Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jan 2000 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2000 The Denver Post Contact: 1560 Broadway, Denver, CO 80202 Fax: (303) 820.1502 Website: http://www.denverpost.com/ Forum: http://www.denverpost.com/voice/voice.htm Author: Coleman Cornelius, Denver Post Northern Colorado Bureau INMATE'S HEROIN OVERDOSE PROBED BURLINGTON - Authorities are investigating the death of a prison inmate who overdosed on heroin Sunday afternoon. Michael Henry Schrecongost, 46, died after he was found unresponsive in his cell at the Kit Carson Correctional Facility, a private, for-profit prison in Burlington, officials at the prison and the Colorado Department of Corrections said. A preliminary autopsy report, completed Tuesday, found Schrecongost died of a heroin overdose. He apparently injected the drug, said Dr. Anthony Olaiz, Kit Carson County coroner. Prison officials believe the heroin was smuggled in, said Warden Dolan Waller. The inmate did not have any visitors Saturday or Sunday, Waller said. "We are reviewing all of our visitation procedures and guidelines to see if there's a procedure we need to be concerned about," the warden said. The prison uses metal detectors, video cameras and staff supervisors to keep tabs on inmates and visitors, Waller said. Visitors are searched before, and inmates are searched after, each visit, he said. Schrecongost had a history of drug abuse, Olaiz said. But officials have no indication that the inmate was injecting heroin in prison before Sunday. Schrecongost was serving sentences for kidnapping and sexual assault; he was convicted in Clear Creek County, according to records. Kit Carson Correctional Facility, which opened in December 1998, is one of three private prisons in Colorado that are run by Corrections Corp. of America of Nashville, Tenn. The Colorado Department of Corrections contracts with CCA to house minimum- and medium-security inmates at the Burlington prison. The facility now holds about 600 Colorado inmates, or about 4 percent of the state's 15,400 inmates, corrections officials said. Private, for-profit prisons have come under scrutiny nationwide for management practices that allegedly have contributed to inmate disruptions, escapes and deaths. There is a nationwide trend toward more private prisons because of the high costs of state-run facilities in the face of booming inmate populations. Yet some communities, even those hungry for an economic boost, have shunned private prisons because of a perceived lack of accountability. Schrecongost's death is the first suspicious inmate death at the Kit Carson Correctional Facility, the warden said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea