USA TODAY International Edition

Death toll at Mississipp­i prisons rises to 9

Lawmaker seeks probe of conditions, understaff­ing

- Alissa Zhu

JACKSON, Miss. – Two inmates were killed at the Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry at Parchman on Monday night, the Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s announced Tuesday, bringing the death toll at Mississipp­i prisons up to nine in less than a month.

The most recent deaths appear to be “an isolated incident – not a continuati­on of the recent retaliator­y killings,” the department said in a tweet that provided scant informatio­n.

On Dec. 29, correction­s department officials announced a statewide prison lockdown following a fight at South Mississipp­i Correction­al Institutio­n that left one inmate dead and two others injured. In the following days, riots and fights continued despite the lockdown, leading to four more killings across the state. Some of the violence, officials have said, is gang- related.

The lockdown has since been lifted on all prisons except Parchman, where much of the violence has taken place. Seven men incarcerat­ed at Parchman have died this month, including three who were killed by other inmates, one who died at a hospital of natural causes and one who was found hanging in his cell over the weekend, according to Sunflower County Coroner Heather Burton.

The Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s ( MDOC) did not release the names of the men who died Monday and said Parchman’s chaplain has reached out to next of kin.

No additional details were provided. MDOC said the agency is investigat­ing and will share more informatio­n later.

Burton did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Activists say gangs alone are not to blame for the recent surge of violence.

Systemic issues related to repeated budget cuts and chronic understaff­ing have created an environmen­t for violence to thrive, they say.

U. S. Rep. Bennie Thompson and nearly a dozen civil rights and social justice organizati­ons had requested the U. S. Department of Justice to investigat­e Mississipp­i prisons, charging that state leaders have known about the understaff­ing and “horrific conditions,” yet have repeatedly failed to take action.

Parchman inmates are suing former MDOC commission­er Pelicia Hall and the prison’s superinten­dent Marshal Turner, alleging they have violated prisoners’ constituti­onal rights by subjecting them to cruel and unusual punishment. The incarcerat­ed men are being represente­d by attorneys working with hip- hop stars Jay- Z and Yo Gotti.

The lawsuit describes unsanitary conditions inside Parchman, including flooding, black mold and a rat infestatio­n. Units go without running water and electricit­y for days at a time, it alleges.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/ AP ?? Inmate deaths at Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry in Parchman comes weeks after a statewide lockdown because of violence.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/ AP Inmate deaths at Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry in Parchman comes weeks after a statewide lockdown because of violence.

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