How To Get Away With White Collar Crime

How To Get Away With White Collar Crime
Become a Government Official

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Friday, November 20, 2015

FELMERS CHANEY CORRECTIONAL CENTER MILWAUKEE INMATES MUST WEAR "ANKLE MONITORS" INSIDE PRISON . . . WHY?

Last week a government official placed me on quarterly reporting instead on monthly reporting because I am no longer "high risk".

How did I become "high risk".

I was released from Felmers O. Chaney Correctional Center Milwaukee prison confinement July 24, 2012.  A jury conviction on August 19, 2005, court sentence November 09, 2005, and December 20, 2005 I received my first Prison Assessment & Evaluation Inmate Classification.  Prison officials determined Minimum Classification for inmate #486845 to be transported to Medium Prison at Prairie du Chien Correctional Institution.

April 22, 2009 at a classification and movement hearing prison officials decided to change my classification from Minimum Security to Minimum Community the lowest possible risk to the prison and community.  June 25, 2010 after Administration Review I was transferred from a Medium Prison to Winnebago Correctional Center (no fence) at Winnebago, Wisconsin.  There was no "Ankle Monitor" requirement at the Medium Prison, the Drug Treatment Facility I worked at and the first Correctional Center.

January 12, 2012, prison officials at Winnebago under directives from Madison Administrative Prison Officials transferred me to Felmers Chaney Correctional Center, 2825 North 30th Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  At this location I was placed under the care of my first Black Warden and his 90% Black Prison Officials Staff.  The first thing they did was put an "Ankle Monitor" on my body under a made up "Jim Crow" policy of their own at a Release Center that is 95% Black.  The "Ankle Monitor" is not activated . . . why is it required?

Last week it was explained to me that upon release from prison confinement at Milwaukee the paper work indicated that I was on electronic "Ankle Monitor" which means "high risk". This allows parole agents to place parolees on monthly supervised reporting rather than quarterly supervised reporting.  In many cases a hardship is created for those working or seeking employment.  After 2 and 1/2 years of  supervised parole (Wisconsin extended supervision) I am no longer "high risk" although I started confinement at "low risk".  This type of frustration and stress on inmates is beyond reason.  Many government officials in the legal and prison systems in this country suffer from mental disorders.

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