Pubdate: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 Source: Buffalo News (NY) Copyright: 2006 The Buffalo News Contact: http://www.buffalo.com/contact_us/submit_editorial.asp Website: http://www.buffalonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61 Author: Lou Michel and Susan Schulman, News Staff Reporters Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) DEALER IN THE GUARD TOWER Officer Arrested, But Some Implicated In Deal Remain On The Job Joseph Lattanzio worked for 20 years as a New York State corrections officer, but his part-time job helped pay the bills. He was a drug dealer. He sometimes made drug deals on his cell phone, perched in a guard tower in Wende Correctional Facility in Alden. And his long customer list included at least nine other corrections officers, from Attica to Wyoming to Gowanda to Wende, according to court papers and federal officials. Speaking from a halfway house where he finished his prison term, Lattanzio denied selling drugs to inmates but confirmed using drugs himself and supplying cocaine to other prison officers. "It got out of control," Lattanzio said. "I was living a criminal lifestyle." Assistant U.S. Attorney Anthony Bruce prosecuted Lattanzio, along with Lattanzio's brother - also a corrections officer - as well as a third prison officer. "It was the height of brazenness," Bruce said of Lattanzio. Lattanzio lost his prison job, as did the two officers prosecuted along with him. But seven other officers identified in an FBI wiretap as suspected customers of the South Buffalo drug dealer were not arrested. Nor were they confronted by the state Department of Correctional Services. One officer, with a history of drunken driving, was eventually fired in 2005 following an unrelated arrest. The six others continue guarding inmates in a prison system where drug activity flourishes. "It's a matter of serious concern if corrections officers are themselves known to be buying drugs from other corrections officers," said Robert Gangi, executive director of the Correctional Association of New York, a New York City-based prisoner advocacy organization. "Steps must be taken to sanction [the corrections officers.] One concern authorities should have is if [the corrections officers] are bringing drugs in to prison," he said. "Another concern would be, if they are cavalier about the use of drugs and are using and selling themselves, maybe they are looking the other way when drugs are used in prison, or if others are engaged in drug trade in prisons." Lattanzio denied that was happening, but nonetheless said he is mystified that some of his customers still work as corrections officers. "I think the state somehow put a stop on it," Lattanzio said of an investigation into the other corrections officers. "I don't think they wanted any more bad publicity than what they got from me, but if you are wrong, you are wrong." Federal officials said they arrested the three men who could be charged under federal statutes, then turned over evidence against the others to the state Department of Correctional Services. "We always hope the administrative agency will pursue every remedy possible to rid the system of corrupt corrections officers," U.S. Attorney Terrance P. Flynn said. The case was reviewed, but there wasn't enough evidence to warrant criminal or administrative charges against the seven, Department of Correctional Services officials said. "Based on the evidence collected, several employees were convicted and fired for their off-duty misconduct," department spokeswoman Linda M. Foglia said. "For others, DOCS reached the exact determination as the U.S. Attorney and the Erie County District Attorney - there was insufficient evidence to take action." "Simply being mentioned in court papers is not enough to warrant disciplinary action," department officials added. Prison secrecy A Buffalo News investigation found New York has a bigger drug problem in its prisons than surrounding states, yet New York is more secretive about employees involved in drug use, making it difficult to assess how aggressively the state pursues corrupt corrections officers and other employees. The New York State Department of Correctional Services initially refused to release any information on employees involved in drug incidents. But in response to several Freedom of Information requests from The Buffalo News, department officials eventually disclosed that 20 employees a year, on average, are disciplined or resign - a total of 130 from 2000 to mid-July 2006 - because of alleged drug activity in and out of prison. The state prison system employs about 32,000 people. The state would not release details of the cases and said it doesn't have numbers available on how many employees were arrested, or how many brought drugs into prison. But Foglia said most arrests involve activities occurring outside the prisons. "They are in the community. That is where the drugs are. That is where they are doing it," she said. In comparison, surrounding states contacted by The News immediately released data on employees accused of bringing drugs into prison. Pennsylvania investigated 12 corrections officers and fired three from 2001 to 2004. Michigan fired five employees from 2003 to 2006. Ohio in recent years saw one officer arrested each year, officials said. In New York, Foglia