Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jul 2002
Source: Blade, The (OH)
Copyright: 2002 The Blade
Contact:  http://www.toledoblade.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/48
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/48
Author: Robin Erb, Blade staff writer

TROUBLES DEEPEN AT NEW PRISON IN TOLEDO

Drug Find Is Latest In Series Of Problems

At least one inmate at Toledo's new state prison may have been able to buy 
more than candy bars and greeting cards at the commissary. In a supply 
locker, investigators recently found two sandwich bags of suspected marijuana.

It's part of the most recent allegations of wrongdoing at the Toledo 
Correctional Institution - from the presence of marijuana contraband to 
sexual contact between staff and inmates.

At least two managers are under investigation at the two-year-old prison.

Warden Khelleh Konteh said most of his staff is "excellent," and wrongdoing 
will not be tolerated.

"This is a new place, [and] it takes a while for people to realize what can 
be tolerated and not to be tolerated," he added. "A couple of bad apples 
should not put a blemish on other employees."

In one of the most recent cases of misconduct, investigators found 97 grams 
- - about 3.5 ounces - of suspected marijuana in a supply locker in a 
restroom of the prison's commissary office June 25. The restroom was locked 
with limited access to the keys, said Cassandra Brewster, a trooper with 
the Ohio Highway Patrol.

At least one manager has been placed on paid administrative leave pending 
the outcome of the investigation. Investigators believe the manager knew 
about the marijuana, but it is unclear if she was involved with the alleged 
drug transaction.

On the street, that quantity of marijuana would be worth about $485, but 
inside the facility, it could be sold to inmates for three to five times 
that amount. One inmate has emerged as a primary suspect in the case, 
though the investigation continues, the trooper said.

It was unclear how far-reaching the suspected operation was or how the 
inmate would have obtained cash. Caroline Haack, the warden's assistant, 
said inmates can have money sent to them or can earn money working inside 
the prison, but all money must go into a debit system operated by the prison.

"They shouldn't have access to cash, but they got it anyhow," Trooper 
Brewster said. Charges have not yet been filed.

That probe then led to unrelated allegations of sexual contact between 
inmates and at least two female staff members, the trooper said. She 
declined to give details, but said charges are pending in that case.

In a third investigation, a unit manager who oversees a block of inmates is 
accused of using a prison computer to download a video of musician R. 
Kelly, who is accused of producing and distributing child pornography. The 
video is the source of a pending criminal case against the performer in 
Chicago.

Trooper Brewster, who is assigned criminal investigations inside Toledo 
Correctional Institute, said the manager also is being investigated for 
allegedly sending personal e-mails and making long-distance personal phone 
calls.

The allegations are not unique to the facility, said Ohio Highway Patrol 
Sgt. Mark Rogols.

"What Toledo is going through happens elsewhere," he said, adding that 
Toledo's problems are most likely more high profile because it is new and 
still in the public eye.

Meanwhile, TCI employee Lois K. Serfozo, 42, of 907 West Broadway, Maumee, 
pleaded no contest to dereliction of duty, a second-degree misdemeanor. A 
corrections officer found Ms. Serfozo partly clothed with a food-service 
inmate.

She was referred to a first-offender program run by the court. If she 
completes the program successfully, the case will be dismissed and her 
record cleared. Ms. Serfozo resigned from the $37,600-a-year job Dec. 16.

Still pending is a case in which several employees are accused of setting 
up a fight between inmates and a case in which a guard is charged with 
punching another in the thigh during roll call.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens