FCI La Tuna is located on the Texas-New Mexico border, 12 miles (19 km) north of El Paso, Texas.[2]
Letters from La Tuna
From May to September 2013, the El Paso Times published a series of letters written by Bob Jones, a longtime El Paso businessman serving a 10-year sentence on corruption and fraud convictions at FCI La Tuna. Known as "Letters from La Tuna," Jones wrote the letters to his family to "warn you and all of our loved ones and friends away from any misdeeds or illegal behavior" and give readers insight into the harsh consequences of breaking the law. In the first article, Jones described being detained in a private prison in Otero County, New Mexico after he was sentenced on February 17, 2011 and contracting E. coli bacteria from undercooked food and becoming ill with dysentery. Still sick, he was transferred to FCI La Tuna in May 2011:
I was loaded with nine other men into a van and taken to La Tuna Federal Correctional Institution, throwing up all the way. Once I was checked in, I was taken by wheelchair to my new home -- and a different type of hell in Unit 6 (handicapped unit) at La Tuna. The things that saved my life were my "cellies" (my cell mates, the other five men in the six-man cell that I was assigned to live in, a 10-by-10-foot room). These men fed me and wheeled me to the bathroom, food service (sometimes) and to the medical office.
Jones subsequently suffered kidney failure and was sent to a local hospital twice, each stay lasting about 30 days before he was sent back to FCI La Tuna. Jones wrote that while in the hospital, he was chained to the bed and was watched by guards 24 hours a day. However, Jones noted that the conditions at FCI La Tuna were better in comparison to the private prison he came from: "La Tuna is far more what I expected of prison -- food, guards, management bureaucracy" and added "the inmates [at FCI La Tuna] are mostly men who are in prison for far too long a term for their crimes."[3]
Former college football player and real estate investor; convicted in 2009 of masterminding an elaborate armored car heist, during which he wore a rip-away landscaper disguise, stashed an inner tube in a nearby creek, floated to a nearby getaway car and escaped with $400,000.[6][7]
Released from custody in 2014; served nearly 20 years.[12]
Major player in the cocaine trade in the United States in the 1970s and early 1980s. Jung was a part of the Medellín Cartel, which was responsible for up to 89 percent of the cocaine smuggled into the United States. He specialized in the smuggling of cocaine from Colombia on a large scale. His life story was portrayed in the 2001 film Blow, starring Johnny Depp.[13]
Imprisoned in August 1982 and released from custody in January 1984.
"Little Nicky" Scarfo. La Cosa Nostra mafia boss of Philadelphia mob. Imprisoned on parole violation for gun possession (0.22 calibre handgun). Became friends with George Jung while imprisoned in La Tuna. Scarfo later was imprisoned on a separate 55-year sentence where he died of natural causes on January 15, 2017 at FMC Butner.
Died in custody in 1971 while serving a life sentence.
In the 1963 Valachi hearings before the United States Senate, Valachi, an Italian-American Mafia lieutenant, disclosed previously unknown information about the Mafia including its structure, operations, rituals and membership. This was the first concrete evidence to federal authorities and the general public that the Mafia existed.
^Buckheit, Mary (February 7, 2008). "From American gangster to crossover legends". ESPN. p. 2. Retrieved October 19, 2022. Drafted by the Bulls in the 13th round in 1968 out of Norfolk State, he left the team in preseason and by 1971 was locked up in the maximum security prison in Lewisburg, Pa., on drug-related conspiracy chargers. Four years later, he got out -- only to land behind the bars of the La Tuna Federal Correctional Institution in Texas from 1981 to 1988.
^Buckheit, Mary (February 7, 2008). "From American gangster to crossover legends". ESPN. p. 2. Retrieved October 19, 2022. Enshrined in hip-hop lyrics and New York City lore, the drug kingpin and Rucker Park street ball legend Pee Wee Kirkland created a revolution all his own in the 1960s and '70s.