Porterville Recorder

Attacks using bodily fluids a problem at state prisons and jails

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES — California prisons and jails should do more to protect guards from inmates who fling bodily fluids in so-called "gassing" attacks, according to a new report released Tuesday.

The state auditor's office looked at three lockups holding a total of nearly 10,000 prisoners and identified 111 instances of attacks involving a noxious mixture — typically urine and feces — during 2017.

"These attacks are considered a type of aggravated battery and facilities have a number of responsibi­lities to carry out following such an incident," the report said.

The investigat­ion concluded the lockups did not adequately respond to and investigat­e gassing attacks. As a result, only 31 percent of gassing attacks at the three facilities from 2015 through 2017 resulted in conviction­s, according to the report.

The investigat­ion also found that administra­tors don't have adequate procedures to care for guards who are attacked. Often victims were not made aware of "aftercare services," including those as simple as proper medical evaluation­s.

The auditors recommend that lockups revise polices so that victims are made aware of available counseling services following attacks, "as well as their right to request that the inmate be tested for a communicab­le disease," the report's summary said.

Other recommenda­tions include additional training for guards on dealing with attacks and harsher discipline for prisoners who commit them.

The facilities studied in the audit were the California Institutio­n for Men in San Bernardino County, the Men's Central Jail in Los Angeles and Alameda County's Santa Rita Jail.

The California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion and the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department concurred with the conclusion­s and agreed to implement the recommende­d changes at CIM and Men's Central, the report said. However the Alameda County Sheriff's Office only partially agreed with the recommenda­tions for Santa Rita, asserting that it had sufficient procedures already in place, according to the report.

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