Inmate Name |
Register Number |
Photo |
Status |
Details |
Ivan Boesky |
13987-054 |
|
Released from custody in 1990; served 2 years. |
Former leading Wall Street speculator; pleaded guilty in 1987 to conspiracy to file false stock trading records for making $80 million through an insider trading scheme.[6] |
Auburn Calloway |
14601-076 |
|
Serving consecutive life sentences with no possibility of parole. Now at USP Florence High |
Hijacker of Federal Express Flight 705 in 1994. |
Nate Colbert |
07633-198 |
 |
Released from custody in 1992, served six month sentence |
Former Major League Baseball player; pleaded guilty to committing fraud on bank loan documents. |
Demetrius Flenory |
13037-078 |
|
Now at FCI Sheridan |
Co-founder of the Black Mafia Family criminal organization; pleaded guilty in 2007 to leading a national drug trafficking operation based in Detroit, Michigan with his brother, Terry Flenory, who was also sentenced to 30 years.[7] |
Carmine Persico |
74666-158 |
 |
Died at Duke University Hospital[8] while serving a combined sentence of 139 years; was eligible for release in 2050.[9] |
Mafia figure; former Colombo crime family Boss; convicted in 1986 of murder, loansharking, bribery and extortion, all in aid of racketeering, in order to control and profit from the concrete industry in New York City.[10][11] |
Mossimo Giannulli |
77808-112 |
|
Released from custody in 2021, served five month sentence[12] |
Charged with connection to the 2019 college admissions bribery scandal. |
Gene Haas |
43241-112 |
 |
Released from custody in 2009; served 16 months. |
Haas pleaded guilty to a felony conspiracy charge in 2007 for orchestrating a plan to list bogus expenses that could be written off as business costs and save Haas Automation millions in taxes.[13][14] |
Harry Robbins Haldeman |
Unlisted[a] |
 |
Released from custody in 1978; served 18 months.[15] |
White House Chief of Staff for President Richard Nixon and key figure in the Watergate scandal; convicted in 1975 of conspiracy and obstruction of justice.[16][17][18] |
Andre Louis Hicks |
55553-097 |
|
Released from custody in 1996; served 4 years. |
American rap artist known as Mac Dre and member of the Romper Room Gang, which was suspected of committing a series of bank robberies. He refused a plea deal and was convicted in 1992 of conspiracy for plotting to rob a bank in Fresno, California. Mac Dre served his time between USP Lompoc and Fresno. He recorded Back n da Hood at this time. [19][20][21][22] |
Trevor Jacob |
66235-510 |
|
Released from custody on June 12, 2024; served a 6-month sentence. |
Pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice by deliberating destroying a plane wreckage that was intentionally crashed for his YouTube channel.[23] |
Herbert W. Kalmbach |
Unlisted[a] |
|
Released from custody in 1975; served 6 months.[24] |
Personal attorney for President Richard Nixon; pleaded guilty in 1974 to illegally soliciting nearly $4 million in campaign funds.[16][25][26] |
Chuck Muncie |
03389-198 |
 |
Released from custody in 1992; served 18 months. |
Former National Football League player; pleaded guilty in 1988 to selling cocaine to an undercover federal agent and perjury.[27][28] |
Eugene Plotkin |
58897-054 |
|
Released from custody in 2011; served 3 years. |
Former associate at Goldman Sachs; convicted in 2007 masterminding an insider trading conspiracy which netted $6.5 million; Plotkin's story was featured on the CNBC television program American Greed.[29][30] |
Jorge Salcedo |
77807-112 |
|
Released from custody on December 30, 2021.[12] |
Charged with connection to the 2019 college admissions bribery scandal. |
Stephen Semprevivo |
77828-112 |
|
Released from custody in 2020, served four month sentence |
Charged with connection to the 2019 college admissions bribery scandal. |
Reed Slatkin |
24057-112 |
|
Released from custody in 2013; served 14 years. |
Co-founder of EarthLink; pleaded guilty in 2002 to mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy to obstruct justice for stealing $593 million from investors in one of the biggest Ponzi schemes in US history; Slatkin's story was featured on the CNBC television program American Greed.[31][32][33] |
Devin Sloane |
77815-112 |
|
Released from custody in 2020, served four month sentence |
Charged with connection to the 2019 college admissions bribery scandal. |
Roger Ver |
99722-111 |
 |
Released from custody in 2003 |
Entrepreneur, early investor and promoter of Bitcoin. Charged with selling explosives without a license, illegally storing explosives, and mailing injurious articles.[34] |
Hüseyin Yıldırım |
09542-018 |
|
Released from custody and deported to his home country of Turkey in 2003; served 5 years. |
Turkish national; convicted in 1989 of conspiring with spy James Hall III to sell classified information regarding US eavesdropping operations to East German and Soviet agents between 1983 and 1988.[35] |
Danny Zappin |
08036-032 |
 |
Released from custody in 2005; served 2 years |
Founder of Maker Studios served a sentence for drug possession.[36] |