San Francisco Chronicle

Prison fostered culture of abuse, AP probe finds

- By Michael Balsamo and Michael R. Sisak Michael Balsamo and Michael R. Sisak are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — Inside one of the only federal women’s prisons in the United States, inmates say they have been subjected to rampant sexual abuse by correction­al officers and even the warden, and were often threatened or punished when they tried to speak up.

Prisoners and workers at the federal correction­al institutio­n in Dublin even have a name for it: “The rape club.”

An Associated Press investigat­ion has found a permissive and toxic culture at the Bay Area lockup, enabling years of sexual misconduct by predatory employees and cover-ups that have largely kept the abuse out of the public eye.

The Associated Press obtained internal Bureau of Prisons documents, statements and recordings from inmates, interviewe­d current and former prison employees and reviewed thousands of pages of court records from criminal and civil cases involving Dublin prison staff.

Together, they detail how inmates’ allegation­s against members of the mostly male staff were ignored or set aside, how prisoners could be sent to solitary confinemen­t for reporting abuse, and how officials in charge of preventing and investigat­ing sexual misconduct were themselves accused of abusing inmates or neglecting their concerns.

In one instance, a female inmate said a man, who was her prison work supervisor, taunted her by remarking “let the games begin” when he assigned her to work with a maintenanc­e foreman she accused of rape. Another worker said he wanted to get inmates pregnant. The warden kept nude photos on his government-issued cell phone of a woman he is accused of assaulting, prosecutor­s say.

One inmate said she was “overwhelme­d with fear, anxiety and anger, and cried uncontroll­ably” after enduring abuse and retaliatio­n. Another said she contemplat­ed suicide when her cries for help went unheeded and now suffers from severe anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder.

All sexual activity between a prison worker and an inmate is illegal. Correction­al employees enjoy substantia­l power over inmates, controllin­g every aspect of their lives from mealtime to lights out, and there is no scenario in which an inmate can give consent.

The allegation­s at Dublin, which so far have resulted in four arrests, are endemic of a larger problem within the beleaguere­d federal Bureau of Prisons. In 2020, there were 422 complaints of staff-on-inmate sexual abuse across the system of 122 prisons and 153,000 inmates. The agency said it substantia­ted only four of them and that 290 are still being investigat­ed.

The Associated Press contacted lawyers for every Dublin prison employee charged with sexual abuse or named as a defendant in a lawsuit alleging abuse, and tried reaching the men directly through available phone numbers and email addresses. None responded to interview requests.

Thahesha Jusino, taking over

as Dublin’s warden later this month, promised to “work tirelessly to reaffirm the Bureau of Prisons’ zero tolerance for sexual abuse and sexual harassment.”

She said the agency is fully cooperatin­g with the Justice Department’s inspector general on active investigat­ions and noted that a “vast majority” of these cases were referred for investigat­ion by the Bureau of Prisons itself.

“I am committed to ensuring the safety of our inmates, staff, and the public,” Jusino said a statement to the Associated Press. “A culture of misconduct, or actions not representa­tive of the BOP’s Core Values will not be tolerated.”

FCI Dublin, about 21 miles east of Oakland, is one of six female-only facilities in the federal prison system. As of Feb. 1, it had about 750 inmates, many of them serving sentences for drug crimes.

Women made the first internal complaints to staff members about five years ago, court records and internal agency documents show, but it is unclear whether those complaints ever went anywhere. The women say they were largely ignored, and the abuse continued.

One who reported a 2017 sexual assault said she was told nothing would be done about her complaint because it was a “he said-she said.” The woman, who is suing the Bureau of Prisons over her treatment, said she was fired from her prison commissary job as retaliatio­n.

In 2019, another Dublin inmate alleged in a suit that a maintenanc­e foreman repeatedly raped her and that other workers facilitate­d the abuse and mocked her for it. When an internal prison investigat­or finally caught wind of what was happening, the woman said she was the one who got punished with three months in solitary confinemen­t and a transfer to a federal prison in Alabama.

Then, in 2020, an inmate’s report that two Dublin workers were abusing inmates made its way to the Justice Department’s inspector general and the FBI, triggering a criminal investigat­ion that has led to the arrest of four employees, including former warden Ray Garcia, in the past seven months. They each face up to 15 years in prison.

Two — Ross Klinger, 36, and James Theodore Highhouse, 49 — are expected to plead guilty in the coming weeks in federal court to charges of sexual abuse

of a ward. Several other Dublin workers are under investigat­ion.

Garcia is accused of molesting an inmate in the months before the pandemic began. Then the associate warden, Garcia made her and another inmate strip naked as he did rounds and took pictures that were found on his government­issued cell phone, prosecutor­s said. He would later be promoted.

“If they’re undressing, I’ve already looked,” Garcia, 54, told the FBI in July 2021, according to court records. “I don’t, like, schedule a time like ‘you be undressed, and I’ll be there.’”

Garcia, the highest-ranking federal prison official arrested in more than 10 years, had an outsize influence as warden over how Dublin handled employee sexual misconduct. He led staff and inmate training on reporting abuse and complying with the federal Prison Rape Eliminatio­n Act.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission.

 ?? Ben Margot / Associated Press 2006 ?? An Associated Press investigat­ion uncovered a permissive and toxic culture at Federal Correction­al Institutio­n, Dublin, the federal prison for women in Alameda County.
Ben Margot / Associated Press 2006 An Associated Press investigat­ion uncovered a permissive and toxic culture at Federal Correction­al Institutio­n, Dublin, the federal prison for women in Alameda County.

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