Skip to main content

Nesquehoning: Police burdened with prison calls

Published June 28. 2019 10:47AM

Nesquehoning officials are in need of some help when it comes to policing the county prison.

On Wednesday, Mayor Sam Kitchko said that police are responding to a number of incidents at the Carbon County Correctional Facility.

The jail is located on the Broad Mountain in Nesquehoning.

Kitcho said it is putting a strain on the department, which has been having staffing issues due to injuries or officers leaving for other positions.

“I know it’s not in the budget, but we need a detective to do the follow-up investigative work,” Kitchko said.

“This week alone, up until (Wednesday), we had three cases up at the prison, and when we get a case at the prison, it’s not just write up a report and you’re done. It’s follow-up interviews and other work. It’s a mess.”

He asked council if it would be OK to have solicitor Robert Yurchak look into what the borough’s responsibility is for covering the prison.

“Yes it’s in our jurisdiction, but do other counties in the state have the municipalities take care of the prisons or do the sheriff’s departments?” Kitchko asked.

Councilman Frank Jacobs said he spoke with the county commissioners about the issue and was told it’s in Nesquehoning’s jurisdiction.

He added that he has heard that in other counties, the county detective does most investigations when something happens at the county jail.

“I’m not saying we can’t go up there occasionally,” Jacobs said, “but the demand is getting too much for our police.”

“It’s getting worse every year and it’s bigger problems,” Kitchko added.

Councilwoman Mary Fox said things Yurchak should look into are the surrounding counties.

Council directed Yurchak to look into the matter and see what can be done. Council then plans to set up a meeting with the commissioners in the future.

In other police matters, Chief Sean Smith is back to work, Kitchko said, noting that he has only been cleared for administrative duties.

Comments
Respond to the call, write a report, conduct follow-up interviews and "other work".. is a pretty fair job description for the civil servant position otherwise known as police officer.
It is a fair description, but the issue is that along with their own work in town, they must attend to a facility of 300 people who already broke the law and don't care. It's an issue of becoming overextended; not the job itself, necessarily.
I remember a nesquehoning officer using a let it rip for free pass in the municipal cruiser and killing a civilian..
Then there was Leslie.. Parking the cruiser in front of his mistresses house, in Hazelton, while on duty..
Perhaps the past actions of two individuals with the same career in the same municipality ruined any empathy for their current paperwork plight.
The Sheriffs can't police the prison because they aren't police, per se. They generally only have arrest powers if a crime was committed in their presence, most commonly traffic violations. But for more serious crimes, they still have to call PSP or whomever holds jurisdiction. But that is Pennsylvania. Other states are different, and in fact, many states have county jails that are offshoots of the sheriff's department itself, making people who work at the jails deputies themselves. But the law does not give them any real investigate or police powers. Plus there's a question of jurisdiction.

Love how the police get bashed. They're the only people who get chastised for both doing and not doing their jobs. Nobody holds every teacher in a school district accountable when one does something illegal. No one writes off all doctors when one gets arrested for drug peddling. Don't like cops? Next time, call a meth head.

Classified Ads

Event Calendar

<<

February 2025

>>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
      
 

Upcoming Events

Twitter Feed