Los Angeles Times

O.C. sheriff outlines jail security improvemen­ts

More upgrades to ‘harden’ the facility and prevent future escapes would cost an additional $3 million.

- By Anh Do anh.do @latimes.com @newsterrie­r

The Orange County Sheriff’s Department has spent nearly $570,000 to “harden” its Central Men’s Jail and needs an additional $3 million for more upgrades — months after the January escape of three inmates gained national attention and led to a massive statewide manhunt.

Officials have long conceded that the Santa Ana jail, built in 1968, was in desperate need of repairs. But public pressure to modernize mounted when prisoners Bac Duong, Hossein Nayeri and Jonathan Tieu cut through steel bars, squeezed through plumbing tunnels, rappelled off a roof and fled at dawn on Jan. 22 — 15 hours before authoritie­s noticed their absence.

Duong surrendere­d seven days after the jailbreak and officers captured the other two inmates the following day, acting on a tip from a homeless man who saw the pair hiding in a van in San Francisco.

At a news conference Friday, Sheriff Sandra Hutchens outlined changes designed to prevent another escape at the facility.

She detailed improvemen­ts in three areas: those made immediatel­y after the escape, those made in the last six months and others being planned but are dependent on funding.

Immediatel­y after the escape, officials secured points of exit used by the three inmates, including plumbing tunnels and the area where prisoners are housed, Hutchens said.

A team of civilian and sworn staff was formed to review inmate count procedures and conduct an inventory — from basement to roof, twice — looking at every tool required for daily maintenanc­e work that enters and exits the maximumsec­urity facility.

Officials still do not know what was used to cut through prison bars. Because searches turned up nothing, they believe the escapees took the tools with them, Hutchens said.

Sheriff’s Department spokesman Lt. Mark Stichter said the trio had been planning their getaway for at least four months.

Over the last six months, officials added more lighting outside the building as well as inside the plumbing tunnels to boost visibility. Workers installed criss-cross metal grills on the plumbing wall vents and motion-sensor video cameras designed to set off alarms when movement is detected. A dog named Mercy now patrols the premises sniffing for drugs and cellphones. An ongoing investigat­ion revealed that the fugitives used such a phone to plan their escape, Hutchens said.

Her team also introduced radio-frequency ID technology to track inmate movement from classrooms, the cafeteria and other areas used for medical care and religious counseling. Officials have opened a second investigat­ion focusing on policies and procedures inside the department. Sheriff ’s Lt. Dave Sawyer, who oversees investigat­ions, said there is “not one sliver of evidence” that any member of the staff had any involvemen­t in the escape.

Authoritie­s initially arrested an English-language instructor who taught at the jail on suspicion of being connected to the escape, alleging that she provided “critical planning tools,” among them Google Earth aerial maps of the facility.

Citing insufficie­nt evidence to charge the woman, officials later released her.

Inside the jail, sheriff’s supervisor­s have also examined the clothing and linen exchange procedures that are used to prevent suicides or escapes. Before fleeing, the fugitives reportedly tied towels and bedsheets together, forming a makeshift rope that allowed them to rappel from the roof, landing on the street four stories below.

Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do, appearing with Hutchens and her staff Friday, noted the detailed improvemen­ts, adding that “her swift actions demonstrat­e how seriously they take this issue.” He pledged to push for increased funding for future upgrades.

The nearly $570,000 already spent comes from the current department­al budget. In the future, officials also want to install extra metal detectors; expand radio-frequency ID technology to all Orange County jail sites; add or improve cameras on jail rooftops; and enclose the Central Men’s Jail roof.

Some improvemen­ts remain under wraps “in order not to compromise security,” Hutchens said.

Across the county, more than 6,000 inmates are housed at five jails that have a maximum capacity of 7,000. The others are the James A. Musick Facility, also called The Farm; Theo Lacy Jail; the IRC, or Intake/ Release Center; and the Central Women’s Jail.

The inmates who fled are now housed at three separate jails and have been classified as escape risks.

 ?? Photograph­s by Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? ROBERT BEAVER, senior director at the Orange County Sheriff ’s Department, describes new plumbing wall vents for the Central Men’s Jail. Sheriff Sandra Hutchens, left, said more changes will depend on funding.
Photograph­s by Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ROBERT BEAVER, senior director at the Orange County Sheriff ’s Department, describes new plumbing wall vents for the Central Men’s Jail. Sheriff Sandra Hutchens, left, said more changes will depend on funding.
 ??  ?? OFFICIALS have long conceded that the Santa Ana jail, built in 1968, was in desperate need of repairs. Pressure to modernize mounted after a January jailbreak.
OFFICIALS have long conceded that the Santa Ana jail, built in 1968, was in desperate need of repairs. Pressure to modernize mounted after a January jailbreak.

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