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Poison in the Lifeblood of the Nation The Consequences of the Police State
CORCORAN, CA-For seven years, the State of California turned a
blind eye to the deadliest prison in America, where 50 inmates
were wounded or shot dead by guards. Gov. Pete Wilson and the
man who wants to succeed him, Atty. Gen. Dan Lungren, finally
launched an examination of Corcoran State Prison that ended last
year. The result was a whitewash - a pair of investigations that
never probed any of the seven deaths or the other serious shootings,
The Times has found.
The Wilson administration blocked efforts to investigate brutality
by officers and mismanagement by top officials in the Department
of Corrections, according to investigators assigned to a special
corrections team. The agents said the powerful prison guard union,
which has contributed nearly $1 million to Wilson and Lungren
since 1989, was allowed to stymie almost every attempt to question
key officers about a range of alleged crimes at Corcoran. "The
union and the governor's office ran the investigation," said
Jim Connor, the corrections agent who supervised the team. "We
would try to question a witness, and the union was there blocking
us. The union even told us how many interviews we could do, and
our bosses in Sacramento backed them. This was no independent
inquiry. It was just a sham."
Top state officials deny any cover-up, each one pointing the finger
at another, although aides to both Wilson and Lungren now concede
that their administrations didn't do nearly enough to watch over
the nation's most violent prison. The union president declined
to talk. Tucked away in the middle of California's cotton fields,
this prison is where 43 inmates were wounded and seven were killed
by officers firing assault rifles from 1989 to 1995. While local
and state watchdogs looked the other way, rival gang members were
pitted against each other in human cockfights watched over by
guards - and then shot if they didn't stop fighting. But the
governor's point man on the 1997 probe ordered corrections investigators
to steer clear of the shootings and the policies sent down from
Sacramento that led to the violence, according to agents. Investigators
were told they could not compel key officers to talk about their
knowledge of any brutality or cover-ups, including firsthand accounts
that problem inmates were purposely locked into a cell and subjected
to repeated rapes by an inmate enforcer nicknamed the "Booty
Bandit."
The parallel investigation by the attorney general's office was
even more limited. Even though Wilson requested an expansive
probe, Lungren's office investigated only one case of alleged
brutality and possible cover-up by a union official. Lungren's
top investigator then took a higher-paying job with the Corrections
Department, the very agency he was assigned to investigate. Wilson
declined requests for an interview, but his top aides said they
were surprised to hear that agents were hamstrung in their attempts
to investigate the prison. "Was there a whitewash or cover-up
from the governor's office? No, absolutely not," said Sean
Walsh, Wilson's press secretary. "Was there a whitewash
or cover-up from the Department of Corrections?
This is
the first we've heard of a conspiracy or attempt to cover up."
(The German Iron Chancellor, Prince Bismarck, held that
no rumor was worth believing until it had been officially denied.
WFI Editor)
George Dunn, the governor's chief of staff, said The Times' findings
were "fresh and new and disappointing." Lungren defended
his investigation, saying any insinuation of a whitewash was "a
bunch of crap." When asked why his office had delved into
just a single case, he cited an FBI probe into civil rights abuses
at Corcoran that has been ongoing since 1994. (Instead, Lungren
was pre-occupied with nullifying the election results that enacted
legislation legalizing medical marijuana, to void the democratic
process in favor of the agenda of control of the police state.
WFI Editor) "We weren't going to duplicate
or interfere with what the feds were engaged in," Lungren
said. "It's a matter of not screwing up another investigation."
But federal authorities say their probe was focused on only one
shooting death and that there was a broad range of alleged misconduct
at Corcoran - enough to keep both state agents and the FBI busy.
The alleged abuses were first detailed in a 1996 Times article;
shortly after, Wilson and Lungren launched their investigations.
The Times has since obtained 10,000 pages of internal Corrections
reports and has interviewed dozens of guards, state investigators
and others whose insider accounts provide new and disturbing details
of Corcoran's violent breakdown and cover-ups. A three-month
Times investigation shows a pattern of neglect at every level
of the local and state bureaucracy responsible for overseeing
the San Joaquin Valley prison. From the day Corcoran opened in
1988, the escalating violence failed to set off alarms - not at
the district attorney's office, not at the Department of Corrections,
not at the attorney general's office or at the governor's office.
And when the Corrections Department and attorney general finally
did step in - seven years after the first death - their probes
were either so restricted or so toothless that it became virtually
impossible to ferret out wrongdoing. "I've been an investigator
for 10 years, and no one has ever told me before that I couldn't
pursue certain key leads," said Ben Eason, another supervisor
on the Corrections team. "If this was a search for the truth,
how can you establish those parameters?"
The twin state probes ended last year without criminal charges
being filed against a single officer. The Corrections team utilized
few, if any, investigative tools to compel officers to come forward
about reports of beatings, torture and staged fights between hand-picked
gladiators. Instead, they spend considerable manpower trying
to dig up dirt on whistle-blowers - the officers who had reported
brutality to the FBI, according to interviews and the internal
reports. In the end, state officials found only isolated incidents
of staff misconduct at Corcoran, even though a federal grand jury
in February charged eight officers with setting up fights for
"amusement and blood sport."
