32 Prison Guards Fired in Florida Dpt. of Corrections for "massacre of inmates"

Oldgamer

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2013
3,280
1
0
Miami Herald News Link Here

To me it is unbelievable that none of these guards who tortured and killed this many inmates are not serving jail/prison time themselves. Wow...

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FILE--Florida Department of Corrections Secretary Michael Crews, shown in this July 10, 2014, file photo, fired more than 30 guards Friday, Sept. 19, 2014, in connection with inmate deaths.

Thirty-two guards with the Florida Department of Corrections were fired Friday afternoon in what union officials were calling a “Friday night massacre.” All were accused of criminal wrongdoing or misconduct in connection with the deaths of inmates at four state prisons.

One of them is Rollin Suttle Austin, the subject of a Miami Herald investigative report coming Sunday. The Herald has published a string of articles alleging brutality and corruption in the prison system.

Eighteen of those fired by Secretary Michael Crews were involved in the death of Matthew Walker at Charlotte Correctional Institution on April 11. Walker, 55, was killed in what the DOC is calling an “inappropriate use of force.”

Five other fired corrections officers from Union Correctional had been accused of using excessive force in the death of inmate Rudolf Rowe on Aug. 16, 2012.

Over the past several months, the Herald has dug through records involving the suspicious deaths of a variety of state inmates, including Randall Jordan-Aparo, a 27-year-old check forger who died at Franklin Correctional in September 2010.

Records show Austin ordered the gassing of Jordan-Aparo as the inmate pleaded to be taken to the hospital for a blood disorder that had flared up.

He died that night. The initial investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement said the gassing had nothing to do with Jordan-Aparo’s death. Austin remained on the job for three years, until a team of prison system inspectors visited Franklin to look into unrelated wrongdoing and stumbled onto the circumstances behind Jordan-Aparo’s death, calling it a case of “sadistic, retaliatory” behavior by guards.

When they reported their findings to their boss, Inspector General Jeffery Beasley, he allegedly told them he would “have their asses” if they didn’t back off.

The U.S. Department of Justice is now investigating Jordan-Aparo’s death, and FDLE is taking a second look.

In recent weeks, Crews has acknowledged that the department has failed to take action against corrections officers involved in inmate abuse. He directed his staff to review all cases in which corrections officers had been placed on paid leave following possible criminal wrongdoing.

All of those who were dismissed had been on paid leave.

“I’ve made it clear that there is zero tolerance for corruption or abuse,” Crews said in a statement Friday. “We continue to root out any and all bad actors who do not live up to our expectations.”

However, the Teamsters Union that represents the officers said Friday’s “massacre” was conducted without due process. Many of the officers, the union official said, were following protocols set forth by their bosses, who have not been held accountable.

“The procedure they were following in Charlotte was well known and condoned by the warden,” Teamsters spokesman Bill Curtis said. “Essentially they promoted the people most responsible and liable for the incident and fired everybody else down the chain.”

The Department of Corrections has been in the spotlight since May, when the Herald first reported the June 2012 death of Darren Rainey, a mentally ill inmate at Dade Correctional.

After defecating in his cell and refusing to clean it up, Rainey was locked in a closet-like shower by guards. After turning on a stream of hot water that Rainey could not control, corrections officers allegedly taunted the inmate as he begged to be let out. Then they walked away, leaving him in the unbearably hot chamber for nearly two hours.

He collapsed and died, falling face-up on the shower drain. When guards found him, chunks of skin were slipping off his body, (this man had literally boiled to death) witnesses told the inspector general’s office. No one was held accountable.

Since the Herald published its initial reports, the Miami-Dade Police Department has for the first time interviewed witnesses, and Dade Correctional’s warden and his top deputy have been ousted.
 

Jaskalas

Lifer
Jun 23, 2004
33,442
7,506
136
Yes, go to prison and be tortured / abused. If not by guards, by other inmates. And we hold the highest incarceration rate in the world.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
72,430
6,089
126
The prison mentality is a result of the CBD that fears crime and projects its own evil intent out onto the other. "Everybody but us must be locked up so we can feel safe." But sadly the fear is within so conservatives will never feel safe. And they will never see that the evil they fear is also within them, a projection of their own self contempt.

We will have endless prison corruption and abuse until we see that all of those others are us, folk who were damaged as children and need help fixing their broken minds. The true psychopaths, those born without a capacity for empathy and treat others as things, can be identified and separated from the population without inhuman treatment. Punishment won't cure those of anything.
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
20,378
5,122
136
Heads need to roll. Obviously they knew they had a problem, they knew the brutality was going on, yet they didn't stop it. The house cleaning needs to start at the top, and those responsible need to find themselves in jail.
 

Attic

Diamond Member
Jan 9, 2010
4,282
2
76
PHP:
Not above the law. Find them guilty and put them away also, or death depending.

Unfortunately they are above the law. Dangerous to buy into the popular narrative of how things work vs how they actually work.

High incarceration rate + deplorable conditions + corrupt justice system? Better not be poor and underprivelaged, that's what the system gorges itself on, can hear the blood spatter and bones crunching from here.
 

KK

Lifer
Jan 2, 2001
15,903
4
81
When they reported their findings to their boss, Inspector General Jeffery Beasley, he allegedly told them he would “have their asses” if they didn’t back off.

Sounds like this wise and beautiful woman needs to fucking be put to death.
 

Orignal Earl

Diamond Member
Oct 27, 2005
8,059
55
86
Phhht..obviously you have never seen the inside of an ISIS prison...

