abuse em. 0 a Mental Heatlh a County outpatient cii?nic a Private hospitals-ER IHeaith . ER I Private hospiiai-inpaiient I County hospitai?inpatient When Homeless in PermanentSupportive Los Angeles identified 163 hospital patients with the highest public and hospital costs and immediately placed them into permanent supportive housing. Total health care costs, inciudingjail medical and mental health care, declined an average of 72%. Miami-Dade County created Crisis Stabilization Units, alternative hospital emergency rooms where police can take people in mental health crisis instead ofjail, and provided mental health training to all its police officers and 911 dispatchers. Over the past 4 years, Miami?Dede police have responded to nearly 50,000 calls for people in mental health crisis and have made only 109 arrests. The jail population has shrunk from 7800 to 4400, allowing the county to ciose a jail at an annuai savings of $12 million. The recidivism rate for misdemeanor diversion Defendants with mental iilnesses fell from approximately 72% to 20%. The recidivism rate for the felony diversion program is 6% for those that complete the program. For more information contact: Overmann Office of the U.S. CTO Overmann@ostp.eop.gov David Wilkinson Office of Social Innovation David Wilkinson@who.eop.gov Claudia Williams Office of the U.S. CTO Chwilliams@ostp.eop.qov 9 Kristen M. Simkins From: Samantha 1C Rees Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 2:16 PM To: Richard C. Smith: Melanie Gordon Subject: Deputy Warden App Attachments: Boatman, Ryan K. Dept. Warden App.pdf Samantha K. Rees HR Specialist Human Resources Centre County Government 420 Holmes Street, Room 334 Bellefonte, PA 1682 3 814-355-6748 Ext. 1282 ehcee?ceutcecmmw The infonnation in this message may be privileged, con?dential, and protected ?om disclosure. If the reader of this message is neither the intended recipient, or an employee or agent responsible for delivery of this message to the intended recipient, you are hereby noti?ed any dissemination, distibution, unauthorized use, or copying of this communication is ntohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by replying to this message and delete the communication ?om your computer. Thank you! Kristen M. Simkins From: Michael S. Woods Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 3:00 PM To: Allyson R. Duvall; Amber M. Wolfgang: Amy Miller: Ashley L. Aurand; Ashley M. Burns; Caitlyn D. Neff: Danielle Minarchick; Dawn M. Walls: Elizabeth E. Woods; Erin M. Mosser. Janet C. Snyder;Jef'frey T. Hite; Johnna Bilger; Jonathan M. Millinder: Joseph S. Koleno; Juan Mendez: Karla A. Withen'te; Kevin P. Peacock; Kevin T. Jeirles; Larry L. Lidgett: Lorinda L. Brown,- Matthew T. Fishes Melanie L. Gordon; Milane Daughenbaugh; Richard C. Smith; Stacy Smith; Stephanie D. McGhee; Thomas S. Allen, Jr. Subject: Investigative Status as placed on Investigative Status for possible gambling on the housing unit. Counselor Minarchic oun a ger in a notebook belonging to Inmate- Inmate ?and Inmate ?were placed on Investigative Status for possibly stealing property from Inmate-locker. CO Hampton suspected that Inmate -was missing property as she was collecting it after-was placed on 1/5. Lt. Allen and I revie nd it appears that Inmate handed ?rtems to Inmate - We are awaiting fo property to be inventoried to determine if anything was stolen. Michael Woods Lieutenant Emergency Planning - Fire Safety - Key Control .. Training Coordinator Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishei Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 814-355-6794 ext. 5 814-548-1150 (fax) mswoods ntrecoun Kristen M. Simkins From: Jeffrey T. Hite Sent Thursday, May 26, 2016 3:05 PM To: Richard C. Smith Cc: Joseph S. Koleno Subject FW: Weekend schedule Warden, we haven't nailed this holiday schedule down yet with Kristen. Can we have her off Monday for the holiday? Please let myself and DW Koleno know as he will be contacting her as I will not be in email range. Thanks. Jeff From: Stephanie D. McGhee Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 2:54 PM To: Jeffrey T. Hire; Joseph S. Koleno Subject: Weekend schedule Director Hite, I spoke with DW Koleno regarding my holiday schedule. Could you please clarify if i am scheduled to work on Monday, May 30th? know we haven?t really figured out this whole holiday thing yet, so l?m confused. I would like to use a vacation day on Sunday, and then I assumed that I would be off Monday for the paid holiday. understand you may need to check with the Warden for clarification as well. Please feel free to email me (I can check it from my cell phone) to let me know the answer. Thank you, fight/a ??ght Cowzselor Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (option 3,3,4) Kristen M. Simkins From: Andrews Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 4:10 PM To: Richard C. Smith Cc: Melanie Gordon: Joseph S. Koleno Subject: SORNA audit documents Attachments: SORNA audit Sex offender registration P&P.pdf Importance: High Warden, please review the answers to the SORNA audit questions. Let me know your thoughts. Have a great Holiday weekend! Saturday is to be near 90 degrees! Make some waves and catch some rays! 83 Wilmer (Andy) Andrews Central Booking Coordinator 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 814-548-1184 814-548-1178 Eman? The information contained in or attached to this electronic transmission may include confidential information which is legaily privileged. This information is intended only for use by the individual[s} to whom it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient. you are hereby noti?ed any disclosure, copying, forwarding or other distribution of these contents is not authorized and may be a violation of state and/or Federal law. Please immediately advise the sending party if you believe you received this transmission in error. CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY POLICY PROCEDURE Section: I Effective Date: 1-23-14 Registration of Sex Offenders Document 119 I Policy: it is the policy of the Centre County Correctional Facility that defendants convicted of an offense as described in Pa Title 42 9799.320) of PASORT Sex Offender Registration Act), will register with the State Police Bureau of Records and Identi?cation Megan?s Law Section. 42 Pa. C.S. 9799.320) authorizes the State Police to create and maintain a state registry of sexual offenders and Sexually Violent Predators. ll Source: 42 Pa. 08. 9799.320) Ill De?nitions: Sexual Offender: An individual who is required to register under Pa Title 42 9799.320) IV Procedure: Upon conviction for any of the following offenses the offender will be required to register as a sex offender. The registration details are as follows: Tier Classi?cation Tier 1 Sexual Offenses - 15 Your Registration Offenders convicted of the following offenses shall be classi?ed as a Tier I offender: -18 29020)) (relating to Unlaw?il Restraint). '18 2903 (relating to False Imprisonment). '18 2904 (relating to Interference with Custody of Children). '18 Pails. 2910 (relating to Luring a Child into a Motor Vehicle or Structure). '18 31242(a) (relating to Institutional Sexual Assault). ~18 Pails. 3126(a)(1) (relating to Indecent Assault). -18 6301(a)(l)(ii) (relating to Corruption of Minors). '18 6312(d) (relating to Sexual Abuse of Children). '18 7507.1. (relating to invasion of Privacy). -18 U.S.C. 1801 (relating to Video Voyeurism). I18 U.S.C. 2252(a)(4) (refitting to Certain Activities Relating to Material Involving the Sexual Exploitation of Minors). 