Federal prosecutors have taken the unusual step of accusing Corrections
officials and union representatives of trying to thwart the FBI
probe and cover up wrongdoing. In recent weeks, the FBI's investigation
has broadened with two federal grand juries weighing allegations
of obstruction of justice. "We wouldn't be doing this investigation
if the Department of Corrections had their own effective procedures
for doing an independent investigation," said James Maddock,
special agent in charge of the FBI's Sacramento office. State
Corrections officials also now concede that they should have paid
closer attention to a prison that mixes some of the most dangerous
inmates and gangs in California, a world where Charles Manson
and Sirhan Sirhan share quarters with an ingenious killer from
the Aryan Brotherhood and where mass murderer Juan Corona likes
to grow chili peppers near the main yard.
Corrections officials offer a variety of explanations for Corcoran's
troubles, blaming other agencies for tying their hands, blaming
predecessors for failing to do their jobs, blaming the societal
breakdown that has resulted in the largest prison buildup in U.S.
history. (The State of California spends more money on prisons
than schools, illustrating the cynical perspective held by the
State bureaucracy, regarding the people of California. WFI
Editor) For its part, the California Correctional Peace
Officers Assn. contends that it is ridiculous to believe that
officers at Corcoran engaged in a pattern of abuse that was covered
up with union help. Union President Don Novey did not respond
to requests for interviews over a two-month period.
In its Peacekeeper magazine and in public rallies with loyal politicians,
the union paints its mission simply as good guards walking the
toughest beat in the state, a beat filled with a new breed of
criminal, more animal than human. Union officials say the indicted
officers are victims of a sneaky and overzealous FBI that chooses
to believe the lies of these inmate predators. But federal authorities
see another Corcoran: good guards who did the right thing and
blew the whistle on bad guards brutalizing inmates. Only after
a handful of whistle-blowers went public, they point out, did
the Wilson administration and Corrections officials undertake
key policy and personnel changes at Corcoran - changes that have
stopped the deadly shootings.
"Since late 1995, there hasn't been a rifle fired at Corcoran,"
said Cal Terhune, Corrections director since 1997. "And
that's a phenomenal record." Although the prison has managed
to put a lid on the violence, it remains a volatile place with
many lessons for California. The anatomy of Corcoran's meltdown
raises questions about the state's ability to police its penitentiaries,
even as California is on the cusp of a second prison building
boom. If Corcoran received such scant oversight, then what kind
of scrutiny is now being afforded to other troubled prisons?
If a place like Corcoran didn't warrant high level questions and
intervention, critics say, then where? "The fact that no
one noticed seems to be the worst crime," said Catherine
Campbell, a Fresno attorney who has brought a civil rights lawsuit
against the state in a 1994 shooting death. "Corcoran was
given license to act out the worst impulses of our criminal justice
system."
FASCIST FOLLY: "ABSOLUTE CONTROL"
Even before Corcoran was conceived as a new model of "absolute
control," state officials were warned about the folly of
concentrating prison gangs inside one institution. The year was
1985, and Folsom State Prison was exploding with violence. In
a report to the Legislature in the midst of the crisis, former
San Quentin Deputy Warden Lewis Fudge traced Folsom's troubles
to the practice of forcing inmates side by side with sworn enemies.
"It is akin to forcing integration among the Catholics and
Protestants in Northern Ireland," Fudge said.
Every feature Fudge warned against, Corrections officials built
into the architecture of Corcoran. Past five guard towers and
through a dozen gates topped with razor wire stood a new prototype:
the Security Housing Unit, a prison within a prison for gang members
and others who refused to obey the system's tough hand. The SHU
was built on the premise that harmony inside California prisons
depended on walling off 1,500 or so of the most volatile offenders.
Its purpose was not unlike that of a toxic landfill, taking the
state's most dangerous chemicals and mixing them into one confined
chamber, hoping it wouldn't explode. "That's what we were
there for. We were going to take the garbage from everybody else,"
George Smith, who served as warden from 1992 to 1996, told state
agents.
Local and state watchdogs had every reason to be on high alert.
Corcoran was opening amid a decade-long construction boom that
saw California add 16 prisons to accommodate a rise in street
gangs and tougher sentencing laws. Veteran officers were hard
to come by. So nearly 70% of Corcoran's staff was fresh out of
the academy. Six weeks of training and suddenly they found themselves
staring down assassins for the Mexican Mafia, the Aryan Brotherhood,
the Black Guerrilla Family. Former Sgt. Paul Lytton recalled
that "the officers weren't ready. You had fresh staff, fresh
supervisors, a fresh facility, and the programs weren't even in
place. The only ones who had seniority were the inmates."
When it came time each day for SHU inmates to go to their respective
exercise yards - two at a time, 20 to a yard - the prison packed
bitter rivals into the same cramped concrete funnel. If a fight
broke out, a gunner stood overhead ready to stop it with wood
blocks from a 37-millimeter gas gun or bullets from a 9-millimeter
assault rifle. The bureaucratic rationale for mixing rival gangs
in the confines of Corcoran's SHU was that they needed to learn
to get along - an important first step to eventual return to the
larger prison setting. Although integration was never a written
policy, Corrections officials sounded at times like idealistic
social workers, talking up the virtues of a multihued prison society.
