Friday, September 07, 2012

PRISON FOR WOMEN IN KANSAS IS AN OUTRAGE


It is Prison Friday here at Scission and I thought I couldn't really just ignore a prisoner abuse story that is so close to home.

I live in Kansas City, Missouri.  I guess Topeka, Kansas is about sixty or so miles off to the west.  Topeka is the home of the Kansas prison for women and has long been the subject of some nasty charges.  A few years back the Topeka Capital Journal did a pretty good expose on what was happening there.  Of course, following the newspaper report there were investigations and all that.  The new ultra conservative governor, Sam Brownback, assured everyone all was well.

Seems he got that wrong.

Seems heads should roll.

Seems they won't.

Seems there ought to be lots of names added to the sex offender list.

Seems like no one much cares all that much.

Seems a shame.

The following articles are both from the Topeka Capital Journal.  The first is from yesterday,  and the second is from 2009.



DOJ: Topeka Correctional Facility violates inmates' rights


Investigation reveals inmates still subjected to sexual abuse

Posted: September 6, 2012 - 4:51pm

The Department of Justice said in a letter Thursday that inmates' rights are still being violated at the Topeka Correctional Facility.  2010 FILE PHOTOGRAPH/THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL
2010 FILE PHOTOGRAPH/THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL
The Department of Justice said in a letter Thursday that inmates' rights are still being violated at the Topeka Correctional Facility.

An investigation by the U.S. Justice Department made public Thursday contained findings of rampant, widespread sexual abuse at Topeka Correctional Facility among state employees and inmates in violation of the constitutional rights of women incarcerated at the facility.
The Justice Department's report to Gov. Sam Brownback declared Kansas Department of Corrections officials "still have not acted" to correct "repeatedly documented" misconduct and "grossly deficient systemic practices" at TCF despite a series of stories in The Topeka Capital-Journal in 2009 and two independent audits in 2010 pointing to employee-on-prisoner and prisoner-on-prisoner sexual abuse.
“Our investigation has revealed that multiple deficiencies in the operations of the Topeka Correctional Facility have exposed female prisoners to harm and the serious risk of harm,” said Thomas Perez, assistant attorney general for the civil rights division in Washington, D.C.
Federal investigators launched the inquiry in 2011 based on suspicion the array of problems surrounding sexual misconduct at the prison for women in East Topeka hadn’t been corrected by state officials.
"The women at TCF universally fear for their own safety," the Justice Department report says. "Yet, at the time of our visit, the problems persisted — KDOC and TCF leadership still have failed to adequately address the deficiencies."
If Kansas officials don't take remedial action in less than 50 days to address Eighth Amendment violations at the prison, the Justice Department issued notice of  intent to file a federal lawsuit to compel reform.
Sherriene Jones-Sontag, spokeswoman for Brownback, said the majority of malfeasance explored by the Justice Department occurred during the administration of Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. Upon taking office, the governor ordered his corrections secretary, Ray Roberts, to conduct a comprehensive review of TCF.
"Immense strides have been made by Secretary Roberts and the KDOC to correct the TCF deficiencies that began under Governor Kathleen Sebelius and were permitted to fester without sufficient attention until Governor Brownback took office," she said.
In addition to security upgrades recommended by outside auditors, Brownback requested additional state funding to improve recruitment and retention of personnel at TCF.