1 ~18 U.S.C- 2252A (relating to Certain Activities Relating to Material Constituting or Containing Child Pornography). '18 U.S.C. 22523 (relating to Misleading Domain Names on the Internet). ~18 U.S.C. 2252C (relating to Misleading Words or Digital Images on the Internet). -i8 U.S.C. 2422(a) (relating to Coercion and Enticerneut). '18 2423(1)), and (relating to Transportation of Minors). ~18 U.S.C. 2424 (relating to Filing Factual Statement about Alien individual). -18 U.S.C. 2425 (relating to Use of Interstate Facilities to Transmit Information about a Minor). -A conviction or court martial of a comparable military offense or similar offense under the laws ofanotherjnrisdiction or foreign country or under a former law of this Commo nwealtlt -A conviction of an attempt. conspiracy or solicitation to commit an offense enumerated under Tier I classi?cation. -A convictionfor a sexual offense in anotherjurisdiction or foreign country that is not set forth in this section, but nevertheless requires registration under a sexual offender statute in the jurisdiction or foreign country. Tier II Sexual Offenses 25 Year Registration Offenders convicted of the following offenses shall be classi?ed as a Tier II offender: '18 (relating to Statutory Sexual Assault). '18 3124.2(a2) and (a3) (relating to Institutional Sexual Assault). ~18 3126(a)(2), (3), (4), (5), 6) or (8) (relating to Indecent Assault). '18 5902031) (relating to Prostitution and related Offenses). -18 Pics. 5903(a)(3)(ii), or (6) (relating to Obscene and other Sexual Materials and Performances). '18 6312(1)) and (c)(rclating to the Sexual Abuse of Children). -18 6313 (relating to Unlaw?il Contact with Minor). '18 6320 (relating to Sexual Exploitation of Children). 018 U.S-C. 1591 {relating to Sex Traf?cking of Children by Force, Fraud, or Coercion). '18 U.S.C. 2243 (relating to Sexual Abuse of a Minor or Ward). -18 U.S.C. 2244 (relating to Abusivo Sexual Contact) where the victim is 13 years ofege or_oldcr but under 18 years of age. -18 U.S.C. 2251 (relating to Sexual Exploitation of Children). '18 U.S.C- 2251A (relating to Selling or Buying ofChildren). '18 U.S.C. 2252(a)(1). (2) or (3) (relating to Certain Activities Relating to Material Involving the Sexual Exploitation of Miners). '18 U.S.C. 2260 {relating to Production of Sexually Explicit Depictions of a Minor for Importation into the United States). -18 U.S.C. 2421 (relating to Transportation Generally). ~18 [18.0 2422(b) (relating to Coercion and Enticement). -18 U.S.C. 2423(a) (relating to Transportation of Minors). -A conviction or court martial of a comparable military offense or similar offense under the laws ofanotherjurisdiction or foreign country or under a former law of this Commonwealth. conviction of an attempt, conspiracy or solicitation to commit an c??ense enumerated under Tier II classi?cation. Tier Sexual Offenses - Lifetime Registration Offenders convicted of the following offenses shall be classi?ed as a Tier llI offender: ?18 2901(a.1) (relating to Kidnapping). -18 3121 (relating to Rape). '18 3122.103) (relating to Statutory Sexual Assault). ~18 3123 (relating to Involuntary Deviate Sexual Intercoms). ~18 3124.1 (relating to Sexual Assault). -l 8 3124.2(a.l) (relating to Institutional Sexual Assault). -18 3125 (relating to Aggravated Indecent Assault). '13 3126(a)(7) (relating to Indecent Assault). '18 4302(0) (relating to Incest). -18 .S.C. 2241 (relating to Aggravated Sexual Abuse). -18 2242 (relating to Sexual Abuse). -18 U.S.C. 2244 where the victim is under 13 years of age (relating to Abusive Sexual Contact). -A conviction or court martial. of a comparable milittn'y offense or similar offense under thelaws of anotherjurisdiction or foreign or under a former law of this Commonwealth. -A conviction of an attempt, conspiracy or solicitation to commit an offense enumerated under Tier classi?cation. -Two or more convictions of an offense(s) enumerated under Tier I or Tier II classi?cation. Sexually Violent Predator An individual convicted of a Tier I sexual offense, a Tier II sexual offense, or a Tier sexual offense who is determined to be a Sexually Violent Predator by the Court. The term also includes an individual determined to be a Sexually Violent Predator ora similar designation where the determination occurred in anotherjurisdietion, a foreign country or by court martial following ajudicial 3 or administrative determination pursuant to a process similar to that of the Commonwealth? s. -A Sexually Violent Predator shall register for life. Reporting Intervals Individuals required to register as a sexual offender shall appear ill?person at an approved Registration or Veri?cation Site according to their assigned Tier or classi?cation: er I offenders required to appear annually. -Tier Ii offenders ., required to appear semiannually (twice a your). -Tier offenders required to appear quarterly (four times a year). ~Transient offenders required to appear -Sexually Violent Predator~ required to appear quarterly (four times a year). General Registration Requirements In addition to the periodic in~person reporting interval(s), an offender shall appear at an approved Registration or Veri?cation Site within three busmess days to provide current information or change(s) relating to: -A change in name, including an alias. -A commencement of residence, change in residence, tennination of residence or failure to maintain a residence, thus making the individual a transient. -Commencement of employment. 21 change in the location or entity in which the individual is employed or a termination of employment. -lnitial enrollment as a student, a change in enrollment as a student or termination as a student. 'An addition or a change in telephone number, including a cell phene number, or a termination of telephone number, including a cell phone number. -An addition, a change in and termination of a motor vehicle owned or operated by an offender, including watercraft or aircraft. In order to ful?ll the requirements of this paragraph, the individual must provide any license plate numbers and registration numbers and other identi?ers and an addition to or change in the address of the plate the where the vehicle is stored. -A commencement of temporary lodging, a change in temporary lodging or a termination of temporary lodging. In order to ful?ll the 4 requirements of this paragraph, the individual must provide the speci?c length of time and the dates during which the individual will be temporarily lodged. -An addition, change in or termination of cmmail address, instant message address or anyr other designations used in Internet communications or postings. -An addition. change in or termination of information related to occupational and professional licensing, including type of license held and license number. The Adult Probation and Parole Department is responsiblefor coordinating the PASORT Initial registration with the Centre County Central Booking Center within 48 hours after being sentenced for a crime requiring the offender to register as a sex offender. Subsequent registration updates or annual veri?cations will be performed at a designated registration site for PASORT, aka as SORNA (Sex Offender Registration Noti?cation Act). Revised Date: 1/23/2014 Reviewed Date: 1/20/2015 v9. m. .5) ?#53 Richard C. Smith MS, CCHP. Warden Date Wf? Chris" Exarchos, Chairman, Centre County Prison Board Date PRISONS County gentre State PA Agent: David Seda Date 5(26116 Agency Contact: Ph Questions: Does your agency have a Poiio/ and Procedure Manual containing specific requirements identifying response and procedure associated with Title 42, Subsection (Prisons)? THIS IS NOT REQUIRED UNDER THE ACT. NO 2L YES If yes, pleasa provide a copy of the policy and procedure that applies specifically to Title 42 Subsection and your agencies intended response. Does your agency use a FORM, read to 3 tier prisoner offender (required to register) and require that prisoner to sign the form and acknowledge its contents?? $799.20 Is there a Form? YES NOTE: Proceed to next page Questions Continued: When and how did your agency address the changes resulting through their interpretation of the Ttle 42 Subsection The TItle took effect on December 20 2012 What did your agency implement the changes? ?9799 How did your agency ensure that, prior to execution of the TItle 41 Subsection H, registration was completed prior to being released? 5 9799 19mm When a Subject refuses to provide required registration information prior to their release, what procedures are used to ensure P5P and local law enforcement are noti?ed; and how 13 that documented. 9799.19 If your answer is; "we never had that happen?; then, what would you do if it did? ?i-iow would noti?cation take place and how would it documented? When a Subject is sentenced to your facility, how are you ensuing proper registration! processing has/is complete in accordance to 9799.16ih)? 9799.19 (b How does your agency verifying that the Subject has registered with the appropriate agencies prior to release from prison? How is your agency documenting veri?cation? 