SOURCE :- THE AGE NEWS
By Ed White, Jill Colvin and Michael R. Sisak
US President Donald Trump says he is directing his government to reopen and expand Alcatraz, the notorious former prison on a hard-to-reach island off San Francisco that has been closed for more than 60 years.
“For too long, America has been plagued by vicious, violent, and repeat Criminal Offenders, the dregs of society, who will never contribute anything other than Misery and Suffering,” Trump wrote in a weekend post on Truth Social.
Alcatraz Island with its notorious ex-prison sits in the middle of San Francisco Bay.Credit: Anadolu via Getty Images
“I am directing the Bureau of Prisons, together with the Department of Justice, FBI, and Homeland Security, to reopen a substantially enlarged and rebuilt ALCATRAZ, to house America’s most ruthless and violent Offenders.”
The prison off the Californian coast was an island fortress often mythologised as “inescapable” due to the strong ocean currents and cold Pacific waters surrounding it.
Known as the “The Rock”, it housed some of America’s most notorious criminals, including gangsters Al Capone and George “Machine Gun” Kelly, and lesser-known men who were considered too dangerous to lock up elsewhere.
Circled by herons and gulls and often shrouded in fog, it has long been part of the cultural imagination. It has been the subject of numerous movies, including The Rock starring Sean Connery and Nicolas Cage.
Alcatraz Island is now a major tourist site that is operated by the National Park Service and is a designated National Historic Landmark.
Trump’s directive to rebuild and reopen the long-shuttered penitentiary was the latest salvo in his effort to overhaul how and where federal prisoners and immigration detainees are locked up.
But such a move would likely be an expensive and challenging proposition. The prison was closed in 1963 due to crumbling infrastructure and the high costs of repairing and supplying the island facility – everything from fuel to food had to be brought by boat.
Bringing the facility up to modern-day standards would require massive investments at a time when the Bureau of Prisons has been shuttering prisons for similar infrastructure issues.

A cell at Alcatraz Island.Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images
Despite its reputation, in the 29 years it was open – from 1934 to 1963 – some 36 men attempted 14 separate escapes, according to the FBI. Nearly all were caught or didn’t survive the freezing water and strong current.
The fate of three particular inmates – John Anglin, his brother Clarence, and Frank Morris – is of some debate and was dramatised in the 1979 film Escape from Alcatraz starring Clint Eastwood.

The 1962 Alcatraz escapees created fake heads in their bunks to enable them to evade detection while they escaped. Credit: UPI Telephoto
The trio absconded in 1962, leaving behind handmade plaster heads with real hair in their beds to fool guards.
“For the 17 years we worked on the case, no credible evidence emerged to suggest the men were still alive, either in the US or overseas,” the FBI said.
Trump said he’d come up with the idea to reopen Alcatraz because of frustrations with “radicalised judges” who have insisted those being deported receive due process.
Alcatraz, he said, has long been a “symbol of law and order. You know, it’s got quite a history”.
A spokesperson for the Bureau of Prisons said in a statement the agency would “comply with all Presidential Orders”. They did not answer questions regarding the practicality and feasibility of reopening Alcatraz or the agency’s role in the future of the former prison, given the National Park Service’s control of the island.
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat whose district includes the island, questioned the feasibility of reopening the prison after so many years.
“It is now a very popular national park and major tourist attraction. The president’s proposal is not a serious one,” she wrote on X.

Cormorants perch on a breakwater as clouds and fog shroud Alcatraz Island .Credit: San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
California Democratic state senator Scott Wiener criticised Trump, saying he wanted to create a “domestic gulag right in the middle of San Francisco Bay”.
While Alcatraz is best known for its years as a federal prison, its history is much longer.
President Millard Fillmore in 1850 declared the island for public purposes, and it soon became a military site. Confederate soldiers were housed there during the Civil War.
By the 1930s, the government decided it needed a place to hold the worst criminals, and Alcatraz became the choice for a prison.

A guard stands by as prisoners enter the Alcatraz mess hall for supper in its days as a working prison.Credit: BETTMANN ARCHIVE
“A remote site was sought, one that would prohibit constant communication with the outside world by those confined within its walls,” the park service said.
Its remoteness, however, eventually made it impractical. “The island had no source of fresh water,” according to the US Bureau of Prisons, “so nearly one million gallons of water had to be barged to the island each week.”
By 1959, the daily cost to house an inmate there was triple that of a federal prison in Atlanta, the government said. It was cheaper to build a new facility from scratch.
A decade after it was closed as a prison, Alcatraz became part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area and was opened to the public in 1973.

Trump wants to restore Alcatraz – now a tourist attraction – as a working prison.Credit: De Agostini via Getty Images
The park service says the island gets more than 1 million visitors a year, who arrive by ferry. An adult ticket costs $47.95, and visitors can see the cells where prisoners were held.
Rob Frank, 55, from Missouri, who toured Alcatraz about a decade ago, said it was difficult to imagine the millions of dollars that would be needed to reopen the prison.
“It didn’t seem very humane to me,” Frank said. “They had the cells stacked on top of each other. Small cells. Everything’s concrete. It was kind of a dark place.”

Despite its reputation, in the 29 years Alcatraz was open, 36 men attempted 14 separate escapes.Credit: SHUTTERSTOCK
The island serves as a veritable time machine to a bygone era of corrections.
The prison bureau already has 16 prisons performing the same high-security functions as Alcatraz, including its maximum security facility in Florence, Colorado, and the US penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, which is home to the federal death chamber.

One of Alcatraz’s most notable residents, gangster Al Capone.Credit: nnaseathompson
Trump’s order comes amid legal battles as he attempts to send accused gang members to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador without due process.
The president has also floated the legally dubious idea of sending some federal US prisoners to El Salvador’s so-called Terrorism Confinement Centre, known as CECOT.
Trump has also ordered the opening of a detention centre at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to hold some 30,000 of what he has labelled the “worst criminal aliens”.