Jump to content

Federal detention center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Federal detention centers are pretrial detention facilities within the Bureau of Prisons. As administrative security level facilities, they are capable of holding inmates in all security categories.[1][2] Thus, typically they have security measures such as double fences, roving patrols, and restricted movement. Agent Steal and others have noted that the conditions in the FDCs are generally better than in local jails.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Prison Types & General Information, Bureau of Prisons, archived from the original on 2012-09-15
  2. ^ "Prison records". Retrieved 2 April 2019.