Monday, June 24, 2013

On the merit of localizing national stories: Globe-News explores top Texas prison units for sexual victimization

The Amarillo-Globe News has a good story localizing issues raised in a national report  from the US Department of Justice on sexual victimization of prison inmates ("Inmate sexual assault: Clements unit among nation's worst, survey says," June 22), expanding on observations from this Grits post a couple of weeks ago. Reported the Globe-News' Mollie Bryant:
The current ranking shows an improvement over previous years. Clements’ rate of sexual victimization has declined since 2008, when it was ranked the second highest by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

However, in the current survey, more inmates at Clements report being forced, coerced or pressured into sex or sexual contact with prison staff than any other male prison in the country.

According to the latest survey, staff sexual misconduct with inmates also decreased from the second highest in 2008 to the fifth highest, with 9.5 percent of offenders reporting sexual activity with staff.
Further:
While staff sexual misconduct at Clements is on the decline, 8.1 percent of inmates reported sexual victimization by staff involving force or threat of force, the highest rate of any prison or jail in the country, according to the survey. Clements inmates also reported the highest rate for inmates being coerced or pressured into sex among male prisons, at 8.7 percent.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice and Office of the Inspector General investigates knowledge or allegations of staff sexual misconduct, said Ralph Bales, the Prison Rape Elimination Act ombudsman for TDCJ. Employees who violate TDCJ sexual abuse policies, federal or state law are subject to disciplinary penalties, including criminal prosecution, he said. Clements Unit staff receive sexual abuse prevention training, Bales said. ...

The TDCJ Safe Prisons Program screens offenders for possible vulnerability to sexual assault or aggressiveness, Bales said. Inmates take a sexual assault awareness course that includes methods to avoid victimization, and the program was expanded in 2010 to include the inpatient mental health population, he said. Almost half of the 3,557 inmates at the Clements Unit are on an inpatient or outpatient mental health caseload, Bales said.

Inmates held for violent sexual offenses and who are under psychological distress reported higher rates of sexual victimization by another inmate, according to the survey. Gay, lesbian or bisexual inmates are among those who are most at risk for sexual assault, the report said.

Understaffing, high employee turnover and the level of violence at a facility can contribute to its sexual assault rate, said Michele Deitch, jail conditions expert and professor at the University of Texas LBJ School of Public Affairs.

Higher rates can also be associated with facilities in rural locations, which can have reduced transparency, she said.
Excellent example of localizing a national story. I don't understand why more state and local reporters don't take this extra step to flesh out the state and local implications of national news, surveys, studies, etc.. Fulfilling that task when the MSM don't has become a staple of this blog's coverage over the years.

As Grits pointed out when the DOJ report was first released, there's a similar story to be written related to the Harris County Jail, which also ranked among the top sites for sexual victimization in the survey. The Globe-News has now explored the subject for Texas prisons (a story which will have wider reach since AP picked it up). But in Harris County the news provides statistical support for a problem which has sometimes raised its head anecdotally, providing a fuller picture of sexual misconduct problems at the jail. Last fall, half of dozen deputies and jailers were fired over sexual misconduct and these survey results suggest they weren't the only ones engaging in such behavior. In response to that episode, Sheriff Adrian Garcia installed additional cameras throughout the jail. (There has also been alleged staff victimization of inmates at the Harris County Juvenile Detention Center.) In the context of that recent history, localizing this national story for the Harris County Jail seems like a no-brainer.

The Globe-News has explored the story's implications in the context of the Texas prison system. Now it's either somebody at the Chronicle or some other Houston media outlet's turn to do the same for the Harris County jail. There was a time, back when there were a lot more paid, full-time journalists on the beat in Texas, when fleshing out the state and local implications of such national stories would happen nearly automatically. Now, it happens piecemeal, often weeks after the initial story, if it happens at all.

