[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 145 (1999), Part 20] [Senate] [Pages 29691-29693] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]REGULATING THE INTERSTATE TRANSPORT OF PRISONERS Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, I have introduced a piece of legislation in the Senate with my colleagues, Senator Ashcroft from Missouri, and Senator Leahy from Vermont. I have written this legislation with their assistance to deal with a problem that could cause and will cause and perhaps has caused significant jeopardy to Americans, American families and others. Let me describe the circumstance. There is a young girl from North Dakota named Jeanna North. Jeanna was a wonderful 11-year-old young girl from Fargo, ND, who was brutally murdered by a man named Kyle Bell. Kyle Bell had previously been sentenced to 30 years in prison for assaulting three other girls, had been convicted of violent acts, and then sentenced to life in prison for murdering this 11-year-old girl, Jeanna North, in Fargo, ND. This convicted child murderer and violent offender, after being convicted and sentenced in the courts of North Dakota, was being transported to prison in another state. Apparently, folks who molest children and are convicted of crimes against children sometimes are put in prisons elsewhere because they run into problems in prison. Even in that culture they are not considered very good people, so child molesters are sent to other prisons for their own safety. This fellow named Kyle Bell, who killed young Jeanna North, was being transported to a prison in the State of Oregon. This convicted child killer was being transported by a private company which was contracted by the State of North Dakota. Apparently-- and I wasn't aware of this--there are transport companies that hire themselves to State and local governments to transport prisoners and criminals around the country. The private company's name was Transcor. Kyle Bell was on a bus with more than a dozen other prisoners. The bus stopped in New Mexico at a gas station. One guard got out of the bus to fill the bus with some fuel, a second guard got out of the bus and went into the service station apparently to buy a hamburger or whatever one was going to buy at the food station, and two other guards fell asleep on the bus. The other guards slept on the bus. Kyle Bell, a convicted child killer, in handcuffs and shackles--with one guard putting gas in the bus, the second guard buying food in the gas station, and the other two asleep in the front seat--Kyle Bell took a key he had in his shoe, took off his shackles and climbed out the ventilator, the roof of the bus. That bus then continued on its route. It wasn't for 9 hours, when the bus was already in Arizona, that the guards discovered this convicted child killer had escaped. Nine hours later they finally discovered he had escaped. Two hours after that, the guards finally notified law enforcement authorities. Today this man is somewhere in this country. ``America's Most Wanted'' did a story last Saturday, the second they [[Page 29692]] have done. Now over a month has gone by and this violent child killer is somewhere on the loose. Why? Because a private company that is required to meet no standards at all hired itself out to haul violent criminals. If you hire yourself out to haul toxic waste interstate, I will tell you one thing: you are going to have to meet standards. If you are going to haul toxic waste, one State to another, you have to comply with reasonable standards for public safety. The same is true if you haul circus animals. The same is true if you are trucking cattle across the country. But if you truck convicted killers across the country--no standards at all. If you want to be in that business, get your cousin, your brother-in-law, maybe a couple sons, buy a minivan and you are in business. Contract with a State or local government and you can haul violent criminals through Arizona, New Mexico, North Dakota, New Hampshire, anywhere. You do not have to meet any minimum standards. There is something wrong with that. Senator Ashcroft and I and Senator Leahy are introducing a piece of legislation saying: If you are holding yourself out to do business hauling violent criminals interstate in this country, then you must meet some reasonable minimum standards. When Kyle Bell walked away from that rest stop, he was wearing civilian clothes. Apparently, he walked into a parking lot, they think, of a shopping center. But he wouldn't have been noticed as a convicted child killer because he was wearing civilian clothes. One would ask the question: if you are hauling a convicted killer across this country, why would you not have that convicted killer in an orange suit that says ``prisoner'' on it? Instead, he was sitting on that bus with a key in his shoe and civilian clothing, so when he slipped out of that bus when the guards were asleep and walked into a shopping center parking lot, apparently no one noticed. So over a month has gone by and people in this country are at risk because this convicted killer is on the loose. This young girl, Jeanna North, who died, you can imagine how her folks feel. I talked to her folks last week. The aunt and uncle of Kyle Bell, this murderer, are worried as well because he has threatened his own relatives. The point is this: All of this has happened because a private company decides it is going to hire itself out to haul killers around the country, but there are no standards to be met. Senator Ashcroft and I and Senator Leahy believe the Justice Department ought to write standards--no tougher than they themselves will follow in the Federal Bureau of Prisons or the U.S. Marshals Service. Incidentally, they do transport killers all across the country. The U.S. Marshals Service has done it for years; so has the Federal Bureau of Prisons. We believe there ought to be some minimum standards that apply to these companies. The Justice Department ought to be able to establish those standards that are no greater than the standards that will be complied with by the Federal agencies themselves. Is this, this escape of Kyle Bell, some sort of strange and unusual occurrence? No, regrettably it is not. Let me give a few examples. Although there are no reporting requirements for private companies that haul convicted prisoners across this country, media reports indicate that in the last 3 years alone, 21 violent convicted prisoners have escaped during transport by private companies. No Federal Bureau of Prisons prisoners have escaped during transport--none. U.S. Marshals Service--it has been years and years since the Marshals Service has had anyone escape from their custody during transport. But private companies that are unregulated and have no requirements to meet? July 24, 1999: Two men convicted of murder escaped while being transported from Tennessee to Virginia. Two guards went into a fast food restaurant to get breakfast for the convicts. When they returned, they didn't notice the convicts had freed themselves from their leg irons. While one guard returned to the restaurant, the other stood watch outside the van, but he forgot to lock the door. The inmates kicked it open and fled. One was caught 45 minutes later; the other stole a car and was free for 8 hours before being apprehended. July 30, 1997: Convicted rapist and kidnaper Dennis