Baltimore Sun

25 jail officials hit with charges

Intimidati­on, excessive force cited in indictment­s

- By Kevin Rector and Phil Davis

More than two dozen Maryland correction­s officers and staff were indicted on charges they used excessive force, intimidati­on, evidence tampering and other criminal measures to ensure their special tactical unit maintained “dominance of its operationa­l territory” within state-run jails, Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby said Tuesday.

The indictment of 25 members of the Baltimore Central Regional Tactical Unit on 236 criminal counts — including first-degree assault, participat­ion in a criminal gang and misconduct in office — pushes to more than 200 the number of correction­s officers, inmates and civilian accomplice­s who have been criminally charged in prison corruption cases in the state in the past four years.

Those indicted Tuesday include the tactical unit’s supervisor and about half its membership. The group is tasked with responding to incidents and maintainin­g order in state facilities.

Mosby said the latest charges stemmed from an investigat­ion state correction­s officials launched last year, after “rumors and anecdotes” were relayed regarding abuses by the unit.

“While the investigat­ion revealed a series of seemingly isolated incidents dating back to 2016, further examinatio­n divulged multiple examples of excessive force utilized against detainees at different facilities, which ultimately led to the discovery of a criminal enterprise functionin­g within the tactical unit,” Mosby said.

Correction­s officials then worked with prosecutor­s to build a case against the officers, many of whom were placed

on administra­tive leave last year but only arrested Tuesday, officials said.

Those indicted included supervisor­s, officials said. Some of the officers charged face up to 150 years behind bars. Correction­s officials said all would be suspended without pay pending trial.

At least 25 detainees have been identified as victims, with investigat­ors gathering informatio­n from surveillan­ce footage and interviews with correction­s staff, officials said. The unit worked at the Metropolit­an Transition Center, the Baltimore Pretrial Facility, the state Correction­s Department’s Jail Industries Building and Baltimore City Booking and Intake Facility, officials said.

Among those charged was acting Capt. Kevin Hickson, 49, the tactical unit’s supervisor. The indictment accused Hickson of being the “organizer, supervisor, promoter and manager” of the criminal enterprise, and outlined 47 incidents in which they alleged he or other members of his team assaulted detainees.

Hickson and those under him used “illegal and excessive force through assaults of inmates, use of threats against inmates, and various retaliator­y tactics to assure complete compliance with [the tactical team’s] authority, which bolsters [its] overall reputation within the territory and suppresses any dissension and discord among the overall prison population,” prosecutor­s wrote.

Neither Hickson nor an attorney for him could immediatel­y be reached for comment Tuesday.

Robert Green, secretary of the state correction­s department, called the allegation­s “disturbing” and noted the investigat­ion is ongoing. He also credited Republican Gov. Larry Hogan for the priority his administra­tion has placed on confrontin­g corruption in the correction­s department.

“This case represents our strong effort to root out people who don’t belong in the field of public safety and rehabilita­tion,” Green said. “This is a disturbing case, but it does not and should not cast a shadow on the commitment and integrity of the exceptiona­l correction­al profession­als in this department.”

Hogan, in a statement, also touted the arrests as the result of the state’s “anticorrup­tion actions.”

“We are again making clear that we have absolutely no tolerance whatsoever for corruption of any kind in our state prison system or anywhere else in state government,” Hogan wrote.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which represents correction­s officers in the state, said in a statement that it had only learned of the indictment Tuesday, and had “no independen­t knowledge about the facts alleged” in the case.

“The correction­al officers charged today should receive the process and rights that they are due under Maryland law and the US Constituti­on. They are innocent until proven guilty,” the union said. “AFSCME does not condone any unlawful acts or any mistreatme­nt of detainees, inmates, or any individual. … Safety for officers and inmates is a top priority.”

The union said the “vast majority” of officers it represents “perform their duties admirably and tirelessly each day,” and the “actions of any few officers should not be held against, or diminish the work, of those many who serve with honor.”

Mosby made the announceme­nt in an administra­tive building on the massive Baltimore jail complex downtown. The jail became notorious in 2013 when federal prosecutor­s indicted 25 people, including correction­s officers, in a smuggling scheme. Prosecutor­s said the Black Guerrilla Family had gained control behind bars and turned the jail into a gang stronghold.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt represents the latest case by authoritie­s trying to crack down on rampant corruption in Maryland’s 24 prisons and detention centers.

In April, federal authoritie­s arrested 19 people — including three prison guards — and charged them with running a smuggling ring at the state’s medium-security prison in Jessup. They allegedly smuggled inside heroin, cellphones and pornograph­y-loaded flash drives in exchange for sex and wire payments.

In January 2018, 18 people — including two guards — were charged with smuggling heroin, cocaine and cellphones into the nearby maximum-security prison at Jessup. A yearlong wiretap investigat­ion led authoritie­s to that smuggling ring. The guards were sentenced to serve three years in prison.

Two months before that case, officials arrested and imprisoned a sergeant who worked at the prison and who they say ran the Crips street gang inside the walls. He pleaded guilty to state charges of participat­ing in a criminal gang.

And in October 2016, federal agents indicted 80 people in the largest prison corruption case in Maryland history. Correction­s officers and inmates were charged with smuggling heroin, cocaine, cellphones and pornograph­y into the Eastern Correction­al Institutio­n in Somerset County on the Eastern Shore. Seventysev­en people were convicted, officials said, including 16 correction­al officers who were sentenced to as much as six years in prison.

Green on Tuesday denied that the long line of prison corruption cases in the state indicated a failure on the part of state officials to get a handle on the problem with better training and vetting of hopeful officers.

“I don’t see it as a failure. Evidence here today is that we investigat­ed this case, we brought this forward,” Green said. “It is a committed effort to be excellent.”

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