“We are confident that as DOJ gains a more complete picture of the situation at TCF as it exists today, it will become clear that the constitutional rights of TCF inmates are protected by the state of Kansas in the Brownback administration," Jones-Sontag said.
The Justice Department concluded:
■ TCF inmates "live in a highly charged sexual environment with notorious sex parties and public nudity" occurring with the permission of guards or due to lack of oversight by officers.
■ Federal investigators uncovered a "shocking digital recording of a recent prisoner-on-prisoner sexual assault that continued for approximately 45 minutes without intervention." Guards were neither in the building nor watching video monitors.
■ "Sexual misconduct by staff and prisoners is rampant throughout the facility," but inmates estimated one-third was consensual.
■ Inappropriate sexual behavior goes unreported due to flawed TCF staffing and supervision, a heightened fear of retaliation, a dysfunctional grievance system and weak investigative processes.
Barry Grissom, U.S. attorney for Kansas, said the federal prosecutor's office stood ready to work with state government officials to resolve glaring problems outlined by the department's investigators.
“The report has identified a very serious and troubling situation at the facility,” Grissom said. “Action needs to be taken immediately."
Since 2001, TCF has served as the lone state prison for women in Kansas. On average, more than 500 women ranging from work-release to maximum-security inmates are housed there.
The Capital-Journal's sex-abuse stories in 2009 detailed problems at the prison with impropriety among inmates and corrections officers, including a plumbing instructor charged with rape after an inmate became pregnant.
The stories described how inmates were driven in state vehicles by a corrections officer to a Topeka cemetery or other remote areas and forced to engage in sexual conduct. In June, Brownback and top legislators approved payment of $30,000  in state funding to a former inmate involved in these assaults.
Other stories in The Capital-Journal documented use by the state corrections department of inmate labor in abatement of cancer-causing asbestos from TCF buildings. The state was reprimanded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
In 2010, the National Institute of Corrections and the Kansas Legislative Post Audit Committee issued reports stipulating dangers faced by TCF prisoners in regard to sexual abuse. The 2010 Legislature amended Kansas law to increase the penalty for unlawful sexual relations between prison staff members and inmates. TCF's warden at that time was removed from his job.
Roberts, hired by Brownback as secretary of the Department of Corrections in 2011, vowed to correct inadequacies at TCF by installing more cameras at the prison and improving training standards.
Internal investigation operations were to be improved as TCF made "great strides" in reducing sexual misconduct, Roberts said.
"TCF will continue to make professionalism and zero tolerance for sexual misconduct a top priority," Roberts said days before the Justice Department launched its inquiry at the prison.
However, the Justice Department said findings of their investigation "mirror those found" two years ago by NIC and Kansas auditors.
Federal officials concluded TCF failed to employ routinely accepted correctional practices, including gender-responsive training of the staff. TCF had no early-warning system to identify problem employees or a method of tracking potential misconduct, the Justice Department said.
The department urged immediate implementation of a policy governing oversight of women inmates on work release or risk the certainty "abuse will continue to occur." The report recommended the number of female officers at TCF be increased.
Tim Carpenter can be reached at (785) 295-1158 or timothy.carpenter@cjonline.com.
Read Tim's blog.