9799 19 Ir) How is your agency tracking and ensuring notification if the individual isscheduled to be released from a Prison due to the expiration of sentence and the individual refuses to provide the information set forth in section 9799.16lb), the titie states that the State or county correctional institution shall notify the State Police or the municipal police department with jurisdiction over the facility of the failure to provide the information and of the expected date, time and location of the release of the individual. How are they documenting? 9799.1slbi1licnv] Describe the cooperation between P5P when communicating necessary Information to PSP regarding their efforts to create the PSP registration notification. Ask if they can suggest improvement ls-the prison notifying PSP thirty days in advance of, but no later than ten days prior'to, the individuals release from prison accordingly and with regard to registration! How are they documenting noti?cation? ?9799 19(b is your agency notifying PSP if the individual refuses to provide the information required by this subchapter?so that the PSP may comply with this section? {3 9799.22{d) If this has never happened; what would you do if it did? Describe how notification is/ would take place and how is it do umented" .h has-no a ened one fthd-ocCurred. ur. unsdictionl aw. Do you have any suggestion regarding how we can assist you with improving your response to Title 42 Subsection l-i? Close The information provided in this audit will ensure uniformity in compliance by all agencies: and, after review, the one will forward any improvement suggestions that they discover through the audit process. Thank you for your cooperation. Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: Kimberly C. Smeltzer Thursday, May 26, 2016 4:13 PM Richard C. Smith; Julia A. Sprinkle; Clayton B. Reed: Debra A. Homan; Ann Marie Oldani Pasces Agenda Item 16-05-31.docx You have an agenda item for the Tuesday, May 31, 2016 Board of Commissioner's meeting beginning at 10:00 AM. Please review the attachment for accuracy. If there has been any changes, if you are unable to attend, or you decide to send another representative from your department, please let me know. Thank you very much! Have a great holiday weekend? CENTRE COUNTY A. BOARD OF AGENDA Tuesday, May 31, 2016, 10:00 AM. willowbank Of?ce Building 420 Holmes Street, Room 146 Bellefonte, PA 16823 VI. VII. CALL TO ORER HUMAN SERVICE BLOCK GRANT PUBLIC HEARING PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE PUBLIC COMMENT In accordance with the Sunshine Act, attendees will be given the opportunity to comment on matters of concern, of?cial action, or deliberation before the Board of Commissioners. For items not on the agenda, the Board of Commissioners will accept public comment at the beginning of each meeting. For items that are on the agenda, the Board will accept public comment prior to each of?cial action. Persons desiring to comment should raise their hand to be recognized by the Chair. Anyone addressing the Board will be given a five-minute time period in which to do so. MEETING MINUTES A Board will consider approving the Minutes from the Board of Commissioners meeting held Tuesday, May 24, 2016. ACTION ITEMS A LIQUIILEUELS - Application from Millheim Borough in the amount of $16,720 for traf?c signal replacement at Route 45 and Route 445 intersections Dept. 41 1. 3. CHECK RUN in the amount of 31 dated May 2016. CONSENT AGENDA A Lease Extension between the County and Centre Hall Fire Company for the Centre Hall Senior Center. The contract total is $10,800 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2019 Dept. 521. BOARD OF AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 PAGE 2 B. RISKMANAGEMENI a Approve the following: i. lil. vi. Contract renewal between the County and for the County?s Property Casualty Insurance. The contract total is $255,625 for the period June 1, 2016 to May 31, 20l7; Loss Prevention Grant between the County and in the amount of $3,030 to replace outdoor lighting at the Willowbank Building with higher output LED lights; Loss Prevention Grant between the County and in the amount of $3,566.52 to purchase six (6) new body armor vests for the Sheriff Deputies; Loss Prevention Grant between the County and in the amount of $3,957 for reimbursement for a recently purchased walk?through metal detector; Loss Prevention Grant between the County and in the amount of $243 for purchase of ?No Trespassing? signs at ten (10) of our 9?1-1 tower sites; Loss Prevention Grant between the County and in the amount of $400 to purchase two (2) pediatric packs for the County?s AED machines Dept 1 12. C. - Contract renewal between the County and Breon?s, Inc, to provide Generator Maintenance for all 9?1-1 Tower Sites and willowbank Tower. The contract total is $1 1,031.24 (91 1110) for the period June 9, 2016 to June 8, 2017 Dept. 354. D. Approve the following: Contract Addendum between the County and Strawberry Fields, Inc., to add monies to increase contract allocations to allow Service Provider to continue to bill for services through the end of the ?scal year in the amount of $45,000. This increases the contract maximum amount from $350,000 to $395,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $355,500; County $39,500 for the period May 2, 2016 to June 30, 2016; Letter of Agreement between the County and Sunny Days Adult Living Center to provide Community Habilitation, Non?Emergency Transportation, Home and Community Habilitation, and ln?Home Respite. The contract total is $34,300 with the source of funding as follows: State $32,695; County $1,605 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; BOARD OF AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 PAGE 3 vii. BOARD OF AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 PAGE 4 Letter of Agreement between the County and Bauer?s All About Kids to provide screening, evaluation, and assessment for infants and toddlers to determine eligibility for eariy intervention services. The contract total is $27,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $24,300; County $2,700 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; Letter of Agreement between the County and Care for People Pius, Inc., to provide unlicensed home and community habilitation, companion services, homemaker/chore services, and reSpite services. The contract total is $17,100 with the source of funding as follows: State $16,300; County $800 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; Letter of Agreement between the County and Strawberry Fields, Inc., for the provision of early intervention services to include Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Speech Language Pathology, and Special Instruction. The contract total is $385,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $346,500; County $38,500 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; Letter of Agreement between the County and Youth Service Bureau to provide special instruction for participants involved in early intervention services. The contract total is $5,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $4,500; County $500 for the period Juiy 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; Letter of Agreement between the County and The Law Of?ce of Denise M. Bierly to provide legal representation at mental health and intellectual disability commitment hearings. The contract total is $5,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $4,766; County $234 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; Letter of Agreement between the County and St. Francis University for the provision of the National Core Indicator Surveys (NCI), PFDS and IM Surveys, and Transition Surveys for the Independent Monitoring for Quality (IM4Q) Program. Teams are trained to conduct intervieWS with randomly selected individuals open for intellectual disability services to ascertain satisfaction. No county match is required. The contract total is $34,564 with 100% State funding for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; ix. Letter of Agreement between the County and Julie Miller to provide screening, evaluation, and assessment for infants and toddlers to determine eligibility for early intervention services. The contract total