Posts Tagged With: Blair Hopkins

Montana Dept.Of Corrections Without Therapists For Their Programs?

Well, we have finally discovered another major reason for the Montana prison system being so clogged up.  It is not just the fact that those who have been revoked on probation have to re-take the CP&R program again and are put on the list of first priority.  Thus pushing the inmate population on a longer waiting period.  It has come to our attention that this program that was developed by Montana State Prison does not have the staff to implement the program.  Apparently one of their therapists was fired, from an outside source, for teaching the course without the appropriate credentials. We are at this time checking on that “outside source”.

How can it be mandated to take classes that they do not even have therapists for?  Why would a prison create a program that apparently is not working?  They do not have the resources available and they have a 94% recidivism rate with these inmates already having completed the program once.  How many times does the taxpayer have to pay for these programs to be taken?  If this doesn’t sound like a major money making racket, I don’t know what does.

At the same time there are those that have taken SOP1 which teaches the very same thing as the CP&R with a few more or a few less points.  Might be the reason that Montana Department Of Corrections is stating that they have changed the CP&R to be taught with SOP2.  It not only allows the Montana Board Of Pardons And Parole to add “enhancements” to an inmates sentence but they are getting extra money from the taxpayers by continuing to add these classes in a longer time frame.  So, you have Blair Hopkins teaching all of these classes?  With over 1400 inmates?

Here is their definition of the CP&R program:

Cognitive Behavioral Programming:
Cognitive Principles and Restructuring (CP&R) is a program that was developed by the Montana State Prison, and has achieved impressive outcome results.  CP&R is conducted five days per week for approximately 1.5 hours per session.  This component is delivered in both individual and group settings by trained staff.

  • see the behavior to change;
  • identify the thinking behind the behavior;
  • identify the patterns and cycles of that thinking;
  • detail the underlying attitudes and beliefs that drive the thinking;
  • develop interventions, controls and alternative ways of thinking;
  • prepare a plan to make and sustain change; and
  • apply and monitor the plan.

http://www.cccscorp.com/watch2.htm

Now why do they need inmates to take this program if they have already learned the same principles in SOP1?   This is a certain segment of the population that could reduce costs to the Montana taxpayers.

Here are the ads we found showing that there is a major need for therapists within the Department of Corrections. Actually we encourage anyone with the qualifications to please apply as we have a system that has become clogged up with inmates throughout Montana waiting to go through these programs and cannot be released until that happens.  Not even those that are being mandated to take duplicated programs.

Position Title: Clinical Therapist –Reposted *Applications must be received by Midnight Mountain Time on the closing date.Listing Number:8434-1210F
For more information contact:State Agency:
Corrections
600 Conley Lake Rd.
Deer Lodge, MT 59722
Phone:(406)846-1320 2202
Fax:(406)846-2950
TTY:Montana Relay Service at 711
E-mail:whislop@mt.gov- OR -

Local Montana Job Service Workforce

Position Number(s): 64122946
Openings: 1
Location(s): Deer Lodge
Job Status: Full-Time Permanent
Shift: Daytime
Date Posted: 9/27/2012
Closing Date:
Department: Corrections
Division: Montana State Prison
Bureau:
Union: MEA/MFT
Bargaining Unit: 6
Band/Grade: 6
State Application Required: Yes
Salary: $22.26 – $27.83
Salary Unit: Hourly

https://svc.mt.gov/statejobsearch/listingdetails.aspx?id=8434

Job Description   
Job Category: Counselor
Reference #: 64122620
Job Title: Sex Offender Therapist
Hiring Organization: Montana State Prison
Salary Range: $39,561 – $49.441
Closing Date: 2012-02-29
Job Location: Montana
Description: Duties include professional psychological testing, counseling groups, conducting sex offender programming therapy sessions, interviewing inmates for psychosexual evaluation and recommendation purposes, emergency evaluations and management, psycho diagnosis, case management, working with Case Managers and contracted professionals, psychological consultation to the institution.

http://www.corrections.com/jobs/6550

Clinical Therapist –Reposted

State of Montana

- Deer Lodge, MT

Montana at http://www.mt.govMontana‘s Official State Website; learn more about the … for prison employees is required. Montana State Prison is tobacco free. All employees…

from State of Montana - 24 days ago

Clinical Psychologist

State of Montana

- Deer Lodge, MT

for prison employees is required. Montana State Prison is tobacco free. All employees … organizing information on all inmates at the Montana State Prison. Maintains…

from State of Montana - 30+ days ago

http://publicdefender.mt.gov/training/Session4.pdf

Inmates move among the prisons for a number of reasons. An inmate could be moved from MSP to Crossroads or a regional prison because:
MSP has reached capacity and another prison has some empty beds.   An inmate does not have immediate needs for special services at MSP such as medical, dental,
mental health and sex offender treatment.
Separation needs; an inmate has problems getting along with other inmates at his custody level. An inmate at MSP should be at a lower custody level but no room at that level is available at MSP An inmate wants to enroll in a program offered elsewhere, such as the virtual welding course at Glendive or the dog-training program at Shelby.