MORE: Below the jump, find a little more background on the situation at the Harris County Jail from the Sheriff's communications director and former Houston Chronicle reporter Alan Bernstein, received via email:
As someone whose newspaper reporting career ran from the 1970s to the current decade, I could not agree more with this part of your blog post today:
“The Globe-News has explored the story's implications in the context of the Texas prison system. Now it's either somebody at the Chronicle or some other Houston media outlet's turn to do the same for the Harris County jail. There was a time, back when there were a lot more paid, full-time journalists on the beat in Texas, when fleshing out the state and local implications of such national stories would happen nearly automatically. Now, it happens piecemeal, often weeks after the initial story, if it happens at all.”
However, media inquiring about the report’s statistics on the Harris County Jail will find that the report indicates that the reported inmate sexual victimization rate for the Harris County jail system is at or near the 2 percent national rate.

Four Harris County jail buildings are listed in the report:

At the 701 N. San Jacinto Jail, which houses about 4,000 inmates, 61.7 percent of the inmates responded to the BJS survey. The reported rate was 0.9 percent, below the national average.

At the 1200 Baker Jail, which houses about 4,100 inmates, 58 percent of the inmates responded to the BJS survey. The reported rate was 6.3 percent, above the national average.

At the 1307 Baker Jail, which houses about 775 inmates, 65.5 percent of the inmates responded to the BJS survey. The reported rate was 1 percent, below the national average.

At the 711 N. San Jacinto Jail, which houses about 130 inmates, 59 percent of the inmates responded to the BJS survey. The reported rate was 0.

In sum, three out of four of our jail buildings were below the national rate and one was above it – in a survey in which more than a third of the inmates did not respond. And in one of the four facilities, the variance from the national average is the difference between 2 percent and 6 percent.

This indicates there is no system-wide problem in the jail system relative to the national averages, even as you state that “the Harris County Jail . . .  also ranked among the top sites for sexual victimization in the survey.”

However the jail command takes the results seriously and is studying them to see what if anything should be done differently to bring us closer to the desired rate of zero at all buildings. The Sheriff’s Office takes any of these alleged incidents seriously. Each and every one is fully investigated, the findings are referred to the district attorney’s office when appropriate, and housing arrangements for inmate victims are changed when needed.

How is the 1200 Baker jail different from the others? It houses all of the female inmates (though I did not see a gender breakdown in the report), the Mental Health Unit and the largest medical clinic. This facility and 701 N. San Jacinto, which together hold about 90 percent of the system’s inmates, contain maximum security units.

The Prison Rape Elimination Act, which required that this report be compiled, has been studied closely by the sheriff’s staff since its inception in 2003. Jail commanders are always seeking new ways to address the problem of sexual victimization of inmates. Before the BJS report came out, the sheriff’s office created a position of a PREA coordinator and is in the process of filling it. Also before the report came out, the staff began working to establish a phone line that inmates could call from their cells so that they could have an additional way to report sexual assault allegations. Inmates already have several ways to report such incidents.
I'm not surprised most of the problems are occurring where the highest risk inmates are housed. Given this additional detail, the situation at the 1200 Baker Street facility in particular could use remedial attention.

8 comments:

  1. TDCJ's Executive Director Brad Livingston should learn about the importance of proper hiring guidelines and training. Right now TDCJ is being run like Wal-Mart. TDCJ hires kids fresh out of high school, 40 year old first time job seekers, and visaed employees who can't speak English.

    With no psychological screening, people with mental disorders are immediately hired and given firearms. This is not an occupation for everyone and correctional Officers sometimes have to make the choice of life or death, while being paid one of the lowest wages in the United States.

    TDCJ treatment of Officers and lack of training is scary. This is not an occupation for everyone. The rate of PTSD is higher than Vietnam veterans with a rate of 31.8%. Correctional Officers have the highest rate of occupational suicide, high rate of divorce, and high rate of drug/ alcoholism. The average Correctional Officer lives to the age of 58 years old due to stresses, poor hours, and lack of proper nutrition, most likely causes by low wages as shift hours.

