Maryland governor to close Baltimore detention center

1Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, center, speaks alongside Maryland Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services Stephen Moyer at Baltimore City Detention Center, Thursday, July 30, 2015, in Baltimore, to announce his plan to immediately shut down the jail.
2The jail grabbed headlines in 2013 after a sweeping federal indictment exposed a sophisticated drug- and cellphone-smuggling ring involving dozens of gang members and correctional officers.
3Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, right, poses at Baltimore City Detention Center, Thursday, July 30, 2015, in Baltimore, at the end of a news conference to announce his plan to immediately shut down the jail.
4Hogan, who announced in June he has non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, was making light of a picture of him that his office posted on Facebook showing his hair loss after a second round of chemotheraphy.
5Pictured alongside Hogan is Maryland Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services Stephen Moyer.
6Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan speaks in front of Maryland Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services Stephen Moyer at Baltimore City Detention Center, Thursday, July 30, 2015, in Baltimore, to announce his plan to immediately shut down the jail.
7Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan speaks at Baltimore City Detention Center, Thursday, July 30, 2015, in Baltimore, to announce his plan to immediately shut down the jail.
8Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, second from right, arrives at Baltimore City Detention Center, Thursday, July 30, 2015, in Baltimore, before speaking at a news conference to announce his plan to immediately shut down the jail.
9Maryland's governor announced plans Thursday to immediately shut down Baltimore's state-run jail, where inmates and guards ran a criminal conspiracy inside vermin-infested, 19th-century walls and thwarted decades of attempted reforms.
10Republican Gov. Larry Hogan said the state would save $10 million to $15 million a year by closing the Baltimore City Detention Center, which houses hundreds of inmates awaiting trial or serving short sentences.
11Current employees and inmates will be reassigned to other facilities, he said.
12"There is plenty of capacity elsewhere in the system to meet this need," Hogan said.
13"Given the space that we have, it makes no sense whatsoever to keep this deplorable facility open."
14While standing by the crumbling building where inmates could be heard shouting, Hogan sharply criticized his predecessor, former Gov. Martin O'Malley, for failing to take stronger action to prevent corruption at the facility and not closing it sooner.
15O'Malley is now seeking the Democratic nomination for president.
16"Maryland taxpayers were unwittingly underwriting a vast criminal enterprise run by gang members and corrupt public servants," Hogan said.
17"Ignoring it was irresponsible and one of the biggest failures in leadership in the history of the state of Maryland."
18A sweeping federal indictment in 2013 exposed a sophisticated drug- and cellphone-smuggling ring involving dozens of gang members and correctional officers at the jail.
19The investigation also exposed sexual relations between jailhouse gang leader Tavon White and female guards that left four of them pregnant.
20Forty of the 44 defendants charged in the racketeering conspiracy were convicted, including 24 correctional officers.
21Thirty-five defendants pleaded guilty; eight defendants went to trial and one defendant died.
22White pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 12 years in prison.
23The ACLU and the Baltimore-based Public Justice Center last month called on a federal judge to reopen a lawsuit against the state of Maryland over what the agencies described as substandard conditions.
24According to the lawsuit, the jail's medical and mental health care possibly played a role in the death of seven inmates over the last couple of years.
25The groups allege inmates suffering from illnesses such as HIV and diabetes were denied life-sustaining prescription medication.
26The filing also described moldy showers, cells infested with mice and cockroaches, poor ventilation and broken toilets.
27The agencies also said the state failed to cure systemic problems since taking control 25 years ago, despite entering into a 2007 agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice.
28In response, Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services Secretary Stephen Moyer said he was committed to changes.
29He noted the state has spent more than $58 million over the past 10 years to improve the safety and security of inmates and staff.
30David Fathi, director of the ACLU National Prison Project, said closing the facility would be a positive step, though he expressed concern about how hundreds of inmates would be transferred.
31For security reasons, their destinations will not be disclosed in advance.
32"Given the jail's history of dysfunction we're concerned about implementation, where the prisoners will go and if that will generate crowding in other facilities," Fathi said.
33"We've consistently seen problems that when detainees are transferred from one facility to another, the ball often gets dropped with regard to their health care, sometimes with serious consequences."
34The state has run the jail since 1991 and says it is one of the largest municipal jails in the country.
35Parts of the complex, which also has wings housing women and juveniles, date to 1859.
36Only the men's detention center is being closed.
37The men's facility had 841 pre-trial detainees on Thursday.
38About 750 are expected to be moved, because other buildings in the complex could accommodate some, said Mark Vernarelli, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Corrections.
39Associated Press writers Juliet Linderman in Baltimore and David Dishneau in Hagerstown, Maryland, contributed to this report.