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U.S. jail in Chicago, where 2 escaped, has problems beyond security

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The attorneys claim there is no predictability to a visit either.

“My experience with the MCC is (that) how well the rules are followed depends on who is working,” defense attorney Andrea Gambino said. “You never know what’s going to happen.”

Contraband has been discovered inside the building, sometimes smuggled during a visit or with the help of staff, according to court records and attorneys. Charges have been brought against guards in the past.

Recently, accused drug trafficker Saul Rodriguez testified to a federal jury that he obtained a cellphone at the MCC after his wife sneaked it in and taped it to the underside of a bathroom sink in a restroom for visitors.

But Gambino, who represented the defendant Rodriguez testified against at the trial, has challenged that story in court documents, suggesting that the phone slipped in through the hands of guards and inmates assigned to a daily work program at a warehouse outside the MCC.

One court filing references a longtime guard who was recently suspended for “smuggling phones, drugs and other contraband into the MCC for inmates.” The union confirmed that a guard had been recently put on “indefinite suspension.”

Former Illinois state official Scott Fawell, who spent about eight months at the MCC for corruption, said he thought illegal items were sometimes smuggled in through the kitchen when deliveries arrived. And the inmate searches that were done after each visit with a loved one could be not only spotty but also negligent, said Fawell, an aide to convicted former Gov. George Ryan.

“Some things that got in there, I don’t think got in by chance,” he said.

Officials at the MCC did not respond to a request for an interview. And a spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons did not answer specific questions about the number of infractions or incidents at the MCC or about the overcrowding concerns.

But even some of the Chicago attorneys noted that the staffing and security concerns at the MCC are probably not unlike those at many federal prisons. The entire system, Steinback said, has struggled to keep up with an influx of inmates who flooded the system under stiffer drug laws.

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