On the front lines, guards grumbled that the whole notion sounded
naïve, the idea that by sharing an exercise yard 10 hours
a week, enemy gangs would find a way to reverse a lifetime of
bad blood. "I don't really know where [the integration policy]
started," Smith told state agents last year. "I think
it sounded good if you said it real fast."
Internal memos and court declarations by Corrections officials
reveal a deeper purpose behind Corcoran's policy. Integration
didn't mean an exercise yard where different races got along.
Integration meant mixing Mexican American gang members from southern
California with Mexican American gang members from the north in
the same yard. Once there, prison code compelled them to fight.
By forcing such explosive combinations and cultivating an atmosphere
of fear, Corrections officials believed that the gangs would brutalize
each other into submission, according to internal memos and interviews
with SHU staffers. Integration, they said, would bust the gangs.
RATCHETING UP THE VIOLENCE TO UNPRECEDENTED LEVELS
The first month the SHU opened, the integrated yards broke out
in gang warfare. In a 1989 internal memo that offers a glimpse
into Corcoran's psychology, the administrator in charge of the
unit acknowledged the violence and then reiterated his support
for the mixed yards. "The integrated yards are doing just
exactly what they were intended to do," Associate Warden
Gary Lindsey wrote, "and the inmate gang structures are left
in confusion since they cannot get together."
Lindsey said his gunners were justified in resorting to the 9-millimeter
rifle for those inmates who had ignored verbal and woodblock warnings.
He said he understood the consequences of what he was advocating
- the serious injury or death of an inmate who carried on a fist-fight
too long. "Sooner or later, a shooting will occur which
will be questionable and an inmate seriously injured because he
was simply a participant in a physical altercation with no weapons."
Eight weeks later, the first body was wheeled out of Corcoran.
The next seven years would be a struggle between two forces:
a bureaucracy unwilling to admit that integration was tearing
the prison apart and the reality of the front lines where the
policy was causing deaths and injuries to inmates and severe emotional
trauma to some guards. In its first year, Corcoran tallied more
than 1,500 fights, 662 discharges of the gas guns, 47 discharges
of the carbine rifle, 204 injuries by either bullet or wood block,
and one death. Daniel McCarthy, the retired director of California
Corrections couldn't believe the numbers. The level of violence
was "absolutely the highest I have ever seen in any institution
anywhere in the country," he testified in one court case.
"That's totally unacceptable."
Corcoran conducted internal reviews of each shooting that ended
in death or injury. The guards always gave the same paradoxical
reason for resorting to deadly force: They were trying to stop
fights from turning deadly. In all but a few cases, internal
reports show, the inmates did not carry weapons or cause so much
as a swollen lip while brawling - important factors in determining
if deadly force was justified. In some instances, the wrong inmate
- the one complying with orders to stop fighting - was shot by
mistake. And yet each shooting was deemed justified by reviewers
in Sacramento.
Corcoran's response to the violence was to declare a "state
of emergency" in late 1989. Repeat fighters were removed
from the yards, their exercise time cut in half. In a memo to
Sacramento, then-Warden Bernie Aispuro pledged that the emergency
would remain in effect until the gangs "decided to coexist
peacefully on the integrated yards." A few Corcoran staffers
upset by the escalating violence complained to superiors. Corcoran's
troubles were temporary, not endemic, they were told. Things
would calm down shortly, as soon as the new prison in Pelican
Bay opened its own Security Housing Unit. The two would work
in tandem - the worst of Corcoran being used to fill up the North
Coast prison.
"We told Sacramento that integration wasn't going to work,"
said Lt. Jim Bolin. "We said, 'We've got inmates whose grandfathers
were enemies, and they're never going to get along - not in the
big real world and not in the little world of the SHU.' The response
that came down was we had no choice. Integration was mandated."
Compounding the problem, according to some younger officers,
was a group of veteran supervisors from San Quentin and Folsom
who set down a culture of "you're either with us or against
us." To prove their loyalty, rookie guards said, they were
called upon to help in acts of brutality. One rite of passage,
they said, was to play rough with inmates arriving from other
prisons, where they had assaulted staff or committed other offenses.
As the bus rolled to a stop, guards would don gloves and manhandle
inmates.
"We knew these were inmates who had done wrong," said
Roscoe Pondexter, a Security Housing Unit officer who was forced
to resign in 1996 for using excessive force. "We'd place
them in a chin hold, tell them look skyward, and any flinch to
the right or the left was reason to take them down. Whatever
force was necessary, we used. And all the while we're yelling
at them, 'Welcome to the Corcoran SHU! This is a hands-on institution.
