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99 Op. Md. Att'y Gen. 3 (2014)

handle is hein.sag/sagmd0103 and id is 1 raw text is: CORRECTIONS

APPLICABILITY OF THE FEDERAL PRISON RAPE ELIMINATION
ACT TO LOCAL JAILS-WHETHER LOCAL JAILS ARE
UNDER THE OPERATIONAL CONTROL OF THE STATE'S
EXECUTIVE BRANCH
January 28, 2014
Robert L. Green
Chairman, Maryland Commission
on Correctional Standards
In 2003, Congress enacted the Prison Rape Elimination Act,
42 U.S.C. §§ 15601-15609 (PREA or the Act), to address the
problem of sexual assault in the nation's prisons. Broadly stated,
the Act creates a mechanism for the adoption of national
standards for the housing and care of inmates, and, as relevant
here, conditions a state's eligibility for five percent of its federal
prison-related funding on the state's ability to certify that the
correctional facilities under the operational control of the state's
executive branch have adopted, and are in full compliance with,
those standards. 42 U.S.C. § 15607(e)(2)(A) (requiring certifi-
cation); 28 C.F.R. § 115.501(b) (describing extent of certification
obligation).
You have asked us whether compliance with PREA
standards is mandatory for locally operated correctional facilities.
Specifically, you ask whether local facilities are under the
operational control of the state's executive branch such that they
must comply with PREA standards for the State to maintain full
federal funding.
As a threshold matter, we conclude that PREA and its
standards apply to State and locally operated facilities but are not
mandatory in the sense that the failure to comply with PREA
constitutes a violation of federal law. However, State and local
facilities face certain adverse consequences if they choose not
to comply. For the State, the most immediate consequence is
expressly provided as part of the statutory scheme: the State will
lose five per cent of its federal prison-related funding. For local
facilities, the consequences of non-compliance flow implicitly
from that scheme and include a potential increase in exposure to
tort liability, ineligibility for contracts for the housing of federal
inmates, and a potential loss of accreditation.

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