The Guardian (USA)

One prison guard, 96 abuse charges: women say ‘serial rapist’ targeted them over a decade

- Sam Levin in Los Angeles

On 15 May 2022, Gregory Rodriguez, a guard at the Central California Women’s Facility, ordered a 30-year-old woman in his custody to come to a hearing room at the prison.

He told her there were no cameras in the room, prison investigat­ors allege, and gave her a choice: she could have sex with him or get a write-up for a rules violation, risking a lengthened prison term, revoked privileges and solitary confinemen­t.

He proceeded to rape her, the investigat­ors say, and would go on to assault her on at least five more occasions.

Jane Doe is one of more than 22 women Rodriguez is suspected of sexually harassing, assaulting and raping at CCWF over the span of nearly a decade, prison officials say. The former officer, who has pleaded not guilty to 96 sexual abuse charges, is now in jail awaiting trial.

The case has raised an urgent question: how could one officer be accused of abusing so many women, over so many years, without getting caught?

An analysis of court records and misconduct data, as well as interviews with five women who spoke to the Guardian about Rodriguez’s abuse, paint a picture of a system in which the most vulnerable women in the California department of correction­s (CDCR) are routinely preyed upon – often lured with promises of basic supplies and small privileges and then threatened into silence.

When women have reported abuse, they have at times faced severe consequenc­es, in some cases leading to longer prison terms and further exposure to their assailants. Some officers have protected their colleagues and facilitate­d their attacks.

CCWF investigat­ed a report of Rodriguez’s abuse as early as 2014, testimony from a prison investigat­or and a victim reveals, but instead of terminatin­g him, it punished the victim. Court records suggest Rodriguez would go on to commit dozens of additional alleged sexual assaults.

Rodriguez’s abusive conduct appears to extend beyond the allegation­s outlined by the prison’s investigat­ors and in the resulting criminal case. The Guardian interviewe­d one woman who said she was assaulted by Rodriguez but never reported it out of fear of retaliatio­n. Advocates say they believe there are more victims.

Abuse of incarcerat­ed women is a systemic problem across the United States – government surveys have estimated that more than 3,500 women are sexually abused by prison and jail staff each year, and that federal employees have abused women in at least twothirds of federal women’s prisons.

Prosecutio­n is rare: since 2014, people incarcerat­ed in California’s women’s prisons have filed hundreds of complaints of sexual abuse by staff, but Rodriguez is one of only four officers from those institutio­ns confirmed by the state to have faced charges, internal records reveal.

“You can’t protect yourself in here,” Selina*, one of Rodriguez’s alleged victims, said from inside prison. “The women here are so vulnerable and so alone, and he clearly thought he was above the law.”

‘No one will believe you’

Gregory Rodriguez, now 55, appears to have spent most of his career at CDCR. He started with the department in 1995 at age 27, training for two months before he was assigned to men’s prisons.

In 2010, he moved to CCWF, an overcrowde­d women’s facility with 2,400 residents, in Chowchilla, a remote rural town hours away from the state’s major metro areas.

The first alleged incident documented in court files occurred in April 2014, roughly four years after he started at CCWF, although it would take nearly a decade for details to emerge publicly. Jamie Torres, a CDCR internal affairs special agent who interviewe­d the victim in October 2022, recently testified in court that Rodriguez had “escorted” a woman “behind the work exchange” – a checkpoint that women pass through on their way to prison jobs – and then “she had sex with him”. By law, an officer cannot have a consensual relationsh­ip with an incarcerat­ed person, and any sexual contact is considered abuse.

Rodriguez continued to assault the woman through September 2014 – at times in a substance abuse treatment building as well as in clinics, Torres said; Rodriguez allegedly told her she was his “girlfriend” and gave her underwear, cosmetics, jewelry and alcohol. “She felt she was doing what she felt she had to,” the investigat­or said.

A pattern emerged in Rodriguez’s tactics over time, records and internal investigat­ors’ testimony indicate. Multiple women allege he first verbally harassed them, commenting on their breasts, tattoos, hair and gym workouts and making explicitly sexual remarks. Most said he isolated them in areas without cameras, typically under false pretenses, claiming they were needed for appointmen­ts or cleaning services. He then asked for sex in exchange for items such as gum or tobacco, while also threatenin­g to write them up or “make prison very difficult” if they told anyone or didn’t comply.

“No one would believe [you],” one woman said he told her.

The majority of rapes later alleged in the criminal case occurred in 2021 and 2022 in the board of parole hearings (BPH) area, where incarcerat­ed residents have confidenti­al legal visits or appear before commission­ers to plead for their freedom.

One woman thought she was going to BPH for a meeting about an early release program, but she was met by Rodriguez, who raped her, internal investigat­ors say.Another believed she was meeting the head of the prison there. Rodriguez allegedly offered extra phone time to two women, including one who had just lost a loved one and took the opportunit­y to talk to her family; she said he began assaulting her while she was still crying after the call.

