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To: hellinahandcart
A huge dent could be put in the rate of prison murders and rapes simply by having all cells and common areas under constant and thorough video surveillance.

I think that would be a fine idea. Except...most prisons house so many inmates that the cost would be overwhelming. Consider Soledad Prison in California, with over 7,000 inmates housed in three seperate facilities. 3,000 inmates are housed in the central facility alone, mostly in two man cells. It would take well over 1500 cameras just to cover the cells in this one facility, not to mention the common areas, which at CTF Soledad can cover several acres within the perimiter fence, and hundreds of acres outside the fence.

CTF Soledad http://www.corr.ca.gov/InstitutionsDiv/INSTDIV/facilities/fac_prison_CTF.asp

16 posted on 08/25/2003 4:28:49 AM PDT by snodog
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To: snodog
Yeah, well, lawsuits are pretty expensive too.

And it simply isn't right to allow people to be raped and murdered in prison.

But like a lot of people, I find myself with no sympathy for Geoghan. He was a monster. People are cheering vigilante justice because real justice is no longer being dispensed. That's the problem. If the law won't do it, others will step up to the plate. It's a shame, but it's also inevitable.

19 posted on 08/25/2003 4:38:47 AM PDT by hellinahandcart (Shnel hs bhe firef po!)
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To: snodog
This morning's stories about Goeghan's murder from the Boston papers:

Boston Herald:

Prison launches probe of murder: Geoghan was strangled with sheet, stomped

by Eric Convey and Robin Washington
Monday, August 25, 2003

State prison officials coming under harsh criticism yesterday launched an intensive internal investigation to find out how a neo-Nazi lifer was able to allegedly beat, stomp and strangle the state's most notorious pedophile inmate in a secure isolation unit.

Department of Correction investigators are ``determining what went wrong . . . if any system in place functioned improperly,'' said David Shaw, a spokesman for the state Executive Office of Public Safety, which oversees prisons.

Defrocked pedophile priest John J. Geoghan was found strangled and beaten to death Saturday despite extensive precautions to protect him. An autopsy is scheduled for today.

Inmate Joseph L. Druce, a 37-year-old former junkie, convicted murderer and neo-Nazi, was put into segregation shortly afterward.

Druce followed Geoghan into his cell after lunch, tied the defrocked priest's hands behind his back and stuffed a sheet in his mouth before strangling him with the same sheet, Robert Brouillette, business agent with the Massachusetts Correction Officers Federated Union, told the Washington Post. He then repeatedly jumped from the bed onto Geoghan and beat him with his fists.

Brouillette, who interviewed several guards Saturday, said Druce followed Geoghan into his cell just after noon when inmates are allowed to return lunch trays to a common area. Just one guard was on duty in the unit at the time, Brouillette said. Druce jammed the door so it could not be opened by guards electronically. It took several guards to pry open the door once they heard the ruckus.

The DOC declined comment on the union account.

While the DOC investigates security failings that allowed the attack on Geoghan, state police assigned to Worcester District Attorney John Conte's office are conducting the murder probe.

With simultaneous investigations under way, the head of a self-described watchdog group called for an external probe led by the FBI or U.S. Attorney's office.

Leslie Walker, executive director of Massachusetts Correctional Legal Services, described Geoghan as ``a frail, slight, short old man'' who should have been better protected by prison officials.

``I'm horrified and saddened that anyone in state custody would be murdered in this way . . . The fact that he was allowed to be murdered is unconscionable,'' she said.

Walker, who interviewed Geoghan recently to check on his condition, said he ``was terrified the whole time he was in prison.''

But his fears subsided somewhat when he moved into a new special unit at Shirley's Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center, she said.

``He was much happier there and felt safer . . . he clearly was happier there because he was safer,'' she said.

Gov. Mitt Romney was due to return last night from an out-of-state trip and receive a briefing on the Geoghan killing today, spokesman Eric Fehrstrom said.

Criminal justice experts said any investigation has to be broad.

``The focus of the investigation should be on whether the security failure was accidental or intentional, and whether the perpetrator bears full responsibility of what happened or whether he was aided by the actions or negligence of others,'' said Northeastern University criminal justice professor James Alan Fox.

Because Druce, who changed his name in prison from Darrin Smiledge, was already serving a life sentence with no chance of parole, Fox noted he would have nothing to lose by killing the former priest.

``Given the fact that Geoghan was an individual that is disdained it's not inconceivable that someone else could have hired him,'' he said.

The unit where Geoghan was strangled and beaten to death was created especially for prisoners considered to be at risk of harm from fellow inmates.

Inmates there spend 21 hours a day in their private cells, said Walker.

The DOC's Web site says it was built to meet ``the need to provide maximum external and internal control.''

