Only in America could the head of the public prison system who retired in shame for breaking the law himself move onto a sinecure in the private prison industry. But that appears to be what Harley Lappin has done.

Mind you, both Lappin and the Bureau of Prisons claim that Lappin’s arrest for DUI had no connection with his retirement in March.

The director of the federal Bureau of Prisons has apologized to his staff for a February DUI arrest, which came to light after his announcement last Friday that he was retiring.

Harley Lappin had made no mention in his retirement statement Friday about his brush with the law in Annapolis, Maryland, after 3 a.m. on February 26.

[snip]

BOP spokeswoman Traci Billingsley said Lappin had decided “some months ago” to retire in the spring of 2011 and that his scheduled retirement date of May 7 has not changed.

That may well be true: after all, Lappin spent less than a month in retirement before joining the Corrections Corporation of America as Vice President. (h/t G.W. Schulz)

CCA (Corrections Corporation of America) (NYSE: CXW), America’s leader in partnership corrections, announced that effective June 1, 2011, Harley G. Lappin, 55, shall serve as Executive Vice President and Chief Corrections Officer (CCO). In this role, Mr. Lappin will be responsible for the oversight of facility operations, health services, inmate rehabilitation programs, purchasing and TransCor, the Company’s wholly-owned transportation subsidiary. He succeeds Richard P. Seiter, who announced his decision to step down as CCO earlier this year, effective May 31, 2011.

The timing sort of suggests that Lappin had no intention of retiring, but instead planned all along on joining the private prison industry.

Even if it weren’t for the fact that no one imprisons as many people as the United States, this seems like a remarkably American fairy tale, not just the move from a public position of trust to a capitalist position of exploitation, but the public fall as well.