Thursday, December 02, 2004
Man Raped by Prison Guard Receives Money Damages in ACLU Lawsuit
Hurrah!! The estimable Meredith Rountree of the ACLU of Texas Prison and Jail Acocuntability Project brings news of a wonderful victory at the courthouse, and forwards a press release announcing that she and the ACLU National Prison Project recorded their first victory concerning prison rape litigation, another lawsuit in addition to the one Grits mentioned earlier.
"A 25-year-old Texas prisoner who was repeatedly raped by a prison guard with a history of sexual assault accepted a settlement in which his rapist and the assistant warden who failed to protect him agreed to pay substantial money damages."
Congratulations! That's truly a landmark victory.
The description of the case in the ACLU press release is pretty graphic, but the story is compelling: "According to an ACLU lawsuit, Nathan Essary was ordered to masturbate and perform oral sex on Officer Michael Chaney at the Luther Unit in Navasota, Texas on multiple occasions in October 2001. Essary reported the abuse to Luther Unit Assistant Warden Jerry Barratt, who promised him protection. However, that same day Essary was forced to return to work at the prison laundry where Chaney supervised him and sexually assaulted him again.
"During two separate attacks, Essary secretly collected Chaney's ejaculate on a handkerchief and mailed a sample to the United States Attorney in Houston. After DNA testing on the sample linked Chaney to the sexual assaults, Prison Prosecutor Kelly Weeks issued an affidavit for Chaney's arrest in January 2002.
"When the ACLU filed its lawsuit against Chaney and Barratt on Essary's behalf in October 2002, information emerged that Chaney had sexually harassed and abused other prisoners at the Luther Unit, but complaints from prisoners to prison staff were repeatedly ignored. In a statement filed in federal court, former prisoner Garrett Cunningham said he was anally raped in the same laundry area one year prior to Essary's assault. After reporting the rape to prison staff, Cunningham was transferred from his job in the laundry to a position in the room next door. Chaney continued to harass Cunningham but complaints against the officer were never
investigated.
"'Victims of prison rape suffer at the hands of both their attackers and the administrators who choose to ignore their pleas for protection,' said Meredith Martin Rountree, Director of the ACLU of Texas' Prison and Jail Accountability Project and co-counsel in the lawsuit. 'The Texas Department of Criminal Justice's inaction is intolerable and unconstitutional.'
"A separate prisoner rape lawsuit filed by the National Prison Project on behalf of Roderick Johnson, a gay former prisoner who was repeatedly raped by Texas prison gangs, won a favorable ruling in September from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. The court found that prison officials can be sued for damages due to discrimination based on sexual orientation. Johnson's
case will go to trial in July 2005.
"Today's case, Nathan Essary v. Michael Chaney, et al., was settled in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas by Winter of the ACLU's National Prison Project and Rountree of the ACLU of Texas' Prison and Jail Accountability Project."
Read more information on the Roderick Johnson case.
And the next time anybody asks you whose rights the ACLU ever protected, tell them about these two lawsuits.
"A 25-year-old Texas prisoner who was repeatedly raped by a prison guard with a history of sexual assault accepted a settlement in which his rapist and the assistant warden who failed to protect him agreed to pay substantial money damages."
Congratulations! That's truly a landmark victory.
The description of the case in the ACLU press release is pretty graphic, but the story is compelling: "According to an ACLU lawsuit, Nathan Essary was ordered to masturbate and perform oral sex on Officer Michael Chaney at the Luther Unit in Navasota, Texas on multiple occasions in October 2001. Essary reported the abuse to Luther Unit Assistant Warden Jerry Barratt, who promised him protection. However, that same day Essary was forced to return to work at the prison laundry where Chaney supervised him and sexually assaulted him again.
"During two separate attacks, Essary secretly collected Chaney's ejaculate on a handkerchief and mailed a sample to the United States Attorney in Houston. After DNA testing on the sample linked Chaney to the sexual assaults, Prison Prosecutor Kelly Weeks issued an affidavit for Chaney's arrest in January 2002.
"When the ACLU filed its lawsuit against Chaney and Barratt on Essary's behalf in October 2002, information emerged that Chaney had sexually harassed and abused other prisoners at the Luther Unit, but complaints from prisoners to prison staff were repeatedly ignored. In a statement filed in federal court, former prisoner Garrett Cunningham said he was anally raped in the same laundry area one year prior to Essary's assault. After reporting the rape to prison staff, Cunningham was transferred from his job in the laundry to a position in the room next door. Chaney continued to harass Cunningham but complaints against the officer were never
investigated.
"'Victims of prison rape suffer at the hands of both their attackers and the administrators who choose to ignore their pleas for protection,' said Meredith Martin Rountree, Director of the ACLU of Texas' Prison and Jail Accountability Project and co-counsel in the lawsuit. 'The Texas Department of Criminal Justice's inaction is intolerable and unconstitutional.'
"A separate prisoner rape lawsuit filed by the National Prison Project on behalf of Roderick Johnson, a gay former prisoner who was repeatedly raped by Texas prison gangs, won a favorable ruling in September from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. The court found that prison officials can be sued for damages due to discrimination based on sexual orientation. Johnson's
case will go to trial in July 2005.
"Today's case, Nathan Essary v. Michael Chaney, et al., was settled in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas by Winter of the ACLU's National Prison Project and Rountree of the ACLU of Texas' Prison and Jail Accountability Project."
Read more information on the Roderick Johnson case.
And the next time anybody asks you whose rights the ACLU ever protected, tell them about these two lawsuits.
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