You're in our house now. Whatever your life in prison was before,
it's over. Welcome to hell.'" (Wasn't there a Nazi guard
at a concentration camp accused of doing the same thing? WFI
Editor)
BLOOD SPORTS TO AMUSE THE GUARDS
In the spring and summer of 1990, hundreds of SHU inmates were
shipped on a "midnight express" to Pelican Bay. Corcoran's
best gladiators were gone, and the prison had bought a measure
of peace. But it was short-lived. A new batch of gangbangers
soon replaced them. From mid-1993 to mid-1994, Corcoran would
experience its most violent period - hundreds of fights that ended
in four shooting deaths and serious injuries to 15 others.
Every fight, every shooting, every injury and death was documented
and the paperwork shipped to Sacramento officials for review.
As part of the prison's emergency declaration, Corcoran was required
to report the fights and shootings to the attorney general's office.
But the state reacted to the growing violence with indifference.
David Tristan, the head of the Corrections institutions division,
said his review of the incident reports turned up nothing extraordinary.
He said he and other Corrections officials expected Corcoran
to be a dangerous place. Indeed, he said, the numbers were so
predictable that no one in an oversight position ever found it
necessary to visit Corcoran to interview staff about reducing
violence. (It's always a good idea to avoid the scene of a crime.
That's probably why Hitler never actually signed an order for
the Final Solution, and was never seen visiting any German prisons
either. WFI Editor)
"In my opinion, Corcoran was not out of control," Tristan
said in an interview. "Were we looking at the number of
shootings?
Yes. Does it appear that it was inordinate
as compared to the population?
My response would be 'No.'"
The King's County district attorney's office had successfully
prosecuted two lieutenants who delivered a Taser jolt to an inmate's
testicles in 1989 and engaged in a cover-up. But prosecutors
then retreated from Corcoran. Garry Gonsalves, district attorney
from 1987 to 1995, said he had neither the personnel nor the wherewithal
to break through the prison's code of silence. He said the guard's
union had told officers not to cooperate with his staff, and shunned
those who talked. (Under a legal government, a cover-up conducted
by guards to conceal a crime would constitute an obstruction of
justice, an extremely serious felony. WFI Editor)
"You have to understand, the prison was a zoo. We had to
be blind not to know something bad was going down. But to break
through all the lies, that takes a lot of work. That Taser case
nearly broke my staff, and it did break the officer who came forward.
You can't imagine the abuse and threats he took during the trial
from other guards. "But that still doesn't excuse what happened
out there and our role, or lack of it." As local and state
law enforcement agencies looked the other way, Corcoran turned
even more perverse, according to internal documents and insider
accounts. Many officers knew when a fight was coming. Word would
spread across the tier. Before releasing fighters to the yard,
they recited the rules. No weapons. No two on one. If one fighter
gets the best of the other, heed the call to stop.
Over time, former and current officers said, violence became such
a part of the landscape that supervisors would call the control
booth officer before a fight and ask for the names, race and prison
numbers of would-be fighters. "They wanted to get a head
start on the paperwork. Once we gave them the information, they
said, 'Send them out. Send out the fighters first,'" said
Richard Caruso, an officer who fired the gas gun 35 times to break
up fights, more than any other gunner. "Afterwards I'd huddle
with my sergeant and review the tape and then I'd write up the
report." Caruso, whose information helped initiate the FBI
probe, said no one feared an internal inquiry. That's because
the supervisor responsible for calling for an investigation was
the same supervisor who gave a green light to the fight.
One Corrections officer and union rep, Pio Cruz, released inmates
from their cells in an out-of-order fashion so he could pit one
skilled boxer against another. Cruz played the role of ring announcer
and gunner, transcripts of his administrative hearing show. He
was later dismissed, but the practice of staging fights had become
so ingrained that some officers devised a scheme to avoid getting
caught. They began moving rivals into cells next to each other
in the days before a fight, according to guards and inmates.
By stacking a tier with enemies, a fight was guaranteed without
having to release inmates to the yard in an out-of-order sequence.
So many fights took place on the second watch, from 6 a.m. to
2 p.m., that the atmosphere turned into a kind of gladiator day.
"The set-up fights didn't happen every day. They only happened
when the guards had a reason to create them," said Conrad
Harrell, a former SHU inmate whose declarations have become part
of a federal lawsuit against the state.
"I was written up six times for being in fights. Three of
the six fights were set up by guards. They would come to me and
criticize my performance. They would laugh at what had happened."
Several inmates sued the state in 1992 for staging scores of
fights involving the same rival boxers. In each case, the Corrections
Department was defended by the civil arm of Lungren's office.
"Had the [attorney general] taken a serious look at these
lawsuits and talked to officers and inmates about the integrated
yards, they might have been able to save Corcoran," said
Campbell, the attorney now suing the state in a 1994 shooting
death. "Instead, the attorney general tried to hide and
ignore the problem and dismiss these cases as frivolous."
Lungren, who like Wilson assumed office in 1991, said it wasn't
until 1996 that a pattern of inmate lawsuits raised serious questions
about Corcoran among his top staff. "We were averaging about
800 to 1,000 lawsuits per year by inmates. We ended up winning
99.9% of those
So the fact that I had a number of cases
with a number of allegations doesn't set off alarm bells."
