Prison guard: CA State Officials Lied to the Supreme Court about Racial Segregation
Saturday, January 22, 2005 at 06:38PM
TheSpook
Prison guards claim state officials lied to the U.S. Supreme Court
about racial segregation in California's prisons and the extent to
which race is used to set prison policies, a newspaper reported
Wednesday. Correctional officers and inmates told The Press-Enterprise
of Riverside that segregation is rampant throughout the system, despite
state attorneys' contention that it is limited to inmates' first 60
days behind bars. "There is no way I'd put a white and a black
together," said Charles Hughes, a lieutenant at California State Prison
in Lancaster. "I'd be putting my job on the line if I did that." The
newspaper reported that one correctional officer filed a whistleblower
complaint with the state auditor last month, saying the state presented
false arguments to the high court in November in a lawsuit filed by
inmate Garrison Johnson. Johnson, who is black, claims his 14th
Amendment right to equal protection under the law was violated by the
prison system's racial segregation policies. California Senior
Assistant Attorney General Frances Grunder told the high court that
racial segregation is limited to "reception center" housing of inmates
during their first 60 days at a prison. They are initially segregated
to determine their propensity for racial violence, lawyers told the
court. Attorney General Bill Lockyer said that beyond the reception
centers, prison inmates are fully integrated. [more] and [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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