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Ponce
26th December 2010, 12:38 PM
The fox guarding the hen house......first drop in the bucket as to who the guards will be at the FEMA summer camps.
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Missouri Guard to train inmates for emergencies.

BY CHRIS BLANK Associated Press at kansas.com


JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. —The Missouri National Guard plans to start training some of the state's prison inmates to help it during natural disasters and other emergencies.

Missouri Guard spokeswoman Maj. Tammy Spicer said Thursday that under the proposal, the prison inmates would become a more formalized part of the Guard's disaster response. She said it would give the Guard a larger and better trained pool of workers to respond to emergencies. The training would focus on skills such as filling and stacking sandbags and removing debris.

Prison inmates already have been used in the past to help local officials during floods and other emergencies. Over the past several years, prison inmates have worked with volunteers and others to shore up levees and fill sandbags along flooding rivers from near St. Louis to northwestern Missouri.

Earlier this year, Gov. Jay Nixon allowed 37 inmates from a prison in St. Joseph to help stack sandbags along I-29 near Craig to protect the highway from a flooded Missouri River. In 2008, nearly 150 inmates from prisons across the state were among those fortifying levees near the Mississippi River in northeastern Missouri. And in 2007, prison inmates and the National Guard worked to protect a water treatment plant, schools and an ethanol plant near Craig from flood water.

Spicer said formal agreements between the Missouri Guard and the state Department of Corrections have not yet been signed. It was not known how many inmates could participate or how much the training would cost.

The National Guard said the inmates who participate in the training could not be convicted of violent offenses and would need to be eligible for the Department of Corrections work release program.

The Department of Corrections said the requirements to be eligible for work release include having 5 years or less left on their sentence and having no escape attempts or convictions for offenses such as rape, kidnapping and robbery. Prison officials also examine the inmates' mental health and the risk they pose to the public

Read more articles at kansas.com

Awoke
26th December 2010, 12:41 PM
Great idea. Take the most dangerous criminals in the state and unleash them in a chaos-ridden emergency situation.

"Don't worry, we've screened them all, and determined they can be trusted".

Pfft.

General of Darkness
26th December 2010, 01:13 PM
They should just give them Blue Helmets while they're at it. What a bunch of fucking morons.

http://www.independent.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00032/nigeria_soldier_32308t.jpg

TheNocturnalEgyptian
26th December 2010, 04:20 PM
This should be prohibited by law.

Ponce
26th December 2010, 04:47 PM
The law is not what it should be but what the coat and ties makes it be........

Heimdhal
26th December 2010, 04:49 PM
Wouldnt it depend on the type of prisoner they are allowing to do this?

I certainly would NOT want a serial murdered or rapist out in a situation where chaos and confusion are the order of the day. Its just too risky they wont make a break for it in all the mayhem.


But I see little problem with low risk offenders or inmates who have short sentences from something like say a DUI or a non violent crime.

If some dudes got a 1 or 2 year sentence, no crime history, and hes not a flight risk, no history of violence whatsoever, why not use him to help build flood barriers or fill sand bags?

Now getting long term training from the National Guard is a bit iffy. How can we be sure they will be used for what they are claiming and only that?

Mouse
26th December 2010, 04:58 PM
The sandbags aren't for you. The sandbags are for them.

RJB
26th December 2010, 05:56 PM
Who needs training for filling a sand bag? Not much to it...

Mouse
27th December 2010, 12:12 AM
The training is for the handlers to figure out how to make you safely fill the sandbags they will use to protect themselves from your friends lead without losing control of you.

Cebu_4_2
27th December 2010, 02:01 PM
The National Guard said the inmates who participate in the training could not be convicted of violent offenses and would need to be eligible for the Department of Corrections work release program

I don't see a problem with it, I would trust anyone qualifying above much more than I would trust any "officials" or TSA agents.