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Federal Detention Center, SeaTac

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Status
  
Operational

Capacity
  
1,000

Opened
  
September 1997

Phone
  
+1 206-870-5700

Security class
  
Prison

Federal Detention Center, SeaTac

Location
  
2425 South 200th Street SeaTac, Washington 98198

Population
  
608 (as of March 23, 2015)

Managed by
  
Federal Bureau of Prisons

Address
  
2425 S 200th St, Seattle, WA 98198, USA

Similar
  
South Correctio Entity Mul, King County Adult Det, Washingt State Departme, Northwest Detention Center, Kent City Corrections Facility

The Federal Detention Center, SeaTac (FDC SeaTac) is a prison operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. It is located in SeaTac, Washington, near the Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, 12 miles (19 km) south of downtown Seattle and 16 miles (26 km) north of Tacoma, 1 mile (2 km) west of the 200th Street exit at the Interstate 5. The administrative facility employed 200 staff as of 2002 and housed 608 male and female inmates as of March 23, 2015.

Contents

Background

Opened in September 1997, the detention center was designed for a capacity of 1000 inmates. The facility houses sentenced inmates, both male and female, as well as pre-trial, holdover, and immigration detainees. Many are involved in federal court proceedings in the Western District of Washington.

Procedures

Inmates are issued a "standard bed roll" consisting of bedding and towels upon arrival. Once assigned to a unit, inmates are estimated for size, provided clothes, and issued an identification card that must be carried at all times except to and from showers.

Death of Roxanna Brown

Roxanna Brown, the director of the Southeast Asian Ceramics Museum, died in a cell at the detention center on May 14, 2008. She had been arrested on May 9 for alleged wire fraud upon her arrival in the United States to give a lecture at an Asian art symposium at the University of Washington. The charge was dropped immediately after her death at the facility.

A medical malpractice lawsuit was filed by her son Taweesin Jaime Ngerntongdee after it was determined that Brown died of peritonitis caused by a perforated ulcer. The suit claimed that she had suffered stomach problems in the detention center and other inmates took her to a shower after a guard did not respond when she vomited something that "smelled like excrement." When Brown called for help after the 10 p.m. lockdown on May 13, the guard told her that she would have to wait until the morning for medical attention, according to the suit. Detention center officials acknowledged that there was no overnight medical staff on duty and took the case to mediation. The federal government settled the case for $880,000 in July 2009. Attorney Tim Ford stated that part of the settlement stipulated that Brown's death would be investigated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Prosecutor murder plot

The Federal Bureau of Prisons filed a request on June 16, 2009 to transfer Clayton Roueche of the United Nations gang from SeaTac to the U.S. Penitentiary in Marion, Illinois, after the discovery of an alleged plot with fellow inmate Luke Elliott Sommer to kill three federal prosecutors and the warden of the detention center. Roueche was eventually transferred to the U.S. Penitentiary in Lee County, Virginia.

References

Federal Detention Center, SeaTac Wikipedia