Women's prison: Sex trade

Records detail employees taking liberties

Posted: October 3, 2009 - 10:35pm

 Back Next 
Two employees of the all-female Topeka Correctional Facility have been accused by the Kansas Department of Corrections of engaging in sex with inmates in the past two years. One inmate became pregnant. Questions also are being raised about the volume of contraband brought into the facility by prison workers.  <p>ANN WILLIAMSON/THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL</p>
ANN WILLIAMSON/THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL
Two employees of the all-female Topeka Correctional Facility have been accused by the Kansas Department of Corrections of engaging in sex with inmates in the past two years. One inmate became pregnant. Questions also are being raised about the volume of contraband brought into the facility by prison workers.

COMING MONDAY An inmate at the Topeka Correctional Facility undergoes an abortion after sex with a prison employee, who was charged with rape and other crimes.
Vocational plumbing instructor Anastacio "Ted" Gallardo's clandestine meeting with an inmate in a dusty storage building at the state women's prison in east Topeka was to be a simple exchange of cash for sex.
Instead, the encounter indirectly pulled back the cover of a complex black market at the Topeka Correctional Facility catering to inmates' demand for contraband -- tobacco, pharmaceuticals, illegal drugs -- and the willingness of prison employees to engage in trafficking to gratify financial or carnal appetites.
"I managed to get pretty much anything into that facility that you could think of through guards or drop-offs along the fence," said former inmate Kendra Barnes, who served nine years at TCF on aggravated burglary, theft and robbery convictions before paroled in late 2008. "Sex for drugs? Sure."
Interviews with current and former female prisoners, past and present corrections employees, lawyers, politicians and civil rights advocates as well as a review of hundreds of confidential or public documents related to activities at TCF, including a 150-page transcript of court hearings from the prosecution of Gallardo, point to a workplace culture at the state's lone prison for women that leaves the door open to misconduct.
TCF inmates and corrections officers say as many as one-third of the Topeka facility's 250 employees have at one time been involved in contraband activities with prisoners, but top administrators of the Kansas Department of Corrections say that percentage is inflated. DOC officials say a more realistic estimate is 2 percent of the 3,000 employees at the state's eight prisons.
The system of exchange involving contraband for personal favors demonstrates lack of respect for prisoners by corrections employees, said Kenneth Maggard, a former heating and air conditioning supervisor at TCF.
"Deep down inside," he said, "they view inmates as garbage. That's why they're not trying to clean this up."
Roger Werholtz, the state secretary of corrections, said such sweeping characterizations were reckless. Kansas isn't much different from other states when it comes to unethical behavior by staff and inmates, he said.
"It's an issue everywhere in the country," Werholtz said.
Gallardo, who admitted in court that he had brought tobacco and drugs to prisoners at the Topeka facility and had sex with at least one inmate, didn't approach this phenomenon in terms of a broad national debate about prison management.
His interest was personal.
The teacher had his eye on plumbing student Tracy Keith, a petite woman with dark hair incarcerated since 2006 for manufacturing methamphetamine in Johnson County.
Keith wasn't fresh fish. She knew the score at TCF. And she was broke. She was making $14 a month at a prison job. Cash makes life more tolerable in the bonds of the corrections department. Documents and interviews detail how an intermediary explained to Keith that Gallardo was prepared to deposit money in her prison bank account if she had sex with him. Keith agreed to oral sex, she said, but drew the line at intercourse.
This type of backroom commerce is both a felony under Kansas law and forbidden by prison rule, but Keith knew other female inmates had avoided detection while trading sexual favors for contraband smuggled onto prison grounds by Gallardo and others. There was little chance of getting caught, she reasoned, since Gallardo's job gave the instructor free run of the institution.
"It was going to be easy money," Keith said during an interview at the prison.
Threat
Immediately after lunch on Oct. 2, 2007, Gallardo slipped behind the wheel of one of the prison's work vehicles. He drove Keith and inmate Sandra McMillan, another prison vocational student in a covert business relationship with Gallardo, a short distance to the prison's old two-story stone gym. The building functioned as a storage facility. Gallardo's crew of inmates went there regularly to pick up plumbing supplies. The locale had the advantage of being outside the prison's perimeter fence. No security cameras to dodge. Fewer prying eyes capable of raising an alarm.
McMillan, who told investigators that she brokered the arrangement with Keith on behalf of Gallardo, stood guard.
Keith began to fulfill her part of the transaction. Gallardo insisted on more. Keith balked. That wasn't the deal, she said.
"My exact words were, 'Ted, I don't think this is a good idea,'" Keith said. "That's a no."
The 6-foot-2, 300-pound instructional supervisor dismissed the protest. He brought her to a standing position and pulled down her elastic-waist pants. It was over in seconds.
On the drive back from the gym, Gallardo said he had to be mindful of a practical problem. He announced to Keith and McMillan that he should better prepare for sexual encounters with inmates by hiding condoms at the prison's plumbing shop. Evidence contained in court records and accounts offered by people incarcerated at the prison or working in the facility indicates Gallardo had sex with three to six other female prisoners. Gallardo attempted to keep a lid on his on-the-job sideline. He was apprehensive word would leak to his wife. Two inmates enrolled in vocational classes said Gallardo threatened to harm anyone who broke their code of silence.
"In the classroom or the trade skills training room, he's the authority figure," said Jason Hart, a former Shawnee County prosecutor. "He's in an environment where he can directly interact with the inmates. He has the ability to impact their liberty."
Threats aside, the scheme orchestrated by Gallardo unraveled in extraordinary fashion.
Keith realized she was pregnant about 10 days after hooking up with Gallardo. He reacted by plotting to destroy evidence of his conduct.
In violation of state law, he smuggled morning-after pills to Keith. She took them, but it failed to terminate the pregnancy. Gallardo went to great lengths in an unsuccessful bid to obtain the abortion pill RU486, a highly regulated medication in the United States. He tried to secure the drug from an associate in Mexico and from a TCF inmate who said she trafficked regularly in pharmaceuticals procured from Bernard Megaffin, a registered sexual offender who had been stripped of his Kansas medical license years ago.
In desperation, Gallardo had an inmate stomp on Keith's stomach in an effort to induce a spontaneous miscarriage. It didn't work. Gallardo repeatedly implored Keith to let him sneak her out of the Topeka prison so they could make a run to an abortion clinic in Wichita or Kansas City. Keith declined. She didn't trust him. If caught outside the wire, she said, a lengthy sentence for escape was a certainty.
TCF Warden Richard Koerner scoffed at the idea Gallardo could have eluded detection while secretly transporting Keith by car 65 miles to the nearest abortion clinic.
The line
Gallardo, who declined an interview request, wasn't the only bad actor at the East Topeka prison to ignore the department's ethical code of conduct.
Koerner said the state agency referred to the Shawnee County District Attorney's Office another case against a corrections officer accused of "unlawful sexual relations" with a female inmate at TCF. District Attorney Chad Taylor declined in June to prosecute the officer because evidence didn't rise to the level required to file charges, a spokesman for Taylor said.
"He was allowed to resign," Koerner said.
Officially, the line between prison guard and prison inmate is wide. Inmates aren't supposed to know the first name of a corrections officer. They often do. The corrections department's code of ethics forbids attempts to "establish any form of personal relationship with an offender." The cold-shoulder philosophy is a security precaution to deny inmates avenues to manipulate guards and for corrections officers to coerce inmates. Still, personal relationships do develop.
Inmates caught crossing that line face erosion of "good-time" credits that shorten a sentence or the loss of other privileges. Employees caught violating TCF policies in the broad category of "undue familiarity" can be issued a warning, hit with a suspension, pressured to resign or fired. The more serious charge of "unlawful sexual relations" is an offense triggering dismissal and possible criminal prosecution.
TCF correctional officer Richard Short, a union leader at the prison, said some disciplinary cases brought against guards were ridiculous. He said corrections officers at the facility were being "held hostage" by inmates who know all allegations, even false claims, initiate internal investigations. He said the DOC reviewed charges in ways that intentionally turned officers against each other and weakened staff cohesion.
"They'll dig and dig and dig. Then they'll pick over the facts," Short said. "What is the biggest mistake of new employees? They're nice, civil."
Short, who has been suspended three times in seven years for violating policy regarding undue familiarity with prisoners, said zealous second-guessing of correction officers plays into the hands of inmates. He unsuccessfully disputed complaints that he "affectionately" stroked an inmate's ear, attempted to tape a prisoner's ponytail to a desk and gave a rose to inmates. None of those scenes was as bad as portrayed, he said.
"One of the reasons you have such a huge contraband issue is they allow inmates to make these complaints," said Short, who believes the steady threat of a DOC probe makes officers susceptible to pressure to break rules in an effort to appease prisoners.
Transgressions
Agency officials say the reality of past conduct among prison employees warrants vigilant investigation.
"What we want to do is stop sexual activity by employees with male and female inmates. Unfortunately, we've had situations involving both," said Charles Simmons, deputy secretary of the Department of Corrections.
At least eight instances of sexual misconduct at state prisons, including two at TCF, have been forwarded to prosecutors in the past three years, the corrections department says. Only three of those cases prompted criminal charges. Overall, at least three dozen prison employees were recommended for prosecution for crimes that include trafficking contraband, undue familiarity, aiding an escape, sexual battery and unlawful sexual conduct.
For corrections employees accused of infractions by their superiors, quitting is the easy escape. It quietly ties off the indiscretion in a confidential personnel file.