said, the department doesn't believe it has a significant problem with employees using drugs, or bringing drugs into prisons. "One (officer involved with drugs) is too many. It is troubling. But when you look at these numbers, we have 32,000 employees, and nine had a problem (so far) this year with drugs. . . "The majority of staff comes to work and do a damn good job, every single day," Foglia said. There are two known recent cases of employees charged with smuggling drugs into prison; a Green Haven cook who provided inmates with marijuana and an off-duty Bedford Hills corrections officer who smuggled drugs to her boyfriend, an inmate in another state prison in Franklin County. There are other instances, corrections officials said, when cases could not be proven, so the department pressured the employee to resign even though no criminal charges were filed. "When they (Department of Correctional Services) find out an employee or volunteer is bringing drugs in, they quietly get rid of them," said State Sen. Dale Volker, R-Depew. "But if they can prove it, they charge them." If prison employees are convicted of felonies, the department, under the terms of its employee contracts, can fire the workers. Misdemeanor cases must be reviewed on a case by case basis, although the department typically moves for dismissal, Foglia said. The Green Haven cook and the Bedford Hills officer both lost their jobs, as did several officers arrested in recent years by Buffalo area law enforcement for drug activities occurring outside of prison. These local officers included a corrections officer caught at Buffalo Niagara International Airport trying to take a flight to Florida with cocaine in his shoe, as well as a corrections officer arrested by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and accused of being part of a Lockport cocaine and methamphetamine ring. The three officers arrested in the Lattanzio case also either resigned or were dismissed. Department of Correctional Services officials declined to discuss details of their own investigation into the other officers implicated in the Lattanzio case. But, based on interviews with several of the men and their attorneys, it appears none was approached by the department. FBI agents tipped off FBI agents in 2000 were tipped off to Lattanzio's drug dealing. They set up surveillance and wiretaps, which uncovered a drug network Lattanzio ran from his South Buffalo home, as well as his guard tower in Wende Correctional Facility. Words such as cocaine, powder or drugs never came up in the taped phone conversations, but there were discussions with fellow corrections officers and others making arrangements to stop by Lattanzio's house to make pickups. There were also cryptic references to numbers, such as one or two - meaning, agents said, the number of packets of cocaine. There was no evidence of Lattanzio or any other corrections officers giving or selling drugs to inmates. Lattanzio was convicted of drug dealing and spent two years in federal prison, then went to a halfway house before being released on parole in April. He resigned from his corrections officer job in October 2003. His brother John, a corrections officer in Wende, was also arrested, charged with conspiring with Joseph Lattanzio to buy, sell and distribute cocaine. He was sentenced to probation and fined $200. He resigned in December 2003. Also arrested was Mark Cater, another Wende corrections officer, who got one year of probation and was required to enter drug treatment. Cater was accused of possessing, with intent to distribute, cocaine and marijuana. He was dismissed from the department in 2001 and is now in Kansas. Cater expressed remorse about his drug involvement and declined to comment further. One of the seven other corrections officers caught on federal wiretaps allegedly discussing the purchase of drugs from Lattanzio is Charles Bagley, a corrections officer at state prison in Wyoming County. Bagley was not charged. But the court papers stated he made arrangements to go to Lattanzio's house for a drug purchase. "In the call, Lattanzio told Bagley he would be home in about 10 minutes. The two agreed Bagley would "swing by' Lattanzio's residence to obtain cocaine from Lattanzio," court records state. Shortly after this call, an FBI agent went to Lattanzio's house and spotted Bagley's pickup parked there. Bagley told The News he was familiar with the Lattanzio case and said there was no evidence proving he purchased cocaine. "It's in the past, seven or eight years ago, and I don't have any comment," Bagley said. Another officer picked up on the surveillance, James Gruber, was arrested twice for drunken driving before the FBI probe. In 2004, he was arrested on petty larceny and drug charges, and was fired in January 2005, authorities said. "That was a long time ago," Gruber said when asked about the Lattanzio case and his job as a corrections officer. "It's in my past. I have no comment." Two other corrections officers identified as suspected drug buyers could not be reached for comment while three others - one from Gowanda, one from Wende and one from Attica - denied ever buying cocaine from Lattanzio, and declined further comment. "Those are accusations," the Wende officer said. "I am still employed." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek