Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jul 2001 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2001 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.starnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: James Patterson, Star Editorial Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) MAJOR CONFIRMS ACCOUNTS OF PRISON RACISM Indiana's first African-American State Police superintendent, by the nature of his position, commands great respect. As well he should. So when Melvin Carraway says there is no such thing as a racist organization of staff at Putnamville Correctional Facility near Greencastle, we may rest assured that there is none. Forget the hundreds of documents of evidence to the contrary (a synopsis of which is at www.prisonjustice.org.) If the State Police superintendent can find no "Brotherhood," then, my land, there can be none. "Nowhere did (the investigation) show there's a connected network of individuals talked about over the years as the Brotherhood," Carraway told a crammed room of reporters in April 2000. He explained then that the allegations about the Brotherhood could be the result of a competitive rivalry between "factions" of prison employees who have feuded for more than a decade. He said that by itself "perpetuates the notion of a Brotherhood." But Carraway would not want to try running that line past Thomas L. Goodlow, for Goodlow has been there and done that. Goodlow is an 18-year employee of the Indiana Department of Correction. He has been loyal, having been promoted four times -- to sergeant, lieutenant, captain and major. As major, Goodlow was assigned to the Putnamville Correctional Facility and placed in command of the prison's approximately 350 correctional officers. Putnamville, situated in the beautiful hills of Putnam County, houses about 2,000 male prisoners, 40 percent of whom are African American or Latino. When he was transferred to Putnamville, Goodlow, 58, had a stellar employment record. Besides consistent promotions, he has received more than 15 awards, commendations and citations. He has also served with distinction on DOC statewide committees to review policy, hiring practices and affirmative action. He has worked in labor relations and has been a spokesman for the DOC to various civic groups, including the Rotary Club. Carraway's claims notwithstanding, Goodlow has no doubt about what's going on at Putnamville. Upon arrival, Goodlow, an African American, was indoctrinated in the reality of life at a rural American prison. He was offended and inflamed by what he saw. Major Goodlow, who was supposed to be in charge of officers, observed several of them displaying gang colors. He saw a large wood-carved Confederate flag hanging on an office wall and identified at least 30 white correctional officers whom he believed to be active members of the Brotherhood. "Throughout his tenure as major at the Putnamville Correctional Facility, Tom Goodlow discovered that the Brotherhood and/or Aryan Brotherhood correctional officer/inmate gang was running drugs and illegal cigarette sales in the prison," states a lawsuit he filed June 8 in Putnam County Circuit Court. Goodlow's attorney, Terry R. Boesch of Valparaiso, spent seven months investigating the white supremacist gang at Putnamville before moving forward. In filing the suit, Boesch told the Terre Haute Tribune Star that gang activity at the prison was blatantly open and included display of gang colors, tattoos of gang signs, regular meetings at remote locations and close ties with members of the Aryan Brotherhood -- a racist inmate gang. Goodlow was demoted to lieutenant in July 2000 and transferred to another prison for trying to report the matter. So much for the State Police "investigation." The suit was filed under the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and Ku Klux Klan Act, which prohibits discrimination in employment. This is the very type of thing that a prison ombudsman office could investigate, but Gov. Frank O'Bannon vetoed the ombudsman bill. A December 1998 letter signed by 21 ministers and 35 other Putnam County residents complaining of "institutionally sanctioned racism and violence" at the prison had it right. The State Police apparently did not. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart