Church Life

Controversial Cain

Warden Burl Cain has had a few tangles in the courts himself.

Controversial cain Thanks largely to movies filmed there (including Dead Man Walking) and an award-winning documentary about its inmates (The Farm), Angola—and the spiritual victory of those who overcome its tough life—is known nationally. But a Louisiana legislator who has chaired a Senate committee overseeing prisons is unimpressed with the penitentiary and with warden Burl Cain.

“They do what they want,” says Senator Don Cravins. “There is no accountability.”

Asserting that 65 to 75 percent of inmates return to the state’s prisons after their release, Cravins says “the whole system has gone awry.” He claims that “there are no meaningful recidivism programs,” but Department of Corrections statistics show that recidivism rates over the past four years at prisons with faith-based programs are 32 percent; that contrasts with overall figures of 50 to 54 percent for Louisiana’s prisons.

The prison has long been famous for its twice-annual rodeo. The 1998 book God of the Rodeo showed how the event put prisoners’ lives at risk. While researching the book, author Daniel Bergner sued Cain in state court, claiming the warden tried to wrest editorial control of the book and charge him $50,000 for continued access to the prison. Cain denied Bergner’s accusations, and the Department of Corrections settled the case out of court.

Cain also has been held in contempt by a federal judge in a lawsuit filed by a prisoner who claimed he was punished for blowing the whistle on the prison’s canned-food re-labeling business, run with inmate labor.

A 1998 Senate committee hearing chaired by Cravins accused Cain of allowing a businessman to keep horses at the prison and of squelching the award-winning inmate magazine, The Angolite. Cain admitted the first charge, but he denied trying to muzzle the prison magazine.

Copyright © 2004 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

The main article to this sidebar article tells how the gospel broke into Angola Prison.

More Christianity Today articles on prison ministry include:

New Life in a Culture of Death | Hope for Colombia dwells inside its most lethal killing field—Bellavista Prison. (Feb. 02, 2004)

‘I Was Looking for Peace and Found it in Christ’ | A converted felon in Colombia reflects on life in the guerrilla ranks. (Feb. 02, 2004)

Suing Success | Prison Fellowship says its Inner Change program is clearly constitutional. (March 18, 2003)

The Legacy of Prisoner 23226 | Twenty-six years after leaving prison, Charles Colson has become one of America’s most significant social reformers. (July 29, 2001)

Prison Ministry in Mozambique | Missionary says women suffer grave injustices. (Aug. 4, 2000)

Setting Captives Free | It takes more than getting a woman inmate out of jail to turn her life around (Jan. 10, 2000)

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