is $8,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $7,200; County $800 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; Letter of Agreement between the County and Central Intermediate Unit to provide vision, hearing and interpretation services to children who are participating in the Early Intervention Program. The contract total is $10,000 with the source of funding as State $9,000; County $1,000 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; xi. Letter of Agreement between the County and Gen-Clear Child Services, Inc., to provide early intervention services to include Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Speech Language Pathology and Special Instruction. The contract total is $5,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $4,500; County $500 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017; xii. Letter of Agreement between the County and Home Nursing Agency Community Services for the provision of early intervention services to include Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Speech Language Pathology and Special Instruction. The contract total is $33,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $29,700; County $3,300 for the period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017 Dept. 561. DEPARTMENT A. AGING MARKET VOUCHER PROGRAM B. ADJJLISEBMQES - Approve The Emergency Food Assistance Program EFAP) Agreement between the County and PA Department of Agriculture. The grant total is estimated at $78,000 for the period October 1, 2016 to September 30, 2021. Approve contract between the County and The HR Of?ce to provide consulting services for the Centre County Correctional Facility. The contract total is not to exceed $4,000 for the period June 7, 2016 to July 15, 2016. D. Renew Maintenance Agreement betvveen the County and Atlantic Tomorrows Office (formerly Full Circle) for imaging solution. The contract total is $3,968 with the source of funding as follows: Federal $2,554; County $1 ,414 for the period August 2, 2016 to August 1, 2017. BOARD OF AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 PAGE 5 E. 21313le Approve Letter of Agreement (Linkage Agreement) between the County and The Meadows Universai Community Behavioral Health for common purpose of information exchange, referral for behavioral health service and coordination of care in best interest to those communities and persons mutually served. The contract period is June 7, 2016 to June 7, 2018. F. WW - Board will consider renewing the following contracts for the period July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016: shelter/residential/counseling services to dependent/delinquent youth. The contract total is $1 ,43 5,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $1,148,000; County $28 7,000; services to dependent/delinquent youth. The contract total is $225,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $180,000; County $45,000; Between the County and Diversi?ed Treatment Alternatives to provide residential services to dependent/delinquent youth. The contract totai is $34,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $27,200; County $6,800; EV. Between the County and Bethesda Children?s Home to provide shelter/residential services to dependentldelinquent youth. The contract total is $4,300 with the source of funding as follows: State $3,440; County $860; v. Between the County and Cambria County Emergency Shelter to provide shelter care to dependent/delinquent youth. The contract total is $2,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $1,800; County $200; vi. Between the County and NHS Youth Services to provide shelter/residential services to dependent/delinquent youth. The contract total is $65,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $3 9,000; County $26,000; vii. Between the County and Pathways Adolescent Center to provide residential services to dependentldelinquent youth. The contract total is $64,000 with the source of funding as follows: State $51,200; County 1 2,800; 1. Between the County and Centre County Youth Service Bureau to provide n. Between the County and Adelphoi Village Inc., to provide foster/residential BOARD OF AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 PAGE 6 BetWeen the County and the Bair Foundation to provide foster home services to dependent/delinquent youth. The contract totas is $7,800 with the source of funding as follows: State $6,240; County $1,560. IX. DISCUSSION ITEMS A. PA Greenways Trails and Recreation Program Local Match Funding $27,500 B. Act 18 of 201 6 Hotel Tax Legislation Update X. CORRESPONDENCE RECEIVED The folio Wing correspondence was received In the Commissioners? 015706 and will be handled appropriateb/ Housing Alliance November 14-16, 2016 Conference Commonwealth of PA ACH Prison $9,179 Commonwealth of PA ACH $48,471.05 Diamondback Groundbreaking Ceremony 6/9/16 Troop 31 Eagle Scouts Jayakar/Messner Miles Township Parade 7/7/16 Shaner Hotei Room Tax Commonwealth of PA ACH - $27,831.14 North Central Regional Study St. Josephs Academy Donation Commonwealth of PA ACH - $653,857 CYS Bellefonte Art Museum 4th Annual Summer Project Alzheimer?s Association Thank you for attending Grand Opening CBICC Business Directory NACO - Voting on Policy . 52.1520 XI. RECOGNITIONS XEI. REQUESTS REPORTS - ANNOUNCEMENTS ELECTIONS A Voter Registration Report B. Executive Session Report C. ANNOUNCEMENTS BOARD OF AGENDA BOARD OF AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2016 PAGE 7 PAGE 8 Board of Commissioners 10:00 AM Room 146WB msammw Solicitor Meeting 11:00 AM GENERAL ELECTION MLednesdavaneJJDJ? XIV. QUESTIONS FROM THE PRESS CCAP County Administration Conference w? Penn Stater Bellefonte Inter-Valley Chamber Train Station 7:30 AM XV. ADJOURNMENT Drug Overdose Committee Meeting - 9:00 AM Aging Advisory Council 9:30 AM Room 146 PEMA Large Scale Exercise 12:00 PM Willowbank Building 3:30 PM Room 144 Catholic Charities Annual Recognition Dinner Altoona Grand Hotel 5:00 PM CCAP County Administration Conference - Penn Stater BOO/Salary Board 10:00 AM Room 146WB CBICC Business After Hours - 5:30 PM Festival of the Arts 4 Penn State Extension Association Event 5:30 PM Brush Mountain Farm 5:30 PM Executive Management Meeting 8:30 AM - Room 146WB D. ELECTION ANNOUNCEMENTS Mondauugusilm Last day to circulate and file nomination papers Last day for withdrawal by candidates nominated by nomination papers WW Last day for withdrawal by candidates nominated at the Primary Last day to REGISTER before the November Election W015 Last day to apply for civilian absentee ballot Eddaye?oxcmbeme?mj? Last day for County Boards of Election to receive voted civilian absentee ballots Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: All mail for inmate Melanie Gordon Thursday, May 26, 2016 4:31 PM Amber M. Wolfgang; Amy L. Hampton; Ashlee M. Wagner: Ashley Aurand; Ashley M. Burns; Barbara Parsons; Bradley C. Kling: Brenda A. McKinley; Brian J. Beals; C. Kay Woodring; Caitlyn D. Neff; Carl G. Gemmati: Carlton L. Henry; Charles R. Zimmerman; ChristopherJW. Baughman; Crisanne M. KeEEey: Danielle Minarchick; Dave L. Watson; David C. Knepp; David Goodman; David Bryan: David R. Zettie; David S. King; Dawn E. 6055; Dawn M. Walls; Dayne M. McKee: Denise A. Murphy; Donald M. Smith: Douglas T. Weaver: Dustin T. Henry; Elizabeth E. Woods: Eric A. Lockridge; Erin M. Mossen George F. Murphy; Heather D. Eckley; Heather E. Beaver: Henry Napoleon; Jacob T. Love; James A. Simler, James F. Meyer: Janet C. Snyder; Jason R. Buckley; Jason Muthersbaugh?effrey T. Hite; Jennifer E. Eck: Jill C. Dickey: John J. Mahler; John J. Scarborough:John M. Jones;Johnna Bilger, Jonathan C. Rockey: Jonathan M. Ayers; Jonathan M. Millinder: Joseph E. Taylor: Joseph S. Koleno; Joshua D. Refinen Juan Mendez: Justine M. Addleman; N. Lomison; Kelly L. Evans; Kevin J. Brindle; Kevin J. McCool; Kevin T. Jeirles: Kevin Wenrick; Keya M. Kaiser; leberly N. Rupert: Kyle S. Kyle S. Smith,- Larry L. Lidgett; Lee R. Sheaffer: Leonard Verbeclc: Lindsey Hass; Lorinda L. Brown; Lyden Hilliard: Mark T. Waite; Marlene E. Summers; Matthew J. Beck: Matthew J. Shawver: Matthew R. Orndorf: Matthew T. Fisher; Melanie Gordon; Michael D. Ishler: Michael R. Shearer: Michael S. Woods; Milane Daughenbaugh; Nick R. Smith; Philip D. Caihoun: Randy Witherite: Richard C. Smith; Ryan A. Cox: Ryan J. McCioskey; Ryan P. Taylor, Ryan S. Miller; Ryan T. Pataky; Sage B. Lear: Sarah L. Prentice: Shandell M. Posey: Shane Stacy Smith; Stephanie D. McGhee; Tanna L. Shirk; Thomas Hook: Thomas S. Allen, Jr.; Tiffany A. McClenahan: Tom L. Dutrow; Tony M. Little: Ty M. Corl: Vanessa C. Billett; Walter E. Jeirles; Wayne A. Warner Whitney Wag ner; \Mlmer Andrews; Zachary S. Sayers Mail hold needs to be left unopened for my attention. Please log it prior to leaving it for me, either under the shift commanders? of?ce. This is not to be discussed with the inmate Any questions, please get in touch .CMefanie 607612211, CJJVI. Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hili Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (814) 548-1150 (fax) Kristen M. Simkins From: Melanie 1.. Gordon Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 6:24 PM To: Denise L. Elbell Cc: Richard C. Smith Subject: Part-time shift offers (form) Attachments: Part?ti me Regular Pay Call Dee, Based on your instruction today to ensure that part?time of?cers are offered shifts exceeding 72 hours in a pay period (not assigned), i worked with Lt. Woods to create the attached form for use. We already have a form used for all overtime calls to be documented, and that practice will continue. This form attached would allow the Lieutenant to call or email based on the situation as long as it was for regular pay and not OT, then have the PT CO initial to verify their acceptance/refusal when they are next in to work. Please let me know your thoughts, and we?ll implement as soon as a system is agreed upon' Thank you, Melanie Mafcmie Gordon, CJM, Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Beilefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-5794 (814) 548-1150 (fax) Part-Time CO Reqular Pav Shifts Phone Numbers Call Time 1? Email Shift and Date Availability Lieutenant 814 592-6231 ch 4 (814) 215-1147 Reffner, Joshu? Lieutenant Refiner, Joshua I (814) 215-1147 Part-Time CO Requtar Pav Shifts Lieutenant - Refiner. Joshua Phone Numbers Lieutenant Kling. Bradley (814) 880-96 Wagner, Whitney n?rfrier; Joshua (814) 215-1147 Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent To: Cc: Subject: Warden/ Kristen, Melanie Gordon Thursday, May 26, 2016 6:53 PM Richard C. Smith: Kristen M. Simkins Geri A. Brabham; Lydia E. Miilard; Brenda A. McKinley; Samantha Rees: Heather N. Bruss Personnel Requisitions After our meeting today i reaiized couidn?t have Brenda forward personnel reqs tomorrow since she is aiso off! I don?t know how many, if any, were sent for the full?time and 7 part-time openings, so I made new ones and left them in the Warden?s of?ce for him to sign and scan down to you tomorrow. Sorry ifthey are doubles. We?ll then send the other 5 part-time reqs when the full?time promotions are put before the board. That will make 12 PT slots for hire in the end. I believe Sam and i are on the same page at the moment with the candidates for hire. I sent one more ?no" yesterday. Denise is going to ty a few one last time, and ifstill no response know by Tuesday how many candidates are moving on to raund interviews so we can get moving there. Thanks, Melanie Me?mie Qam?n, CCE Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Fac ty 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 355-6794 (314) 548?1150 (fax) Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Michael S. Woods Thursday, May 26, 2016 9:06 PM Amber M. Wolfgang; Amy Miller; Ashley L. Aurand: Ashley M. Burns: Caitlyn D. Nef? Danielle Minarchick; Dawn M. Walls: Elizabeth E. Woods; Erin M. Mosser. Janet C. Snyder, Jeffrey T. Hite; Johnna Bllger: Jonathan M. nder; Joseph S. Koleno: Juan Mendez Karla A. Witherite; Kevin T.Jeirles; Larry L. Lidgett: Lorinda L. Brown; Matthew T. Fisher: Melanie L. Gordon; Mllane Daughenbaugh; Richard C. Smith; Stacy Smith; Stephanie D. McGhee; Thomas S. Allen, Jr. Inmate Administrative Custody Inmate ?was placed on Administrative Custody upon commitment. Inmate-is a former Assistant District Attorney in Centre County. Michael Woods Lieutenant Emergency F?lanning - Fire Safety - Key Control - Training Coordinator Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 814-355?5794 ext. 5 814-548-1150 (fax) Kristen M. Simkins From: Melanie Gordon Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 9:31 PM To: Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno; Richard C. Smith Subject: Fwd: CO Taylor - Interview Attachments: 20160526202842817.pdf: ATT00001.htm For your review Melanie Gordon, CJM, CCE Deputy Warden of Operations Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 35545794 (814) 543-1150 (fax) Begin forwarded message: From: "Michael S. Woods" <mswoods centrecoun To: "Melanie L. Gordon" <ml ordon centrecoun Subject: C0 Taylor - Interview Questions and Union Waver attached. 1? I place the folder and questions in the Security Desk ?ling cabinet. Even after watchingthe video he could not recall the interaction between him and Kuhns at 10:02pm. Michael Woods Lieutenant Emergency Planning - Fire Safety - Key Control - Training Coordinator Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishei Hill Rd Bellefonte, PA 16823 814-355-5794 ext. 5 814548-1150 (fax) mswoods centrecoun Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: I LtJuan Mendez Juan Mendez Friday, May 27, 2016 6:45 AM Brenda A. McKinley: C. Kay Woodring; Denise A. Murphy; Jeffrey T. Hlte; Jonathan M. Millinder: .Foseph S. Koleno; Matthew T. Fisher: Melanie L. Gordon: Michael S. Woods: Richard C. Smith: Thomas S. Allen, in; Walter E. Jelrles Shift Packets 5/26/2016 20160527064107485.pdf Centre County Con-notional Facility 700 Richel Hill Road Bellefonte Pa. 16825 814-355-6794 Ext? 5 Fax: 814-548-1150 CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT PACKET Routing Form DATE: 5/26/2016 SHIFT: 7-3 SHIFT Allen NAME my; 30,, Deputy Warden of Operations - Gordon Deputy Warden of Administration - Koleno Director of Treatment Hite CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT LOG 7:00 am to 3:00 pm Day: Date: 5/26/2016 Lieutenant: Allen Pass Days: Lieutenant: Napoleon Pataky Intake: Buckley Smith Release: Waite IItr, it Ecru; Taylor Central Control: v-Zimmerman I Watson Central Control: Calhoun Zettle SMU Control: Henry, C. Relief Knepp Relief 2: Dickey Relief 3: Zettle Vacation: Relief 4: McCool Jones Lobby: Billett. S. Housing Units: A1: Hilliard A2: Murphy A3: Refiner Overtime: A4: Rockey Zettle Il'lilIvIL (S mfg? Bi: Kling Beaver 7?10 I B2: Rupert lshler 7-10 Ci. CZ, 03: Hampton Central Booking: Shearer Call orrs (Sick, AIL, Other): Special Duty: DrPuh? Jame Eon Hm Kiddo?: Eton-[U WW I Veri?ed?y.? I 07.57 05I2612016 Misconduct Nixon, Keith (Bi) 2"d Minor for entering another inmate's cell 12hrs. to be served on Thursday 5/26 Mazza, Roberto (Ct) - Major for attempting to access pornographic material on the Work Keys 1 ?incident Location 5" computerKuhns, Brannon (C1)-Majorforfaiiure to return a razor and laying about it to staff. Director Hite I I I t. Allen Intake [Rf I bn the above date and approximate time, I was authorized by Director Hite to have the facility locked down due to reports of a missing razor down in the C1 unit on the 11-7 shift on 5/25/2016. The Camp chairs Employee Appreciation Gift - in Shift Commanders' Of?ce; pick it up before you leave . - - . - - - - and make sure you,re checked off the list. The weight limit is 250 pounds. faculty was then unlocked at approx1rnately 08.50 With the approval of administration. Dr mm a: 58120 lee.-. Facility was un!ocked forwarded to administration. [ET?niil . . it{snipemmangenegjn: CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY PROGRAM REVIEW COMMITTEE ACTION Bdo?na?ti? 3 7L Naine Date ofRiavIew - 35-15? Pu- Am.? Sipwoca M-amq.. I PROGRAM REVIEW COMMITTEES DECISION AND ITS RATIONALE 7M 30 0am, ?am'w ma?anwv? f??oth- 2:,qu 711?? In La; It?: WJ. calf/iv- EMMA mammal 5.. Ad; [?541.st 7% Mad!? Ila WM .731!?qu rye/hi Yuan? I Ra's fwvaI?o ?Ikr-I? in; ?ml r'r awn'??z pip {0 I?mm?y cw th'l?kc. lip/cc]: 2" . DECISION RELATIVE TO HEARING VERDICT NotApplIcable m??stain Sustairmmend [3 Refer Back For Further Study Exonerate Inmate CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY PROGRAM REVIEW COMMITTEE ACTION A. I. 'Name=3-' war?? {@1133}, 7L1, ?(mm I 52$ PROGRAM REVIEW COMMITTEES DECISION AND ITS RATIONALE IOJQC 30 Ion/?y {rt/w. an?! {574741 \z (5 [1/Jaz1/j/4KZ mem :44 n; 74: A Eli; 1,5 mm? {7 3(Nm( Randall, ?M/m/y a A I) {r Off?l?lb? (Ix/trig CCMMIBSIN //f167[4 ELI): I 5,+4sz Inwn? 194: vac/ 7Q Cfn?mffo Wow/.1 7) Members DECISION RELATIVE TO HEARING COMMITTEES VERDICT Not Applicable Sustain Dvs?gt?in-Amend Refer Back For Further Study [3 Exonerate Inmate I 311237} H46 7 5?1014, Reutew Committee Members i ?1 %4 5/26 /9 Ty?l [ma 5115 7? MAC S?zw/c YOU WILL HAVE TEN DAYS TO APPEAL THE PRC DECISION TO THE WARDEN YOU WILL HAVE TEN DAYS TO APPEAL THE PRC DECISION TO THE WARDEN CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT PACKET Routing Form DATE: 5/26/2016 SHIF I: 3-11 SHIFT COMNIANDERG): Woods Jeiries mmu. UPON NAME Deputy Warden of Operations - Gordon Deputy Warden of Administration - Koleno Director of Treatment Hits CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT LOG 3:00 pm to 11:00pm Day: Thursdav Date: 0512612016 051261201 6 Lieutenant: Jeiries Pass Days: Lieutena nt: Woods Misconduct Beaver Nixon, Keith (81) 2'?1 Minor for entering another inmate?s cell. He can be unlocked after 18:00 Beck headcount. Intake: Wagner, A. Eck Kuhns, Brannon (Ci)~Major for failure to return a razor and laying about it to staff. Release: Gemmati Lomison Central Control: Sh awv er Miller, R. Engie, Thomas investigative status for posSIbie gambling 1o 01 Central Control: $.an Laue, Bowser, Garrett - investigative status for possibly stealing from another inmate. SMU Control: Little Relief 1: lrilr/mwr . . Medical Isolation Rel'ef 2- MCClenaha? . Hess, Cheisi (52) - MRSA protocol \Nllkinson. Brandon Investigative status for possibly stealing from another inmate. Relief 3: Baug hman Vacation: Relief 4: Muthersbaugh Kelley Lobby: Billett. V. Knippie, Anna (B2) Head Lice Intake Housing Units: 1 changed out and sent back to A1 A1: Smith, N. 2 females to be seen by medical A2: //en 24. .. A3: Lear I I Overtime: A4: Sayers gym?,- 81: Bryan (game back. 07" 82: Evans . ll h? $9.erle Ct, 02, C3: Taylor, R. 2 for commitment 1 needs temp returned. Camp chairs Employee Appreciation Gift in Shift Commanders? Of?ce; pick it up before you?leave and make sure you're checked off the list. The weight limit is 250 pounds. 3 H-7 a imam- Central Booking: WeaveL Shear-or Call Offs (Sick, AIL, Other): Special Duty: Hospital Duty: Cori Meyer - FMLA Veri?ed By: \33 Date/Time: ?l'?rSll to UL) CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY MINOR MISCONDUCT REPORT Housing unit 5126(16 A 14:56 steerinoidgn?tii [326/16 m3Qf. Incident I 1 3:05 OTHER INMATES OR STAFF INVOLVED 145 Possession of contraband 157 Taking food from the food cart to deli/dorm room, and/or taking extra food from the food cart these belong to and he stated ?they?re mlne'. iln?'?'oseo its: amemtii?amm FIRST OFFENSE 8 HOUR CELL RESTRICTION El SECOND OFFENSE 12 HOUR CELL RESTRICTION THIRD OFFENSE 24 HOUR CELL RESTRICTION l/ Updated 6?29-14 Inmates Laird, Ty (16?0631) I5Te'rson . on the above date and time I was working the A4 Housing unit and I was sending Inmate Poorman to a ciass in the small classroom and I smelled an odor that smelling like winter green chewing tobacco. Couple of days before that Inmate Laird yelled from the sho it's pretty bad when your shorts smell like winter green". I Informed the shift commander and I search cells 9 and 10. Nothing was found in the search. i-nmafI?? use R2 51' Man a. N-?canirne?te?s?I?a. ?tit-?e A nigcf an: mama, CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY MINOR MISCONDUCT REPORT 5/26/1 5 Il?a? If: at? 5:534, Housing unit Rockey OTHER INMATES OR STAFF INVOLVED it?z? 145 Possession of contraband 157 Taking food from the food cart to cell/dorm room, and/ortaking extra food from the food cart 0n the above ate and time I was conducting a search of cell 101:1 the a-4I found the center out of one of the red ?oor scrubbing pads. and an apple In Inmate Laird?s bIn. i, 72 HI ?W?'mm II ?I?fji? SANCION name 31?? a??m 41:. 5:1. eIIt'Ijtmm L33. FIRST OFFENSE 8 HOUR CELL RESTRICTION SECOND OFFENSE 12 HOUR CELL RESTRICTION El THIRD OFFENSE 24 HOUR CELL RESTRICTION 4 VI. .44. Fit AREPNR Updated 6-29-14 I 5.25.15 Emma orR?p'oirm 1045 [pateortnd? ejnt r71! 5.26.2016 1020 Counselor Minarchick?s Of?ce I Dareora?rb?onnl 5-26-16 I -1120 a incident'l 5-26.16 Incident .l 1100 Director Hite .l Inmate Diedre Andres(16-0635) Witnesses? Danielle Minarchick Making Ftp")! caiior'li?j I Counselor Minarchick?s Of?ce Deputy Koleno ?l .Person?(s Involved Hnmate Rachel Markus (16-0663) I used to complete this call. The call lasted approximately 5 minutes. Inmate Endres returned to her housing unit without incident. Director Hite approved Inmate Endres a call to her family. The blue recorded phone in my of?ce was LEEQFSOnZMakinggRepOrt Danielle Minarchick Deputy Koleno approved Inmate Rachel Markus a cail to her mother. The blue recorded phone in my of?ce was used to complete this call. The call lasted approximately 10 minutes. Inmate Markus returned to her housing unit without incident. - army madame-em? 1035 FCounselor Minarchick?s Of?ce a [Director Hite . Mlnarchick a ?Wcrae?tmcation?e Housing Unit . . Wmates in the A3 Housing Unit I A3 Housing Unit Inmates Persp'ri making Report Director Hite approved a call for Inmate Ruch to speak to her pubiic defender in Schuylkiil County. The black ShoreTel phone was used to complete this iegal cali. I dialed the number for the attorney and con?rmed she wished to speak to Inmate Ruch. The call lasted approximately 25 minutes. Inmate Ruch returned to her housing unit without incident. A . . sport On 5/24/16 at approximately 21 :30 hours a box of peanut butter wafers was removed from the officer?s desk without permission. The peanut butter wafers (#3333) were sent to inmate Conrad 0390) with his commissary order, and were incorrect. He ordered Swiss rolls (#3331). and stated that he ?did not like peanut butter and would like to return them for cred'rt." The box of wafers was placed on the A3 of?cer's desk while commissary was finished being distributed and remained there when my relief CO Henry came for my break. I forgot to take the box with me to the Shift Commanders of?ce when I left for break, and planned shift. I returned to the block and didn?t immediately realize that the box was missing. When i did realize that it was gone. I addressed the inmates in regards to this issue. At this time. the biock was already locked in for shift change, so I was unable to search each ceEl, or I would have done so, checking receipts. I walked to each cell door asking it celi if they had the box. I had a few inmates offer their boxes in ptace of the stolen box, but they had receipts and I felt that was unfair. i told them that if I didn?t get the box returned before the end of my shift that the entire block would likely be punished for the theft. This is not the ?rst time that have had an issue with theft on the A3 block. Several inmates made efforts to locate the missing box, even offering soups to whoever would give it back to avoid being locked in for the day tomorrow. The box was never recovered, and this incident report was written. (Jed! MIXC tY 'l-l1 ee?nt'rz? . 05/26/2016 20:00 05/26/2016 1950 - Inmate Services 5/26/2016 .1945 Date Qf?I??ide?n j?im?iorlmcidentgl 1930 5/26/2016 . Intake . Inmate Jerry Keith 16-0428 Inmate Keith, 3erry 16-0428 . i if" Lt. Woods Reade On the above date and time I provided Inmate Jerry Keith with a telephone cal! at the request of Deputy Koleno to Inmate Keith?s mother Betty Keith (814) 360-4696 in Inmate Services. Inmate Keith spoke to his mother for approximately 8 minutes and the call was completed without incident. Inmate Keith was then escorted to A2 and placed on Medical Observation in Cell 3. Inmate Keith, Jerry was released from UPMC Altoona hospital and returned to by facility vehicle. He was escorted by Cori (5055. He was seen by Nurses Smith Daughenbaugh upon his return. Inmate Keith was piaced on Medical Observation A2 cell 3. He will be evaluated tomorrow 5/27/2016 by PA-C Baney. End of report. [65! Raf?e/ace *1 A .Aflnbid?'n 16.15 HRS {IncudentLocamanoRK RELEASE CORRIDORAA . WILKINSON, BRANDON #15?1438 Makihg Rem I C-O- R- TAYLOR - THE ABOVE DATE AND APPROXIMATE TIME, I WAS DOING RHU PROPERTY INVENTORY, DUE TO, THIS INMATE BEING TAKEN TO THE RHU ON DAYLIGHT WHILE DOING HIS PROPERTY, FOUND A MULTITUDE OF CONTRABAND, TO WHICH, WAS DISPOSED OF. EXAMPLES ARE, BUT NOT TO: -PRISON COMB WITH BROKEN TEETH. -FOOD BOXES USED TO STORE ITEMS OTHER THAN THE FOOD THE BOX WAS INTENDED. -MULIIPLE MAGAZINE CLIPPINGS. TORN FROM BOOKS. END OF REPORT CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY. SHIFT PACKET Routing Form DATE: 5/26f2016 SHIFT: 11~7 SHIFT COWANDEMS): Mendez upon NAME Deputy Warden of Operations - Gordon Deputy Warden of Administration - Koleno Director of Treatment - Hits 0512612015 Misconduct Kuhns, Brannon (C1)~Major for failure to return a razor and laying about it to staff. Engle, Thomas Investigative status for possible gambiing in C1 Bowser. Garrett - Investigative status for possibly stealing from another inmate. Wilkinson, Brandon - Investigative status for possibly stealing from another inmate. Former Assistant {District Attorney for Centre County Sloane. Stephen placed on Administrative Custody! singie celled. Medical Isolation Hess, Chelsi (82) MRSA protocol lnta ke ?l to see medical Sloane, Stephen Camp chairs Employee Appreciation Gift in Shift Commanders? Of?ce; pick it up before you leave and make sure you?re checked off the list. The weight limit is 250 pounds. CENTRE COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY SHIFT LOG 11:00 pm to 7:00 am Day: Ww Date: 5?25?2015 lei-pate: OfReportf 05-27-2016 .Of Report? 0400 Hrs. :InCIdent'ERepOrt . . Lieutenant: MENDEZ Pass Days: Lieutenant- KWG liDateLOflncident?l 05-27?2015 ?0 MOHLER . 0340 Hrs. intake: 9 33!: as a POSEY Release: 6 WARNER - . l:incident-Locationifl Central Booking Center Central Congo]: 2- MILLER, Relief?l: a HOOK Reliefz: g, Vacation: Laundry: - MCKEE KEISER Ferguson Police Officer Rose i CO Miller erson in olved Ferguson Police Of?cer Ctouse Osagie, Osakioduma Pat CO Ayers I Housing Units: A1: ORNDORF A2: '3 HEW-S k??hmm A3: 5 BEALS Overtime: A4: ISHLER 31: san- Cent 82: 0 On the above time and date Of?cers Rose and Clouse of the Ferguson Township Police brought in 01' 02' C3: ?2 ADDLEMAN detainee Osagie, Osakioduma Pat to be ?ngerprinted on a DUI. Osgaiewas uncooperative refusing to come in the door and be pat searched. escorted Osagie to holding cell 2 and asked him if he was going to cooperate with us. Osagie refused and was placed on the ground to be PAT searched and 398013! Duty? Total 397 Ca? Offs ($10k. AIL, Other): i uncuffed. I then exited the cell. . a; . Empty?ms' 75' 3? HM: $35 After the of?cers completed their papen/vork i asked Osagie if he was going to comply with DUI 56?: 3? 7? processing. Osagie said he wanted a iawyer or he wouldn?t cooperate. informed him that wasn't an option. Osagie refused processing and was escorted out to the Sallyport to wait for a Taxi. Osagie refused to obey any orders while being escorted out. Once in the Sallyport I explained to Osagie if he damaged any property he be escorted out of the facility and have to walk home. Once detainee's taxi arrived gave Osagie back his property and told him to leave the premises. Osagie walked to the Taxi and got in. As I walked out to intake I looked at camera 119 I noticed 1the Taxi wasn?t leaving. I radioed for Lt. Mendez to check and see if the Taxi driver was alright due to Osagie?s unpredictable behavior. Lt. Mendez and lwatked out to check on the wellbeing of the Taxi I driver. As we approached the vehicle the cab driver was distraught and informed us Osagie was Verified By. 7: I p.44 Datemmetw - refusing to pay and wanted her (taxi drivers) personal information. Lt. Mendez asked Osagie if he was going to pay the Taxi driver. Osagie would continuous talk but would not answer the question. i asked the Taxi driver if she was worried about her safety. She replied "yes". Lt. Mendez told Osagie to exit the car. Osagie complied. I asked him if he had anyone he could salt for a ride. Osagie became verbally abusive. At this time i told Osagie to leave the property. Centre County Correctional Faculty JnCident Report-.= l. Date Of-Report' I 05/27/2016 I L-Tirrie?Of Repbrt?; I 0445 hrs. ?;oate? Oflr'ioi'dent 5/27/2016 I. TimeiOf-lncidentI 0425 hrs. 1'27??sz was r?mamec/ firm 7736 75)? 75? Ame ?ue (?g/Harp? Incident Location I Visitation Parking Lot i - ngOsagie Osakioduma Pat Person (3) involved Wurse Erin Mosser I GO Warner I Lt. Mendez Person Making I CO Ayers End of Report Reportij.-i Fr On the above date and approximate time (0426 hrs. I (CO Ayers) was in intake and witnessed Mr. Osagie, Osakioduma from camera 120 pull out his keys while walking through the Centre County Correctional Facility Visitation parking lot. He walked up to Nurse Mosser's vehicle and keyed the left side of her car from the driver's door to the front of the car. Shift Commander and PSP were notified. [15/ pa?H?ec/ ?'te HICUI 16? I Shift Commander Sign LT Wm Mad?arm Kristen M. Sim kins From: Joseph S. Koleno Sent: Friday, May 27, 2016 9:01 AM To: Richard C. Smith;Jeffrey T. Hite; Brenda A. McKinley Cc: Melanie Gordon; Kristen M. Simkins Subject: RE: Weekend schedule All: I let Counselor McGhee know and I will ask Brenda to update her KRONOS. Thank you, Joseph Koleno Deputy Warden of Administration Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Rd. Bellefonte, PA 16823 Internal extension: 2046 Phone: 814-355-6794 Fax: 814?5484 151 'skoleno centrecoun This email is con?dential and may contain legally privileged information. This message is intended for the recipient and is not to be duplicated or reproduced without written consent from the sender. Ifyou are not the intended recipient, it may be unlawful for you to read, copy, distribute, disclose, or otherwise make use of the information herein. If you have received this e-mail in error, please contact the sender immediately. From: Richard C. Smith Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 11:52 PM To: Jeffrey Hire Cc: Joseph S. Koleno; Melanie L. Gordon; Kristen M. Simkins Subject: Re: Weekend schedule Joel Jeff: Approved off this weekend only until we discuss with Kristen. Warden Smith Sent from my iPhone On May 26, 2016, at 3:05 PM, Jeffrey T. Hite <ithite@centrecountyna.eov> wrote: <image001.gif> Warden, we haven?t nailed this holiday schedule down yet with Kristen. Can we have her off Monday for the holiday? Please let myseifand DW Koleno know as he will be contacting her as 1 will not be in email range. Thanks. Jeff From: Stephanie D. McGhee Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2016 2:54 PM To: Jeffrey T. Hite; Joseph S. Koleno Subject: Weekend schedule Director Hite, spoke with DW Koleno regarding my holiday schedule. Could you please clarify if i am scheduled to work on Monday, May l?know we haven?t really figured out this whole holiday thing yet, so I?m confused. I would like to use a vacation day on Sunday, and then I assumed that I would be off Monday for the paid holiday. i understand you may need to check with the Warden for clarification as well. Please feel free to email me (i can check it from my cell phone) to let me know the answer. Thank you, KQOMIZ 0. Counselor Centre County Correctional Facility 700 Rishel Hill Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 (814) 3556794 (option 3,3,4) Kristen M. Simkins From: Dan Donohue <ddonohue@craftmaster.net> Sent: Friday, May 27, 2016 9:01 AM To: Richard C. Smith Subject: Special Pricing on Southern Folger Products from Craftmaster Hardware 1010 Series Deadlocks 1080 Series Deadlocks KEYED TO CODE KEYED TO CODE $175.75 4 $207.60 .m-eeretemtgte-re HARDWARE Security Hardware Locksmith ?uppliies At Craftmaster, we carry an impressive inventory at competitive prices. But it's our people, our industry knowledge and our commitment to solving ?amen MAM your probiem that make us a "go?to" source For customers. mammau Got a Security Problem? Get a Solution. Call Craftmaster Now at 800 221 3212 Call 800 221 3212 to get a Free 320+ page Catalog Or download a Catalog at mmaa?masterttetmp?meads Email a customer care representative at 10 Series Deadlocks 80 Series Deadlocks ?g??g?p?aee? FA-12 KEYED TO CODE KEYED TO CODE $218.50 $251.75 for FA-120E-Repair Kit FA?120M-120V-Repair Kit #7665001? #76650018 $166.00 $185.00 SS-10120AE -Repair Kit SS-10300E-Repair Kit #76650000 #7665000? $270.00 $284.00 age-mam 25:: smegma GSA Schedule Contract (2331\- STATE Contractsunsubscribe click here

