Prison Name: | Federal Correctional Institution, Sandstone |
Location: | Sandstone, Pine County, Minnesota |
Status: | Operational |
Classification: | Low-security |
Population: | 1,337 |
Managed By: | Federal Bureau of Prisons |
The Federal Correctional Institution, Sandstone (FCI Sandstone) is a low-security United States federal prison for male offenders in Sandstone, Minnesota. It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BoP), a division of the United States Department of Justice.
FCI Sandstone is located approximately 100miles northeast of Minneapolis/St. Paul and 70miles southwest of Duluth.[1]
†Inmates who were released from custody prior to 1982 are not listed on the Bureau of Prisons website.
width=13% | Inmate Name | width=10% | Register Number | width=28% | Status | width=49% | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tim Allen | 04276-040 | Released from custody in 1981 after serving 28 months under his birth name, Timothy A. Dick. | Comedian and television actor; pleaded guilty in 1979 to drug trafficking after being found in possession of 1.4 pounds of cocaine at Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport in Michigan.[2] [3] | ||||
Mike Danton | 10096-111 | Transferred to Kingston Penitentiary in Canada in 2009 after serving 4 years; later released that year. | Former National Hockey League player and Canadian citizen; convicted in 2004 of conspiracy to commit murder for attempting to hire a hitman to kill his agent, David Frost.[4] [5] | ||||
Con Errico | 13274-053 | Released from custody in 1985 after serving 4 years. | Former horse jockey; convicted in 1980 of racketeering for fixing races and contempt of court for refusing to provide grand jury testimony.[6] [7] |
width=13% | Inmate Name | width=10% | Register Number | width=28% | Status | width=49% | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
James Cannon | Unlisted† | Released from custody in 1945 after serving 18 months. | National Secretary and Labor Secretary of the Socialist Workers Party, convicted under the Smith Act in Minneapolis in 1941. | ||||
Vincent R. Dunne | Released from custody in 1945 after serving 16 months. | Socialist Workers Party member and leader in the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 544, convicted under the Smith Act in Minneapolis in 1941. | |||||
Igal Roodenko | Unlisted† | Released from custody in 1947 after serving 20 months. | American pacifist, conscientious objector, and member of the War Resisters League during World War II. Imprisoned for refusing to serve in the military or perform mandatory Civilian Public Service in lieu of military service.[8] |
Inmate Name | Register Number | Status | Details | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Manuel Arturo Villarreal-Heredia | 95354-198 | Scheduled for release on April 4, 2031. | Manuel Arturo Villarreal was arrested along with Javier Arellano Félix “El Tigrillo” on August 14, 2006 in international waters and was transferred to San Diego, California, United States, accused of trafficking hundreds of tons of drugs to that country, ordering some homicides and pay millions of dollars in bribes to authorities. In 2008 he was sentenced by the Federal Court for the Southern District of California to a sentence of 30 years in prison and to pay a fine of 5 million dollars. | |
Xengxai Yang | 16979-089 | Serving a 14-year sentence. Scheduled for release in 2031. | Bank Robber sentenced for his role in a robbery of a credit union, apparently armed with a short-barreled rifle. Yang was convicted of armed bank robbery, brandishing a short-barreled rifle during a crime of violence, and possession of a short-barreled rifle.[9] | |
Cecil Price | Unlisted† | Sentenced to six years by Supreme Court case United States v. Price; served four-and-one-half years before being released in 1974. | Deputy sheriff of Neshoba County, Mississippi and member of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan; convicted of civil rights violations in the murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner in 1964.[10] | |
David Brankle | 07411-028 | Was serving a 21-year sentence; released on June 18, 2023. | Serial bank robber; pleaded guilty in 2004 to robbing 43 banks in six states in 2002 and 2003, stealing over $175,000; Brankle's story was featured on the CNBC television program American Greed.[11] | |
Marc Dreier | 70595-054 | Serving a 20-year sentence; scheduled for release in 2025. Currently in the custody of RRM New York. | Disbarred attorney; pleaded guilty in 2009 to securities fraud, wire fraud and money laundering for bilking hedge funds and investors of over $700 million. Dreier's story was featured on the CNBC television show American Greed.[12] [13] | |
Rigoberto Yanez-Guerrero | 71652-279 | Was serving a 16-year sentence; released from custody on September 11, 2019. | Chief operator of the Arellano-Felix drug cartel in Mexico City between 1995 and 2001; directed the shipment of 5 to 10 tons of cocaine from Colombia to Mexico en route to the United States.[14] | |
Anton Joseph Lazzaro | 59637-509 | Sentenced to 21 years, scheduled for release in 2039. | Minnesota GOP donor who sex trafficked five minors.[15] [16] [17] | |
Joshua Ryne Goldberg | 63197-018 | Released from custody on April 1, 2024.[18] | Posed under a fake alias as someone who was connected to the terrorist group ISIS to provoke terrorist attacks.[19] [20] | |
Mohamed Osman Mohamud | 73079-065 | Serving a 30-year sentence; scheduled for release in 2036. | US citizen from Somalia; convicted in 2013 of attempting to use of a weapon of mass destruction for trying to detonate what he thought was a car bomb supplied by undercover FBI agents posing as members of Al-Qaeda at a Christmas tree lighting in Portland, Oregon in 2010.[21] [22] |