It’s an optimistic headline: “Prison Rape: Obama’s Program to Stop It”. It leads into a comprehensive New York Review of Books article on three recently released Federal government publications. Two of these documents examine sexual abuse in the nation’s detention centers while the other outlines the Department of Justice’s regulations for eliminating prison rape. All three aim to address the appalling number of people—young and old, female and male, citizen and those awaiting deportation— who routinely suffer sexual violence while in lockup, an estimated 209,000 plus every year according to the Justice Department.
So where’s the optimism? The guidelines established by the Obama administration are—on paper, at least—good ones. As the reviewers David Kaiser and Lovisa Stannow (both staunch advocates for victims of prison sexual assault) note, the new recommendations address pivotal issues: how detention centers are staffed, how those staffs are trained in sexual abuse issues, and how inmates are supervised. Equally important is how offenders are evaluated for their potential as either sexual prey or predator. This provision is crucial in protecting young offenders, especially LGBT youth who are in greater danger of sexual harassment and abuse by peers and adult inmates. Once this information is obtained housing can be assigned based on vulnerability, which in the case of minors means not being housed with adults. There are also new standards on how prisoners can report sexual assault and on how that information is handled and investigated by staff. Kaiser and Stannow write that if these standards are successful—“and we believe they will be”—then the incidences of prison rape will be reduced dramatically.
But I can’t share their optimism. I wish I could. My skepticism stems from the way in which these regulations are to be enforced. Enforcement will be the responsibility of the state departments of corrections and the correctional staff in charge of prisons and jails.
Anyone who has worked in a detention facility knows the power of frontline staff to sabotage whatever standards or procedures are put in place. In my ten years working as a high school teacher in a county prison I’ve watched this culture of obstruction play out as many correctional staff subvert—sometimes blatantly, most times covertly—everything from innovative grant-funded projects designed to reduce recidivism in young offenders to simple routines such as making sure all inmates daily attend their assigned programs, all measures that would provide true “safety and security” for staff as well as inmates and that would further the stated goal of incarceration: rehabilitation.
What’s behind this apparently illogical obstruction? It is the same dynamic that informs so much of what goes on in any detention system; it is certainly the dynamic that is behind all prison sexual violence: the power grab. All lockups whether they be for adults, minors or immigrants awaiting deportation are run on a hierarchy of power: Who’s got it, who wants it and what you’ll do to get it. Within this structure there is the inevitable scramble for power and position in an environment where everyone feels impotent.
People who are locked up live every day of their incarceration with this lack of control (and for so many of them, every day of their lives) and so understandably make the power grab. This is especially true for young offenders who are the most vulnerable in this predatory world. Ironically it is just as pronounced with correctional staff. Over my years in the prison system I’ve often heard officers openly complain that the work they do is just as dangerous, if not more so than other law enforcement officers, yet they feel they are underpaid and not respected as professionals by their peers and society in general. So what better way to “stick it” to the system, to “show” wardens, county executives, the Feds, civilians, and certainly inmates that COs are the ones who make or break things in prison than by subverting regulations, routines, and structures.
The Obama guidelines are strong in addressing the delicate and fraught issue of sexual violence. This is especially true when it comes to the victimization of young people and the sexually vulnerable. Is it wise then to leave their implementation in the hands of the people who are themselves part of the problem both in terms of upholding standards and in terms of actually being sexual assailants themselves? (Reports show that half of all sexual abuse is committed by correctional staff.)
Kaiser and Stannow are confident that enforcement of these regulations “will make American detention facilities better run, more humane, and safer places in general.” It is a hopeful vision. But if we want detention centers that are humane and safe we have to go beyond a fresh set of regulations. We need to make fundamental changes in the prison system: confront the perverted power structure—and struggle—that dominates these institutions and that leads to sexual violence and replace it with a form of justice that truly values rehabilitation and that restores dignity and respect to victim, inmate and correctional staff. Radical steps? Yes. Do we have a choice? The numbers say we don’t—because each incident of prison rape radically changes a person’s life forever.