This is just fvckin horrible
 

Nebor

Lifer
Jun 24, 2003
29,582
12
76
He collapsed and died, falling face-up on the shower drain. When guards found him, chunks of skin were slipping off his body, (this man had literally boiled to death) witnesses told the inspector general’s office. No one was held accountable.
[/B]

That's pretty fucking terrible.
 

master_shake_

Diamond Member
May 22, 2012
6,430
291
121
hey it's true!

badges do ward off prison sentences...

i have a great idea how to handle these fired people.

find the most active volcano and dip them like candles.
 

DucatiMonster696

Diamond Member
Aug 13, 2009
4,269
1
71
Was it a privatized prison? If so I'm not surprised.

Charlotte Correctional Institution is a government run state prison.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Florida_state_prisons

You'd have to be a pretty naive person to believe that just because government runs a prison system that no abuse or corruption occurs within it and thus people (prisoners or staff) are "protected" from harm.

In fact I could point at government run prison after government run prison where abuses have occurred, e.g. Corcoran State Prison in California where the prison guards in the mid 90's were found guilty of staging gladiatorial prison fights as retaliation against prisoners they did not like or just to make bets because they were bored. Which meant that they would make bets on the outcomes of those fights using rival gang-members who would be released into the same yard with the full knowledge that they would try to fight or kill each other on sight.
 

Hugo Drax

Diamond Member
Nov 20, 2011
5,647
47
91
PHP:

Unfortunately they are above the law. Dangerous to buy into the popular narrative of how things work vs how they actually work.

High incarceration rate + deplorable conditions + corrupt justice system? Better not be poor and underprivelaged, that's what the system gorges itself on, can hear the blood spatter and bones crunching from here.

Just because your poor and underprivileged does not mean you are a criminal who ends up in jail.
 

zanejohnson

Diamond Member
Nov 29, 2002
7,054
17
81
been telling you people for ages this crap actually goes on in our prison systems...

Texas is really bad...... good ole boy system is so thick here they'll continue for a while more.


if you just look at the numbers.... how many incarcerated....how many relasesed from prison.....you're gonna see a HUGE gap... where just where are all those people going?


it's a pretty well known fact in most of Texas towns.....if you go to the farm and your 40+, for any amount of time.....it's a death sentence..

you'll die at the hands of other inmates, guards, or lack of medical treatment...

my own father, had his shoulder broken in a texas prison, went when he was 40+, managed to survive.....but came out with severe cellulitus in his shoulder (they didnt attempt to treat it, just put him in seg for the last 2 years of his incarceration)

still has a deformed shoulder, it nearly killed him, he came straight out of prison, paroled to a family members, and straight into hospital...
 

disappoint

Lifer
Dec 7, 2009
10,137
382
126
The prison mentality is a result of the CBD that fears crime and projects its own evil intent out onto the other. "Everybody but us must be locked up so we can feel safe." But sadly the fear is within so conservatives will never feel safe. And they will never see that the evil they fear is also within them, a projection of their own self contempt.

We will have endless prison corruption and abuse until we see that all of those others are us, folk who were damaged as children and need help fixing their broken minds. The true psychopaths, those born without a capacity for empathy and treat others as things, can be identified and separated from the population without inhuman treatment. Punishment won't cure those of anything.

CBD? I tried googling it and got only Christian Book Distributors and Cannabinoidiol. If it's the former then I'd like to subscribe to their newsletter CCBD.

Christian Correctional Book Distributors. If you're not out of touch with reality yet, we'll correct that malfunction post haste! Buy our books today!
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
14,681
136
Unions standing up for murderers. Of course.

Unions are like Lawyers- it's what they're paid to do, stand up for their clients.

When management has the goods on a miscreant & follows their own rules, Unions just make sure the process is pro forma, by the book.

I'm pretty sure that the Florida DOC has a whole labor relations department supposedly dedicated to doing things that way. Or not- It's Florida.

Which is not to say these guys are guilty or innocent, either, but rather to say that you have to follow the rules to enforce the rules.

Otherwise, it's just a more genteel version of thuggery.
 
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Pipeline 1010

Golden Member
Dec 2, 2005
1,918
742
136
Well I haven't seen any of our police officer members posting in this thread yet defending the cops/prison guards, so I guess I'll have to step up to bat for them. Here goes, let me know if I left anything out.

1) If you don't want to be brutalized by prison guards, beaten to death, or drafted for fight club, then don't be a criminal.

2) If you don't want to get scalded to death until your skin sloughs off, then don't be mentally ill. Mother bitch was asking for it.

3) Just put yourself in the prison guard's shoes. They had to clean a man's poop up. Did you hear that? They had to CLEAN HIS POOP! They were obviously in fear for their lives and had to throw him in the scalding shower for 2 hours because they want to make it home to see their families that night. Besides, if they let him out of the shower, he might have killed other inmates.

4) Speaking of putting yourself in their shoes, how do you think they feel after they found the dead body and all the dead skin in the shower floor? Poor guys must be traumatized. Have a little sympathy...not only do they have to clean the poop in his prison cell, they must now clean up the icky mentally ill person's dead body AND all that gross skin. They should get some paid leave to recover from that.

5) Scalding people to death and sponsoring fight clubs between gang members is part of prison guard policy. They were only following orders.

6) They weren't trying to scald the man to death. There was a shower malfunction. They were kindly helping him with his sanitary needs.

7) They weren't trying to cause fight club. They only released 2 rival gang members into the same yard alone so those guys could talk about their feelings and resolve their differences like grown mature men. And the guards weren't placing bets on who would beat/kill the other one...they were placing bets on who would apologize and tearfully hug the other first.

Did I miss anything?