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View Full Version : Court to decide if unpopular prison food is punishment


PlayOn
03-23-2008, 11:41 PM
Montpelier, VT.

When shooting suspect Christopher Williams acted up in prison, he was given nutraloaf- a mixture of cubed whole wheat bread, nondairy cheese, raw carrots, spinach, seedless raisins, beans, veggie oil, tomato paste, powdered milk, and dehydrated potato flakes.
Prison officials call it a complete meal. Inmates say it so awful, they'd rather go hungry.
On Monday, the Vermont Supreme Court will hear arguments in a class action suit brought by the inmates who say it's not food, but punishment and that everyone subjected to it should get a formal disciplinary process first.
Prison officials see nutraloaf as a tool for behavior modification.
"It's commonplace in other states as a way of providing nutrition in a mechanism that dissuades inmates from throwing feces, urine, trays and silverware." said Vermont Corrections Commissioner Rob Hofmann.
"It tends to have the desired outcome," Hofmann said. "Once the offender relents, we stop with the nutraloaf. That's our goal, to protect our staff and not have them subjected to behavior that the average Vermonter would find incomprehensible."
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I think the inmates should be thankful they have that nutraloaf. Heck of a lot more than what some have to eat. Besides, it's a jail. Not 'The Olive Garden.'

Ireneparalegal
03-23-2008, 11:45 PM
I read this in the newspaper today. :rolleyes:

Hey you bastards in prison, if you behave, you eat good, if you act up, you eat sh*t. My advice: BEHAVE. How hard is that? :lol:

Zoneboy
03-24-2008, 01:43 AM
Montpelier, VT.

No wonder Montpelier is the only State Capital without a McDonalds, Obviously the big mac didn't stand a chance against nutraloaf. :lol:

Stormtracker TF
03-25-2008, 03:39 PM
There are millions of people in the world who don't even have food to eat, but we should allow the criminals of our country to pick and choose? Heck no.