Wisconsin youth prison

Chronic problems at Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake youth prisons prompted activists to call for shutting the facilities down. Teen inmates as well as prison workers have been subject to violent abuse and mistreatment.

The Wisconsin Department of Corrections will close the Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake state-run youth correctional facilities in Irma.

The announcement on Jan. 4 followed an injunction secured by the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin and Juvenile Law Center — with pro-bono assistance from Quarles & Brady — through a class action civil rights lawsuit in federal court centered on the use of solitary confinement, pepper spray, shackling and strip searches of children.

The suit was filed on behalf of youth confined in the Lincoln Hills School for Boys and the Copper Lake School for Girls. The ACLU, in a news release, said the facilities had previously been under federal investigation for a range of abuses and violations of constitutional treatment of the youth.

“The closing of Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake today is fantastic news,” said Jessica Feierman, associate director of Juvenile Law Center. “This is a huge step forward for Wisconsin. We are relieved that the state is moving away from a model that just doesn’t work — large youth prisons that violate the Constitution and are dangerous to youth. The task now is to ensure that youth are placed at home or in the most family-like settings possible, and provided with the positive supports and services they deserve.

Children at Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake were routinely placed in solitary confinement, put in mechanical restraints, pepper-sprayed, and strip-searched.

These facilities incarcerate about 150-200 children as young as 14 years old.

Before state and federal raids on the facility in December 2015, staff also regularly physically abused youth in the facility, even breaking their arms and legs in some cases, according to the ACLU. 

The closing of the facilities will not be immediate, according to the Wisconsin Department of Corrections, which plans to move youth to several facilities closer to most of their homes in Southeast Wisconsin. 

“While this is a step in the right direction, we will continue to pay attention to how young people are treated while they are being moved from the current facilities,” said Larry Dupuis, legal director of ACLU of Wisconsin. “Our lawsuit is against the Department of Corrections officials — not just LHS/CLS — and we will continue to fight to ensure that any resolution of our lawsuit protects these children where they are now as well as at the new facilities.”

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