For about ninety years, the Lorton Correctional Complex in rural Fairfax County, Virginia, about 20 miles south of Washington, served as the District of Columbia's prison. The National Capital Revitalization and Self-Government Improvement Act of 1997 required the DC Department of Corrections transferred the sentenced felon population formerly housed at Lorton to the federal Bureau of Prisons, and the Lorton facility shut down in 2001. The Lorton complex was handed over to the General Services Administration, which manages property for the federal government, which in turn gave the property to Fairfax County.
Rank Structure
Rank
Insignia
Director
Deputy Director
Warden
Deputy Warden
Major
Captain
Lieutenant
Sergeant
Corporal
Corrections Officer
Facilities
The DOC operates the Central Detention Facility, at 1901 D StreetSoutheast. The jail opened in 1976. In 1985, a federal judge in the case of Campbell v. McGruder, a lawsuit filed against the District of Columbia for unconstitutional jail conditions, set a population cap of 1,674 inmates for the D.C. Jail. This judicially imposed cap was lifted in 2002, after seventeen years. In 2007, DOC administrators set the jail's population capacity at 2,164. The D.C. Jail houses only adult males. It holds inmates detained while awaiting trial; inmates convicted of misdemeanors; and convicted felons awaiting transfer to the BOP. The Correctional Treatment Facility at 1901 E Street SE, which the district opened in 1992, is an eight-story, medium-security facility located on of land adjacent to the D.C. Jail. It consists of five separate buildings that appear like one large building. It is located adjacent to the D.C. Jail. It houses male prisoners, female prisoners, and juveniles charged as adults. The CTF is operated by a private contractor, the Corrections Corporation of America, under a twenty-year contract with the District, entered into in March 1997. The DOC contracts with three privately owned and operated halfway houses: Extended House, Inc., Fairview and Hope Village. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and the Superior Court of the District of Columbia sometimes use the halfway houses as an alternative to incarceration. Juveniles who are not charged as adults are not in DOC custody, instead going to facilities operated by the Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services. For fiscal year 2015, DOC reported having 939 full-time employees.
Notable inmates
Central Detention Facility
Rayful Edmond charged with various drug crimes, and charged with running a Continuing Criminal Enterprise involving at least 150 kilograms of cocaine and at least 1.5 kilograms of cocaine base "