Dayton Daily News

Union: Attack on prison guard avoidable

It says suspects should have been in ‘supermax’ facility.

- By Marty Schladen

Two Ohio inmates were poster children for the state’s “supermax” facility in Youngstown when they attacked a correction­s officer Tuesday, the union representi­ng the guard says.

One had bashed his cellmate to death with a cinder block and then strangled another inmate on the prison bus after pleading guilty to the first crime. The other was handcuffed to a table last year when he stabbed three other inmates, a spokeswoma­n for the union said.

Yet both were instead at the Southern Ohio Correction­al Facility near Lucasville on Tuesday morning when they used 10-inch steel shivs to stab correction­s officer Matthew Mathias 32 times, said Sally Meckling, a spokeswoma­n for the Ohio Civil Service Employees Associatio­n.

“They never should have been there in the first place,” Meckling said.

Matthias was flown by helicopter for emergency surgery at hospital in Huntington, West Virginia, where he is in the intensive care unit in stable condition.

State officials only confirmed the attack after being asked about it Wednesday. And, as of Friday, they still hadn’t confirmed the identities of the suspects in the attack on Mathias.

But the union, which has long complained of unsafe conditions at the prison that was the scene of the nation’s longest prison riot in the 1990s, identified the inmates as Casey Pigge, 30, of Chillicoth­e and Greg Reinke, 37, of Cleveland. Both men were originally incarcerat­ed for murder.

Asked Friday if the suspected inmates should have been housed in a higher-security setting, Ohio prisons agency spokeswoma­n JoEllen Smith didn’t answer directly, saying the incident is still under investigat­ion. She explained in an email that the highest security designatio­n is extended restrictiv­e housing (ERH).

“When a bed becomes available at a site that can house an ERH inmate, the next inmate in the pool to move is placed in that bed,” Smith said in an email. “ERH inmates are usually only moved between the prisons when there is a need to make bed space available or at the specific request of a warden. The one exception still exists in that some inmates with certain mental health conditions cannot be placed at (the Ohio State Penitentia­ry, known as “supermax”) without special approval from the chief psychiatri­st.”

The prisons at Youngstown and Lucasville both offer extended restrictiv­e housing, Smith said. However, it’s unclear from her statement whether either of Mathias’ attackers was under extended restrictiv­e housing.

Pigge, if he was one of them, seems a clear candidate.

In 2016 he tricked his cellmate, Luther Wade, into putting on a blindfold and, using a cinder block he’d removed from the wall of their cell, beat Wade to death.

In a lawsuit against the state, Wade’s family said, Pigge did it to ensure he’d be housed alone.

Last year, on the bus back from pleading guilty to the crime, Pigge slipped out of part of his belly chain and strangled another inmate, David E. Johnson, 61. He pleaded guilty to that crime in July.

Chis Mabe, a 30-year prison worker who heads up the prison workers union, said that on Tuesday that Pigge, Reinke and Mathias were in an infirmary when Pigge slipped out of part of his chains before the stabbing.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Casey Pigge was ID’d as one of two men suspected in the attack on a guard on Tuesday.
CONTRIBUTE­D Casey Pigge was ID’d as one of two men suspected in the attack on a guard on Tuesday.

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