| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: BRANDON MALONEY |
| March 24, 2006 |
615-253-8144 (OFFICE) |
|
877-909-5128 (PAGER) |
COMMISSIONER VACUUM SEALS LID ON PEANUT BUTTER
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Tennessee Department of
Correction (TDOC) Commissioner George Little today announced the
immediate ban of peanut butter containers in the state's prison system
in a sweep that began overnight and continues today. Prison
officials are collecting all peanut butter jars from prison inmates,
beginning late Thursday night at three prisons.
"After today, any/all such containers shall be
considered contraband and will result in disciplinary action,"
Little said in a memo distributed to inmates.
Confiscation of the 18 ounce jars was necessary after
officers found guns, drugs and cell phones concealed in the sticky
substance. Department investigators determined that George Hyatt,
now accused of killing a correctional officer in Roane County, had
concealed a cellular phone in a jar of peanut butter, which was used to
facilitate his escape. Investigators also found a 32 caliber
pistol with ammunition in a peanut butter jar during a routine search.
The round up began simultaneously at the West Tennessee
State Penitentiary in Henning, Turney Center Industrial Prison in Only
and Brushy Mountain Prison in Petros, Tennessee. Searches will be
completed at the remaining 12 correctional facilities by Saturday.
Little advises inmates that appropriate replacement will
be provided in new one ounce packets, similar in size to the condiments
handed out in fast food restaurants. The packets will be easier to
search and make it harder for inmates to conceal things.
Inmates purchase the peanut butter through the
department's commissary. The commissary is presently stocked with
some 4,600 jars. The unused portion will be returned to the
vendor. North Carolina, South Carolina and the Federal Prison
System have already banned the sale of peanut butter jars for the same
reason.
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