PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The Thomas Caldwellchief of the Philadelphia Department of Prisons is leaving the job after a series of inmate deaths and escapes.
Blanche Carney, who has overseen the city’s four prisons and jails since 2016, told staffers in a letter on Monday that her last day will be April 5, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported. A department spokesperson confirmed Carney’s impending retirement.
The city’s lockups have been dealing with surging violence and the escape of four inmates in a span of six months last year.
The Pennsylvania Prison Society, a group that monitor’s the state’s prisons, interviewed nearly 50 inmates in Philadelphia last year and issued a report that documented the “dangerous and degrading conditions in the Philadelphia prisons.” The report said that inmates were confined to “rat-infested, caged areas, with insufficient food and insufficient healthcare for weeks or months at a time while their mental health deteriorates.” Ten inmates died in 2022, according to the report.
The Philadelphia correctional officers union cast a unanimous “no confidence” vote in Carney last year, asserting the facilities were understaffed and in “chaos.”
Carney, the first woman to serve as prisons commissioner, acknowledged the problems in her letter to prisons staff, saying the pandemic had “caused a tremendous strain on correctional operations worldwide.”
2025-05-06 21:21888 view
2025-05-06 20:521993 view
2025-05-06 20:2887 view
2025-05-06 20:122955 view
2025-05-06 19:451304 view
2025-05-06 19:401369 view
Now that’s a lot of zeroes.Elon Musk − whose wealth and influence have skyrocketed since President-e
Brad Rogers and Brett Berkley stepped carefully on the gravel sill along the Middle Branch of the Pa
CINCINNATI — A dangerous chemical leak at a railyard near Cincinnati forced nearby schools and resid