As the violence continued to spike, a few SHU administrators
disobeyed Sacramento and segregated their yards into "get-along"
sections. The number of fights and shootings dropped. Then deputy
director Tristan found out and ordered integration to resume.
"Sacramento knew the level of violence," said Steve
Rigg, a former lieutenant who also cooperated with the FBI. "We
assumed that they would read the numbers and say something is
terribly wrong here and take appropriate corrective action. Instead,
we continued to bait inmates into fights and then shoot them for
throwing punches." (Clinically, to bait someone into behavior
that is immediately the cause of punitive action, is sadism. WFI
Editor)
MURDER ON VIDEO
Whether the fight that led to Corcoran's first shooting death
was a form of baiting or staging is hard to say. Even though
William Martinez and Pedro Lomelli had signed forms pledging they
had no known enemies in their SHU quarters, everyone on the tier
knew this was a lie. Bad blood ran between the gang veterans,
if only by virtue of geography. Martinez was an armed robber
from Oakland and Lomelli came from Los Angeles, and two weeks
earlier they had stood toe to toe in the same yard. This time,
the 30-year-old Martinez was getting the best of Lomelli. A camera
set atop the SHU yard captured 13 seconds of bloodless fisticuffs.
Martinez knocked Lomelli to the ground, delivered a single kick
and then walked away. The gunner manning the control booth had
already fired wood blocks as a warning when he chambered his rifle
with a special bullet, one designed not to ricochet but to explode
like a land mine inside the body. The fight appeared to be over,
and Martinez stood a few feet from Lomelli when the shot rang
out, the video showed. He was shot in the back.
The state review panel judging the fatal shooting was made up
of four Corcoran supervisors. They included Associate Warden
Lindsey, a defender of the integrated yard and weapons practices.
The gunner's report said that Martinez was kicking Lomelli when
he was shot, which is contradicted by the prison's video. The
board exonerated the gunner, finding that Lomelli faced imminent
great bodily harm, even though Martinez had ceased fighting.
Corrections officials responded to the death of Martinez by encouraging
the use of wood blocks over bullets. But otherwise, Sacramento
left unchanged a shooting policy that kept gunners in a perpetual
state of confusion, unsure about what level of harm needed to
be present to trigger deadly force.
Over a five-year span, six more inmates would be shot dead in
much the same way. Not one of the fighters carried a weapon.
During one review hearing, board members asked so few questions
of the gunner that they never mentioned a prior report showing
that he had shot and paralyzed another inmate only months earlier
- without firing a warning. The troubles at Corcoran remained
so obscure that when George Smith came before a state Senate committee
to be confirmed as warden in January 1994, he was asked just one
question: What do you regard as the most pressing problem facing
the prison system in the next five years? He responded, "overcrowding
tuberculosis, AIDS." Out of sight and out of mind, Corcoran
had quietly become the deadliest prison in America.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA HAS PUBLIC RELATIONS PROBLEM
In the fall of 1996, after stories in The Los Angeles Times and
by CBS' "60 Minutes," Wilson had heard enough. His
staff met with then-Corrections Director James Gomez and devised
a plan. Corcoran would be the focus of a pair of investigations
by the Corrections Department and the attorney general. By this
time, two FBI agents had spent two years boring deep inside Corcoran.
The focus of the federal grand jury was the 1994 shooting death
of inmate Preston Tate, a 25-year-old gang member from Los Angeles.
The gunner said he was trying to protect Tate from the blows
of a rival and shot him by mistake.
In announcing the twin probes, state officials knew they had a
public relations problem. (Somehow, it got past this brain trust
that what they really had was a human rights problem.
WFI Editor) How to explain the lag behind the FBI,
if not the seven years of inertia? State officials said it was
out of deference to the federal probe that they hadn't investigated
two years sooner. Now the statute of limitations on prosecuting
any crimes of brutality was running out, and the state needed
to move in headlong. "We were coming into this thing 30
months after the fact," said investigator Eason, who helped
supervise the 15-member Corrections team. "The FBI has been
there, the federal grand jury, Kings County D.A., and now all
of a sudden we're going in?"
Eason said he put aside his doubts and took the job out of respect
for Brian Parry, a longtime Corrections investigator who would
direct the team from Sacramento. Parry had chosen Jim Connor,
a Corrections investigator from southern California, to oversee
the team's day-to-day movements. But from day one, team members
said, it was clear that neither Parry nor Connor was in charge.
The man directing the probe was Del Pierce, a former head of
the Department of Motor Vehicles and trusted Wilson trouble-shooter
who had gone from political hot spot to hot spot. (Just to show
that expertise in one department of the police state is just as
useful in another unrelated department, because the final power
available to the state in all cases is that of police power.
WFI Editor)
"Brian chose the team but he never got to run it," Eason
said. "It was taken out of the hands of an investigator
and put into the hands of a political appointee." Corrections
investigators were not happy with the ground rules that Pierce
set down that first day. They would be limited largely to allegations
of staged fights detailed in a 1996 Times story. Agents could
not delve into any serious shootings or department policy, and
could not interview director Gomez or other higher-ups without
Pierce's permission, they said. They would have to wrap things
up in 60 days.
