The State vs. The Feds (Part 1 of 6): Shattering the "Country Club" Myth
- tyspeakstruth2430
- Mar 27
- 3 min read
The earth-shattering difference between the Wisconsin Department of Corrections (WI-DOC)
and the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) is remarkable. I have been convicted and sentenced
for drug crimes in both jurisdictions, landing in medium-security facilities for both. The difference
is like night and day. My story will surely be different than another’s, but this is my truth.
Walking into Fox Lake Correctional Institution was nerve-racking, mostly because it was my first
prison bit. The rumor mill said Fox Lake would be “sweet,” and it was. Walking to my unit felt like
navigating a college campus.
The CO looked me up and down while handing me a key to my room says "We’re known for
having the best softball team. I need a good second baseman." I confidently told him I could
play. He immediately yelled for Martinez, the coach, to take me to rec later that night.
My new celly, who went by "Spider," shook my hand firmly and took me to our cell. He had
taken the top bunk to avoid trouble, hoping to eventually drop down to minimum security. He
looked at me dead serious: "I don’t know what kind of case you have, but if you have a sex
case, I’d rather not know." I emphatically replied, "Hell naw." Later on, Martinez casually
mentioned to me that he did have a sex case, shocking me with his openness.
On the complete opposite end of the spectrum, I entered Terre Haute FCI in Indiana. The 1940s
building was in shambles. Walking to the unit, inmates yelled from the tiers: “What car you in?”
“You better have your paperwork!”
The guard unlocked a door resembling a tiger cage. Hit with the rich smell of marijuana and
cigarette smoke, I was rushed by a group of white inmates. When I said I was from Wisconsin,
they grabbed Zach, a massive bodybuilder who had the face of a 19 year old (I later found out
that Zach was 42) Zach asked if I had a sex case or if I was a rat. When I peered into the room I
noticed I did not have a mattress. I asked where to get a mattress, he just snickered, "I paid for
mine."
Walking the tier, I saw guys smoking homemade "squallys," a man nodding off in a chair, and
another gripping the railing, screaming out of his mind and gripping the hand rails as If he were
riding a motorcycle. I later found out this is often the effects of smoking deuce aka K-2.
Zach introduced me to the unit rep, J-Rock, who aggressively demanded to know if my
paperwork was clean. He sat me down with a template to write the clerk of courts to prove it.
Right then, Joey—a kid from my hometown with the exact same snitch as me—ran up to me
gave me a big hug as if I was his last living relative. "Wanna smoke?" he asked. I told him I didn't.
want to fail a drug test and ruin my chances for going to RDAP. Joey smiled. "Bro, they don’t
drop you here." Looking at the absolute madness around me, I said, "Fuck it, lets do it."
That lawless moment captured the unchecked chaos of the federal system. To be clear, many
state prison systems are absolute nightmares, broken by underfunding or local corruption. But
the Wisconsin system I experienced had something the feds don't: local oversight.
The BOP fails for a completely different reason. It is a massive, faceless national monopoly that
devolves with the revolving door of presidential administrations. How can a government
organization maintain discipline when its mission changes every four years? Appointing
directors based on political connections rather than performance is insane. There is no true
watchdog.
In contrast, the WI-DOC is largely run by competent career bureaucrats promoted by
performance, not cronyism. Until there is structural consistency and genuine oversight in the
BOP, it will remain a powder keg waiting to explode. Each administration may try to paint the
keg, but the explosives remain.
This was authored by Ethan Massey and published by Prisonproject.net
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