Pubdate: Thu, 21 Aug 1997 Source: Houston Chronicle, page 14A (http://www.chron.com/cgibin/auth/story/content/chronicle/page1/ 97/08/21/jailside.20.html) Contact: Elected officials debate treatment of prisoners By STEVE OLAFSON and KATHY WALT Copyright 1997 Houston Chronicle Allusions to Nazis and chicken slaughterhouses were thrown into the fray Wednesday as elected officials debated how the treatment of Missouri inmates at the Brazoria County Detention Center should be viewed. State Rep. Ron Wilson, DHouston, said in Austin that the behavior of sheriff's deputies in the Sept. 18, 1996, incident "was reminiscent of Hitler's Nazi camps." "It is imperative that we maintain a strong but respectful penal system in the state and not try to emulate Bo Pilgrim's chicken slaughtering ranch," Wilson said, referring to the Pilgrim's Pride chickenprocessing plant in East Texas. "We're just lucky nobody was lynched down there," he added. "We're lucky nobody was shot." Wilson called the videotape of deputies and private jailers manhandling inmates especially frightening because the officers knew their actions were being recorded. "There's no telling what they're doing on the streets of Angleton" when not on camera, he said. "Anyone can look at that tape Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Jose Feliciano can look at that tape and see that something is wrong." Wilson's comments drew a rebuke from state Rep. Dennis Bonnen, R Angleton, who criticized the Houston legislator for passing judgment without knowing all the facts. "Ron Wilson is doing something that no politician should do. He's trying to promote himself and create political gain when he doesn't know the facts," Bonnen charged. "I don't appreciate him making comments about a community, my hometown of Angleton, that I doubt he has been to in the last five years," he added. "The people of Angleton and the people of Brazoria County are good people and our lawenforcement officers are good people. They don't deserve to be compared in such a gross way." State Rep. Tom Uher, DBay City, whose 29th District includes part of Brazoria County, also took issue with Wilson's remarks. "Sometimes you can say too much. He says too much," Uher said. He said he is convinced Brazoria County Sheriff Joe King didn't know what was going on when officers manhandled the Missouri inmates. "I've known Joe King for over 20 years, and he's a class act," he said. "I can't imagine him tolerating any heinous behavior." Still, Uher said he was bothered by what he has seen of the videotape that was made of the jail incident. "I don't think it's the same as the Rodney King situation, which was awful," he said. "What I have seen, though, I do not like."