Glick escaped while being transported from Salt Lake City to Pine Bluffs, AR--again by a private company. While still in the van, Glick grabbed a gun from a guard who had fallen asleep. He took seven prisoners, a guard, and a local rancher hostage, and led 60 law enforcement officials on an all- night chase across Colorado before being recaptured the next morning. November 30, 1997: Whatley Rolene was being transported from New Mexico to Massachusetts. He was able to remove his handcuffs and grab a shotgun while one guard was in a gas station and the other slept in the front seat. He later surrendered after a showdown with the Colorado State Patrol and a local sheriff's office. December 4, 1987: During transport, 11 inmates escaped from a private company after overpowering a guard in the van. Among the escapees was convicted child molester Charles E. Dugger and convicted felon and former jail escapee Homer Land. Apparently, they shed their shackles by either picking their locks or using a key. The guard in the van opened the van doors to ventilate it while the other guard was inside the Burger King. The guard in the van had been on the job less than a month. The man named Dugger was apprehended a short time later, but Homer Land forced his way into the home of a couple in Owatonna, MN, held them hostage for 15 hours, and forced them to drive into Minneapolis where they escaped when Land went into a store to buy cigarettes. He was later apprehended on a bus headed to Alabama. August 28, 1986: A husband-and-wife team of guards showed up at an Iowa State Prison to transport six inmates, five of them convicted murderers, from Iowa to New Mexico. When the Iowa prison warden saw there were only two guards, a husband and wife, to transport six dangerous inmates, five of them convicted murderers, he responded, ``You've got to be kidding me.'' Despite his concerns, the warden released the prisoners to the custody of the guards when he was told the transport company had a contract to move these prisoners. Despite explicit instructions not to stop anywhere but a county jail until reaching their destination, the guards decided to stop at a rest stop in Texas. During the stop, the inmates slipped out of their handcuffs and leg irons and overpowered the two guards. The six inmates stole the van and led police on a high-speed chase before being captured. The escape was not even reported to the local police by the guards who were at fault but instead by a tourist who witnessed the incident. There is clearly something wrong here. I mentioned a few of these examples. Violent prisoners are being hauled across this country, interstate transportation, without the kind of basic precautions you would expect. Again I say if you want to haul toxic waste interstate you must meet specific safety criteria. But that is not the case if you want to haul violent criminals. What if you or your family were to drive up to a gas station and stop next to a minivan that is holding three convicted murderers being transported by some guy and his two sons-in-law to a prison in California? Is that something you would worry about? I would. People in this country ought to worry about that. There ought to be standards. It is interesting that most of these escapes occurred when a private company stopped at a fast food place or to get fuel. Do you know what federal agencies do when they need to stop someplace? They try to only stop at a police station or jail or prison so they have decent help in making certain these folks are not going to escape during a stop. None of this makes any sense. All of us know this is not the way to do business. The Kyle Bell escape is just the most recent. God forbid that this man should murder someone while he is out. [[Page 29693]] God forbid someone is injured, hurt, or murdered during this person's escape. This story of Kyle Bell's escape was on ``America's Most Wanted,'' last Saturday night. I don't know whether he will be apprehended, when he will be apprehended, where he might be apprehended. But this country and its law enforcement authorities should not be having to go through this. This person should be in a maximum security prison in the State of Oregon right now. That is where he was headed. He should be serving life in prison for the killing of this 11-year-old girl. Instead, he is somewhere out there in this country, a danger to the American people because we have private transport companies that are required to meet no regulations, no minimum standards. The legislation I have introduced is rather simple. With my colleague from the State of Missouri, Senator Ashcroft, and my colleague, Senator Leahy, from Vermont, I have introduced legislation that will say the Justice Department shall establish minimum standards and minimum requirements a business must meet in order to transport violent offenders. I am only talking about violent offenders. Among those would be the requirement of certain kinds of handcuffs and shackles, the requirement for violent offenders to wear easily recognized, bright clothing identifying them as prisoners, and a range of other sensible ideas. The bill does not allow the Justice Department to impose requirements on the private sector that exceed the requirements the U.S. Marshals Service or the Federal Bureau of Prisons themselves will meet as they transport prisoners. But it seems to me reasonable, and it does to my colleagues as well, that we ought to require some basic, thoughtful, commonsense standards to be met on the part of these private companies. I should also say that some of the companies themselves believe this is a reasonable thing to do. Some of the transport companies themselves say there needs to be some set of standards. Because when anyone can get into this business without taking reasonable precautions, we will have convicted murderers escaping and the American public will be at risk. This legislation is supported by a wide range of organizations: The National Sheriffs Association, the American Jail Association, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, the New York Correctional Officers and Police Benevolent Association, the North Dakota Chiefs of Police Association, the North Dakota Fraternal Order of Police, the Victims Assistance Association in my State, the Klaas Kids Foundation in California, the Megan Nicole Kanka Foundation, and others. We call this bill Jeanna's bill. It is called Jeanna's bill in the hopes that the memory of this 11-year-old girl, Jeanna North, might serve for the Congress to pass good legislation that will impose sensible, commonsense requirements on private companies transporting violent criminals so some other family will not have to go through the agony, the heartbreak, and the sheer terror that has visited the North family--first because of the murder of their daughter, then the trial of the murderer, and now the murderer's escape. Let us hope Congress can pass this kind of legislation and we will not in the future be seeing stories about private companies allowing convicted killers to escape while they are being transported to their life in prison in a maximum security institution. Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The legislative assistant proceeded to call the roll. Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Bennett). Without objection, it is so ordered. ____________________