Month: November 2023

AS ANTI-TRANS BILLS TARGET PRISONERS, SOME WARN OF A ‘CANARY IN THE COAL MINE’

  • Adam M. Rhodes
  • August 17, 2023
  • The Appeal

Lawmakers in a handful of states have begun taking aim at transgender people in prison with extreme measures that seek to infringe on the rights of an especially vulnerable segment of the population. Over the past two years, elected officials have proposed a variety of mechanisms designed to suppress transgender existence behind bars. The bills

Sex Abuse, Beatings and an Untouchable Mississippi Sheriff

  • Ilyssa Daly and Jerry Mitchell
  • April 11, 2023
  • The New York Times

Terry Grassaree was dogged for years by questions about how he did his job as a law enforcement officer in Macon, Miss., a tiny, rural town near the state’s eastern border. There were allegations of rape inside the jail that Mr. Grassaree supervised, and lawsuits claiming that he covered up the episodes. At least five

KARE 11 Investigates: Private Guards, No Oversight, a Pattern of Rape

  • A.J. Lagoe, Steve Eckert, Aaron Adelson, Gary Knox, Chris Vanderveen
  • November 7, 2023
  • Prospect

CHAPTER 1 The Predator and the Prey In June of 2019, Danielle Sivels was living in Texas when she was arrested on an out-of-state warrant for probation violations stemming from a 2015 hit-and-run. Danielle, 34 at the time, battled mental illness, addiction, and grew up in and out of the foster care system surviving family

Brutality behind bars

  • Michael Amherst
  • October 4, 2023
  • Prospect

I read with interest Bill Keller’s piece on the Americanisation of UK prisons. However, I was surprised there was no mention of sexual violence in prison, often seen as synonymous with the US prison estate. Years ago, I was told by a researcher on prisons here in the UK that we have a collective state of

A prison guard confessed to sexual misconduct. He got a year of paid time off and no charges

  • Sam Levin
  • October 30, 2023
  • The Guardian

Records obtained by the Guardian show women in California prisons routinely report abuse, but few officers face consequences, even when there is substantial evidence Women incarcerated in California state prisons have filed hundreds of complaints of sexual abuse by staff since 2014. But in that time frame, only four officers have been terminated for sexual misconduct,