Lane McCotter

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Photograph of Lane McCotter (front right) briefing Paul Wolfowitz and others on the reconstruction of Abu Ghraib prison.

Lane McCotter is a controversial United States prison administrator, formerly in charge of the reconstruction of the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

Contents

[edit] Government Employment

Lane McCotter is a retired lieutenant colonel and military police officer. He worked as warden of the U.S. military prison at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas through 1984; as Assistant Director, then Executive Director of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (1985-1987); as Cabinet Secretary for the New Mexico Corrections Department (1987-1992); and as Director of the Utah Department of Corrections (1992-1997).

[edit] Texas

During McCotter's administration of the Texas prisons, the system was criticized for overcrowding and violence, resulting in 12 deaths. At one point, U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice was threatening to fine the state $1000 a day if improvements were not made. It became an issue in the 1986 Texas gubernatorial campaign, and in 1987 newly elected Texas Governor Bill Clements pressured McCotter to resign. [1]

[edit] Michael Valent

In 1997, McCotter resigned his post with Utah’s corrections system after Michael Valent, a 29-year old schizophrenic inmate, died after being strapped naked to a restraint chair for 16 hours for refusing to take a pillowcase off his head. Death resulted from blood clots that formed in Valent's immobilized legs and blocked an artery to his heart. [2] The incident was videotaped, publicised nationally, and served as the basis for a lawsuit from Valent's family against the state to stop further use of the device, and also naming McCotter.

[edit] Management & Training Corporation

McCotter was subsequently hired as Director of Corrections Business Development for the private, Centerville, Utah based prison and education company Management & Training Corporation (MTC) that manages a number of prisons in the Southwestern United States, Australia, and Canada. He was working there at March 2003 at the Santa Fe County Detention Center, when a United States Department of Justice team investigating civil rights violations there filed a report concluding that conditions violated inmates' constitutional rights, that inmates suffered "harm or the risk of serious harm" from insufficient healthcare and basic living conditions, with numerous examples, and threatening a lawsuit if conditions did not improve. [3]

[edit] Abu Ghraib

Not long after, on May 20, 2003, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that McCotter, along with three other corrections advisers, would be sent to Iraq to assist the reconstruction during the US administration. [4] In a statement to online magazine Corrections.com in January 2004, McCotter said that his team reviewed the entire Iraqi criminal justice system, supervised reconstruction of the prisons, and trained Iraqi citizens to work in the prisons, including the one at Abu Ghraib, but that prison was empty during their tenure, and they never supervised any military personnel. [5]

McCotter's controversial record became a national political issue [6] after the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal became public.

[edit] Notes and External Links