(Remember in June of this year the instructor was caught having sex with inmates in her dog-training program and blackmailing the other inmates?)

To read: Montana’s Dirty Sex Secret 

Moving an inmate will improve his behavior in relation to staff or other inmates. An inmate might move to MSP because:

He needs specialized treatment as a sex offender or for chemical dependency.
He wishes to participate in an industries program.
He needs medical attention available only through the infirmary.
He requires placement in a higher custody level that is not available elsewhere.
He requires more intense mental health treatment.
The cost per day at the prisons varies due to the disparity in the services and programming provided and the custody levels of the inmates housed there. The cost per day at Crossroads is $63.98 for each inmate. The cost per day at Montana State Prison is $94.19. The higher rate is because MSP functions, to a great extent, as a special-needs facility in the Montana prison network.

MSP has specialized programs and services that are not available elsewhere. It has:

A full infirmary that is capable of providing inmates with extensive and chronic medical and dental needs
Intensive treatment units for chemical dependent and methamphetamine-addicted inmates
Sex offender treatment
Treatment for inmates with serious mental health issues
Capability of housing the highest-custody inmates, which requires higher staffer levels

http://www.cor.mt.gov/content/news/Newsletters/No2_2012.pdf

The Montana Department of Corrections is having you to believe that they are offering all of this with an enormous success rate.  But that is not the truth, they can’t and don’t offer it.  As you can see documented in all of the articles on this very website.

They move these inmates around the state without the personnel for these programs and the mental health and the extensive medical and dental needs is a joke.  Sounds like a good way to keep milking the system and the public.

Prison budget

A budget hearing in early 2011 brought up the idea of prisons earning their own money rather than relying on taxpayer funds. Members of the panel asked about privatizing some services at prisons and how could the state increase restitution payments from prisoners.

State prison officials told the joint subcommittee on Judicial Branch, Law Enforcement and Justice that the department would need $170 million in 2012 and $180 million in 2013 to operate. There are about 12,000 people who are wards of the state in Montana with 8,000 of those on paroled supervision, officials said.

“Montana is tough on crime,” Gov. Schweitzer’s Budget Director David Ewer said. “We’re very compassionate people but we’re tough.”

Rep. Kenneth Peterson asked if privatizing some services had been considered and Ewer did not offer him much hope.

“We believe it is appropriate for government employees to deliver something as important as public safety,” Peterson said.

Peterson pointed out that the administration of Gov. Schweitzer does not traditionally advocate for private prisons or for shipping prisoners out of Montana to other facilities.

Mike Ferriter, director of the Department of Corrections, said it cost the private-run prison in Shelby $67.86 a day to keep a prisoner whereas Montana state prisons have a cost of $87.91 a day.

However, Ferriter added, Montana State Prison was becoming a prison that dealt with people who were sex offenders or had medical issues.

Peterson said he’d be interested in privatizing some prison services, but would not push the issue.

“I thought it would be good for the agency (DOC) to pursue,” Peterson said, adding that the state could privatize the prison ranch in Deer Lodge and send low-level offenders there to work.

Rep. Michael More suggested the DOC look at ways to make prisoners pay restitution for their own incarceration.

http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/

Privatized prisons is not the way to go.  I don’t know where Rep. Kenneth Peterson has done his research but this is the least favorable avenue.  The nation is in an uproar over corporations owning prisons.  Their profits based on how many they have locked up.  Yet remember that these kind of organizations lobby and spend millions for this very thing.

And the comment from our own Governor Brian Schweitzer’s Budget Director…“Montana is tough on crime,” Gov. Schweitzer’s Budget Director David Ewer said. “We’re very compassionate people but we’re tough.”  This is a real laugh.  What has Governor Schweitzer done to even check up about these prison camps?  That is not compassion when you allow a judicial system to run rampant, declaring war on Montana citizens.  To allow the incarceration rate to skyrocket without even researching into it.  To allow inmates to commit suicide at an alarming rate, for officers to commit felonies in these prisons and there is no “real” investigations taking place.  Nor is there any “change” within the system.

We have found other out of state websites calling Montana  ”Montana House Of Shame”  even though Governor Brian Schweitzer keeps repeating how popular of a governor he is.  Not everyone in the nation thinks so.

Remember the two departments that say they work only in administrative purposes, yet we discovered by their own “meeting minutes”  how involved they are with each other,  The Montana Families. 

Montana taxpayers, it is time for change.  We cannot continue sticking our heads in the sand.  Wake up!

