|
ACLU Seeks Sanctions Against
New Jersey
DOC For Witness Tampering And Retaliation
Witnesses Describe Beating Of Female Prisoner
For Exposing Corruption
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
March 26, 2008
TRENTON
-- The American Civil Liberties Union
and the ACLU of New Jersey filed court papers
today requesting that the New Jersey Superior
Court impose sanctions against the New Jersey
Department of Corrections (DOC) for witness
tampering, official misconduct and violations of
court rules. The ACLU's motion for
sanctions charges that the DOC obtained false
and misleading statements from women prisoners
about conditions in the prison in an attempt to
defend the prison against claims of inhumane
treatment. A female prisoner who exposed
the DOC's misconduct reports being beaten as a
result.
"Witness tampering
is a serious criminal act," said Ed Barocas,
ACLU of New Jersey Legal Director. "The
Mercer County Prosecutor should immediately
investigate the allegations of abuse of power by
DOC personnel and attempted fraud on the court."
The ACLU asserts
that James Drumm, Assistant Administrator of the
New Jersey State Prison, offered female
prisoners reductions in their disciplinary
sentences in exchange for making false
statements describing women's prison conditions
in the New Jersey State Prison (NJSP) -- a men's
supermax prison -- as better than they were.
The statements were obtained from women
prisoners held in NJSP's women's disciplinary
segregation unit but described conditions in a
different part of the prison where these women
did not even reside. DOC officials then
introduced the women's statements in court.
After one prisoner, Kareema Thomas, disclosed
what had occurred to the ACLU, she was beaten by
a prison guard, according to the sworn
statements of Thomas and three other women
prisoners.
This is the
latest chapter in
Jones v Hayman,
an ACLU class action lawsuit against the DOC
challenging the improper transfer of a group of
women to the men's prison and subjecting them to
inhumane and virtual lock-down conditions.
On February 8, 2008, the Department of
Corrections offered into evidence in that case a
letter written by Thomas as proof that
conditions for the transferred women prisoners
were adequate, even though she had never seen
the unit in which the transferred women are
held.
Although most
women prisoners in New
Jersey are confined in the Edna
Mahan Correctional Facility in
Clinton, women subject to
"disciplinary segregation" have for years been
held in a section of New Jersey State Prison
known as unit "1FF." The ACLU clients who
were transferred to the men's prison, however,
are being held in a separate unit called "1EE."
Furthermore, none of the women in 1EE were
transferred for violating prison rules -- the
usual criteria for disciplinary segregation --
but were transferred arbitrarily to the men's
prison without justification.
"Mr. Drumm made it
sound like if I wrote him a letter saying
certain things, my time in segregation would be
cut," Thomas said in her sworn statement.
Thomas' account was corroborated by another
woman prisoner to whom Drumm made the same
offer.
Thomas alleges she
was brutally beaten by a prison guard the day
after she met with ACLU attorneys to tell her
story, raising questions about whether the
beating was retaliatory. Thomas says that
during the beating, the guard said, "You have a
big mouth" and called her a "nigger with no home
training." Thomas also alleges that,
following the beating, Drumm told her, "You're
causing problems in my institution," and that
she should "stop causing trouble."
In addition to
seeking sanctions against the Department of
Corrections for witness tampering and
retaliation, the ACLU also charges that prison
officials violated court rules by conducting
psychiatric examinations of the women the ACLU
represents without first notifying their
attorneys, and under the guise of the
examinations, extracted information from the
women about the case. The ACLU's request
for sanctions also presents evidence of prison
officials regularly reading confidential
attorney-client correspondence and listening in
on prisoners' phone calls to lawyers.
"The Department of
Corrections is taking a scorched earth approach
to the civil rights lawsuit brought by these
women prisoners," said Mie Lewis, the ACLU's
lead counsel in the case. "The women
deserve a fair hearing of their claims, and that
means the Department has to obey the law and
court rules."
Sanctions sought
by the ACLU include striking from the record all
of the unlawfully obtained evidence;
reassignment of the guard who allegedly beat
Thomas; a ban on further evidence-gathering by
James Drumm; and permission for the ACLU to
further investigate the Department's misconduct.
A hearing in the
New Jersey Superior Court is scheduled for April
11, 2008.
Attorneys on the
case are Lewis and Lenora Lapidus from the ACLU
Women's Rights Project and Barocas from the ACLU
of New Jersey. |