"We couldn't go here, and we couldn't go there," said
Connor, who supervised the team. "We couldn't touch the
shootings. We couldn't follow the leads. If a lead took you
to the ivory castle - someone high up in Corrections - that lead
was turned off by Pierce. None of his orders came down in writing.
Maybe I should have challenged Pierce and asked him for a memo.
But I was just a cog." Pierce confirmed that he focused
the probe on the newspaper allegations, but said he never told
investigators they couldn't pursue wrongdoing by top brass. "I
would never participate in an investigation in which we couldn't
turn over all the rocks," he said.
But Connor and other investigators were troubled by the presence
of Eddie Myers, who had huddled with Pierce that first day. As
deputy director of Corrections, Myers was the same official who
directly oversaw Corcoran during its most violent period. Investigators
were wary of Myers for another reason: He had made his feelings
about violence at Corcoran and the FBI probe clear, according
to a deposition by former warden Smith. He told SHU staff members
in a 1994 meeting that he backed them fully and didn't believe
the allegations of staged fights or other abuses.
GUARDS' UNION FLEXES MUSCLE
The investigators said they knew the role the guards union had
played in clamping down on past inquiries at Corcoran. They had
watched the union under president Novey ride the prison construction
wave, growing from a kind of social club into one of the more
powerful forces in the state, with a rank-and-file 27,000 strong.
Novey handed out much-coveted endorsements and sprinkled the
union's millions into campaigns statewide, giving $5.2 million
to candidates since 1987. That included $667,000 to Wilson and
$159,000 to Lungren in direct contributions. (Now every time
Lungren or Wilson suggest that a new category of crime be created,
the average person has to wonder, "What's in it for him?"
WFI Editor) In 1990, the union spent an additional
$760,000, mostly on ads targeting Wilson's opponent, Dianne Feinstein.
In 1997, the union spent more lobbying money than any other public
employees group in the state.
"They mobilize their members. They have a tendency at times
to bully people," said state Senator Richard G. Polanco (D-Los
Angeles). "Members up here get scared when the CCPOA starts
throwing their cards around." Investigators expected the
union to flex its muscle. They expected officers not to talk
unless granted a form of immunity called a Lybarger admonishment.
This immunity would make it difficult to then prosecute any officers.
So investigators devised a strategy to get around the union.
They said the key to making it work was the new warden, George
Galaza. The first officer who refused to talk would be marched
in front of Galaza and ordered to cooperate with investigators.
If the officer still refused, he would be charged with insubordination
and suspended.
Such a hard-line approach, it was reasoned, would send a clear
message to the union and every other officer walking the line
between cooperating with the team or not. "We had to draw
a line in the sand and say, 'If you don't cross it and come to
our side, your butt's in trouble,'" Connor said. As expected,
the union took its own tough stance. No officer would be compelled
to talk without immunity. No officer would talk without a union
representative present. Because only four union representatives
were at Corcoran, the union demanded that only four interviews
could be conducted at a time.
In the first days of the investigation, more than 90 officers
marched in and out of interviews without answering a single question.
Investigative reports show that some officers had agreed to talk,
only to change their minds when union counsel showed up. "I
lost track of how many officers came in and left without saying
a word," recalled investigator Linda Schulteis. Investigators
said they told Galaza the turning point had come. They needed
him to call in a few of the reluctant witnesses and order them
to talk. But investigators said they had barely made the request
to Galaza when they got a phone call from Sacramento.
It was Del Pierce, the governor's point man, reciting more ground
rules. No officers would be compelled to talk or punished for
staying quiet. Of those officers who agreed to talk, a union
representative would be present during every interview. Investigators
said they threw up their hands in frustration. The restrictions
were unprecedented. The department had blinked, and the union
had won. In effect, their probe was over before it had begun.
"We had a good team with good people running it and good
people down on the ground," said Bryan Neeley, a team member.
"But whoever in Sacramento made the decision not to compel
officers to talk made a big mistake. It muzzled the staff at
Corcoran, and we needed these guys to talk. We couldn't read
minds."
"The union was allowed to control the terms," Eason
said. "It became an exercise in futility." Pierce
said he too was frustrated by the restrictions. But he said it
was Gomez who made the call to limit the team. "He's the
director of the department." But Gomez pointed the finger
back at Pierce: "Del Pierce ran this investigation on a day-to-day
basis
At no time did I intentionally limit or restrict
any of the investigation." Gomez's account is supported
by Corrections team members. They say that during the probe Pierce
told them he was reporting back to the governor's office. "Someone
above Gomez was calling the shots," Connor said. "And
that someone allowed the union to run our investigation. This
all boils down to large campaign contributions."
The governor's top aides said the union never came to them to
influence the investigation. Pierce did brief them on how the
probe was unfolding, but at no time did he express any frustrations.
"When Pierce said the investigation was done, I said, 'Are
you happy with it?' He undoubtedly said yes," said chief
of staff Dunn. "He didn't share [frustrations] with me."
Investigators had one modest tool left to lure reluctant officers
to cooperate. But even that tool - giving selected officers immunity
- was taken away at the request of the attorney general's office.
