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Elle

Inside 'Club Fed,' Where Felicity Huffman Served Her 14-Day Prison Sentence

Rose Minutaglio
Photo credit: Hearst Owned
Photo credit: Hearst Owned

From ELLE

What comes to mind when you picture incarceration? Brewing jailhouse hooch and getting in fights? Spitting in your enemy's lotion like Brianna “Princess Thug” Guerra of Girls Incarcerated? A bloody tampon sandwich à la Orange Is the New Black?

At Dublin Federal Correctional Institute's satellite camp, where Felicity Huffman completed a 14-day sentence on Friday, life in prison was much more club fed than FCI Danbury. The Desperate Housewives actress, who paid $15,000 to inflate her daughter’s SAT score as part of the college admissions scandal, was allowed visitors and could sunbathe outside. Crafts like cross-stitching and origami were made available. She participated in bingo, and ping-pong tournaments. Food ranged from Bran Flakes to fish sandwiches to Salisbury steaks. She wore, as this photo shows, an apparently subjectively chic olive-green jumpsuit practically identical to an ELLE.com approved Alex Mill piece.

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As one Twitter user put it, "she's on vacation from life right now."

Photo credit: Boston Globe - Getty Images
Photo credit: Boston Globe - Getty Images

FCI Dublin has a cushy reputation and a history of housing celebrity inmates, like heiress Patty Hearst and Hollywood's infamous madam Heidi Fleiss, who was convicted of federal charges of tax evasion in 1996 and served 20 months. Fleiss, speaking via telephone to ELLE.com from her parrot sanctuary in Nevada, says Huffman's two weeks in prison was likely a breeze.

The former prison facility opened in 1974 and is located about 40 miles east of San Francisco. It's considered a low-security facility with just over 1,000 female inmates, plus an adjacent minimum-security satellite camp housing 175 more women, where Huffman was staying. Fleiss was sent to the same satellite camp when she arrived in 1996. She says inmates immediately surrounded her, offering to buy her coffee and toothpaste from the commissary. The expectation, she says, was to give something in return, like a sexual favor. Fleiss claims to have had sex with a fellow inmate in both the FCI Dublin's chapel and in the electrical closet.

Sleeping areas were often ant-infested, she recalls, and the bathroom's water pressure was nonexistent. The food? "Awful, horrendous," she says. "I was raised a vegetarian on organic food. All the starch and the processed food was gross."

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Her advice to anyone in the prison: "Be friendly to everyone. Don't be arrogant. Don't be rude, whatever you would be in everyday life, be. You should be respectful of other people's space. I definitely wouldn't receive Snickers and Dr. Pepper or buy them for other people, things like that. Don't try and be anyone's best friend."

Photo credit: John T. Barr - Getty Images
Photo credit: John T. Barr - Getty Images



There's nothing easy about incarceration. But recent celebrity inmates, like Teresa Giudice of Real Housewives and Dance Moms star Abby Lee Miller, have sparked interest about what life on the inside is really like for the rich and famous.

According to FCI Dublin's inmate handbook, Huffman was awakened each day at 5 a.m. She was responsible for making her bed and tidying up her cell floor. Inmates at the facility wear jumpsuits or sweats available for purchase at commissary. They are not allowed cell phones, but have radios and computer access. Zumba and yoga classes are available, according to The New York Times, and the facility's volleyball court and horseshoe pit are newly renovated.

Photo credit: MediaNews Group/The Mercury News via Getty Images
Photo credit: MediaNews Group/The Mercury News via Getty Images
Photo credit: Getty Images
Photo credit: Getty Images

Former federal prosecutor Anthony Brass, who represented Danielle Steel's accountant ten years ago and has several female clients who have served time at FCI Dublin, says the facility is "much nicer" than a local county jail or a supermax prison. It's a desirable place to be, he says, as far as correctional facilities go.

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"Dublin doesn't, for the most part, have female gang members or murderers or people who are used to resolving problems with violence," he says. "Inmates there face shorter sentences, because they are people who have pled guilty as opposed to people fighting their charges to the bitter end. It reduces pressures on the inmates and reduces levels of desperation."

For that reason, he says, the facility is run with a certain degree of trust and autonomy. There are classes and jobs available to inmates in laundry and food service sectors, though it's unclear whether Huffman had a designated job and, if so, what it was.

Photo credit: DAVID MCNEW - Getty Images
Photo credit: DAVID MCNEW - Getty Images

The security at FCI Dublin is also incredibly low, says director and founder of Wall Street Prison Consultants Larry Levine, and there are no fences or locked doors on the satellite premise. An anonymous Bureau of Prisons official also told The New York Times the camp where Huffman was located houses "white-collar criminals." Breakouts are incredibly rare.

Levine, who served 10 years in federal prison for racketeering, advises clients before going into lock-up and is currently working with three people involved in the college admissions scandal. He believes Huffman could have received special treatment at FCI Dublin because of her celebrity-status, like cutting the food line and limited exposure to other, more dangerous inmates at the facility.

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"The Bureau of Prisons wants to keep her safe and happy [for fear of] bad PR when she gets out," he says. "Do you think they want her talking about how bad of a time she had in jail?"

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