Pubdate: Thu, 05 Aug 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ STATE PRISON VIOLENCE PERSISTS, REPORT SHOWS Corrections Department Defends Prevention Efforts SACRAMENTO - Three prisoners were shot to death by guards breaking up inmate fights, and a dozen other inmates died in clashes between prisoners as violence persisted in state prisons last year. The number of deaths attributed to violence was just one fewer than in 1997, and non-lethal fights among inmates in California's overcrowded prisons increased over the previous year, a recently released state Corrections Department report shows. While acknowledging new department policies aimed at curbing the use of deadly force by guards, prisoner rights advocates criticized state corrections officials. "We're here to protect prisoner rights, and you can't get much less rights than getting killed," said Donald Specter, director of the Prison Law Office in San Rafael. "There's not enough space to separate out the prisoners who need to be separated." California, the nation's largest corrections system, houses 161,000 inmates in its 33 prisons, about twice as many as they were built to hold. "Our goal is to have no violence in the prisons, but I don't know if that's realistic or not, considering who you're dealing with," said Corrections Department spokeswoman Terry Thornton. She cited violence-prevention efforts that include work training, substance abuse treatment and ombudsman programs. Inmate deaths for 1998 and 1997 were the highest since 1987, when 20 inmates were killed. In the intervening years, the death tolls ranged from four to 13. California's prison system is the deadliest in the United States, according to the Criminal Justice Institute, an independent research group in Middletown, Conn. In 1997, while California had 16 violent inmate deaths, Texas reported nine and the federal prison system 10. A total of 443 inmates have died violently in California since 1970. Of those, 52 were shot by guards breaking up fights, and four were shot while trying to escape. Last year, 12 violent inmate deaths were at the hands of fellow inmates, four by stabbing, two by beating and six by strangling. The total of three inmates shot by guards breaking up inmate fights was up from one the previous year. The Corrections Department has changed its policies after allegations that guards abused inmates and successful lawsuits against the state over inmate deaths and injuries. April 1, the department barred guards from using high-powered rifles in all but extreme cases of inmate violence, and it is exploring new, non-lethal ways to keep the peace. The 1998 deaths occurred at eight of the state's prisons that house some of the most violent inmates. Three each were at Pelican Bay near Crescent City, High Desert near Susanville and the new Folsom prison; two at Soledad; and one each at Corcoran, Vacaville, Calipatria and Pleasant Valley. Assaults and batteries between inmates that did not result in deaths totaled 6,392, up 167 over the previous year. About a third involved use of prisoner-fashioned weapons, as they did in 1997. Inmates injured 2,870 staff members in assaults in 1998, 281 more than in the previous year. Lance Corcoran, vice president of the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, said his union is concerned about the rise in assaults on staff members. "There's a number of factors -- overcrowding and we're getting younger, more violent criminal offenders with longer sentences who have less to lose," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea