By Jerome R. Corsi
The U.S. Army is authorized to create civilian prison labor camps on
military installations, according to a little-noticed regulation.
The camps are allowed if the request comes from the Federal Bureau of
Prisons or state corrections facilities under leasing requirements
defined by federal law.
WND's discovery of the regulation comes shortly after Bush
administration directives expanding presidential powers during an
emergency.
The Army prison camp policy is defined in Army Regulation 210-35,
entitled "Installations: Civilian Inmate Labor Camps," signed Feb. 14,
2005, by Sandra R. Riley, then-administrative assistant to the
secretary of the Army
The regulation revises an earlier civilian inmate labor camp regulation
signed Dec. 9, 1997, under the Clinton administration.
Ned Christensen, spokesman for the U.S. Army Installation Management
Command, confirmed to WND the 2005 version of Army Regulation 210-35 is
currently valid and fully operative.
The regulation specifies "the Army's primary purpose for allowing
establishment of prison camps on Army installations is to use the
resident nonviolent civilian inmate labor pool to work on the leased
portions of the installation."
The regulations specify Army personnel running the prison camps will
prepare an "Inmate Labor Plan" that will comply with 18 U.S.C. 4125(a),
governing civilian inmate labor.
That section of the U.S. Code allows the U.S. attorney general to make
available to the heads of U.S. departments, including the Army, the
services of U.S. prisoners to engage in labor, including "constructing
or repairing roads, cleaning, maintaining and reforesting public lands,
building levees and constructing or repairing any other public ways or
works financed wholly or in major part by funds appropriated by
Congress."
The regulation currently limits the Army's Civilian Inmate Labor
Program "to using inmates from facilities under the control of the
Federal Bureau of Prisons," noting the bureau "provides civilian inmate
labor free of charge to the Army."
The regulation specifies that a benefit of the program to the Army is
"providing a source of labor at no direct cost to Army installations to
accomplish tasks that would not be possible otherwise due to the
manning and funding constraints under which the Army operates."
Extraordinary powers
WND previously reported that in May President Bush signed National
Security Presidential Directive-51 and Homeland Security Presidential
Directive-20, which granted near-dictatorial powers to the president in
the event he declares a national emergency.
The directives loosely define "catastrophic emergency" as "any
incident, regardless of location, that results in extraordinary levels
of mass casualties, damage or disruption severely affecting the U.S.
population, infrastructure, environment, economy or government
functions.
When the president determines a catastrophic emergency has occurred, he
can take over governmental functions at all federal, state, local,
territorial and tribal levels, as well as direct private sector
activities, to ensure the U.S. emerges from the emergency "with an
enduring constitutional government."
That means, essentially, when the president determines a national
emergency has occurred, he can confer to the office of the presidency
powers usually assumed by dictators to direct any and all government
and business activities until the emergency is over.
Christensen could not answer WND questions regarding whether the
president could declare a national emergency under NSPD-51/HSPD-20 and
instruct the Bureau of Prisons to have the Army construct civilian
prison camps.
"The last time civilians were incarcerated on U.S. Army installations
was when the Japanese were interred during World War II," Christensen
told WND.
Still, Christensen acknowledged that Fort Dix has two civilian labor
prisons on its property, one federal and one state.
"Fort Dix routinely uses inmate labor for grounds maintenance and some
other manual labor, such as filling sandbags," Christensen told WND in
an e-mail. "So, the Fort Dix program is used to provide activity for
trusted inmates and labor to the government at no cost."
WND also reported KBR, formerly the engineering and construction
subsidiary of Halliburton Co., has a contingency contract in place with
the Department of Homeland Security to construct detention facilities
in the event of a national emergency.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, spokeswoman Julie Zuieback
confirmed to WND on May 29 that the Department of Homeland Security in
January awarded KBR a $385 million contract to construct detention
facilities on a contingency basis.
Christensen said it was outside his area to comment on whether the DHS
could ask KBR to build a civilian prison labor camp on an Army
installation.
WND called the White House and the Department of Homeland Security and
left detailed messages about the substance of this story but received
no response.
Original
Source
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Civilian prisons coming soon to U.S. Army base near you
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