Programs

Civilian Inmate Labor Program

Army program establishing civilian prison camps on military installations for slave labor operations under national emergencies.
AI-Generated Content
This content was written by AI and has not been 100% reviewed by the owner of this site. Read our disclaimer for more information.
programs

Overview

The Civilian Inmate Labor Program is a documented Army program establishing procedures for using civilian prisoners as labor on military installations.

Purpose

According to America In Peril:

  • Establish civilian prison camps on military bases
  • Use prisoners for slave labor
  • Support military operations during national emergencies
  • Generate revenue through labor sales

Facilities

Prison camps established or equipped on:

  • Fort Chaffee (Arkansas)
  • Fort Drum (New York)
  • Indiantown Gap (Pennsylvania)
  • Fort Benning (Georgia)
  • Fort Hood (Texas)
  • Fort McCoy (Wisconsin)
  • Camp Pendleton (California)
  • Elmendorf AFB (Alaska)
  • And many others

Operations

Prisoner Categories

  • Gun owners
  • Food hoarders (more than 30-day supply)
  • Political dissidents
  • Militia members
  • "Hate crime" offenders
  • Environmental criminals
  • Regulation violators

Labor Sales

According to the book, the Marxist dictatorship plans to:

  • Hold 10-15 million slave labor prisoners by 2015
  • Offer prisoners to highest bidding foreign countries
  • Market prisoners as a "resource"
  • Historical precedent: Russia, China, India, North Vietnam

Historical Precedent

North Vietnam after the war:

  • Negotiated price per healthy slave laborer with Russia
  • Gave 500,000 Vietnamese (ages 17-35) to Russia
  • Worked on 3,600 mile Siberian pipeline
  • Many died in forced labor

Documentation

Army Publications

  • Civil Affairs Operations (FM 41-10) - ordered destroyed to avoid falling into wrong hands
  • Contains diagrams of civilian concentration camp layouts
  • Standard operating procedures for detainee handling

Congressional Records

  • $80.4 million approved for federal prison in Pollock, Louisiana
  • 600 acres within airport boundaries
  • High security and low security facilities

Resistance

Seneca Army Depot example:

  • Army Public Affairs denied conversion to federal prison
  • Claimed only interest was "half-way house" or "boot camp"
  • Congressional sources confirmed prison use
  • Northern section of base shut down for conversion