The Bureau of Prisons is not looking at the empty jail in Hardin, Montana -- which was recently at the center of the American Police Force con -- as a potential site for Guantanamo inmates, contrary to an AP report today, a spokesperson for the bureau tells TPMmuckraker.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (2) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Why was a private security firm given control of a jail in Hardin, Montana, before a lease agreement with the town was finalized?
Hardin officials, who yesterday put a deal with American Private Police Force on hold, are having a hard time answering the question.
A bank that is trustee on bonds used by Hardin to build the Two Rivers Detention Facility -- now in default -- never signed off on the APPF deal, which was first announced in early September.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (14) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (7)How did American Private Police Force convince the town of Hardin to put it in charge of a 464-bed prison, despite having essentially no proven track record with such projects? The complete answer isn't yet clear. But could the mysterious private contractor have dangled a job for the wife of a top city official to seal the deal?
Let's lay out the evidence...
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (19) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)One of the abiding mysteries of the American Private Police Force story is who, if anyone, provided the financial backing the private security company claims to have.
As the project unravels and more of APPF's claims are shown to be dubious, it seems like the key question is not who the parent company is, but: does it actually exist?
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (11) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)A Hardin, Montana official who has been the public face of the town's controversial prison contract with American Private Police Force (APPF) is now expressing serious concerns about the deal.
Yesterday, Al Peterson of the Two Rivers Authority (TRA), the city's economic development agency, sent an email to Michael Hilton of APPF and to the TRA's board members, declaring:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (16) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)Spooked by a man who turned out to be a convicted felon and who appears to have repeatedly lied on his way to acquiring a lease for an empty jail in Hardin, MT, town leaders yesterday put the deal with American Private Police Force on hold.
Last week, the state attorney general launched a probe of the deal that was pushed through by a man calling himself "Captain" Michael Hilton.
The AP reports on the Hardin board meeting yesterday that put a stop to the whole project:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (47) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)American Private Police Force has hired a director of operations for the Hardin jail project who will not be publicly named until next week but who is a "highly qualified" retired U.S. military person doing training in Afghanistan, a Hardin official tells TPMmuckraker.
"I've got his resume and it looks pretty nice," says Al Peterson of the Hardin economic development agency, which brokered the jail deal with APPF.
Peterson wouldn't say who the director of operations is, but confirmed it was not a Hardin local.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (12) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)A Hardin Montana official is trying to quell rumors that the town is "becoming a police state, having private paramilitary security forces, building gates at the town entrances, taking residents to the detention center that refuse to get swine flu shots, registering your firearms, and blocking off our main street," among other fears.
In a statement, Al Peterson of the city's economic development agency, the Two Rivers Authority (TRA), responds to fears stoked by Hardin's deal with American Police Force, a mysterious private security contractor, to provide prisoners for an empty prison in town.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (53) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (7)Michael Hilton, the American Police Force official who signed a deal to have APF take charge of a prison in Hardin, Montana, may have a lengthy criminal record and a history of alcoholism -- but everyone deserves a second chance.
That's the charitable view of Al Peterson, the Hardin economic development official involved in striking the deal with Hilton and APF.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (48) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)A shadowy private security company that has no known clients but claims to have helped foreign governments combat terrorism and will protect anything from cruise ships to Pakistani convoys has taken over a jail in a small Montana town, with plans to build a law enforcement training facility on the property.
The state legislature is looking into the matter and residents of Hardin, MT, were alarmed last week when executives from the firm, American Police Force, showed up in the town, which does not have its own police department, with Mercedes SUVs bearing "City Of Hardin Police Department" decals.
And the town has had to tamp down reports on conspiracy Web sites that APF plans to impose experimental H1N1 vaccines on residents under threat of quarantine in the jail.
Under a lease signed with Hardin, APF, based in Santa Ana, California, and incorporated just six months ago, is now in control of a 400-bed detention facility the town built a few years ago but never used, a town official confirmed to TPMmuckraker today. The town reportedly stands to make over $2 million per year.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (98) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (27)
TPM Stories Now Surging on Digg.com
