Many
of us who live in rural North Carolina understand the importance of
our state prisons to our economy. Most are located here. They employ
a significant number of people responsible for keeping us safe by
maintaining security within these facilities. In fact, hardly a day
goes by when we don’t see a correction officer at the grocery
store, or waiting in line at the drugstore to have a prescription
filled. Some are friends and neighbors we know, while others can only
be identified by the patch on the sleeves of their gray or blue
shirts. Other than a friendly hello or nod, we hardly gave them
another thought, until April 26, 2017. That was the day that
29-year-old correction officer Sergeant Megan Callahan was brutally
murdered by an inmate at the Bertie Correctional Institute.
Megan
was a more than competent correction officer who loved her job. Her
cold-blooded murder stunned everyone. When her family came to
Raleigh, where Megan was honored by the state House and Senate, I
said on the House floor that I truly hoped and prayed that her death
would lead to reforms that would help reduce the chance of something
like this ever happening again. Most assumed that would indeed be
the case. As we learned six short months later, it wasn’t.
On
October 12, 2017 at the Pasquotank Correctional Institute, a prison
breakout attempt resulted in the ultimate deaths of four more
correction employees by inmates. The victims: Veronica Darden, Justin
Smith, Wendy Shannon and Geoffrey Howe. I suggested a legislative
commission be established that would review prison management and
conditions from top to bottom, including the operations of Correction
Enterprises. The next day the Department of Corrections stated they
were going to have an independent investigation conducted at both
Bertie and Pasquotank. In my view, too little too late. Any
investigation needs to be system wide. The problems are systemic.
For
the last many months I have been speaking with corrections personnel
from many of the 55 correction facilities across the state. They have
been sharing information with me about what amounts to a “Secret
Society” that exists within a closed circle of management. It
protects the misdeeds of those in power from ever being reported.
This includes inmates. Employees at lower levels are told by
management that, “Not a word will be spoken about what goes on
within these walls or it will be trouble for you; even your job!”
There
is little or no trust by correction officers in management.
Correction officers and other prison staff are beyond frustrated by
the continuing downward spiral within the system including the lack
of adequate security and support for them to do their jobs properly
as well as a lack of training for newly recruited officers. They are
being forced to put up with rampant gang activity. In addition, on
almost any confrontation between a correction officer and an inmate,
allegedly management sides with inmates. Officers are disrespected
and demoralized, while putting their lives on the line every day. And
for what? Seasoned personnel know much of what is wrong within the
system. They see it every day. The problem is no one in management
listens, or seems to even care. As for those who will talk; they
realize it will likely mean their jobs. This should no longer be
tolerated. The folks on the inside are fed up! Unless things change
for the better and soon, we will continue to see more correction
officers heading for the exits and their exits to date have been
unprecedented.
The
Joint Legislative Oversight Committee on Justice and Public Safety,
of which I am a member, is scheduled to meet again in Raleigh on
March 15 on the sixth floor of the Legislative Office from 1-5 PM. We
will be discussing the recent 78-page NIC (National Institute of
Corrections) report, a damning indictment of the Pasquotank
Correctional Institute’s safety procedures or lack thereof on
October 12th,
2017, the day the murders occurred. Representative Ted Davis,
chairman, has invited someone from NIC to present its findings in
detail to the committee and to answer all questions posed.
I am in hopes that this will
begin to further expand the discussion as to how we can begin to
really fix our prison system which, in my view, remains clearly out
of control. I am hopeful a complete investigation, including
recommendations for overall reform by a subcommittee will be
forthcoming. There are still hundreds of questions that remain
unanswered that will likely require bringing employees out of the
shadows, by subpoena if necessary, to tell us what they know. Only
then will we learn for certain if this “Secret Society” exists,
and the extent to which their existence is contributing to the
continuing downward spiral of our state prison system.
Representative
Bob Steinburg
North
Carolina House District 1
ALLEGED SECRET SOCIETY ENDANGERS OUR PRISONS
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