Lacson pushes ‘Alcatraz’ jail for hardened criminals

Sen. Panfilo Lacson called the NTF-Elcac “bullies” for attacking him after his earlier remark that he regrets supporting its budget.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, –Senate PRIB file photo / Henzberg Austria

SAN RAFAEL, Bulacan, Philippines — Presidential aspirant Sen. Panfilo Lacson and his running mate Senate President Vicente Sotto III pushed on Saturday their proposal to build an island prison similar to the famed US penitentiary on Alcatraz Island.

“Removing them from society is almost like suffering the death penalty,” Lacson, a former national police chief, said of the proposed high-security facility for hardened criminals.

The Alcatraz Island penitentiary in San Francisco Bay was used as a federal prison for three decades from the 1930s to the early 1960s, but has since been repurposed as one of the most popular tourist sites in the United States.

Lacson said drug lords and other high-profile convicts could be held in a similar jail, possibly in the West Philippine Sea, that would be designed like a fortress without the luxuries that wealthy inmates usually enjoy at the National Penitentiary in Muntinlupa City.

Lacson and Sotto explained the idea at a Saturday news conference before a scheduled interaction with San Rafael residents as part of a wider plan to reform the country’s jail and penology system.

The two senators, both longtime advocates of capital punishment, declared earlier this month that their thinking on the death penalty had evolved profoundly.

Lacson withdrew a death penalty measure at the Senate after concluding that “prevention, rehabilitation and correction” was the better approach to end criminality.

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