Porterville Recorder

Correction­s officers charged with bribery, racketeeri­ng

- By MEG KINNARD

COLUMBIA, S.C. — More than a dozen South Carolina correction­s employees pleaded not guilty Wednesday to federal charges related to bribery and bringing contraband into the state’s institutio­ns, a case that was announced a week after a deadly prison riot.

The indictment­s against 14 Department of Correction­s employees, including 11 officers, include charges of racketeeri­ng, bribery and wire fraud, and in some cases are connected to actions that allegedly took place as long as three years ago. The indictment­s unsealed Wednesday don’t detail how much the employees are accused of accepting in exchange for smuggling drugs, cellphones and phone accessorie­s into state prisons.

The defendants were jailed pending the resolution of bond for their federal charges.

The indictment­s were unsealed a little more than a week after a deadly riot at Lee Correction­al Institutio­n left seven inmates dead — and just one day after the AP quoted several people connected to correction­al institutio­ns as saying that cellphones, drugs and other contraband were flowing into prisons around the state while officers turned a blind eye, or helped to smuggle them.

South Carolina’s Department of Correction­s has long banned inmates from possessing cellphones, saying they pose a top security threat because they can help inmates commit crimes, such as coordinati­ng drug distributi­on or plotting violent uprisings.

Citing understaff­ing as one of his agency’s top problems, Correction­s Director Bryan Stirling has repeatedly asked for more funding to allow him to hire additional officers. Since taking over the agency in 2013, Stirling has been able to increase officer pay and opportunit­ies to earn overtime.

But an inmate, defense attorneys and a person familiar with the operations of South Carolina’s correction­al institutio­ns all told the AP for its previous story that the problem is not a lack of officers, but the inattentio­n or collusion of current officers that is behind the contraband problem.

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