From Military.com:
“Navy Adds Color Coding to
Prisoner Uniforms to Avoid Brig Mix-Ups”
Navy Personnel Command has a new
uniform for prisoners at all ashore correctional facilities, and it's
uni-service. Wearing of the new uniform will be mandatory starting May 1 for
all prisoners in pre-trial and post-trial confinement at Military Correctional
Facilities (MCFs) run by the Navy, regardless of the prisoner's service
affiliation, the Navy said in a news release last week. The new standardized
prison uniform (SPU) also will likely save the Navy money, the release states.
The costs associated with buying and maintaining service uniforms for a
prisoner become a tremendous and unnecessary fiscal burden to the Navy and the
taxpayer, the service said. The new uniform will come in two colors, dependent
on the prisoner's legal status, the release states. Those in pre-trial
confinement will get a chocolate-brown uniform, and those in post-trial
confinement will get a tan uniform. Currently, prisoners at Navy MCFs wear
their service utility uniforms, in line with the Navy's theory that doing so
helps maintain discipline and aids in rehabilitation. "However, having
prisoners wear their service uniform creates security and public safety
challenges, such as difficulty in distinguishing staff from prisoners,"
Jonathan Godwin, senior corrections program specialist with the Corrections and
Programs Office of the Navy Personnel Command, said in a statement. In
addition, sentences often also involve total forfeiture of all pay and
allowance, "and it is rare for a prisoner to return to active duty,"
Godwin said. The new standardized prison uniform (SPU) also will likely save
the Navy money, the release states. The costs associated with buying and
maintaining service uniforms for a prisoner become a tremendous and unnecessary
fiscal burden to the Navy and the taxpayer, the service said. According to the
release, the cost for a service-specific military utility uniform with one pair
of trousers and a top is about $95. Add a fleece jacket, and the cost exceeds
$150. The new SPU top and trousers will cost approximately $18.50, the release
states. Add a belt, buckle, ball cap and watch cap, and the price is about $22.
With a jacket, the complete price to clothe a prisoner will be about $45. "In
addition to the enhancement of correctional security, improved public safety
and significant fiscal savings, the wearing of the new SPU will produce
numerous benefits across a wide range of Navy corrections operations,"
Godwin said. "These include an SPU with a neat and professional look, an easier-to-maintain
and care-for uniform, and less wear and tear on equipment, i.e. washing
machines and dryers, and less cleaning supplies, i.e. laundry detergent."
^ It makes sense to have a uniform
to wear before and during your trial and then a uniform to wear if you are
convicted. I don’t know if the other military branches have a similar uniform
policy, but if they do not then they should. ^
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