Nationwide, prison staff are the accused perpetrators in half of all reports of sexual abuse in prisons and jails
From “Preying on Texas Prisoners: When Guards Demand Sex” by Alysia Santo, The Marshall Project, June 17, 2015:
In Texas, sexual contact between staff and inmates is a state jail felony, punishable by up to two years in prison, but it is rare for prison staff there to be imprisoned for sexually abusing the people in their charge. Since 2000, the state prison system’s inspector general has referred nearly 400 cases of staff sex crimes against inmates to prosecutors. An analysis by The Marshall Project found that prosecutors refused to pursue almost half of those cases. Of 126 prison workers, mostly correctional officers, convicted of sexual misconduct or assault, just nine were sentenced to serve time in state jail. The majority of the rest received fines ranging from $200 to $4,000 and a few years on a type of probation called deferred adjudication, which results in a clean criminal record if conditions are met.
Texas leads the nation in prison sex abuse. In federal surveys of inmates, Texas has had more facilities deemed “high rate” for sexual abuse than any other state, leading the Dallas Observer to declare Texas the “prison rape capital of the U.S.”
Nationwide, prison staff are the accused perpetrators in half of all reports of sexual abuse in prisons and jails, according to the latest justice department survey, which broadly defines any sexual contact, from unwanted touching to romantic relationships to rape, as “staff sexual misconduct.” Most of these allegations are not substantiated by prison investigators. But even when there is enough evidence to prove a staff member had sexual contact with an inmate, criminal sanctions are rare. Fewer than half are referred for prosecution.
Accountability dwindles further from there. Proving sex abuse in prisons is difficult. An inmate’s word may hold little credibility, and prosecutors often refuse to prosecute. The most common punishment for corrections staffers caught sexually abusing inmates is the loss of their jobs.
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Texas, the capital of capital punishment - Texas proud! The prison rape capital – not so proud!
5 comments:
Maybe if Texas paid their staff better they could afford to hire hookers like everybody else.
Texas correctional officers are severely under paid. They easily succumb to taking bribes and smuggling. Once they do so they belong to the inmate. They then comply to sexual demands. The prisoners make threaten to harm their families and can do so easily.
Texas Prisons are so corrupt, that several years ago the head of the criminal justice committee, Senator John Whitmire received a phone call from a death row inmate on a smuggled cell phone!
If they can get a cell phone smuggled into death row, imagine what is happening in the entire system.
If TDCJ wants to stop it, they need to block all cell phone signals to state prisons. They can't because federal law prohibits it.
Anon, you may have missed the point. Nearly half the reported sexual assaults of inmates have been committed by prison staff members.
I think the vast majority of the female guards were unwilling participants. The inmates usually con them into breaking a rule for them, then they have them under their control.
Anyway, Texas is not going to correct it if it costs money.
Hell, Texas still doesn't air condition their prisons except for the staff offices. Believe me, it's a hot son of a bitch in there!
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