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Janice Ruth Hylen

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Janice Ruth Hylen

Birth
Corning, Steuben County, New York, USA
Death
21 Nov 1979 (aged 23)
Fulton County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Painted Post, Steuben County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Janice R. Hylen's bio is blank. But she is considered a fallen hero from those of us who work for the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Her bio should read, as it does on the Official BOP.GOV:

"Janice R. Hylen was a dietary consultant employed by a BOP contractor. As part of her job, she visited USP Atlanta on a regular basis to assist with the planning of special diets. On November 21, 1979, Ms. Hylen was on duty at the institution to interview inmates with dietary problems and complete paperwork to develop special diets for them.

She was working in a room near the hospital library when inmate Robert Hogan passed by and saw that she was alone. He entered the room, then viciously attacked and brutally murdered Ms. Hylen. Inmate Hogan later admitted to having previously intended to kill a female staff member, but no opportunity had presented itself. At the time of Ms. Hylen's death, Hogan was serving a 15-year sentence for threat through the mail and sodomy.

After a brief stay at FCI Butner, inmate Hogan was transferred to USP Marion, where in June 1980, he was killed by another inmate. Hogan's murderer suggested that Hogan was killed because he bragged about killing two women; however, USP Marion staff believed his murder was gang-related.

Janice, you will never be forgotten."
Janice R. Hylen's bio is blank. But she is considered a fallen hero from those of us who work for the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Her bio should read, as it does on the Official BOP.GOV:

"Janice R. Hylen was a dietary consultant employed by a BOP contractor. As part of her job, she visited USP Atlanta on a regular basis to assist with the planning of special diets. On November 21, 1979, Ms. Hylen was on duty at the institution to interview inmates with dietary problems and complete paperwork to develop special diets for them.

She was working in a room near the hospital library when inmate Robert Hogan passed by and saw that she was alone. He entered the room, then viciously attacked and brutally murdered Ms. Hylen. Inmate Hogan later admitted to having previously intended to kill a female staff member, but no opportunity had presented itself. At the time of Ms. Hylen's death, Hogan was serving a 15-year sentence for threat through the mail and sodomy.

After a brief stay at FCI Butner, inmate Hogan was transferred to USP Marion, where in June 1980, he was killed by another inmate. Hogan's murderer suggested that Hogan was killed because he bragged about killing two women; however, USP Marion staff believed his murder was gang-related.

Janice, you will never be forgotten."


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