Categories: Montana DOC/BOPP, MT DPHHS/DOJ | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Allen Whetstone The Incarcerated MT Fireman Threatened

Incarcerated Montana Fireman


It has come down to the fact that there is pure blackmail going on within the Montana Department of Corrections.   This is an excerpt of an email that was sent out from his wife to the Chief Public Defender and forwarded to many Montana Politicians, ACLU, Innocence Project, etc.

Dear Sir:
How can a prison go above what Judge Loren Tucker court ordered?  Blair Hopkins, MSP and the Parole Board has said that Allen has to sign a paper for SOP2 within the prison which is not mandated, that would admit his guilt to this crime.  If he did not sign it then his model inmate status would change as they would write that he has decided not to follow treatment.  They will add points to his record and transfer him over to the high side.  That he will not be paroled January 3rd, 2013 or at any point. He was only ordered by Judge Tucker to take SOP1 and CP&R which now they have not allowed him to take CP&R, they said now they are having the class with SOP2.
This seems to be an ongoing trend and I would think that Kristina Neal would have known this.  Everyone else does.  Allen said he is not signing a document that says he is guilty of a crime that he did not do.  The plea bargain was not even correct. That is not what Allen plea bargained too.  I was there at all meetings and I have the court transcripts.  Was the plea bargain typed in after Allen signed a document?  Because that is not what the plea bargain that was agreed to or in the court transcripts.  Although Kristina threatened us that we would not get a fair trial, it seems that this is not fair either.  Blair Hopkins said he is only giving Allen until Monday to sign this document or not, Allen told him that he wanted to talk to me about it.  Blair Hopkins said he did not care what I think.  Allen told him, “Well, I do she is my wife and this not only affects me but affects her too, we live 2,000 miles away from here and she has health issues.”    I do not know who is suppose to give him legal advice on this issue as this whole thing has been thrown up in the air. Isn’t this blackmail?  How are we suppose to work on his exoneration if he has to sign this?
I worry for the safety of my own husband, not from other inmates but from the Montana system itself.  They seem to think that they are above the Federal Law and answer to no one. How do you fight for someone when there is that attitude all around you?
After some checking around and finding those that have been researching this problem, this is what she found out.
  • As to the statement of guilt it’s a classic ploy, to be eligible for a parole he will likely not get for many years he must admit guilt, there have been several Supreme Court cases that have stated such action or demand is a violation of several rights. That said he cannot enter or complete SOP 2 until he confesses (admits guilt) thus he is ineligible for parole and by DOC policy labeled non-compliant and assessed points that generally raise a prisoners custody level, this a move to the “High Side.” 
  • But here is the real kicker, to pass SOP 2 he will have to pass a polygraph and they will in most instances (based on interviews with SOP 2 participants) ask him about all or any crimes he may have committed and he will have to admit to all of them truthfully so since his is innocent he will never pass the polygraph as either he will lie when he admits guilt or it will show he is truthful and then he will be labeled as deceptive (socio or psychopath) that will then be transmitted to the Board who will then deny him as a danger to the community. 
  • In our study of parole data if the parole board told your husband that he would not be eligible for parole until he completes SOP 2 then they have in effect even if he was guilty and admitted everything he would not get a review for years. 
  • But the good news is there are several MT Supreme Court cases that deemed such action to violate the persons State and Federal Constitutional rights. So, in the meantime he is going to have to stand strong and request more time to confer with his attorney before signing anything.
  • They can like all evil do what they want till someone stands up and opposes them. Edmund Burke said it best “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” That’s not to say evil will not put up a fight, it is standard procedure for the Parole Board to demand a confession a mea culpa from a prisoner prior to any action. If the prisoner refuses well back you go, for someone tagged as a sex offender SOP 2 is the tool, to pass or attend you must “confess” and not just one but several times during the process (interview data) and they make them write every gory detail out on paper. In  reading your emails your husband is innocent and by that fact alone he cannot pass the program, he would have to make up stuff to complete the “assignments” and then pass a polygraph on the fiction. If he fails the polygraph he gets kicked out, if he states his innocence he does not get in. 
  • However here is the real problem in my opinion, how do you reign in the DOC, as has been shown, follow the law, no they don’t care, Court orders, Court cases, don’t care so if the Legislative and the Judicial have no power to stop them and they are part of the Administration then who or what holds them accountable. The Court has stated that such actions are wrong, but a Court order seems to change little, they simply do the minimum for that person and shove the next into the same hole.
I say do not sign anything more under this state and definitely do not trust anyone anymore.   This man has been lied too, jerked around from the get go already. It looks to be a bad situation no matter which way he goes.   Mr.Whetstone said that he does not plan to admit to something he did not do.  He was already threatened to not receive a fair trial and that they would give him life if he did not plea bargain.  His public defender did not want to go to trial.  Now it is happening all over again in the prison system.  These inmates are more worried about the hopelessness of DOC more than other inmates hurting them.  All of the inmates are hurting.  That is all they talk about is the corruption of the system and how no one is hardly ever released.   That is all their families and friends talk about.  Even staff of State Departments and DOC talk about it.  But at least people are coming out of the woodwork and banding together.  That is what has to be done.  Montana Speak Up!  (Mrs.Whetstone commented below.)
Categories: Allen Whetstone, MDOC/Abuse, Montana BOPP | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Allen Whetstone Incarcerated Fireman – Montana State Prison Set Up – Part 3