``Supervision of inmates is direct and constant,'' the Web site states.

But experts say there is no way to assure safety every minute of the day.

``It only takes a split second to strangle someone. A guard turns his back and it happens,'' said Jack Levin, director of the Brudnick Center on Violence at Northeastern University. ``Keep in mind the people in the protective custody unit are the worst of the worst.''

Fox agreed, saying the candidates for protective custody represent a wide range of felons who may not all be segregated for the same reasons.

``Obviously, Geoghan was a prime target and a triple whammy as a pedophile, a gay man and a priest who had violated the trust placed in him. Added to that, he was a high-profile offender,'' Fox said.

At the Shirley facility, only 24 prisoners were in the special unit that has a capacity of 64 prisoners, Walker said.

Walker, who has sued the DOC on behalf of inmates, chided prison officials for failing to disclose more information on Geoghan's killing over the weekend.

``They have tapes of everything. If they chose to, they could reveal more information, like where the murder occurred, who the witnesses are,'' she said.

Kelly Nantell, a DOC spokeswoman, said the agency was withholding much of the information because ``we don't want to compromise the investigation.''

Boston Globe:

Geoghan was tied, beaten, officials say

Attacker struck when guard was distracted

Defrocked priest John J. Geoghan was bound, gagged, strangled, and stomped by a fellow inmate who followed the notorious child molester into a cell Saturday afternoon while one prison guard was distracted with other prisoners and another officer was temporarily away from the area, according to correctional officer union officials.

The fellow inmate, Joseph L. Druce, then jumped from Geoghan's bed onto Geoghan's chest at least twice, the officials said.

"An officer heard a noise, went over to the cell, and he saw Geoghan on the floor, gagged and tied," said Robert W. Brouillette, business agent for a 5,000-member corrrectional officer union. "Druce was standing on the bunk."

Brouillette's account of the attack comes from correctional officers who work at the Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center.

Geoghan, hands tied behind his back, was strangled with either one of his T-shirts or a bed sheet, and beaten, Brouillette said.

Druce used one of Geoghan's shoes or sneakers to tighten the sheet or shirt, another union official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said. "He twisted the shoe to tighten the ligature around Geoghan's neck," the official said. "It all happened in a matter of minutes."

Brouillette said six or seven guards, alerted by a commotion in the cell, rushed to the scene but were unable to immediately open Geoghan's cell because, he said, Druce had jammed it from inside, perhaps with a stick.

Brouillette said there is no video surveillance inside the inmates' cells.

Union officials said inmates had finished their lunch, eaten on trays in their cells. The inmates had returned their trays to a common collection area outside their cells, when Druce trailed Geoghan and pounced on him in his quarters, the officials said.

One official said Druce had been closely following the unit's staffing patterns the last three months, apparently in an effort to strike when staffing levels were at their barest minimum. "These guys have nothing better to do 24 hours a day than to watch what you do and how you do it," said Brouillette, who represents the Massachusetts Correctional Officers Federated Union.

Union officials yesterday said they have complained about inadequate staffing levels in the protective custody unit, which opened earlier this year. The area where the attack took place is typically patrolled by two correctional officers, but during Geoghan's assault, one officer was assigned to monitor lunch activities elsewhere, one of the officials said. The union had been seeking to have three officers on duty.

Kelly Nantel, the state Department of Correction public affairs director, yesterday declined to give any description of the attack.

The details about the assault came as state officials struggled to explain how a serial pedophile could have been left alone with an inmate convicted of a "gay-bashing" murder.

Prisoner rights activists yesterday called for an independent probe into Geoghan's strangulation death inside Massachusetts' most modern and secure prison.

Nantel acknowledged there are 366 surveillance cameras at the Souza-Baranowski facility, which straddles the town line between Shirley, which is in Middlesex County, and Lancaster, which is in Worcester County. She would not say whether Saturday's attack, or the events that led up to it, was captured on videotape.

"There are significant video capabilities in the facility," Nantel said.

Geoghan, whose serial child molestation offenses helped to ignite the roiling scandal in the Catholic Church, was housed in a unit away from the prison's general population with inmates deemed not to pose a threat to him, Nantel said.

The state is investigating how officials could have allowed Geoghan, 68, to share the same prison space as his alleged killer -- the 37-year-old Druce, a convicted murderer with a white supremacist past and an apparent disdain for homosexuals. Geoghan was accused of molesting about 150 children, mostly boys.

Nantel said the correction department's policy is to keep any two inmates with a documented history of antagonism apart, even if that means allowing only one into the protective custody unit.

But prisoner rights leaders said Geoghan's slaying should be the focus of an independent probe, declaring the state Department of Correction incapable of policing itself.

