Pubdate: Mon, 17 Oct 2005
Source: Dallas Morning News (TX)
Copyright: 2005 The Dallas Morning News
Contact:  http://www.dallasnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117
Author: Dianne Solis, The Dallas Morning News

SUIT UNDERSCORES STATE'S PRISON RAPE PROBLEM

Former Inmate Awaits Verdict; Experts Point To A Wider Net Of Abuse

WICHITA FALLS - In the Allred state prison near this ranching and oil 
town, Roderick Keith Johnson says he was bought and sold for sex by 
prison gangs with names like Gangster Disciples, Mandingo Warriors 
and the Mexican Mafia. But his biggest tormentor was a man named 
Monster, who called him Coco and was his pimp.

"Monster was the guy who was controlling me," said Mr. Johnson, a 
37-year-old, gay former inmate of the James V. Allred prison unit. In 
a quiet voice before the jury hearing his federal civil rights 
lawsuit, Mr. Johnson detailed his 18-month sexual hell. There were, 
Mr. Johnson says, near-daily rapes, a forced shower sex show with a 
mentally retarded inmate, and a prison guard who called him a 
"commissary ho." Mr. Johnson's allegations - he is suing six Allred 
prison authorities and staff members, alleging they ignored his 
repeated pleas for help - cast light on what prison experts say is a 
serious problem among Texas' 156,000 inmates: the rise of warring 
prison gangs who use rape, sexual intimidation and assault to 
establish control and hierarchy among inmates. Mr. Johnson's 
attorneys call it a system of "gang-run sexual slavery," and they say 
that prison authorities are aware of the sexual abuse going on within 
their institutions.

The prison's attorneys argue that Mr. Johnson willingly engaged in 
sex and that his credibility is poor. A spokesman for the Texas 
Criminal Justice Department, Mike Viesca, said that the prison 
officials whom Mr. Johnson has sued did all they could "to 
accommodate" Mr. Johnson's requests for safety. "The agency itself is 
not on trial here," Mr. Viesca said. But others disagree. In the 1999 
training manual of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, the 
agency acknowledged that, on average, "three out of 10 newly admitted 
offenders will be forcibly raped within 48 hours." "Inmates should 
not have to face the choice of putting out or being beaten up," says 
Jamie Fellner, director of the U.S. program for Human Rights Watch, 
which produced a large report on prison rape in 2001. "If this were 
the only case in Texas, you could say, 'Oh, it seems extreme.' But 
Texas has been notorious for sexual violence."

Closing arguments in the lawsuit are expected today, and the jury 
could return a verdict early this week. Mr. Johnson, who is 
represented by lawyers from the National Prison Project of the 
American Civil Liberties Union, is asking for unspecified monetary damages.

Mr. Johnson ended up in the Allred prison in 2000 for relatively 
minor offenses - a burglary, drug possession and passing a bad check. 
Nearly 4,000 men are housed in the maximum-security Allred facility, 
one of the state's toughest, which sits on 320 acres of 
mesquite-studded prairie next to a stock-car track.

Mr. Johnson was released in December 2003 and now lives in Marshall, 
Texas, with his 79-year-old grandmother, Dorothy Epps, who raised him 
and has sat in on parts of the trial.

'They knew' The testimony often has been graphic and disturbing. One 
inmate, testifying in shackles, described Mr. Johnson as "property" 
made to do "anything we asked." Another inmate testified, "I sold Mr. 
Johnson to other inmates."

Jeff Monks, an ACLU attorney, asked, "And was there any indication 
that prison staff knew what was happening to Mr. Johnson?" Responded 
the inmate, "They knew."

Mr. Johnson's case hinges on a 1994 Supreme Court ruling that prison 
officials can be held liable for damages under the Eighth Amendment - 
which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment - if they are found to 
have acted with "deliberate indifference" to an inmate's health and 
safety and knew that the inmate faced a substantial risk of harm.

Much of the trial has focused on Mr. Johnson's repeated requests for 
protective custody. Defense attorneys have pointed out that Mr. 
Johnson wore makeup to one meeting with prison officials, suggesting 
that he had willingly adapted to his role as a sexual subservient to 
other inmates. The attorneys repeatedly asked him why he hadn't 
washed off the makeup before the meeting.

Mr. Johnson said he wore makeup as a "catch out" - an infraction that 
he hoped would get him transferred to a safekeeping area for 
prisoners considered vulnerable to attack.

