The only person accused of witchcraft during the salem witch trials who wasn't executed was shock of shocks...tituba the black house slave who taught magic to the three Parris girls who started the whole thing. Ironically it was probably her status as a slave that spared her life. She remained in jail because her owner John Parris refusing to pay her legal fees and reclaim her, so she was ultimately sold off to another owner at the cost of said fees, her fate following the release from prison remains unknown.
They impounded a witch?
St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., has a long history. Congress created the hospital as the Government Hospital for the Insane in 1855. During the Civil War, it served as a general hospital, at which time, according to a D.C. government website, "wounded soldiers... were reluctant to admit that they were housed in an insane asyklum, and instead referred to their location as 'St. Elizabeths,'" which was the "name given to the original 600-acre tract of land." Eventually, tenants totally abandoned the West Campus, while a mental hospital remains in the East Campus.
But in recent years, government waste has entered the story.
The General Services Administration (GSA) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have been attempting, since 2005, and at a cost of more than $2.1 billion, to establish a headquarters for DHS on parts of the property. This effort includes creating office space for the Office of Secretary of Homeland Security and other crucial senior personnel in the West Campus' main building.
If you want to turn a a historical mental institution into a high-tech and secure government facility, you will face a multitude of problems along the way.
The problems DHS and GSA have faced are particularly fundamental, which raises questions as to why the agencies selected the site in the first place. First - the slope on which they are building the site is unstable. Federal Spending Oversight Subcommittee staff requested information regarding what percentage of the site is unstable. GSA responded that the entirety of the site was not unstable, but up to 30 percent was subject to "anticipated slope instabilities."
Because the entire site is a historical landmark, GSA has had to work around D.C. preservation regulations, including maintaining the exterior facade of key buildings. So when GSA and DHS gutted the interior of the buildings, they kept the exteriors intact to use as shells for newly constructed buildings within the walls of the originals. In 2010, GSA learned the buildings lacked adequate foundations, and some were literally sinking into the ground.
In sum, GSA has spent $305 million on "adaptive re-use," or, in other words, maintaining the historical facets of the buildings to conform to historical preservation requirements.
Meanwhile, there are portions of the site which are "restricted for development" due to historical and environmental concerns. GSA and DHS have also agreed other portions of the site - inside the secure perimeter - must remain open to the public.
The surrounding community will maintain access to the site, albeit on a limited and supervised basis, to visit a hilltop from which community members traditionally watch Fourth of July fireworks, visit the cemetery on site, and use an auditorium.
If there were not enough problems with the physical site itself, DHS has also spent significant sums recreating the interior architecture down to the crown moldings, carvings, and other intricacies of interior design.
The decision to use St. Elizabeths Hospital, in light of all these concerns, becomes even more starkly acute when one considers DHS and GSA considered roughly 12 other sites for their headquarters, instead choosing a site with historical, environmental, and geological issues.
Even worse?
After investing so exorbitant a sum on adaptive re-use, GSA and DHS are reportedly largely chucking the model and "proposing to demolish at least five of the historic buildings."
Though certain components of DHS, such as the Coast Guard's headquarters and the Office of the Secretary of Homeland Security have finally transferred there, the American people are expected to spend millions more in a project that has become a textbook example of poor government planning - and that is now projected to last until 2026.