However, some corrections officers fight sanctions imposed by prison administrators.
These challenges of a personnel action, eventually, offer the public a glimpse of misplaced affection among staff members and inmates. Civil Service Board summaries of contested disciplinary actions against Topeka prison employees are reported four times a year to the Kansas Department of Administration. Names are redacted from reports, but each contains a brief summary of the personnel issue under review.
In January, an activities specialist assigned to oversee evening programs in the Topeka prison's gym decided instead to visit women in the facility's maximum-security living unit. He kissed or bit an inmate's hand. He allowed lewd behavior to occur between two inmates. He delivered fist bumps while socializing with prisoners. His firing was upheld by the state board.
The dismissal of a corporal, which is the introductory rank among corrections officers, was allowed to stand in 2006 after the guard was found to have permitted an inmate to telephone him at home 17 times, speaking for up to 30 minutes each time. He previously had been suspended for undue familiarity with an inmate. A sergeant was fired in 2003 for engaging in undue familiarity with an inmate after being warned three times to stay away from the same prisoner. Also in 2003, a TCF storekeeper specialist was sacked after a series of suspensions, including a seven-day sanction for bringing a camera into the prison and taking "inappropriate" photographs of inmates.
Pregnancy test
Back in Keith's cell, biological ramifications of her pregnancy continued to unfold. Uncertainty ate away at her. She agonized about when prison officials would learn of her condition. Keith was disappointed Gallardo never sent money as promised. She was bitter Gallardo turned the tables on her by insisting on intercourse.
She informed Gallardo she would not keep quiet about his involvement if prison or law enforcement officials started making inquiries. Gallardo confidently pushed aside the warning.
According to Keith, "He said: 'Nobody is going to believe you. You're an inmate.'"
Gallardo, who began work at the prison on Dec. 18, 2006, soon felt the walls closing in. Without serving notice, he quit showing up at his plumbing job at the prison a week after Halloween in 2007.
Gallardo's wife, Kari Johnson, said her husband had yet to confess to a fling with Keith or any other inmate at TCF. That heart-rending conversation did occur.
"He left the facility in November, so probably a few weeks later," said Johnson, who works for the Department of Corrections in a program to help offenders reintegrate into society.
Johnson's colleagues at the corrections department had been similarly clueless. TCF investigators had no idea of a cover-up until inmate Shari Bierman, serving a 25-year term from Wyandotte County for sadistically murdering her sister, tipped guards in mid-November that Keith was carrying a baby. Three people who were at the prison during this period said Bierman was motivated to share information about Keith's predicament because Bierman was a jilted former lover of Gallardo.
William Tabor, a top officer in TCF's internal investigation division, confronted Keith. He shoved across a table the informant's note, known in prison parlance as a Form 9. It said: "Give Tracy Keith a pregnancy test. It's Ted Gallardo's."
Keith, 35, could have refused to cooperate, but her womb would have eventually revealed its secret.
She identified Gallardo as the only person who could be the father. She provided information about Gallardo's method of bringing pouches of tobacco and other items to the prison in a lunch pail. She shared the names of other women involved in the enterprise. Keith was given a pregnancy test. It was positive.
Prison officials confiscated Keith's journal, which included details of her liaison with Gallardo. It has never been returned.
'Bad luck'
In the course of that interrogation, Keith said Tabor joked about the statistical improbability of getting pregnant from a solitary rendezvous with Gallardo.
"He said, 'Miss Keith, you have some really bad luck.'"
Lovisa Stannow, executive director of Just Detention International in Los Angeles, said the problem at TCF and other U.S. prisons went far beyond an unlucky roll of the reproductive dice. The corrosive edge of sexual abuse in penal institutions is fueled by simplistic attitudes about the power differential between inmates and employees, Stannow said.
"There is no consensual sex between staff and inmates because one of the parties literally holds the key," Stannow said. "At Just Detention International, we consider any sexual activity between staff and inmates to be sexual abuse."
Werholtz, the state corrections secretary, said "there's no doubt that people enter into consensual relationships," but he also views those alliances as "inappropriate."
Gallardo's attorney, John Fakhoury, of Topeka, said the sexual adventure involving his client was a consensual affair orchestrated by prisoners intent on blackmailing a naive prison employee into trafficking in contraband.
Stannow said shaping prison employee attitudes about sexual abuse and sexual harassment is a responsibility corrections department administrators must take seriously.
In Kansas, this issue has evolved slowly. It wasn't until 1994 that Kansas passed a law making it illegal for prison employees to have sex with inmates.
"Prison management has to set the right tone," Stannow said. "Sexual violence is rampant in prisons with poor management, inadequate policies and bad practices."
