Santa Fe New Mexican

State settles with female correction­s officers for $2.5 million

- By Steve Terrell sterrell@sfnewmexic­an.com

to The pay $2.5 state million government to six current agreed this and year former female correction­s officers as a settlement in a lawsuit alleging sexual harassment and discrimina­tion by 23 male guards at the state prison in Los Lunas. In the suit, filed in 2015, the women accused the men of “unthinkabl­e and constant sexually based violence and

harassment,” including urinating and masturbati­ng in front of them, screaming at them, calling them obscene names, propositio­ning them, fondling their breasts while they were being fitted for vests and physically threatenin­g them on a regular basis.

One plaintiff said someone drew an obscene picture with her name on it that was on display in the prison “in plain sight” for years.

The suit claimed female officers had to endure sexist insults even during training sessions addressing domestic violence and sexual harassment.

The settlement, signed in late January, was sealed for six months, according to the terms of the agreement. The state agreed to pay the plaintiffs within 30 days of the signing.

The state Correction­s Department has denied the allegation­s and has said the settlement was reached to avoid a costly legal battle. Department spokesman S.U. Mahesh, contacted after business hours Thursday, said, “The settlement speaks for itself.”

The agreement says the Correction­s Department “denies the allegation­s in the lawsuits and this agreement does not constitute and will not be construed as an admission … of any unlawful, improper or wrongful conduct” in regard to the allegation­s in the suit.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit were Antoinette De La Cruz, Allison Eastman, Benita Joe, Many Kennedy, Niadra Lemons and Nicole Romero.

In the suit, the women said supervisor­s were aware of the situation but did not take appropriat­e action.

The women initially included former Correction­s Secretary Gregg Marcantel and former Deputy Secretary Joe Booker as defendants in the suit, saying the top officials had ignored allegation­s of widespread sexual harassment and violence against female correction­s officers. Last year, however, state District Judge Francis Mathew ruled the plaintiffs had not provided enough evidence to take the two officials to trial.

Government employees generally are protected under the doctrine of qualified immunity, so they can perform their official duties without facing the constant threat of litigation — unless it can be proven they intended to violate someone’s constituti­onal rights.

Attorney Laura Schauer Ives said at a court hearing last year that Lemons had sent Booker a document describing the “lewd” behavior she encountere­d at the prison. Booker, in a deposition, said he passed Lemons’ document to the department’s Office of Profession­al Standards.

The complaint says Lemons also spoke at a town hall for correction­s officers in December 2013, telling the crowd, which included top administra­tors, that women faced a sexually hostile work environmen­t and discrimina­tion daily.

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