Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 02:56PM
A former New Folsom prison lieutenant was acquitted
Monday of assaulting an inmate despite testimony from five fellow
guards, but he was convicted of filing a false report. The case
involving Stephen Luke Scarsella renews the debate over what
whistle-blowers and a federal court-appointed monitor say is a
pervasive "code of silence" within the state's prison system, and over
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration's attempts to clean up what
critics say is an often abusive system. Five guards, including a
sergeant, testified that Scarsella, a 49-year-old former lieutenant,
dragged inmate Mel Edward by his leg chains partly down a stairway,
then punched the defenseless inmate twice in the face. Edward was being
forcibly removed from his cell at California State Prison, Sacramento,
commonly known as New Folsom, on June 8, 2002. The guards said they
were subsequently derided as "rats" by fellow officers, and ostracized
for speaking out. Scarsella was fired after the incident. [more]