Attorneys for the prison officials also introduced affectionate 
letters Mr. Johnson wrote to fellow inmates. The defense attorneys 
noted that Mr. Johnson signed one letter "love, your wife, Coco." Mr. 
Johnson said he wrote the letters hoping to secure protection from 
the attacks of other prisoners. An investigation by the state prison 
system's inspector general concluded Mr. Johnson's allegations were 
unfounded; last year, a Wichita Falls grand jury declined to 
criminally indict any of the inmates accused of attacking him. Mr. 
Johnson's attorneys call the state's report a "whitewash" and say the 
grand jurors clearly weren't interested in the facts of the case 
since Mr. Johnson was never asked to testify before them.

Inmates' testimony Some inmates who have testified in Mr. Johnson's 
case say they've been threatened as "snitches" by guards and other 
inmates. U.S. District Court Judge Barbara M.G. Lynn has closed the 
courtroom during certain portions of the trial in an effort to keep 
secret some inmates' identities. In one redacted court document, an 
inmate said two black gangs, the Crips and the Bloods, and the Latino 
gang Raza Unida had placed a "hit" on him because "I am crossing 
races, meaning that I am a white inmate helping a black inmate."

Another inmate said a prison officer told him he was on the "faggot" 
bus as he was being transported to Allred for the trial. Another 
inmate said a guard had said to him, "You stupid [expletive]. You 
think you can beat us? The state is unbeatable."

Prison officials say some of the inmates who complained have been 
transferred to other facilities for their safety.

National taboo National experts say it's difficult to get accurate 
statistics on prison rape, in part, because so much of it goes 
unreported. Inmates simply don't want retaliation by gangs or 
perpetrators, or are too ashamed to report an attack. The subject of 
prison rape historically has been taboo, but in recent years prisoner 
advocates have stepped up campaigns to bring more attention to the 
problem. After Mr. Johnson filed his suit, which has received 
widespread media coverage, the state Legislature passed a law in 2003 
that provides for better training of guards and other measures to 
reduce prison rape. Later that year, President George W. Bush signed 
into law the Prison Rape Prevention Act, which requires prison 
authorities to collect data on such rapes. It also established a 
national prison rape reduction commission and grants aimed at 
investigating rapes and punishing perpetrators. The legislation noted 
that "at least 13 percent" of U.S. inmates have been sexually 
assaulted in prisons.

The training manual of the Texas state prison system, introduced at 
Mr. Johnson's trial, says that the level of sexual violence in Texas 
prisons is twice as high. "Sexual assaults are always violent," the 
manual says. "They never involve consenting adults because many 
victims engage in this activity out of fear and as means to survive 
within the institution." Prison politics Conquest and control are 
often the motivations for a rape, and offenders feel pressured into 
participating in sexual attacks to attain status and membership in 
groups such as gangs, according to the manual. On average, nearly two 
rapes are reported every day in the Texas prison system, according to 
the agency's statistics for fiscal year 2005. The number of alleged 
sexual assaults has increased more than 600 percent from 1996 through 
2004. During that period, the state's prison population grew only 20 percent.

And the Allred prison had the most reports of alleged sexual assaults 
in 2005. In the previous three years, it was ranked second. The rise 
is attributed to new zero-tolerance policies, instituted in 1999, and 
the creation of the inspector general's office, which investigates 
inmate claims of sexual assaults and other crimes, said Michelle 
Lyons, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. 
Even so, a national advocacy group based in Los Angeles, Stop Prison 
Rape, says that one-fourth of their inmate complaints come from Texas 
prisons. Female prisoners also are raped, though experts believe the 
problem isn't as extensive as in male prisons. One woman, a former 
inmate in a Texas prison who asked for anonymity, said male guards 
harass women into giving sexual favors. The guards often offer 
perfume and other gifts. Health problems Mr. Johnson testified that 
doctors have diagnosed him with post-traumatic stress and a bipolar 
condition and prescribed medications he must take every day. He says 
that he has recurring nightmares.

The prolonged sexual abuse and the prison's refusal to protect him 
left him "defeated," he said, in a near-whisper, as jurors and 
spectators strained to hear him. Shortly before his trial began, his 
parole officer testified, drug testing found cocaine in his system. 
Mr. Johnson is regularly tested for substance abuse as a condition of 
his prison release. He admits to substance abuse problems since his teens.

During some of the most graphic testimony, Mrs. Epps, his 
grandmother, bowed her head and clasped her large hands together, as 
though in prayer. Other times, she simply took her oak cane and left 
the courtroom. "I pray all the time, or else I couldn't make it," she 
said during a break in the proceedings.

As for her grandson, whom she still dotes on with specialties like 
pig's feet and peach cobbler, she said he must construct "a better 
life." And then, drawing a long breath, Mrs. Epps said, "I am an old 
lady now. I won't be around much more. He must keep the faith and do 
on to others as he wants them to do to him."
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