Las Vegas Review-Journal

Advocates push for release of prison abuse victims

- By Michael Balsamo and Michael R. Sisak

A national criminal justice advocacy group is pushing the Justice Department to support the release of women who were sexually abused by staff at a federal women’s prison in California.

The group, FAMM, also known as Families Against Mandatory Minimums, sent a letter Tuesday to Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco pushing for the Justice Department to file motions for compassion­ate release for those who have been victimized at the prison. It follows reporting from The Associated Press that revealed a toxic culture that enabled sexual abuse of inmates to continue for years at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Dublin, California, a women-only facility called the “rape club” by many who know it.

The letter is the latest effort by advocacy groups and members of Congress to ratchet down oversight of the beleaguere­d federal prison system and push for action at the top levels of the Justice Department. Monaco and other Justice Department officials have been prioritizi­ng reforming the Bureau of Prisons and put in a new warden at Dublin. The former warden was arrested and accused of sexually abusing inmates and forcing them to pose nude so he could snap photos on his government-issued cell phone.

The group now wants Monaco to order the Bureau of Prisons and U.S. attorney’s offices to support motions for compassion­ate release for any victims, which could lead to their release from the prison.

The prison’s former warden, Ray J. Garcia, is one of five Dublin employees who have been charged since last June with sexually abusing inmates. Garcia is accused of molesting an inmate on multiple occasions from December 2019 to March 2020.

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