Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Governor fires 34 prison guard trainees who gave Nazi salute

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CHARLESTON, W. VA. » West Virginia’s governor has fired 34 correction officer trainees who were photograph­ed giving a Nazi salute, and he fired their instructor. He also says four instructor­s are being suspended without pay.

Republican Gov. Jim Justice announced his decision Monday after receiving a report from state investigat­ors that the trainees regularly gave the Nazi salute “as a sign of respect” for their instructor in the weeks prior to the release of the photo. Its release earlier this month triggered widespread outrage.

“As I said from the beginning, I condemn the photo ... in the strongest possible terms,” Justice said in a statement Monday. “I also said that this act needed to result in real consequenc­es — terminatio­ns and dismissals. This kind of behavior will not be tolerated on my watch in any agency of state government.”

A three-page executive summary was released Monday detailing the state’s inquiry into the controvers­ial image.

The summary determined that an unnamed number of trainees in Academy Class 18 began using the hand gesture in the second or third week of training “as a sign of respect” for their correction­al academy instructor, Karrie Byrd. Other classmates then began using the gesture. Justice said Byrd has been fired.

The executive summary does not mention the word “Nazi” but only refers to the cadets’ action as the “hand gesture.” The cadets’ faces were blurred by the state when it released the photo.

“Several cadets recognized it for its historical implicatio­ns and refused to go along with the class,” the report read. “Others who knew the implicatio­ns of the gesture felt pressure to fit in and joined in. Some of these class members voiced their concerns to classmates.”

According to the summary, Byrd told investigat­ors that she was unaware of the hand gesture’s historical and racial implicatio­ns and said she thought it was a greeting. However, other interviewe­rs seem to contradict Byrd’s statement.

For example, the report found two instructor­s separately approached Byrd once witnessing the hand gesture being used by Academy Class 18 members. It said one instructor tried to tell Byrd and the class about the negative connotatio­ns of using a hand gesture similar to a Nazi salute. But the report summary found one cadet responded, “Look at me, I am black, and I am doing it.”

“The gesture was done with Byrd’s knowledge,” the report read. “The investigat­ion disclosed that she encouraged it, reveled in it, and at times reciprocat­ed the gesture. Additional­ly, Byrd appeared to overrule the corrective actions taken by others and assured the cadets the behavior was acceptable.”

Byrd eventually directed her class to use the hand gesture while taking a photo of the class, it said. And it added that after 10 members resisted, Byrd explicitly directed them to give the gesture. Seven of those cadets told investigat­ors they made a fist so as to appear to comply with Byrd’s demand but not directly mimic a Nazi salute — which can be seen in the photo released.

When Byrd later asked a secretary to print the photo with the caption “Hail Byrd,” she was pressed by a secretary on what the class was doing, the report said. State investigat­ors say Byrd responded with “because I’m a hardass like Hitler.”

The photo also made its way before “Capt. DanielsWat­ts,” according to the report, which withheld the captain’s first name. The report said the captain never addressed Byrd about the photo and did not attempt to stop the photo’s distributi­on.

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