WASHINGTON — Inmates at New Jersey’s solely state jail for ladies had been frequently sexually assaulted by guards and typically pressured to inter
WASHINGTON — Inmates at New Jersey’s solely state jail for ladies had been frequently sexually assaulted by guards and typically pressured to interact in intercourse acts with different prisoners whereas employees members seemed on, based on a Justice Division report launched on Monday detailing widespread, pervasive sexual abuse on the facility.
In a single occasion on the jail, the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Ladies in Clinton, N.J., one lady was pressured to behave as a lookout for the guard assaulting her, the report stated.
Assault and coercion had been so prevalent that the Justice Division concluded that the New Jersey Division of Corrections and the jail had violated the inmates’ constitutional protections from merciless and strange punishment.
“Sexual abuse shouldn’t be part of any prisoner’s punishment,” Eric S. Dreiband, the pinnacle of the Justice Division’s Civil Rights Division, stated in a press release accompanying the report, the results of an investigation by the division and the U.S. lawyer’s workplace in New Jersey. “Ladies prisoners at Edna Mahan are at substantial danger of sexual abuse by employees as a result of systemic deficiencies discourage prisoners from reporting sexual abuse and permit sexual abuse to happen undetected and undeterred.”
Officers on the New Jersey Division of Corrections didn’t reply to a request for remark. The Justice Division additionally stated it may sue the division in 49 days if officers didn’t handle the issues specified by the report.
The damning report was the newest occasion of a Justice Division effort to crack down on abuses at state prisons throughout the nation. The division has pledged to analyze Mississippi’s notoriously violent state prisons and found last year that Alabama’s prisons were so dysfunctional, unsafe and gruesome that they also violated constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment.
Sexual assaults are particularly pervasive at Edna Mahan, a 700-person facility where inmates have complained for decades that sexual assault is an “open secret,” the department found.
“As the Supreme Court has held, sexual abuse is not part of any person’s punishment,” the department said in its report. “Our society requires prisoners to give up their liberty, but that surrender does not encompass the basic right to be free from severe unwanted sexual contact.”
At least 16 women said they were beaten or sexually abused between 2008 and 2010 by a single officer, according to the report. He never faced criminal charges, but he did settle a lawsuit with six former prisoners for $75,000. In 2010 and 2011, three corrections officers were fired after several women accused them of abuse.
The Justice Department’s investigation began in April 2018, after New Jersey Advance Media published a detailed article about the culture of rampant sexual violence against inmates at the prison. Even after officers were informed that the Justice Department was investigating the prison, sexual assault and coercion continued largely unabated, federal investigators found.
Between October 2016 and April 2019 — a full year after the prison had been under investigation — seven correction officers and one civilian employee were arrested, indicted, convicted or pleaded guilty to sexual abuse charges, including senior officers. The Hunterdon County Prosecutor’s Office is still pursuing sexual assault cases related to Edna Mahan.
Investigators reviewing the files of state corrections officials found scores of substantiated instances dating back years when guards preyed on inmates “for sexual gratification.” Inmates were forced to perform sex acts on guards or with other prisoners.
In one case, the guards held “viewing parties” of a mentally ill inmate who was on suicide watch. They coerced her to dance naked for them.
Staff members and guards regularly referred to inmates in vulgar, homophobic and demeaning terms, the department found. They also regularly commented on the physical appearance and perceived sexual inclinations of the inmates.
“This environment emboldens Edna Mahan staff to seek out opportunities for sexual abuse,” the report said.
Women kept quiet, living in fear of retaliation, violence or loss of privileges, the department found. And when they did speak up, the prison was often indifferent to complaints.
When the prison instituted a hotline in 2018 for inmates to report sexual assault allegations, the number was not posted in inmate housing units or common areas, the department found. The staff called the hotline the “snitch line” and used the term to display the number on the prison’s caller ID system.
“It is both problematic and emblematic of the problems with the reporting systems at Edna Mahan,” the report said.
The Justice Department demanded that the prison implement 19 remedial measures to address systemic sexual assault and harassment, including compliance with national standards on reporting allegations and installing more cameras.
The department said the prison should also stop transferring prisoners who report sexual abuses to segregated housing, provide a way for inmates to anonymously and confidentially report sexual abuse and harassment, and inform prisoners of their rights to do so.