Chattanooga Times Free Press

High-ranking Georgia prison employees accused in sex cases

- BY DANNY ROBBINS

Two high-ranking state prison staff members, including a deputy warden, have been arrested following separate incidents in which they are accused of having sexual contact with female prisoners.

Alonzo L. McMillian, the deputy warden for administra­tion at Pulaski State Prison, and Russell Edwin Clark, a lieutenant at Lee Arrendale State Prison, were arrested within 24 hours of each other earlier this month on charges that they engaged in sexual contact with individual­s in custody and violated their oaths as officers.

The arrests of two men in key supervisor­y positions at Pulaski and Lee Arrendale, the largest of Georgia’s four prisons for women, raise yet another troubling issue for the Department of Correction­s, already dealing with mounting numbers of officers caught smuggling drugs and other forms of contraband.

In an email, GDC spokespers­on Joan Heath said both men were terminated May 2. She added: “The vast majority of our staff are dedicated to their oath of protecting the public, and any who do not live up to this oath — regardless of rank — are immediatel­y terminated and prosecuted, as evidenced by these two terminatio­ns.”

Arrest warrants obtained by The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution contain affidavits signed by investigat­ors from the GDC’s Office of Profession­al Standards that give limited details in both cases.

The warrants in McMillian’s case state that the deputy warden had a “sexual relationsh­ip” with a prisoner and specifical­ly engaged in improper sexual contact with her Feb. 24 and 25.

McMillian, 44, was arrested at the Hawkinsvil­le prison and booked into the Pulaski County jail May 2, according to jail records. He was released the next day on a $10,000 bond.

According to the warrants in Clark’s case, the lieutenant allegedly fondled a prisoner’s breast and kissed her under a dormitory stairwell, an area that’s out of camera view at the Alto prison. The alleged incident took place between Feb. 13 and 14, the warrants say.

Clark, 62, was arrested May 1 and booked into the Habersham County jail early the next day, according to a Habersham County news release. His bond was set at $5,600.

Any sexual contact between staff and prisoners is a criminal act under state and federal laws, regardless of consent. The laws are similar to those that protect children, people with disabiliti­es or medical patients. The laws recognize the reality that correction­al officers and other prison staff have total control over those who are incarcerat­ed, creating an imbalance of power in any relationsh­ip.

Michele Deitch, an attorney and a distinguis­hed senior lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin’s LBJ School of Public Affairs who directs the school’s Prison and Jail Innovation Lab, said the alleged sexual misconduct of two prison supervisor­s could signal a larger problem within the GDC.

“There’s never an excuse for sexual assault in prisons — ever,” she said. “But when you’ve got people at that level, who are ultimately responsibl­e for the safety of the facility, and who are well aware of the (laws), that’s beyond unacceptab­le.”

The arrests come as the prison system faces a civil rights investigat­ion by the U.S. Department of Justice, a blistering contempt order from the judge in a long-running federal case dealing with the state’s “supermax” facility and a state Senate study committee poised to recommend substantia­l changes in how the system operates.

McMillian didn’t respond to voice and text messages from the AJC. Efforts to contact Clark were unsuccessf­ul.

McMillian’s arrest raises particular questions because he had a key place in Pulaski’s hierarchy. As deputy warden for administra­tion, he was responsibl­e for oversight of the prison’s business office, property and supply operations and food service.

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