Originally posted on Juvenile Justice Information Exchange
Photo by Still Burning under Creative Commons License



12 Comments

Thanks for this, David. An important topic I would like to cover more on FDL.
Will front page this later today.
I certainly hope Obama can achieve this one thing.
Singer/Activist Harry Belafonte has referred to this nation’s fetish in locking people up as “the new slavery.” And everyone knows that sex abuse is a very big part of what goes on in the slave plantations.
A person is eight times more likely to be killed by a police officer than a terrorist. Because of “terrorists,” the nation has a lot more police. These police have more “toys” that include more methods of lethal and “non lethal” force, than police officers had in the past. We have more prisons, filled to the brim with people who have been convicted of drug offenses – often offenses that they didn’t really commit. (Today’s FB offerings circle around the issue of women who get thrown in jail for cocaine that their boyfriends have hidden in their homes, often without their knowledge.)
But what fun for the prison guards and staff to use as the prison population for their entertainment. Our newspapers tell us that in California, the guards enjoy watching the brawls on surveillance cameras, rather than breaking them up.
Part of the problem is the framing of the purpose of prisons. Another is the large number of people being incarcerated. And then you get into the abuses of the prison-industrial complex.
Thank you, David, for this informative and very important post. Front-page worthy, for certain.
Recommended to the awareness and conscience of the entire FDL community.
DW
I think the problem goes deeper than the correctional staff using inmates as”entertainment.” The way I see it and experienced it, COs are as much “victims” of a corrupt, toxic,aggressive and repressive system, one in which they feel powerless and so seek power in a violent and degrading way for inmate and staff itself.I certainly don’t excuse staff behavior. I do accuse the criminal justice system of being the problem.
Indeed, when incarceration is seen only as punishment and retribution then it seems any kind of treatment of inmates is “deserved.”
That is powerfully stated, and the dismal truth is that I think that selfsame dynamic increasingly characterizes U.S. society at large.
The prison is becoming the organizing principle for this country, most directly in our world’s-largest incarceration system, now replicated in our foreign occupations, but by extension in what is supposed to be our normal life outside the lockups.
This is an incredibly important topic; thanks for covering it.
Kudos also to the N.Y. Review of Books, which has been on this beat as well for no other reason I know of than that it is the right thing to do.
“Within this structure there is the inevitable scramble for power and position in an environment where everyone feels impotent.”
…and presumably for those who have been systematically desensitised, by raping someone, they can – at least temporarily – feel in control; that they are powerful, potent, and in a position that they like. I fear all institutions.
The way I see it is it start with our justice system, a corrupt justice system, a different justice system for the rich and powerful than for the poor man, until the United States does something about our corrupt justice system out here, their is little chance of straighten out our prison. The way the US spread their militarism on other country’s by killing innocent people and torturing people that we have locked up. I treat our enemies like we treat our on people. Karma a bitch isn’t it….
In 2003, the U.S. Congress passed the “Prison Rape Elimination Act.”
In May 2012, the U.S. Justice Department issued the first comprehensive federal rules aimed at “zero tolerance” for sexual assaults against inmates in prisons, jails and other houses of detention. These rules are the first to address federal, state and local prisons and jails, including institutions holding juveniles.
So you can see that reform in this area is going slowly. Nobody deserves to be raped and it is wrong that this is happening in our prisons.
Something effective must be done to stop sexual assaults in U.S. federal and state prisons.
A couple of good references:
Nearly 10 Percent of Former State Prisoners Reported Being Sexually Victimized During Confinement U.S. Department of Justice 05/17/12 http://tinyurl.com/ajqu3lu
U.S. Issues Far-Reaching Rules to Stem Prison Rape New York Times 05/17/12 http://tinyurl.com/82ylccm
And then there are the privately owned prisons.
In a very real sense, from the prisoner’s perspective, prisoners run the prisons.
If you don’t understand this, then you don’t understand the problem.