- Source: McNeil Island Corrections Center
The McNeil Island Corrections Center (MICC) was a prison in the northwest United States, operated by the Washington State Department of Corrections. It was on McNeil Island in Puget Sound in unincorporated Pierce County, near Steilacoom, Washington.
Opened in 1875, it had previously served as a territorial correctional facility and then a federal penitentiary. Americans sentenced to terms of imprisonment by the United States courts that operated in China in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries served their terms at McNeil Island. In the 1910s, inmates included Robert Stroud, the "Birdman of Alcatraz", who fatally stabbed a prison guard in March 1916.
During World War II, eighty-five Japanese Americans who had resisted the draft to protest their wartime confinement, including civil rights activist Gordon Hirabayashi, were sentenced to prison terms at McNeil; all were pardoned by President Harry S. Truman in 1947. Career criminal and novelist James Fogle was sent to McNeil at the age of 17 in the 1950s.
The State of Washington began to lease the facility from the federal government in 1981, and later that year the state department of corrections began moving prisoners into the facility, renamed "McNeil Island Corrections Center." The island was deeded to the state government in 1984.
In November 2010, the department announced its plans to close the penitentiary by 2011, saving $14 million in the process.
Notable inmates
Alvin Karpis, Depression-era gangster
Tomoya Kawakita, war criminal and collaborator with Imperial Japan
Gordon Hirabayashi, resister against Japanese American internment during World War II
Mickey Cohen, 1930s Los Angeles gang leader
Robert Franklin Stroud, "The Birdman of Alcatraz" convicted murderer and cause célèbre
Alton Wayne Roberts, convicted by United States v. Price of the murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner
Vincent Hallinan, 1952 presidential candidate
Charles Manson of the Manson Family
John David Norman, pedophile, sex offender and sex trafficker
Anselmo L. Figueroa, Mexican anarchist
See also
List of law enforcement agencies in Washington (state)
List of United States state correction agencies
List of U.S. state prisons
References
McClary, Daryl C. (April 24, 2003). "McNeil Island Corrections Center, 1981-present". HistoryLink.org Essay 5239. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
Further reading
Young, Elliott (March 2021). "Dawn of Immigrant Incarceration: Chinese and Other Aliens at McNeil Island Prison". Forever Prisoners: How the United States Made the World's Largest Immigrant Detention System. doi:10.1093/oso/9780190085957.003.0002.
External links
"McNeil Island Corrections Center". Washington State Department of Corrections. Archived from the original on August 27, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)* "". Washington State Department of Corrections.
Oppman, Patrick. "Last island prison in U.S. closes". CNN. April 1, 2011.
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- List of Washington state prisons
- Washington State Department of Corrections
- Sally McNeil
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- Ferries in Washington (state)
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