Los Angeles Times

Death row visit leads to woman’s arrest

LAUSD aide charged with smuggling heroin, mobile phones to a San Quentin inmate.

- By Brittny Mejia and Paige St. John brittny.mejia@latimes.com paige.stjohn@latimes.com

A teaching assistant with the Los Angeles Unified School District has been charged with smuggling heroin and cellphones to an inmate on San Quentin’s death row.

Teri Orina Nichols, 47, was charged with one felony count of bringing a controlled substance or drug parapherna­lia into a prison or jail and one misdemeano­r count of possession with intent to deliver a wireless communicat­ion device or component to a prison inmate, said Barry Borden, Marin County’s assistant district attorney.

Nichols was charged Friday and is scheduled to be arraigned Sept. 13. If convicted, she could face up to four years in prison, to be served in the county jail, Borden said.

Nichols, whom the prison identified as an assistant teacher with L.A. Unified, was arrested Thursday during a visit with inmate Bruce Millsap.

Millsap, 50, has received eight death sentences and also is serving a 200-year sentence for murdering eight people. He is a known member of the East Coast Crips gang.

San Quentin’s Investigat­ive Services Unit was in the main visiting room when zip-close plastic bags were seen in an area occupied only by Nichols and Millsap.

The bags were not consistent with packaging for any items sold in the vending machines, so Millsap was removed for a strip search, the prison said.

Staff members found nothing and asked Nichols whether she would consent to a search, which she did.

Nichols later admitted to bringing contraband into the visiting room, the prison said. The smuggled items included 18 cellphones, 18 cellphone chargers, two unidentifi­ed blue pills and about three ounces of heroin, the prison alleges.

“We are evaluating how she was successful in circumvent­ing our security measures,” prison Lt. Samuel Robinson told the Marin Independen­t Journal.

Nichols began working for the school district in 1992 and most recently was assigned to South East High School in South Gate, where she worked as a special education assistant, according to a statement from the district. She was reassigned Monday “to a non-school site,” according to L.A. Unified.

A recent Times report highlighte­d the issue of illegal smuggling among death row inmates. Six death row inmates died from 2010 to 2015 with detectable levels of methamphet­amines, heroin or other drugs in their system, according to Marin County coroner records.

Three of them had toxic levels of drugs, including one in whose intestines were found five snipped fingers of a latex glove, each packed with methamphet­amine or marijuana. He had overdosed when they burst.

Death row inmates are strip-searched regularly, including before and after they leave their cells to exercise, go to the law library or see visitors.

The overdoses on death row mirror the larger problem with drugs in California’s prison system as a whole. From 2010 to 2015, 109 inmates died of overdoses, according to state figures.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States