Torture Pays Off at Pennies on the Dollar
By Pamela Clifton
The prison staff was warned by the inmates, hours, days, and weeks
prior to the explosion of anger on the prison yard that something bad was going
to happen. No one in charge did anything
about it. In July of 2004 a riot broke
out in prison owned by Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and it was
their fault that it happened. At least that’s what the end result of the lawsuit against CCA states.
In 1998, Dominion Corrections built a prison in Crowley
County, Colorado and started leasing space to Colorado to help with our
overflow of prisoners. Colorado didn’t
have enough prisoners to fill Crowley County Correctional Facility (CCCF) and Dominion
decided to backfill those empty beds with prisoners from Washington State. That decision didn’t go over too well with
the prisoners from Colorado or Washington and in 1999 there was a riot.
Dominion eventually backed out of their deal with Washington
State and those prisoners were returned home and CCCF was put up for sale and
purchased by CCA. CCA had big plans for their prison on the
plains of Eastern Colorado. First in
line was to increase capacity from 1,000 inmates to 1,800; although they weren’t
planning on adding additional recreation, security or programming, just beds. Two more housing units were constructed and
as soon as the first one was finished CCA was back on the phone with Washington
State. They signed a deal that would
move three hundred prisoners back to Colorado in batches of 100 at a time.
Attorney Bill Trine and former prisoner Vance Adams |
It was a recipe for disaster and disaster finally struck on
July 20, 2004 when a Corrections Officer ordered an 18 year old African
American man from Washington State to do something and the young man
refused. The CO body-slammed the kid,
handcuffed him and dragged him through the yard, in front of all of his fellow inmates
to place him in “the hole”. While still
in the yard, he resisted and the guards attacked the young man, pummeling and
kicking him in front of other inmates. Grumblings
started on the yard that morning, and the staff were informed, throughout that
day, that the Washington inmates were going to “go off”.
At 5:00 that night, the executive staff just went home. The Captain in charge held an impromptu
meeting in the yard control center for all the corrections staff that would be
working that night. Three officers asked
if they could just keep the prisoners locked down for the night until the
tensions were relieved and the Captain said that would be unnecessary and at
7:02 he released the prisoners to the yard.
On that night there were 1,122 inmates in the facility, and
they had access to two separate yards that weren’t separately secured from one
other. There were a total of 47
employees, eight of which were new hires to watch over that entire
population.
After being released to the yard, a group of Washington
inmates started to demand to speak with a supervisor. They wanted their
friend out of Segregation and they wanted their grievances to be heard. Since all the executive staff had left for
the day there wasn’t anyone there with the authority to do anything to help
them and the attitudes quickly escalated.
Documents and interviews obtained during the investigation prove that
the staff were untrained as to how to handle a disturbance. Guards were told by their superiors to
evacuate, from the yard and from their units.
Two officers were accidently left behind and they hid in a cell and a
female librarian was locked in the library with 37 inmates who did not
participate in the riot.
Mayhem was the next step.
The inmates started destroying everything that they could and it took
over three hours for DOC to even attempt to respond. During that time nineteen inmates were
brutally assaulted, and the shoddily-constructed prison was mangled. Fires were burning, windows were smashed, and
the units were rendered unusable because of the massive amounts of
destruction.
Nolin Renfrow, Director of Prisons for the Colorado
Department of Corrections at the time, called twice from the road on his way to
Crowley and asked the warden if they had deployed gas. The warden said that
they were waiting for confirmation from their head office in Tennessee that it
was okay to use the gas. That
confirmation never came. Special Operations
Response Teams (SORT) finally arrived by 10:30 but by then the damage to people
and property was extensive. SORT came in
and deployed rubber bullets and gas.
They didn’t attempt to figure out who was a rioter and who wasn’t and
they quickly subdued all the inmates.
That’s when the real terror began. The SORT team shackled every man in CCCF and
forced them to lie down in six inches of a mixture of sewage, blood and water,
and then they dragged them to the yard where they were forced to lie down for
nearly seven hours. Once the cuffs were
on, guards refused to loosen them or take them off. When people asked to be able to use the
bathroom, the guards stood them against the wall and forced them to urinate and
defecate on themselves because they would not loosen their shackles.
Afterwards, the prison was on lockdown status for nearly six
months. For the first thirty days no one was allowed to communicate with
anyone, the guards threw bologna sandwiches onto the floor of their cells for
meals, and they were only allowed out of the cell for an hour a day.
Vance Adams, a plaintiff named in the lawsuit, was in his
cell when the riot started. He was in
prison for drug related charges, but he had a special skill. Vance knew sign language. So he lived with an inmate who was deaf. This way Vance could communicate what was
going on during their daily routine. On
the night of the riot, SORT officer’s came into Vance’s cell and ordered them
both to the floor, Vance was hurriedly trying to communicate what the SORT team
wanted them to do but the guards took issue because they thought Vance was
taking too long and they kicked them both to the ground, face down in six
inches of sewage and then shackled them and drug them out to the yard. Vance was no longer able to communicate with
his cell mate because his hands were tied behind his back.
Vance was asked if he was satisfied with the outcome of the
lawsuit.
“I would have rather not got any money, they got away with
pennies on the dollar for what they did to us.
I would rather that CCA was forced to sell their prisons back to the
state of Colorado, the state is the one that should take care of their
prisoners, not the private prisons.”
Horrors like this played themselves out in the Crowley
prison for hundreds of people.
After eight years of litigation, a lawsuit brought by more
than 200 inmates injured in the July 2004 Crowley prison riot has been
settled. As a result of the overwhelming
evidence produced, CCA chose to settle the claims, rather than face the 25 week
jury trial scheduled to start in March of 2013.
Each inmate received a small sum depending on the extent of their
injuries. Total cost to CCA? Only $600,000. The smallest award was for $1200 and the
largest being about $17,000. With so
many plantiffs and no way to try each case separately, plaintiff's counsel chose to
accept the agreement as long as there was no confidentiality agreement, rather
than risk a mistrial or the years it would take to fight off appeals after they
won.
CCJRC is deeply grateful to Bill Trine and Trine &
Metcalf, P.C. for taking on this case and seeking justice for the people who
were traumatized at the hands of those who were contracted to watch over them.
1 comment:
Congratulations to all who persevered for 8 years. I live/work in the region with a CCA prison near Boise, Idaho, where some similar circumstances have occurred. Mr. Adams is right: get rid of the profit motive in holding people; compel the state to do what it should. Chuck Armsbury, www.november.org/
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