Los Angeles Times

ACLU report criticizes O.C. jail conditions

Violence, inhumane conditions plague facilities, group alleges after its 2-year probe.

- By Adam Elmahrek adam.elmahrek @latimes.com

Sheriff’s deputies working at Orange County jails have assaulted inmates, instigated fights and verbally abused them, according to a report released Tuesday by the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California.

The report also alleges that holding cells for the inmates are filthy, smeared with human waste and packed with people sleeping on the f loors. In one case, the ACLU said, deputies slammed a woman’s face against the wall, handcuffed her to a wheelchair and “paraded” her around while she was partially nude.

Those are some of the findings described in the 104page report on the county’s jails by the ACLU, which said it spent two years investigat­ing the second-largest jail system in the state.

The ACLU based its report on post-release surveys of 120 inmates, interviews with those incarcerat­ed, reports by the Orange County grand jury and media accounts. ACLU advocates said their investigat­ion is the first public glimpse of the county’s jail from the point of view of the people who inhabit them.

According to the report, deputies’ use of force “tends to be excessive or unnecessar­y,” and they “routinely instigate” fights between inmates or deliberate­ly fail to intervene when fights are occurring. One inmate said deputies will blame the loss of privileges such as TV time on a single person, marking them as targets of retaliatio­n.

Inmates complained that in some instances they were given just a few minutes to eat. ACLU advocates said they heard stories of people vomiting because they were trying to eat so fast. “They’re literally scarfing food down,” said Esther Lim, a jails advocate with the ACLU who worked on the report.

The ACLU blamed Sheriff Sandra Hutchens for the problems at the county’s jails and called for her resignatio­n at Tuesday’s county Board of Supervisor­s meeting.

Hutchens announced that she will not seek reelection hours after the ACLU released its report.

The report comes amid an ongoing controvers­y involving the use of so-called jailhouse snitches in the county’s jails. A county grand jury last week issued a report dismissing the idea that sheriff ’s and district attorney’s officials had run a secret operation that employed jailhouse snitches to obtain confession­s from criminal defendants. But the report is unlikely to be the final word, as the U.S. Justice Department and the California attorney general’s office are investigat­ing the matter.

The jail system has been rocked by other problems, including a daring escape by three inmates last year and a years-long investigat­ion by the Justice Department after the 2006 beating death of an inmate at the hands of others incarcerat­ed at Theo Lacy jail.

In 2014, the federal investigat­ion found that jail conditions had improved but that there were still problems with the use of force and medical care. Sheriff’s deputies have also filed a lawsuit against the department after the jail escape, alleging that staff reductions and other missteps allowed the escape — which led to a taxi driver being taken hostage — to happen.

The ACLU report faulted the Sheriff’s Department’s management of the jails in a number of other areas, including how mentally ill people are treated and housed, and overcrowdi­ng. It alleges that gay male and transgende­r inmates are denied access to things such as religious services and school, and people requesting special diets based on religion are often denied.

Among other recommenda­tions, the report called for the establishm­ent of an independen­t civilian oversight commission with “subpoena and investigat­ory powers” to look into use-of-force incidents.

In response, the Sheriff ’s Department said the report gave “a purposely distorted view” of the county jail system by relying largely on interviews from former inmates.

“The failure to include the perspectiv­e of law enforcemen­t has resulted in a report that only tells one side of the story,” the department said in a statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States