State prosecutors thought that giving immunity could hamper their
criminal probe, they said.
Hobbled or not, the Corrections team trudged on, uncovering over
the next four months evidence to support allegations of beatings,
torture, missing reports and cover-ups by top Corcoran brass,
according to interviews and reports detailing their work. And
yet none of these cases resulted in criminal prosecution and only
a few led to administrative discipline. One promising case involved
a prisoner who confessed to investigators that he had raped inmate
troublemakers on behalf of staff, the documents show. The 6-foot-3-inch,
230 pound enforcer called the "Booty Bandit" told investigators
that as payment for the rapes and beatings he administered, he
was awarded privileges.
The enforcer talked of sexually assaulting one unruly inmate in
1993 at the behest of officers who moved the inmate into his cell
to teach him "how to do his time." Over the next 36
hours, the 120-pound inmate was repeatedly raped, according to
internal reports. The inmate said he pleaded with staff that
his life was in danger but that one guard laughed in his face.
(That guard is the embodiment of the republic. WFI Editor)
Investigators said they had a strong case of aiding and abetting
a felony against seven officers, but few would talk on the advice
of union representatives. When agents began approaching guards
at home, the union sent out fliers warning officers about a knock
on the door. "They muzzled most of our witnesses,"
Neeley said. Investigators still believed that the case was strong,
but Kings County District Attorney Greg Strickland said there
wasn't enough evidence to prosecute. Strickland was in a tough
position, agents said, already facing the union's wrath for pursuing
another brutality case.
Last month, Strickland was defeated by a challenger who had the
union's financial backing. The union blanketed the county with
a last-minute, $27,000 mailer that accused Strickland of being
in league with prison gangs. The state team "worked real
hard on the rape case, and it should have gone to the grand jury,"
said a source in the district attorney's office. "They have
to understand that the prison and the union are big forces in
this county." There was one area, however, where the state
team clearly had a green light - digging up dirt on officers working
with the FBI.
The team generated more than 1,000 pages of information regarding
whistle-blowers, including how one of the officers supposedly
shot and killed his neighbor's dog. Information about another
whistle-blower, Richard Caruso, was then passed on to the FBI
by Corrections deputy director Myers. Federal sources describe
Myers' letter offering the information as an obvious ploy to sour
their relationship with Caruso. Myers did not respond to requests
for an interview.
After spending more than $500,000 and employing 15 agents to canvass
the state, Corrections officials ended up investigating and disciplining
only one officer involved in a shooting. That officer was Caruso,
who was docked 90 days pay for firing wood blocks at an inmate
in 1993, a shooting that resulted in no injuries. "I think
it says a lot that out of 2,000 shootings [of wood blocks or bullets],
they investigate just one. Mine," Caruso said. "After
coming forward and losing my career as a Correctional officer,
the state launches an investigation and comes after me."
SADIST "GAMES" PROBED
There were no such cat-and-mouse games in the attorney general's
probe. State agents focused on a single case of alleged brutality
and cover-up - a June 1995 incident known as "Ninja Day."
The head of the attorney general's criminal division said he
made the call to limit the probe and that Lungren agreed. Chief
Deputy Atty. Gen. George Williamson acknowledged that his office
could have done a better job monitoring Corcoran. But he said
it was unfair to read anything sinister in the decision to narrow
the investigation. He said that decision came after conversations
with federal prosecutors, after which he concluded it would be
best not to complicate the FBI probe by pursuing the same witnesses.
"I knew they were looking at the Tate killing in particular.
And the impression I had was that the feds were looking broadly
at use-of-force concerns
So we decided not to duplicate
efforts." But Williamson agreed that at no time did federal
prosecutors tell his office to steer clear of Corcoran. Federal
authorities told The Los Angeles Times that their probe was "only
the tip of the iceberg." Said a federal source: "The
A.G. could have convened its own grand jury."
Lungren said he stood by Williamson's decision, calling him one
of the finest prosecutors in the state. Lungren said he would
welcome the guard union's endorsement in the governor's race,
but that he would not politicize an investigation to get it.
The union opposed Lungren in 1990 but supported his bid for attorney
general four years later. When asked if his office had ceded
authority to the federal government in matters involving a state
prison, Lungren said: "It's not a matter of ceding authority.
It is what we do often times."
The one case that Lungren's agents did pursue was first investigated
by the state Corrections team. The case dealt with a 1995 mock
fire drill involving scores of officers who donned ninja-like
uniforms and face masks and roused hundreds of half-naked inmates
from their cells. The prisoners were herded onto a patch of grass
under the hot sun. Several inmates were then kicked and beaten
by a squad of guards whose faces were covered and name tags removed,
according to interviews and investigative reports. Under the
direction of Lt. Francisco Rodriguez, black inmates were targeted
for particular abuse, including one inmate whose wrist was broken
and another who was allegedly beaten by Officer Francisco Galvadon,
reports show.