Sexual abuse is an under-reported crime in free society. Barriers to reporting incidents in prison are formidable. Complaints aren't always taken seriously by prison officials, inmates say. The women of TCF are convicted criminals. There are credibility issues. Corrections officers accused of wrongdoing have ample opportunity to retaliate against prisoners. Convincing local police to investigate is a challenge. Obtaining consent from prosecutors to file charges is another hurdle. Inmates frustrated by the justice system rarely have financial resources to bring civil lawsuits.
One national study by the U.S. Department of Justice indicated inmates anonymously revealed to federal surveyors the incidence of sexual assault in prison was 15 times greater than the frequency reflected in prison files.
In September, the justice department's inspector general reported sexual abuse of inmates by staff members in U.S. federal prisons had doubled over the previous eight years. The report found 257 cases were uncovered and referred for prosecution, but only 102 actually were prosecuted. The cases resulted in 83 convictions against prison employees.
Zero tolerance
Werholtz said the agency takes a hard line on sexual misconduct among its employees. He said each verifiable case is reported to the district or county attorney.
"We refer every time," he said. "We have terminated and prosecuted male staff for becoming sexually involved with male and female inmates."
The secretary said unsubstantiated assertions by manipulative inmates or disgruntled employees, depictions of prison life in popular culture and well-meaning government reports packed with anecdotal accounts of promiscuous behavior generate an exaggerated profile of correctional institutions.
At TCF, he said, existing employee training and coverage by more than 120 security cameras and listening devices are adequate to keep the majority of employees from falling prey to temptation.
Werholtz said the state prison system's minimum hiring age of 19 and minimum educational requirement of a high school diploma or a GED aren't contributing factors to the problem. He said informal studies in Kansas show veteran prison employees are just as likely to be caught up in banned activities as young and inexperienced staff members.
Still, Werholtz said any campaign to root out this behavior was bound to fall short.
"I'm sure there are things going on that we're not aware of," the secretary said.
Maggard, the one-time prison heating and air conditioning supervisor at the Topeka prison, said he worked with Gallardo at the prison and socialized with him after hours. He said the 30-year-old Gallardo had viewed his job as an opportunity to lead a modern-day harem among vocational students in the prison. It went on for months without detection by TCF staff, he said.
"Candy store, so to speak," Maggard said.
Maggard was accused in 2008 of trafficking contraband and obstructing the legal process. Both charges were dismissed in February, but the nine-year employee was fired. He said the department's claims against him were based on his pro-labor union activism and willingness to point out problems at TCF to his superiors.
Barnes, the former inmate from Reno County who said trafficking in contraband was relatively easy at the prison, said she believes dozens of prisoners had sex with staff members at TCF during her nine-year stay in prison. It wasn't difficult to discern which guards were interested in playing the field and which were in it to profit from the contraband economy, she said.
"It's very easy to spot," Barnes said. "Instantly."
Barnes said one current guard regularly delivered to her a prescription pain medication if she put on a skin show while changing clothes in her prison room.
She also said prison employees caught participating in the underground economy might be penalized or ignored.
"If the Department of Corrections has a reason to, as far as they don't like the guard, then they do," Barnes said. "If they like the guard or if the guard's family works there and is prominent there, nothing happens to them. It gets swept right under the rug."
Gallardo and Keith were drawn together in a web of deceit. This intersection of commerce and desire set off a series of events thrusting both into a spotlight neither craved. Their lives would never be the same.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

citizen I think they should get ride of male officers out of a womens prison. Temptation between inmate and officer is not cool, needwomen officers in a womans prison.

Anonymous said...

The rising system and employees who run kansas largest industries are like monkeys fuckingfoot balls.The so called rules are set up to work against the population and are only made up as they go along. If your so far beyond having a brain don't want an education can't get McDonald's to hire your unclothed uneducated worthless ads. Come to K D O C. It's really that bad and repeating what Lady bird Johnson wrote a Paul Harvey made famous is true. If you want to see the SCUM OF THE WORKING CLASS. just pile in the car and go to your local penitentiary at shift change. And the entire system is run that way to keep a revolving door . The local city's pay to have these blood suckers there. then matching county funds then matching state federal funds adding up to millions a year . So all this we arnt making money crap is exactly that.For peers sakes. We have a state that has prison endustries . So prisons arnt for none prophet and every time you turn around you find the dept of prisons mishandling funds. stealing from the till and making up some damn lie about why they had to laundry their own damn money from onenmade up bull shit program one after another. Its a shame that damn neat 25 percent of the populas ends up in prison every damn year. No damn wonder this isthe most moved out of state in the union.