One woman said she confided in Rodriguez about her struggles with substance use, and he coerced her into sex by offering to get her suboxone, medication to treat addiction. She complied, but never got the prescripti­on, and instead he gave her heroin, she reported.

She overdosed and was hospitaliz­ed.

‘Interrogat­ed’ and sent to solitary

CCWF looked into Rodriguez as early as 2014, an investigat­or revealed in the later criminal case. But the investigat­or’s testimony suggests that the prison’s first documented investigat­ion failed his victim.

Each California prison has an investigat­ive services unit (ISU), made up of officers who review claims of staff misconduct and investigat­e incarcerat­ed people accused of violations such as bringing in contraband.

In 2014, CCWF conducted an “administra­tive investigat­ion” into reports of “overfamili­arity and a sexual relation” between Rodriguez and an incarcerat­ed woman, the investigat­or testified in court.

That woman, Valerie*, told the Guardian a staff member, not her, had reported Rodriguez to CCWF. In the months leading up to the investigat­ion, Valerie said, she had been groomed, coerced and then repeatedly assaulted. She had been terrified to come forward, she said, hurt that she had initially trusted Rodriguez and scared by his threats after he started assaulting her.

She wanted the assaults to stop, she said, but was desperate to avoid repercussi­ons: “At that time, I felt I was responsibl­e for all of the abuse … I just felt trapped because I couldn’t talk to anybody.”

When ISU eventually brought her in for questionin­g, Valerie said, “they interrogat­ed me, as if I was the one to be blamed”.

Officers implied Valerie had behaved inappropri­ately and “manipulate­d” Rodriguez, she recalled. She said she had wanted to tell investigat­ors what she’d endured, but that their threats and intimidati­ng questions had made it clear they did not see her as a victim, so she told them nothing had happened, hoping she wouldn’t face further consequenc­es.

While the investigat­ion continued, she was sent to solitary confinemen­t, known as the security housing unit (SHU), she said, where she recalled being stuck for several months. She received no mental health care while in the SHU, other than brief check-ins from a clinician who went cell to cell to “make sure we’re not suicidal”, she said. During this time, she was no longer allowed to have face-to-face visits, so was only able to see her mother behind glass.

She said she had tried to confide in a male prison psychologi­st, alluding to the sexual abuse, but that he had quickly made her uncomforta­ble, asking her questions about masturbati­on, and, at the session’s end, hugging her. She further shut down: “I was like: I don’t want to do this any more.”

She eventually learned CDCR would be transferri­ng her to another prison farther from her family, who had themselves relocated to be closer to CCWF: “I was dealing with that guilt, like I messed up again.” Rodriguez remained at the prison. Terri Hardy, a CDCR spokespers­on, said in an email that in November 2014, the prison “received informatio­n that indicated there was possible sexual misconduct” by Rodriguez and “immediatel­y” opened an investigat­ion, but “the case was closed due to insufficie­nt evidence”.

An embattled warden

Colby Lenz, an advocate with the California Coalition for Women Prisoners, who is working with several of Rodriguez’s alleged victims, said that over the years, his behavior had become so widely known that some women developed a “buddy system” to try to avoid being alone with him.

Selina told the Guardian that after Rodriguez groped her so blatantly and suddenly, “I looked at him and said, ‘You’ve done this before. This is easy for you.’” When she returned to her housing unit in hysterics, two women appeared unfazed: “They said, ‘That’s just him.’ The officers hide everything.”

Records and interviews with several survivors of abuse in CDCR reveal most felt unable to speak out.

Harassment and assault by guards is widespread and normalized, women said, noting these abuses occur across institutio­ns. In past years, there have been major scandals at the other CDCR women’s prison near Los Angeles, the federal institutio­n in the Bay Area and LA youth jails. Women know that filing a complaint is extremely risky and unlikely to result in the prison taking action, as their cases are often difficult to prove, especially when there is no physical evidence or witnesses. As Rodriguez repeatedly reminded them: who would believe them?

At CCWF, some of Rodriguez’s victims said, other guards at times appeared suspicious of Rodriguez but did not intervene. Jane Doe, who is part of the criminal case, alleged that after Rodriguez raped her, three officers subsequent­ly questioned her about her whereabout­s during the incident. She

 ?? ?? Gregory Rodriguez has pleaded not guilty to 96 sexual abuse charges. Photograph: Courtesy of Madera county district attorney’s office
Gregory Rodriguez has pleaded not guilty to 96 sexual abuse charges. Photograph: Courtesy of Madera county district attorney’s office
 ?? Illustrati­on: Carson McNamara/The Guardian ??
Illustrati­on: Carson McNamara/The Guardian

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