Correcting Corrections
Program for training correctional officers
The rehabilitative nature of incarceration depends to a great extent on the environment that an inmate experiences. If an incoming prisoner enters a world filled with corruption, drugs, and crime the potential for rehabilitation is nonexistent. Given the prevalence of corruption among correctional officers (COs), including ties to organized crime and street/prison gangs, reinstating the goal of rehabilitation in prisons and jails will require a dramatic sea change in how oversight activities are conducted. Official recognition of this problem was codified in the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003, which mandated additional training for correctional staff to eliminate sexual abuse and misconduct between inmates and staff. One of the standards proposed is the creation or expansion of internal investigations by specially trained personnel. This essay outlines how an undercover internal investigations unit would be recruited and trained, whose primary purpose is to investigate all forms of misconduct by COs, including gang affiliation, sexual abuse and misconduct, contraband smuggling, and unsanctioned physical violence.
Correcting Corrections
Background
Correctional officer (CO) misconduct can take many forms, from isolated incidents involving civil rights violations of prisoners, drug trafficking, gang activities, sexual assault, to murder for hire. In April 2009 a federal grand jury handed down indictments for 25 defendants alleged to have engaged in smuggling contraband into Maryland prisons, as part of a CO drug-ring allegedly run by the Black Guerrilla Family Gang (Smith, 2010). The contraband included drugs and cell phones, but also involved extortion schemes and the murder of a fellow CO who refused to participate. Many of the COs who were allegedly involved had a history of gang affiliation.
These incidents are not rare, but literally represent the 'tip of the iceberg'. In 2005 the Texas legislature investigated juvenile complaints of sexual misconduct against COs and other correctional facility staff, and during the five-year period from 2000 to 2005 over 750 complaints had been filed (National Prison Rape Elimination Commission [NPREC], 2009, pp. 88-89). Within the federal prison system there were 1,585 complaints of sexual abuse or sexual misconduct by inmates against COs and other correctional staff between 2001 and 2008, involving all but 1 of the 93 federal prisons (Evaluation and Inspection...
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