October 8, 2014

George Mallinckrodt - Talking Points October 7, 2014 - Latandra Ellington Press Conference

Yesterday, October 7th at 1:30 pm, I participated in a press conference in Tallahassee, Florida regarding the suspicious death of Latandra Ellington on October 1st. Civil rights attorneys representing Latandra's family, Daryl Parks and Ben Crump, spoke first followed by me and Dale Landry of the NAACP.

What Parks, Crump, and Landry said was summarized in today's Miami Herald story. My talking points that follow include a reference to Suwanee Correctional Institution. From what I have heard from family members, Suwanee CI is one of the most abusive prisons in all of Florida.

Inmate reports threats by guard, turns up dead

BY JULIE K. BROWN AND MARY ELLEN 

10/08/2014 7:43 AM

Latandra Ellington had weathered some of Lowell Correctional Institution’s harshest and most primitive realities, and was just seven months shy of freedom — and being reunited with her four young children.

But on Sept. 21, Ellington wrote a chilling letter to her aunt telling her she feared she wouldn’t make it out alive. One of the officers at the prison — she identified him as “Sgt. Q” — had threatened to beat and kill her, she wrote.

“He was gone [sic] beat me to death and mess me like a dog,’’ she wrote. “He was all in my face Sqt. Q then he grab his radio and said he was gone bust me in my head with it...’’

Ten days later, on Oct. 1, Ellington, 36, was dead. Corrections officials said Ellington, who had been serving 22 months for grand theft, was in confinement — separated from the general population — at the time of her death because the agency had taken her family’s concerns about the alleged threats “seriously.’’

Still, with no answers about how the death happened, the family hired an attorney and paid for a private autopsy. The autopsy, their lawyer said Monday, showed that Ellington suffered blunt-force trauma to her abdomen consistent with being punched and kicked in the stomach.

On Monday, civil rights attorney Daryl Parks, whose firm represented the Trayvon Martin family and has now been hired by Ellington’s relatives, urged U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate.

Parks, joined by Florida’s NAACP, told Holder in a letter they were particularly concerned that evidence in the case “will be lost or destroyed’’ and that local and state law enforcement have demonstrated they are unable to conduct an impartial investigation.

“It’s not right that these four children would lose their mom,’’ Parks said. “While the trail is very fresh, we believe a federal investigation is warranted.”

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement confirmed that it was called to the scene of her death and is investigating.

“She was not sentenced to the death sentence and the Department of Corrections certainly owed her far greater protection,’’ Parks said.

Lowell, based in Ocala, was built in 1956, and houses young, elderly and infirm female inmates, from minor drug offenders to the six women currently on Florida’s Death Row.

Department of Corrections records show only one male sergeant at the prison whose name begins with a Q.

The DOC did not respond to questions about whether the sergeant had any links to the case, his current status — or whether anyone had been suspended in connection with Ellington’s death. It issued a statement saying “this is an ongoing investigation, and any additional details, including reports from the medical examiner, are confidential at this time.”

The Herald reached out to the sergeant, but a message left with a woman who answered his phone number was not returned Monday.

Ellington is among nearly 200 ongoing state prison death investigations that have been turned over to the FDLE.

It is the second time this year that civil rights groups have called on the Justice Department to examine alleged human rights abuses in Florida’s prison system.

In June, several groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, called on Holder to intervene in the death of Darren Rainey, a 50-year-old mentally ill inmate who died in a scalding shower at Dade Correctional Institution in 2012. Witnesses have said that Rainey, and other mentally ill inmates at the prison south of Homestead, have been starved or tortured. His case remains under investigation by Miami-Dade police, and no one has been charged.


Dale Landry, vice president of the Florida conference of the NAACP, called for immediate intervention by the federal government, and said reform of Florida’s correctional facilities has become a top issue of the national organization.

“Death, abuse and official misconduct is rampant in Florida’s criminal justice system and nowhere is it more pervasive than in our law enforcement and correction agencies,’’ he said, noting that his organization has received a stream of complaints from inmates’ families in the past few years.

“For over 14 years, and especially the last four, Floridians have watched this tyranny grow,” he said.

Bill Warner, a private investigator who has probed several cases at Lowell, said the female inmates who are raped or sexually abused by male guards rarely report it out of fear that they won’t be able to see their children. About 65 percent of female inmates are mothers, and the prison also houses a population of pregnant inmates, he said.

“Everyone I talked to — it’s always the same story. There are beat-downs and they are subjected to indignities like males strip-searching them,’’ Warner said.

Ellington’s aunt, Algerine Jennings, said she feared that her niece was being sexually abused or knew about the abuse of other inmates and had complained. Her niece had previously told her she had filed several complaints with other officers at the prison and feared she would face retaliation.

Sgt. Q, she told her aunt, always turned his badge around so that she couldn’t see his name. In one of the letters, she said he took her into a room and repeatedly told her he was going to “beat the sh-- out’’ of her. She also provided the names of other corrections officers who had witnessed violence and mentioned the beating of a “white girl’’ at the prison recently.

“Auntie, no one knows how to spell or say this man’s name,’’ Ellington wrote about the guard in her last letter to her aunt. “But he goes by Sgt. Q and he works the B Shift a.m. So please call up here.’’

After getting the letter, which Ellington sent under an assumed name, Jennings called the prison on Sept. 30, frantic about her niece’s well-being. She said she spoke to a Major Patterson. She said he assured her he would “look after” her niece. She could hear Ellington in the background, so she felt relieved when he said she was safe in confinement.