Galvadon was well known to Corcoran's brass, not only because
he had been the subject of numerous excessive force complaints
but because he looked like an inmate with his shaved head and
neck tattoos, documents show. Corrections investigators concluded
that the abuses occurred and were covered up by a group of officers,
including the union's chapter president, Rod Nason. Rodriguez
was demoted to officer, and disciplinary action is pending against
six others. Galvadon and Nason, who denied any wrongdoing, are
not among them.
The mock fire drill case was then passed on to the attorney general.
After spending more than 2,500 hours conducting its own probe,
the attorney general concluded that there wasn't enough evidence
to file criminal charges. State agents expressed the same lament
as the Corrections team: Nearly all of the officers contacted
declined to talk on the advice of the union. As part of its Corcoran
probe, the attorney general's office also reviewed paperwork but
never did a full-blown inquiry on another incident that took place
10 days later and involved a group of officers known as The Sharks.
Several Sharks - so called for their reputation to attack without
warning - teamed up with other officers and engaged in a mass
beating of black inmates arriving by bus from Calipatria Prison,
internal reports show. As the bus pulled in, dozens of guards
snapped into drill position and performed a half-hour of football-like
warmups and cheers. Wearing black gloves and tape over their
name tags, the officers grabbed shackled inmates one by one and
ran them through a gauntlet of fists, batons and combat boots.
One inmate was thrown through a window, another rammed into a
wall, witnesses said. (The fact that the officers put tape over
their name tags indicated that they were aware that what
they were about to do was illegal and actionable, and it was an
outright attempt to conceal their identities; the same
thing that motivated Klansmen to wear white sheets when they committed
a lynching. WFI Editor)
According to Corrections investigators, some of the Sharks weren't
even working that day but were called in as enforcement. They
said the incident was covered up with the help of a lieutenant
who manipulated time sheets to show that off-duty Sharks had worked
overtime that day. (So not only do they commit hate-crimes
against humanity, but they get paid time-and-a-half for it
too! WFI Editor) "I've seen guards beat inmates
but nothing ever like that," said Connie Foster, a former
Corcoran canteen operator who witnessed the incident. "I
couldn't watch it all. After it was over, I went to my car and
threw up."
Foster said no one from Corrections or the attorney general's
officer ever contacted her. Corrections officials disciplined
eight officers, including Associate Warden Bruce Farris. As the
attorney general's probe came to a close, the agent who headed
the effort took a higher-paying job with the Corrections Department.
Al Fox said there was no conflict of interest in taking a post
with the subject of his last investigation. "You're trying
to create a story where one doesn't exist," he said. "My
decision to come to Corrections had nothing to do with the Corcoran
investigation."
THE MOST VIOLENT PRISON IN THE UNITED STATES TODAY
For three years now, not a single rifle shot has echoed through
Corcoran. The calm is a kind of redemption for the officers who
blew the whistle and then had to leave their jobs because of threats
from fellow guards. Warden Smith, embittered by critics who nicknamed
him "Mushroom George" for his supposed preference to
be kept in the dark, is retired, though hardly chagrined. "Corcoran
was a very functional institution," he told state agents.
(So was Auschwitz. WFI Editor) "It was not
out of control. It was never out of control." (Of course,
guards concealing their identity, and subjecting inmates to brutality,
and then closing ranks to obstruct investigations, is run of the
mill business for American prisons. WFI Editor)
Gone too is Corrections director Gomez, appointed by Wilson to the state's public employees pension fund. His right-hand man, Eddie Myers, also has retired. The FBI is still inside Corcoran, investigating the rape case and the Calipatria bus incident. The eight officers already indicted are awaiting trial. The state is paying for their defense. After six years insisting that its integrated yard policy had no flaws, the Corrections Department has finally retreated. (Only after deaths took place. WFI Editor) Deputy director Tristan said he discovered only recently the level of concern and confusion at Corcoran. A new written policy allows for compatible gang members to exercise with each other. These are the same "get-along" yards that some Corcoran staff had instituted in the early 1990s - before several deaths and injuries - only to be told by Sacramento that they were illegal. "Apparently there was some confusion," Tristan said. "In 20-20 hindsight, we probably could have done a lot of things different." SOURCE: Reprinted from the 5 July, 1998, issue of the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Edition. Reprinted in the public service of the national interest of the American people.(WFI EDITOR: It is particularly horrifying the fact that the prisons are so brutal and sadistic. How can such an institution imbue inmates with a respect of law, when they can only expect to be treated as human garbage? Crime is terrible, but it will never be curbed when the guardians of the law violate it. Regardless of the crimes of any criminal, the state should NEVER lower itself down to the level of the criminal in the enforcement of law, or the criminal justice system. The crimes at Corcoran are truly symptomatic of a widespread problem that exists in all the state and federal prisons, which is a poison flowing in the blood of the veins of this nation. The cruelty of the street is started in these prisons, and flows onto the street as an after-effect. No American is well-served by a system of justice that allows and rewards systematic cruelty by any Correctional institution. The reports of cruelty and crimes at Corcoran underscore the very real nature of the republic as a police state, especially in the political way that the crimes of the guards was concealed. Only the dissolution of the republic will properly put these crimes in the past, and guarantee a future system of law enforcement that is capable of providing the American people with justice.)
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