Carroll County Jail will stop taking Calhoun County inmates

News

October 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A northwest Iowa sheriff plans to end an agreement to house prisoners from a neighboring county in Carroll County’s jail — a move that sparked a debate during a public meeting this week. Carroll County Sheriff Ken Pingre says there have been a lot of issues with Calhoun County officials.

“I’m not getting his paperwork on time, not getting prisoners released when they’re supposed to,” Pingrey says. “It’s just come time to hopefully nix this agreement.” Pingrey says the turning point for him was the recent announcement that if Sac County voters approve construction of a new jail in Sac City, Calhoun County’s sheriff will send his county’s prisoners there once that new jail opens.

Carroll County’s sheriff says Polk County officials assure him they’ll be able to send Carroll County more prisoners from central Iowa once he stops accepting Calhoun County prisoners in January. Benjamin Smith, the county attorney in Sac County, says Pingrey’s move is appalling. “He can subsidize Polk County with Carroll County resources, but not the local counties that shop in Carroll, that send their kids to school in Carroll, law enforcement that works closely with Carroll,” Smith said.

Pingrey says Polk County inmates serving out a sentence are easier to deal with than the prisoners his facility gets from Calhoun County and he’s looking to make things easier for his jail’s staff. The Sac County attorney is accusing Carroll County’s sheriff of retaliating against Calhoun County for promising to send its prisoners to a Sac County jail — if it’s built. “That was the turning point,” Pingrey said. Smith asked: “So you’re admitting that’s retaliatory?” The sheriff responded: “Not retaliatory, no. I saw it as a good opportunity.”

A few moments later, Carroll County Supervisor Stephanie Hausman intervened. “Real quick, I’m going to shut this down,” Hausman said. “…I would ask you two, if you guys want to work some things out, do it outside of an open public meeting.”

The chair of Carroll County’s Board of Supervisors says the jail in Carroll was built so it could house out-of-county prisoners and those room-and-board fees are paying off the bonds that financed the facility’s construction.