But less than 24 hours later, the family was told she was dead.

They were given no cause of death and they haven't been contacted since — no questions to indicate the department was investigating her claims, no attempt to reassure them, Parks said.

“This state owes them more than that,” he said. “They get one call from a chaplain saying she’s dead, and nothing.”

Jennings, the aunt, said the sergeant had been terrorizing her, but she was too afraid to tell her why.

“She just said she couldn’t fight them. He told her ‘Do not underestimate my power.’ ’’




Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article2564576.html#storyli
George Mallinckrodt  Talking Points
October 7, 2014
Latandra Ellington Press Conference

Having worked as a counselor in the very same psychiatric unit where Darren Rainey was killed, I can personally attest to the cover-up mentality of the Florida Department of Corrections. Many inmates on my caseload filed months and months of grievances regarding abusive behavior by guards that were never addressed.

Grievances are often hijacked by guards who in turn taunt the aggrieved inmate. In my tenure, the cameras were often broken and the recordings grainy to the point of being useless.  

In a beating incident I refused to stay silent about, guards employed a rather sinister strategy to pressure a staffer to back off. In an eerie coincidence, on June 23, 2011, a year to the day before Rainey was killed, an inmate named Joseph Swilling was handcuffed behind his back and briskly escorted to a hallway to meet his fate. Out of sight from cameras, he was thrown to the concrete floor and kicked repeatedly by correctional officers.

The beating would have continued unchecked if not for the timely intervention of my coworker who pounded on the window while yelling, "Stop! Stop! Stop!" Out of fear of retaliation, this coworker wrote on the Incident Report that he/she did not see anything.

As counselors, guards escorted us into sessions with violent inmates, some of whom were mentally unbalanced. Guards were required to monitor the session through large windows. Any counselor who incurred the wrath of COs would be left without security.

The strategy of the guards was to simply leave the counselor alone with the inmate.

One counselor I know of resigned believing her life was in danger. As a result, most counselors stayed silent even after witnessing multiple instances of abuse, torment, and beating.

Given the documented failures of the DOC on many levels, it is essential that the Department of Justice intervene and provide assistance to the Florida Department of Corrections.

By doing so it will allow the inmates and prison guards to be less fearful to report incidents that may eventually lead to a death or serious bodily injuries.
  
These unnecessary and unforgivable killings have to stop. Latandra Ellington should not have died in her solitary confinement cell. The Florida DOC, like many large organizations, cannot be trusted to regulate itself. It is time they get pulled into the new millennium - dragged kicking and screaming if need be. After all, that is what the DOC understands.

I urge Governor Scott to allow the DOJ to investigate the DOC. He took a bold step in requesting the Department of Children and Families be investigated. Scott should do the same for the DOC - our inmates deserve it.

Admittedly, mental health reforms will take time. The beating, torture, and killing of men and women in prison will not end overnight. However, one major step can be taken now to curb these horrific events. It is vitally important that attorney general Eric Holder open an investigation into all suspicious deaths of inmates in Florida prisons. The FL DOC has a deep rooted culture of abuse and a long track record of covering up criminal activity at all costs.

This investigation must proceed with the help of families and individuals whose loved ones tell them horror stories from the inside. Having the FBI investigate a prison for a few days is no guarantee of an accurate result. A woman whose husband is in the Suwanee Correctional Institution reports that inmates were threatened with beatings or worse if they spoke the truth to FBI agents. I was told beatings resumed almost immediately after the FBI left.

Eric Holder must act now. However, a standard FBI investigation will not work. Clever guards, administrators, and wardens always put on a show for visiting VIPs. I know this from the many dog and pony shows I witnessed in my unit. Any investigation must be conducted with this in mind. Getting to the truth will not be easy.   

What happened to Latandra Ellington and Darren Rainey must never happen again.

The following documents include letters written by Latandra out of fear for her life:















4 comments:

  1. George, DOJ is federal. This is a State problem. FDLE is the next step, and the watchdog of DC. The problem is that a lot of the DC corruption is also present in FDLE-however, in order to do a PROPER clean-up, PROPER steps must be taken. FL DC does not want Federal Oversight by any means, so please encourage relatives and concerned friends to take the proper steps in the proper way, so proper reform can begin to happen.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The problem is that the state has failed dramatically to deal with their problems and Gov. Scott's leadership is nonexistent. Time to call in the Feds!

      Delete
    2. The FDLE cannot be ignorant of the FL DoC's coverups when their current spokesperson - Gretl Plessinger - was the former spokesperson for the FL DoC when coverups of suspicious deaths were already underway.

      The FBI and the Justice Department both know that the FDLE has participated in conviction corruption rather than exposing and addressing it - prior to hiring Plessinger. The FDLE has acted under Color of Law, a federal offense.

      Delete
  2. DOC doesn't fit into the businessman's model. It's a money losing enterprise. Poverty wages, understaffing, and miniscule budgets to maintain buildings that are falling apart. I worked for DOC for nearly two years. I wasn't security or medical. I drifted in and out of the realm of working with inmates and working with security. It was an eye opening experience.
    I read about the inmate that was scalded to death. I feel that there is something to be gleaned from what I have read: How did the inmate get scalded? Confinement areas generally have penal control systems and mixing valves. There is no hot or cold, just 'on' the water temperature is controlled upstream from the showers. Improper /inadequate maintenance, intentional subversion?
    If the system was working properly, this wouldn't have been possible,

    ReplyDelete

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George Mallinckrodt