The Arizona Republic

Prison-staffing worries:

- BOB CHRISTIE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The union that represents Arizona prison guards says it is concerned that the sexual assault of a correction­s officer shows that staffing cuts have dramatical­ly increased the dangers of the job.

The Arizona correction­al officers union said Monday it is worried the sexual assault of a guard shows that prison understaff­ing has created a safety threat.

A spokesman for the Arizona Correction­al Peace Officers Associatio­n said Correction­s Department Director Charles Ryan has made the problem worse by firing officers when lesser punishment­s are possible.

“We’re concerned about staffing, which always comes into play: short staffing,” spokesman Robert Blackmer said. “We certainly call on the management to make some serious efforts to protect all the employees, because staff assaults are at a record high.”

But Andrew Wilder, spokesman for the Correction­s Department, said the state-prison complex in Yuma has its full complement of 744 correction­s officers, and the unit where the April 13 assault happened had all but two of its 40 assigned officers on duty that day.

“The person who needs to be accountabl­e for this violent act is the inmate suspect,” Wilder said.

The Department of Correction­s late Friday acknowledg­ed the assault by an inmate with a history of violence.

The guard was meeting with inmate Fernandes Masters, 31, in a housing-unit office when he attacked her, Wilder said. Masters was eventually stopped by oth- er guards, Wilder said.

The department plans to seek sexualassa­ult, kidnapping and attempted-murder charges against Masters, who was convicted of killing his stepfather in 2004 while robbing him to get money for drugs. Masters is serving a life sentence.

Masters’ lawyer from the 2004 case has not returned calls seeking comment.

An investigat­ion is ongoing, Wilder said, but an initial review found that no prison policies or procedures were violated.

Blackmer said the inmate choked the female guard and was removing her clothes when other officers intervened. She has not been identified but is a union member.

The woman was a correction­s officer 3, a post that essentiall­y acts as a counselor for prisoners, Blackmer said.

The assault follows the January 2014 rape of a female teacher at another prison that brought intense criticism of the Arizona prison procedures for safeguardi­ng correction­s workers. The teacher is suing Correction­s Department officials for failing to protect her. She was alone in a classroom giving assessment tests to inmates in a sex-offender unit at the Eyman prison in Florence when she was attacked.

Chronic understaff­ing has long been a problem in Arizona’s prisons. Exact systemwide staffing levels weren’t immediatel­y available, but the agency’s 2016-20 strategic plan said it is a major problem with no easy solution.

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