Incarcerated Montana Fireman Allen Whetstone has now been locked up for 7 months, 14 Days

  •  19,612,800 Seconds, 
  •  326,880 Minutes 
  •  5,448 Hours 
  •  32 Weeks
  •  Each Second An Injustice.

The drama just keeps unfolding on this individual.  Allen Whetstone just had his re-classification evaluation and he received high praise.  It read that he was “above average in his area of work” (which is to take care of an inmate with Diabetes) “he is not a problem inmate” (otherwise a model inmate). Now, both he and his wife had received threats from Department of Corrections and even have documentation from Montana State Prison that Mr.Whetstone would more than likely not receive parole because the parole board would recommend that he takes SOP2 Class.  He completes SOP1 next week.  The judge court ordered SOP1 and CP&R Class within DOC and with SOP2 and SOP3 to be taken on the outside.   We have heard from numerous sources that CP&R was taken with SOP1 or could be taken alone.  Either way Mr.Whetstone should have already been involved in CP&R, he has not as they have not allowed him.  It is now been said that CP&R runs with SOP2.

Well, low and behold Blair Hopkins who is not only Mr.Whetstone’s group therapist for these classes but he is also the “Treatment Program Manager” told the entire class today that he recommends that they need to take SOP2 while in prison. That it would be cheaper for them to take it while under Department of Corrections because it would be free, outside they would have to pay for the classes. Inmates were disgruntled. As well they should be. (Remember there are men that are innocent or have been labeled as a sex offender though their crime had nothing do with sex at all.)  In SOP2 classes they have to admit in detail to the crime they were charged for. (How are those that are fighting a wrong conviction admit to something that is not so? Mr.Whetstone has submitted all of his documentation to the Innocence Project.) That class alone can take up to 2 years or more as many of them will not take the class because they did not do what they are being accused of or their charge was not a sex charge.)  Mr.Whetstone will be eligible for parole soon.  Blair Hopkins asked Mr.Whetstone what was wrong  and Mr.Whetstone told him that he was not court ordered to take this class in prison.  Blair Hopkins replied that ” he had the right to recommend SOP2 but would write on Mr.Whetstone’s paper that it should not affect his parole date. Although the Montana State Parole Board could tell him that he has to take the class and there is nothing that he could do to change that.”   So, in the end every inmate had to sign the document that stated they were to take SOP2 class.  Mr.Whetstone said that “he was upset that he was basically forced into signing this, but if he didn’t it would then hurt his good record of being a model inmate which he needs in order to be paroled.  What else are you to do when your back is against the wall?”

Excerpt taken from:  page 18 of

MONTANA STATE PRISON 

ANALYSIS OF THE IMPACT OF

TREATMENT PROGRAMS ON INMATE
MISCONDUCT AND RECIDIVISM

CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY TREATMENT
                                      &
SEX OFFENDER PROGRAMMING

The University of Montana-Missoula

This table shows that those inmates that successfully complete ITU SOP fare no better than those in the non-treatment group in terms of recidivism even taking into account time served, race, age at release, and the amount of time that elapsed between release and return to prison.

To Read The Whole Analysis: http://www.cor.mt.gov/content/Resources/Reports/MSP_AITPIMR.pdf

This is outrageous!

  1. First of all this may be free for the inmate, but it is not free for the taxpayer.  It costs an individual $180 a month with 15 individuals in the group for 8 hours per month.  That total should be what…about $2,700.00 per month total. (This is based on what they charge individuals on the outside) This is for 1 class.  Now if they are in prison total that up.   
  2. Second, this may be free to the inmate while in prison but while he is in prison it costs the state money to help the inmates family as the inmate is not able to be a productive citizen and take care of his family or to pay taxes.  The family does not see that savings. And the taxpayer pays for it.
  3. Where do they get the power to over-ride a judge and all the while the inmate is doing everything  by the books and above and beyond  in prison and even receives a good recommendation? 
  4. Can anyone connect all of the dots that has been outlined in this whole website and follow the State Departments, follow the money trail that is left behind them? It is glaringly obvious how money is being swiped away from the unknowing taxpayers and the rustling of human souls that is being herded in and out of these departments. There is a need for prisons and for the different programs but it is corruption when it has been turned into a money scam. 
Categories: Allen Whetstone, MDOC/Abuse, Montana BOPP | Tags: , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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