    With mentally weak individuals being hired to fill positions regardless of their ability to handle stress, munipulative convicts, and physical danger, this only adds to officer corruption and incompatance in responding to situations.

    No wonder Brad Livingston has the largest rape camp in the United States. Lack of hiring and maintaining correctional professionals will result in more fallout for this agency. Someone with knowledge of criminal justice policy needs to run this agency.

    It's sad despite the need for thousands of Qualified Correctional Officers, Brad Livingston downplayed the serious hiring demand and need for greater training and standards for TDCJ, only agreeing to officers receiving a 5% raise for two years, without a previous increase in the last two years. DPS's Director asked and pushed for 20% for his officers and received it. Brad and the Board of Criminal Justice need to go run Wal-Mart and not the
    largest criminal justice agency in Texas, by placing people's lives on the line.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Forget about more money and training...it isn't going to happen.

    The best course of action in Texas is de-incarceration and sentencing reform so that fewer nonsense cases get sent up the river. "evading arrest", "felon in possession of a firearm", "Possession with intent to distribute" of small amounts of dope, criminalizing the possession of an empty dope pipe--these "bullshit charges" are merely a waste of taxpayer money when sentenced as individual crimes

    Persons interested in criminal justice should follow and support the work of the Texas Criminal Justice Coaliwastion and organizations such as "Right on Crime". Vote against your prosecutors and judges who continue to pursue maximum sentences.

    ReplyDelete
  3. "Now it's either somebody at the Chronicle or some other Houston media outlet's turn to do the same for the Harris County jail..."
    Put the local Faux News" (sic) TV team on it. They used to "love" sex offenders. (I don't watch Faux News anymore.) They would have at least three negative stories a week, most of which were "non-news" items just to try to stir something up.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Not buying this. As a staff member (Not a CO) I was in every pod and dorm of every building at Clements at all hours and unannounced for several years. I do not deny that sexual assaults do occur, but not anywhere near this extent. Safe Prisons at Clements has some of the most professional officers and staff I have known and worked with. There is no tolerance at all allowed for sexual assaults – none! Every accusation is taken with the most serious consideration, major and minor accusations are not distinguished. Maybe this explains the high number of reports. Again, I am not in denial that sexual assaults happen in prison. What I am saying is that there is much more to this story than what is in the newspaper article.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Prison Doc has it right - "Forget about more money and training...it isn't going to happen."

    Brad Livingston has, (in my opinion), a history of leadership that is mediocre at best. However, TDCJ is not being properly funded for the task it is being asked to do. If guidelines for hiring and officer training are to be improved the legislature will simply have to increase it's security funding to a level that will enable it. Dental, Medical and Mental Health Care fair no better. UTMB-CMC staff at unit level have not had a pay increase in close to 5 years.

    More money must be put in the prison system and we must stop incarcerating violations that common sense tells us are unnecessary. We need to lock up people who pose a danger to the public.

    The public school system got back 2.5 billion in funding. Only a 1/3 of what was taken away but, a start. If you what to keep your place in the Legislature voting to increase school funding is a popular idea. Voting to increase funding for the prison system is not. However, that under funding has a price. Sexual assaults is just the tip if the iceberg.

    ReplyDelete
  6. David E ~ when TDCJ deny inmates a clear and easy to understand guide on how to file grievances, you have to wonder how many of the accusations of sexual assault actually get to the ears of someone who will listen.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Happening in Georgia, too: http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/caa7027c991f4cd589cc0dc85fdc73ab/GA--Juvenile-Justice-Suspensions

    Cops and guards be liking themselves some young boys.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I wonder why or what they are afraid to find out if they gave the inmates these surveys on any of the Gatesville women units? Especially the Crain Unit. The findings would be criminal is why there will be no survey in these units.

    ReplyDelete