Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Youth prison changes likely

Judge troubled by Lincoln Hills practices

- PATRICK MARLEY

MADISON - A federal judge signaled Thursday he is likely to force major changes at Wisconsin’s juvenile prison, saying it appears the state excessivel­y uses solitary confinemen­t, pepper spray and handcuffs on teen inmates.

“I think it’s very clear Lincoln Hills is a very troubled institutio­n and that shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone,” U.S. District Judge James Peterson said at the end of a daylong hearing.

“I think the problem is the general perspectiv­e of the institutio­n has been essentiall­y to run it like an adult prison and I think there really has been an extensive lack of programmin­g and an extensive lack of mental

health care provided to the residents.”

Peterson said he expects to issue a ruling from the bench Friday after hearing closing arguments about Lincoln Hills School for Boys and Copper Lake School for Girls, which share a campus north of Wausau.

He characteri­zed as excessive the use of pepper spray, isolation and restraints.

“I do see that it is really overused and I’m not completely convinced that the institutio­n has a constituti­onally proper perspectiv­e on the use of it,” he said of pepper spray.

He indicated, however, that he would not grant the teen inmates who brought the lawsuit everything they wanted. For instance, he said he did not think the prison had treated the inmates with deliberate indifferen­ce.

Separately, the complex has been under criminal investigat­ion for 21⁄2 years for prisoner abuse and child neglect.

The lawsuit, brought with the assistance of the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin and the Juvenile Law Center, is seeking to curb the use of pepper spray, solitary confinemen­t and handcuffs and other restraints. Thursday’s hearing was held to decide whether the judge should immediatel­y curb those practices with an injunction.

Wendy Peterson, the superinten­dent at Lincoln Hills, testified that prison officials are working daily to reduce the use of those practices.

“We realize that it’s not the best thing for kids,” she said of the use of pepper spray.

Pepper spray has been used at the prison complex about 20 times a month, but that was cut in half in May and has been used just four times so far in June, she testified.

The judge, however, noted pepper spray was deployed 45 times in 2015 but 220 times in 2016.

“That is not a trend that is on the front lines of reform,” he said.

Testifying for the ACLU

was Vincent Schiraldi, a criminal justice fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School who previously ran the juvenile correction­s system in Washington, D.C.

He noted that one inmate at Lincoln Hills was blasted with pepper spray 17 times and another 19 times. Some see getting sprayed as a way to show resistance to the prison, he said.

“The kids talked about eating pepper spray,” Schiraldi said. “There was a point where it became almost a macho badge of courage.”

Teen inmates in solitary confinemen­t sometimes make the “irrational calculatio­n” to incite guards to use pepper spray because it gives them some form of attention after being ignored for long stretches, he testified.

“It’s negative stimulatio­n, but it’s the only stimulatio­n they’re getting when they’re locked down,” he said.

The ACLU showed two videos of teen inmates getting pepper sprayed. In one, an inmate in November had pushed his hands through the food slot in his door and refused to pull them back in his room.

Six guards wearing riot gear surrounded his door and repeatedly asked him to pull his hands back, telling him he would be sprayed if he did not follow their commands.

They sprayed him through the food slot but he kept one hand out of the food slot and appeared to signal that he wanted to be sprayed again. He was.

Before the pepper spray was deployed the first time, an inmate in a nearby cell yelled that he wanted to be moved before the spray was deployed because he had asthma. There appeared to be no effort to remove him from the area.

“It doesn’t make the youth behavior better,” Schiraldi said of the use of pepper spray. “It may be making youth behavior worse.”

Those bringing the lawsuit initially asked to close the hearing while the videos were shown because they had not had time to blur the inmates’ faces or edit out times when their names were used.

Media outlets, including the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, objected to the proposal

and the judge ruled the videos could be shown in open court provided those who watched them signed statements they would not disclose the names of the juvenile inmates.

“It’s important that we know what goes on in the courts and it’s important that we know what goes on at Lincoln Hills,” Judge Peterson said.

While the judge raised significan­t concerns about how Lincoln Hills is run, he also said he was reluctant to find that all use of solitary confinemen­t as a form of punishment violates the rights of inmates in all cases.

“It’s hard for me to rule that it’s just per se unconstitu­tional,” he said.

Schiraldi noted one inmate spent 72 days in solitary confinemen­t and was denied visits from a psychologi­st during that time.

At any given time, 15% to 20% of the teen inmates are held in solitary confinemen­t as a form of punishment. That’s “very high” compared with other states, Schiraldi testified.

Inmates in solitary confinemen­t remain in their cells for 20 hours a day or more with the lights on at all hours.

Brian Gustke, security director at Lincoln Hills, acknowledg­ed some inmates get no time out of their cells. He blamed it on staffing shortages.

“Some of our staffing patterns haven’t been the best,” Gustke said. “It just leads to confusion on everybody’s part, staff as well as the youth.”

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