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Juveniles no longer to be held at troubled Wisconsin prison

By: Associated Press//January 4, 2018//

Juveniles no longer to be held at troubled Wisconsin prison

By: Associated Press//January 4, 2018//

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FILE - This Dec. 10, 2015, aerial file photo, shows Lincoln Hills juvenile prison in Irma, Wis. Gov. Scott Walker announced Thursday, Jan. 4, 2018, that juveniles will no longer be housed at the Wisconsin youth prison that's been under federal investigation and the subject of multiple lawsuits alleging inmate abuse. Walker said the Lincoln Hills-Copper Lake prisons will be changed into medium security adult prisons. The state will instead open five regional juvenile prisons across the state. (Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP, File)/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP)
Gov. Scott Walker announced Thursday that juveniles will no longer be housed at Lincoln Hills juvenile prison in Irma. The state will instead open five regional juvenile prisons across the state. (Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP, File)

By SCOTT BAUER
Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Juveniles will no longer be housed at a Wisconsin youth prison that’s been under federal investigation and the subject of multiple lawsuits alleging inmate abuse, Gov. Scott Walker announced on Thursday.

The Lincoln Hills-Copper Lake prisons will be changed into medium-security adult prisons as part of a far-reaching $80 million reorganization plan, the governor said. The proposal calls for opening five smaller, regional juvenile prisons throughout the state and expanding mental-health treatment at a state-run hospital in Madison.

A federal judge last year ordered the state to reduce its use of solitary confinement, shackles and pepper spray on inmates at the juvenile prison, which stands about 20 miles north of Wausau.

The announcement comes as Walker is up for re-election to a third term in November. He has never traveled to Lincoln Hills, a point his Democratic opponents have been hitting him on for months.

Walker insisted as recently as November that the prisons were safe, both for inmates and guards.

Although the plan announced Wednesday won bipartisan support, some Democratic critics accused Walker of being motivated by his political ambitions rather than a desire to do what’s best for the young inmates.

“It is a really transparent, cynical move by the governor,” said Senate Democratic Minority Leader Jennifer Shilling. “The timing of this announcement is so transparent and does nothing to address the immediate safety concerns for staff and youth.”

The plan was developed in consultation with both Republicans and Democrats and local officials. The regional juvenile prisons it calls for aren’t likely to be open until at least 2019.

“Republicans and Democrats alike agree this is the way forward to reform juvenile corrections,” Walker said.

The plan was hailed by the Juvenile Law Center and the American Civil Liberties Union, which sued the state over the treatment of inmates at the juvenile prisons.

“While this is a step in the right direction, we will continue to pay attention to how young people are treated while they are being moved from the current facilities,” said Larry Dupuis, legal director of ACLU of Wisconsin.

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