The Boston Globe

Stabbing of Chauvin raises new inmate-safety concerns

Latest in string of high-profile cases

- By Glenn Thrush and Serge F. Kovaleski

WASHINGTON — The stabbing Friday of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapoli­s police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd in 2020, at a special unit inside a Tucson prison is the latest in a series of attacks against high-profile inmates in the troubled, short-staffed federal Bureau of Prisons.

The assault comes less than five months after Larry Nassar, a doctor convicted of sexually abusing young female gymnasts, was stabbed multiple times at the federal prison in Florida. It also follows the release of Justice Department reports detailing incompeten­ce and mismanagem­ent at federal detention centers that led to the deaths in recent years of James “Whitey” Bulger, the Boston gangster, and Jeffrey Epstein, who had been charged with sex traffickin­g.

The Bureau of Prisons confirmed that an inmate at the Tucson prison was stabbed around 12:30 p.m. Friday, though the bureau did not identify Chauvin, 47, by name. The agency said that the inmate required “lifesaving measures” before being rushed to a hospital emergency room nearby. The office of Keith Ellison, the Minnesota attorney general who prosecuted the former police officer, identified the inmate as Chauvin.

He is likely to survive, according to two people with knowledge of the situation who were not authorized to discuss the incident publicly.

On Saturday, the prison remained on lockdown while law enforcemen­t agencies, including the FBI, examined the crime scene and interviewe­d witnesses. Family visits have been suspended indefinite­ly, according to the prison’s website.

The Tucson facility where Chauvin was stabbed is referred to as a “dropout yard,” one of several special protective units within the Bureau of Prisons system housing informants, people convicted of sex crimes, former gang members, and former law enforcemen­t personnel, among others, according to Joe Rojas, who retired this month as president of the union local representi­ng workers at the Federal Correction­al Complex near Coleman, Fla.

These specialize­d facilities — including units in Tucson, Coleman (where Nassar was stabbed), and Terre Haute, Ind. — are supposed to provide an additional measure of safety for high-profile inmates. In turn, such inmates tend to avoid conflicts and disciplina­ry infraction­s prevalent in the wider prison population, for fear of losing their protected status.

“There is a different inmate code at these places,” Rojas said.

It was not clear how Chauvin, who is serving a sentence of just over two decades in federal prison after he was convicted of state murder charges and a federal charge of violating the constituti­onal rights of Floyd, was assaulted. Nor was it clear why prison officials failed to protect one of the most hated, and vulnerable, inmates in the 160,000person federal prison system.

Chauvin, who is white, killed Floyd, who was Black, by kneeling on his neck for 9½ minutes while he lay handcuffed on the street. The incident set off the largest protests of a generation and led to calls to reform or de

Boston gangster James “Whitey” Bulger (left) and Larry Nassar were also attacked in federal prisons.

fund the police.

Chauvin negotiated a plea deal with prosecutor­s in his federal case, in part, to serve his sentence in a federal prison, which his legal team considered safer than a state prison.

While the specific details of the attack on Chauvin are not yet known, they appear to fit into a pattern of other attacks documented by Michael E. Horowitz, the Justice Department’s inspector general, who has issued two reports in the past year calling upon the prison bureau to improve procedures and oversight of high-profile inmates.

In December last year, Horowitz issued a scathing 65page report on the death of Bulger at the federal prison in Hazelton, W.V., detailing “staff and management performanc­e failures; bureaucrat­ic incompeten­ce; and flawed, confusing, and insufficie­nt policies and procedures,” that allowed inmates to fatally beat the 89-year-old with a padlock hours after he had been transferre­d into the general population.

In June, the inspector general concluded a yearslong probe into the death of Epstein, a wellconnec­ted financier who was found dead in a cell with a bedsheet tied around his neck in 2019, disclosing a similar pattern of lax management and missteps. While the inspector general’s office confirmed the department’s determinat­ion that Epstein had killed himself, the report described a remarkable, at times unexplaine­d, succession of circumstan­ces that made it easy for him to take his own life. For example, the jail’s staff members allowed Epstein to hoard extra bedding and clothing, even though he had tried to hang himself earlier.

Nassar, who is serving a sentence of up to 60 years, was attacked by an inmate wielding a homemade weapon in a common area of a specialize­d protective unit at the US Penitentia­ry Coleman II.

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