"Everybody in prison knows that prisoners who have attacked children are hated," said Joshua Rubenstein, Northeast regional director of Amnesty International. "Mr. Geoghan was sentenced to a long jail term. He was not sentenced to be beaten or murdered by another inmate."

Rubenstein and Leslie Walker, executive director of Massachusetts Correctional Legal Services, said federal investigators such as the FBI or the US attorney's office should open an investigation independent of those begun by the DOC and Worcester County District Attorney John J. Conte.

"Let's face it," said Walker. "They screwed up. This was a skinny old man that they allowed to be murdered on their watch and in our name."

As the head of a statewide nonprofit law office for prisoners, Walker said she visited Geoghan at Souza-Baranowski in April just after he became one of the first inmates at the new protective custody unit there following his transfer from the state prison in Concord.

"He was very relieved to be at Souza-Baranowski," Walker said of Geoghan. "He told me he felt safe there."

As an inmate in the maximum security prison's protective custody unit, Geoghan was locked alone in a cell secured by a wooden door with a window cut into it except for the roughly three hours a day he was allowed out of his cell. State prison regulations require correctional officers to make rounds at least every 30 minutes.

Nantel said corrections officials are prepared to make changes in procedures, if necessary, to protect inmates. She declined to answer questions about why Druce and Geoghan shared a common area, other than to say that prison officials assign all inmates who might be in danger to the small, well-monitored unit known as protective custody where both Geoghan and Druce were housed.

Inside protective custody, however, the inmates are in regular contact with fellow prisoners also considered at risk, she said.

"Inmates in protective custody are not isolated from all others," the DOC spokeswoman said. "They do get out of their cells and have contact with others in protective custody."

Inmates in protective custody share recreational facilities, access to telephones, and a visitor area, she said. The number of inmates they come into contact with is vastly lower than in the general population. When Geoghan was killed, there were 24 inmates in the protective custody unit, compared with 1,200 in the general population.

Nantel said the Department of Correction considers the safety of inmates on a case-by-case basis. While the nature of an inmate's offense might be taken into consideration, there is no general rule for the security of all inmates convicted of a particular type of crime, such as child molestation, she said.

"We don't assess the safety of all inmates by a category of offense," she said. "The process is to identify anyone who may be at risk and house them where their safety can be assured. I don't want to get into a particular offense as being more risky or more susceptible. The bottom line is the safety of all."

A prisoner cannot be assigned to the protective custody unit simply by requesting it, she said. "There has to be a documented history of an enemy situation, for example, or some particular notoriety," she said.

In Druce's case, he was an admitted neo-Nazi who was in prison for a crime that mirrored the attack on Geoghan. He strangled a 51-year-old man in 1988, after driving him to a wooded area. Police said Druce apparently believed his victim was gay. A police officer who investigated the murder said Druce "viewed it as a gay bashing."

Dana Smiledge of Byfield, Druce's father, has said his son has a longstanding grudge against homosexuals, in addition to a hatred of blacks and Jews.

The $105 million Souza-Baranowski facility opened in 1998. Prisoner rights advocates have said that since the prison's opening there have been persistent complaints of inmate mistreatment.

"What we have heard is that when one prisoner attacks another prisoner, the guards do nothing," Walker said. "They stand and wait until it's over."

Nantel, the DOC spokeswoman, dismissed that characterization of prison disturbance protocol. "That is not the policy. The policy is to intervene when it's safe to do so," she said.

Walker, the legal services director, said during her April visit with Geoghan, he realized that he was a potential target in prison. "We talked about how difficult it was for him being such a notorious client," Walker said. "He was aware of his notoriety."

Geoghan's old assignment to Concord's protective custody unit was considered too porous, according to James Pingeon, a lawyer with Massachusetts Correctional Services. "There were serious security concerns with the protective custody unit at Concord because of contact with the general population," he said. "My sense is that the situation at Souza-Baranowski was better."

Walker and Pingeon said Geoghan believed his food at Concord was being fouled before it reached him. "He suffered a lot of abuse at the hands of inmates and guards," said Pingeon.

Stuart Grassian, a Newton psychiatrist who has written about prison life, said officials should have realized Geoghan was an obvious target for violence and done more to prevent him from coming in contact with Druce. "The risk to him was fairly obvious," Grassian said, noting that inmates in all prisons maintain an aggressive social pecking order that shunts pedophiles to the lowest rung.

Conte, the Worcester County district attorney, did not return telephone calls yesterday. An autopsy on Geoghan is scheduled to be performed today. A Worcester County grand jury will hear the case against Druce in September.

Michael S. Rosenwald and Michael Rezendes of the Globe staff and Globe correspondents John McElhenny and Ron DePasquale contributed to this report. Thomas Farragher can be reached at farragher@globe.com.


24 posted on 08/25/2003 4:50:57 AM PDT by Catspaw
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