FACT CHECK: A look at moving Guantanamo detainees to US prisons, possibly in Ill., Mich.

By Deanna Bellandi, AP
Tuesday, November 17, 2009

FACT CHECK: Guantanamo detainees and US prisons

CHICAGO — As the Obama administration considers a plan to move Guantanamo Bay detainees to prisons on U.S. soil, including possible sites in Illinois and Michigan, proponents and critics are spinning the facts.

The nearly vacant Thomson Correctional Center in the western Illinois farming town of Thomson is the latest potential candidate being evaluated to hold detainees after President Barack Obama promised to close the military-run detention center in Cuba.

Federal officials inspected Thomson on Monday after visiting another proposed site, a shuttered prison in the northeast Michigan town of Standish, in August.

Here is a look at some of claims about security, economic impact and prison visitors if Guantanamo Bay detainees are locked up in the U.S.

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CLAIMS: Critics, including Republican U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk and several other Congress members from Illinois, contend moving Guantanamo prisoners there would make the state — with its signature Chicago skyscrapers — a terrorist target. Opponents in Michigan, including U.S. Rep. Peter Hoekstra, the ranking Republican on the House intelligence committee, raised similar concerns.

FACTS: Convicted terrorists already are held in U.S. prisons. Federal Bureau of Prisons director Harley Lappin said more than 340 international and domestic terrorists currently are incarcerated.

Lappin said the bureau already works with federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to assess threats.

Northwestern University law professor Joseph Margulies, who has represented detainees, agreed that moving them to a U.S. prison would not affect any risk of a terrorist attack. Chicago has been on guard against terrorism since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

In Michigan, Standish residents scoffed at the notion of their town, population 1,500, as a terrorist target. Residents of Thomson, a village of about 450 people, did too.

If Chicago is a terrorist target, they say, it’s because it’s a big city and not because detainees would be locked up in Illinois.

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CLAIMS: Detainees moved from Guantanamo Bay would be able to recruit other inmates to terrorism if held in a U.S. prison.

FACTS: Detainees would be overseen by the military and would not mingle with other federal inmates, said Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman Felicia Ponce.

If Thomson is chosen, the bureau would buy the prison and lease a “small” portion of it to the Department of Defense to house the detainees. The remainder would be operated as a high-security prison with between 1,500 and 1,600 inmates, Lappin said.

Democratic U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin has said there would be fewer than 100 detainees at Thomson. Lappin said Monday there would be a “limited” number of detainees and they would be in Department of Defense custody.

The Michigan prison, which closed Oct. 31 because of budget cuts, has a capacity of about 600.

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CLAIMS: Federal prisoners are allowed visitors so al-Qaida followers and family members would visit detainees.

FACTS: The Department of Defense does not allow detainees to have visitors. Phil Carter, deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee policy, said detainees’ only visitors at Guantanamo Bay are attorneys, the Red Cross and diplomatic and law enforcement personnel.

“They would not have friends and family coming to visit them here so that’s not a concern,” Carter said.

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CLAIMS: Bringing Guantanamo detainees to Illinois or Michigan would bring jobs to small prison towns.

Durbin and Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn say selling the Thomson prison to the federal government would generate about 3,000 jobs both directly at the facility and indirectly in the community.

Supporters in Michigan said the prison complex there could employ 500 to 1,200, including guards and military officials, and create spinoff jobs for construction workers, contractors and others.

Opponents say the numbers are inflated.

FACTS: An economist says the reality is probably somewhere between predictions floated by supporters and critics.

University of Chicago economist Allen Sanderson said job creation numbers “tend to be gross overestimates.”

“You should take them with more than one grain of salt although it’s not recommended by a doctor,” Sanderson joked.

If Thomson is chosen, Lappin said the bureau of prisons would employ about 800 to 900 people, including 250 to 300 people moved in from other facilities to quickly get the prison up and running. Carter said the defense department would have as many as 1,500 military, civilian and contractor personnel there. The majority would be military.

In Michigan, critics argue that economic impact and job creation forecasts are debatable because, they say, detainees’ presence would scare tourists away from the rural community near Lake Huron.

Associated Press Writer John Flesher in Traverse City, Mich., contributed to this report.

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