Related Documents (6)

Dept. of JusticeAug 22, 2017

1 May 1 1255-May 6 237_Redacted.pdf

Kristen M. Simkins me: Sent Tn: Subject: Atladimem: LT. THOMAS E. ALLEN JR Thomas S. Allen. Jr. Sunday. May BIL EDIE 12:55 AM Allyson FL Dwell; Brenda McKin1e?c C. Kay Wandring: Caitlyn D. Neff: Daniel?le Minarch?lck: JeFFrey' T. Hite; Jon D. Fisher. Jonathan M. Mfl?n-der. Joseph 5. Kolenorluan Mendez: Kevin T. Jeirles; [any Lidgett Lee R. Shea??er: Lorinda L. Brown.- Matti-new T. Fishet: Melanie Gordan; Michael S. Woods Richard C. 5mm; Shephanie D. Calander?mtus Report SMDIE 20150501004

493p
Dept. of JusticeAug 22, 2017

17 August 1 through August 15 2016_Redacted.pdf

JAN 1 2 3 4 7a to 12p 0 4 0 7 1p to 5p 1 3 0 5 6p to 12a 2 0 1 10 1a to 6a 0 0 0 0 AVER 1 2 0 6 total  3 7 1 22 Year to date searches 5 7 12 9 4 8 32 6 26 8 3 2 10 39 7 18 7 8 0 8 33 763 8 18 5 3 2 7 28 9 4 4 0 0 2 8 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 12 3 1 0 4 16 12 13 16 23 20 17 3 2 0 7 10 12 39 49 Jan 14 15 16 17 11 20 4 1 19 15 3 0 3 7 0 0 0 0 0 4 8 11 2 1 33 42 7 5 Month Average 18 7 9 1 0 4 17 19 20 21 9 22 14 11 16 9 9 2 1 0 0 4 7 10 7 29 40 28 190.75 22 14 13 1 0 7 28 23 24 25 26 27 28 4 0

1793p
Dept. of JusticeAug 22, 2017

17 August 16 through August 31 2016_Redacted.pdf

Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: Juan Mendez Tuesday, August 16, 2016 1:10 AM Brenda A. McKinley; C. Kay Woodring; Caitlyn D. Neff; Danielle Minarchick; Eric A. Lockridge; Jeffrey T. Hite; Jonathan M. Millinder; Julie A. Simoni; Kevin T. Jeirles; Larry L. Lidgett; Lee R. Sheaffer; Lorinda L. Brown; Matthew T. Fisher; Melanie L. Gordon; Michael S. Woods; Richard C. Smith; Stephanie D. McGhee; Thomas S. Allen, Jr.; Walter E. Jeirles Calendar and Status Report 8/16/2016 20

1846p
Dept. of JusticeAug 22, 2017

15 July 7 2016 - July 17 2016 working progress_Redacted.pdf

Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Cc: Subject: Irons, Janet < Tuesday, July 12, 2016 10:47 AM Richard C. Smith     Hello Warden Smith,     mother is anxious to hear the results of your inquiry into her daughter's health.   I'd be grateful if you could  email or call me at your earliest convenience.  I'm free today after 2 p.m.  Alternatively, we could meet after the Prison  Board of Inspectors Meeting this coming Thursday.    Best wishes,    Janet Irons    1 Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent:

1196p
Dept. of JusticeAug 22, 2017

4 MAY 11 1241-MAY 12 219_Redacted.pdf

Kristen M. Simkins From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: C. Kay Woodring Wednesday, May 11, 2016 12:41 PM Bryan L. Sampsel; Denise L. Elbell; Eileen B. Mckinney: Jeffrey T. Hite: Jonathan D. Grine, Judge:Joseph S. Koleno: Mark Higgins; Melanie L. Gordon: Michael Pipe: Richard C. Smith; Stacy Parks Miller, Steve Dershem daily pop reportdocx daily pop reportdocx CORRECTIONAL 700 Rishel Hill Road Richard C. Smith, AIS CCHF Bellefonte. 16823 Telephone (814) 355-6794 Fax (314) 543.1150

98p
Court UnsealedNov 19, 2025

HOUSE OVERSIGHT 016698-mailing

November 12, 2025 release of Jeffrey Epstein documents by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Microsoft Excel Spreadsheets converted to PDF. Originals in NATIVES/001 folder

73p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.