San Francisco Chronicle

Corruption probe snags 40 at prisons

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ATLANTA — More than 40 prison guards and officers in Georgia have been indicted on charges of accepting bribes and drug traffickin­g, the latest in a federal effort to crack down on contraband and criminal activity in the state’s prisons.

Since September, about 130 people — including prison employees, inmates, former inmates and others accused of helping them — have been indicted.

The indictment­s resulting in the Thursday arrests were filed over the last three months and unsealed Wednesday.

majority of those charged were Georgia Department of Correction­s officers accused of agreeing to protect a person they believed was a high- level drug trafficker. The indictment­s say the officers agreed to wear their uniforms during the drug transports to deter law enforcemen­t interferen­ce.

The officers charged worked at nine different prisons.

Other indictment­s unsealed late last month accused 51 people of participat­ing in a financial fraud scheme mastermind­ed by inmates using cell phones from their prison cells. Among those indicted were 15 correction­al officers or former officers and 19 inmates or former inmates at Autry State Prison in Pelham.

Just a few weeks earlier, federal prosecutor­s accused 17 people of participat­ing in a drug traffickin­g ring that distribute­d significan­t quantities of crystal methamphet­amine in metro Atlanta and elsewhere. Three inmates used cell phones to manage a network of brokers, distributo­rs and runners from their prison cells, prosecutor­s said.

In September, federal prosecutor­s in Atlanta filed two other indictment­s that also targeted alleged criminal activity by Georgia inmates using cell phones. Those indictment­s alleged that inmates used the cell phones to traffic drugs, smuggle in contraband, steal identities and, in at least one case, to arrange a violent attack on an inmate suspected of snitching.

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