St. Louis halfway house for federal prisoners turns into cash cow for family that runs it [View all]
ST. LOUIS The oldest halfway house in America was founded on a simple premise, to provide assistance to the downtrodden and other victims of misfortune
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These days, the Dismas House of St. Louis is run like a family business, and a lucrative one at that.
Founded as a nonprofit in 1959 by a colorful Jesuit priest and a lawyer for the mob, Dismas House serves as the last stop for some federal prisoners before they go on probation and reenter society. Long considered a religious ministry, the organization currently has no apparent connection to either the Missouri Jesuit Province or the Archdiocese of St. Louis.
Since 2006, the board has been controlled by John Flatley and his sister, Vivienne Bess, and the two siblings have turned the nonprofits contract with the federal Bureau of Prisons into their personal piggy bank.
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