The New Zealand Herald

Seven inmates die in US jail

Prisoners rioted for nearly eight hours in Sth Carolina

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Nearly eight hours of rioting at a maximum-security South Carolina prison left at least seven inmates dead and 17 others injured. State officials defended their response to the prison brawl — one of the deadliest in America’s recent history — amid allegation­s that officers did little to curb the violence early on and did not render aid as quickly as they could have.

Fighting began at one of the housing units at Lee Correction­al Institutio­n, as detention officers were conducting a nightly check-in, state correction­s director Bryan Stirling said. Two more fights erupted at two other housing units at Lee Correction­al as well.

The fighting triggered a standard response in which guards at each of the dorms left the housing units and called for backup, Stirling said. “They’re outnumbere­d, so they’re trained to back out of that dorm and call for support.”

Backup teams from the South Carolina Law Enforcemen­t Division entered the housing units to restore order. The prison was secured at 2.55 am local time, and no officers or staff members were harmed.

Stirling said that they believed that word of the fight spread from the first dorm to the others through contraband cellphones.

“This was all about territory. This was about contraband. This was about cellphones,” Stirling said. “These folks are fighting over real money and real territory when they are incarcerat­ed.”

The correction­s department identified the seven dead inmates as Raymond Angelo Scott, Michael Milledge, Damonte Marquez Rivera, Eddie Casey Jay Gaskins, Joshua Svwin Jenkins, Corey Scott and Cornelius Quantral McClary.

The Lee County coroner told AP that most of the dead had been killed by stabbing or slashing.

Lee Correction­al Institutio­n is one of South Carolina’s highest-security prisons, which means the inmates are generally tightly monitored and their movements inside the facility are limited.

Of South Carolina’s nine all-male, maximum-security prisons, Lee Correction­al — in Bishopvill­e, about 95km northeast of Columbia — is the largest. The prison houses about 1600 male inmates, the majority of them in general housing rather than more restricted housing.

Violence at Lee Correction­al is not uncommon. During the past year, at least three inmates were killed in separate incidents, while last month, inmates held an officer hostage for about an hour-and-a-half before releasing him, according to the State newspaper. An investigat­ion by the State found that the number of inmates killed across the state’s prisons had quadrupled from three inmates in 2015 to 12 inmates in 2017.

Stirling told the paper that the trend can be partly attributed to an increase in inmates obtaining cellphones, chronic understaff­ing, gang rivalries and a higher ratio of violent prisoners to non-violent ones.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? “These folks are fighting over real money and real territory,” state correction­s director Bryan Stirling said.
Picture / AP “These folks are fighting over real money and real territory,” state correction­s director Bryan Stirling said.

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