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Crowley Prison Riot and the Evils of the Private Prison System, 2013
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Trine | TRINE’S TALES The Crowley Prison Riot and the Evils of the Private Prison System By Bill Trine, Esq. F ollowing the prison riot at the Crowley County Correctional Facility (CCCF) in July, 2004, I filed consolidated lawsuits1 for more than 200 inmates who did not participate in the riot, but were innocent victims of the gross negligence of Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), the largest private “for profit” operator of prisons in the United States. After eight years of litigation and facing a 25-week jury trial, CCA finally began offering individual settlements to our remaining 198 clients.2 When the offers, after lengthy negotiations, were in an amount that I could recommend, we began settling each individual case and the court vacated the trial set for March 11, 2013. The court dismissed each client’s case as it settled.3 ing prisoners as merchandise to be transferred in large groups from one prison to another for greater profits. They often made transfers to isolated rural areas of the nation on short notice, separating inmates from friends, family and any support system. The evidence produced in these lawsuits demonstrated that it was this willful and wanton conduct by CCA that caused the initial disturbance, which CCA then permitted to escalate into a four-hour prison-wide riot when the CCA staff quickly abandoned the recreation yards and housing units at the first sign of trouble. So here is the Crowley story that demonstrates why government should not permit private companies to use our prison system for profit, rather than protecting the safety, welfare and rehabilitation of its inhabitants. Many of you followed this litigation with some interest perhaps because of its length and complexity - and I am now free to divulge some of the evils inherent in the private prison The Crowley Prison Riot industry as revealed in the formal pre-trial discovery. I can The Location do so because I refused to enter into a confidentiality agreeTo increase profits, private prison companies try to locate ment as a condition of settlement. But before publicizing their prisons in rural areas where there is a cheap labor market, those evils, let me first give you a capsule summary of the a lower tax base, and a local government that will become eight years of this epic litigation. dependent on this new industry and support its growth. CCCF We were in the appellate courts five times resulting in was therefore ideal. It is isolated about 50 miles east of Pueblo two published opinions4; defended the depositions of 126 in a rural county, surrounded by sparse prairie grassland coninmate/clients5; took the depositions of 30 CCA employees; ditions, some ranch land and a few farms. The county is and reviewed over 150,000 pages of documents produced also home to a state operated prison. These two prisons by CCA, the Colorado Department of Corrections and the constitute the only “industry” in Crowley County. The 2010 Inspector General. Multiple motions were filed, including census showed 5,518 county residents of which 2,682 13 motions in limini. Just weeks before the scheduled trial, were prisoners, giving Crowley County the highest the court dismissed CCA’s frivolous affirmative defenses6 percentage of prisoners of any county in the U.S. There and struck the 483 designated nonparties7. The court had are only four small towns in the county, which includes the earlier dismissed CCA’s counterclaims and ruled that the county seat, Ordway, with a population of 1,080, a gas station, evidence supported plaintiffs’ claims for punitive damages. one small restaurant, and no overnight lodging. These demoSo what did this entire discovery reveal of the evils graphics are relevant when considering the importance of inherent in permitting private “for profit” corporations to family contact and visitation to successful rehabilitation. operate our prisons? It clearly demonstrated that CCA’s The First Riot quest for greater profits caused the Crowley prison riot because they used the cost saving practice of understaffing The first riot occurred at CCCF in 1999 when another prisons with untrained and poorly paid personnel and treat- private prison company operated it.8 That company Colorado Trial Lawyers Association Trial Talk April/May 2013 45 TRINE’S TALES | Trine arranged to have a large group of medium security prisoners transported from the state of Washington to CCCF in order to fill vacant beds and increase profits. The transfer interrupted the Washington inmates’ rehabilitation and educational programs and jobs, interfered with family visitation and contact with lawyers, and placed them in an isolated environment. Soon after the transfer, a small group of Washington inmates started a disturbance, which became a riot with destruction of property. Following the riot, the Washington inmates were transferred back to their home state. The Second Riot and CCA’s Willful and Wanton Conduct CCA then took over the management and operation of CCCF on January 19, 2003, and sent a CCA employee, Richard Selman, to function as the Chief of Security. He arrived in April 2003 and immediately recognized the need for changes that were necessary to improve security. At that time, CCCF had four housing units and two recreation yards, east and west, and it released all inmates at the same time for recreation. They could congregate and wander freely between yards. So in the summer and fall of 2003, Selman recommended significant and costly changes to improve security including fencing around both yards to control inmate movement “versus the whole yard being an open style compound where inmates could be everywhere.” He recommended that they enclose an observation tower and staff it 24 hours a day; and schedule shifts for use of the recreation yards by inmates.9 However, CCA’s home office ignored these recommendations as it was planning a substantial expansion of the prison to increase its profitability. It planned to add two new units to house several hundred new inmates. Construction started in the fall of 2003, and when it 46 April/May 2013 was nearly complete in the spring of 2004, CCA arranged to have 300 prisoners from Washington again transferred to CCCF to fill it. The plans for this transfer of prisoners caused Warden Leland Crouse concern because the entire prison population could move freely from one recreation yard to the other. So he developed a plan that he discussed with his regional supervisor to control movement by establishing a recreation schedule so that “only one pod or one unit would have access to one part of the yard at a time.”10 These plans were in place, but they had not implemented them before the transfer of Washington inmates. carried him to segregation as hundreds of inmates watched. Some angry Washington inmates, who thought they used excessive force, planned a confrontation that evening when both yards would be open for recreation to all 1100 inmates. As word of this plan spread, many inmates, concerned for their own safety, voiced their fears to COs and warned them of the plans. The COs notified their superiors and voiced their own concerns. The captain in command called a meeting of the COs that evening, before releasing the inmates, to discuss the threats. During that meeting, several COs opined that they should not release inmates for fear of a riot. Upon learning of the planned transfer, They felt the prison should remain in CCCF inmates and correctional officers lockdown until tempers cooled and (CO) who had been present during the they dealt with inmates grievances. 1999 riot voiced their concern and fear of The captain overruled them and simply another riot should the transfer of Wash- cautioned the COs to be careful when ington inmates again take place. CCA’s they patrolled the yards. management in its home office in Nashville, They released all inmates for yard Tennessee ignored the objections and recreation in both yards, despite the concerns, and the first 100 inmates advance warnings. A group of Washarrived in late June 2004, followed by ington inmates in the west yard a second group two weeks later. immediately confronted the two yard Upon arrival, the Washington inmates COs, demanding to see the warden to learned that there would be no conjugal voice their grievance over the morning visits with their wives, no smoking incident. When the COs refused, groups and no Washington law library, all of of inmates began forming in that yard. which were available to them in Wash- The COs panicked and ran from the ington prisons. Instead, CCCF offered yard, as did the two COs in the east isolation with limited programs and jobs. yard. Then the two COs in each of the Nearly all inmates were from poor Wash- five housing units abandoned those ington families who would be unable to units, as the disturbance became a fulltravel to Colorado for visitation. They blown riot. could not afford frequent long distance Realizing that the skeleton crew of telephone charges at the elevated rates COs on duty had essentially abandoned prisoners pay.11 They complained, and the prison, rioters went on a rampage some threatened to riot. Although the setting fires, breaking into housing threats of a riot worried other inmates units, destroying property, looking for and some COs, CCA management sex offenders and creating chaos. The ignored them as tension mounted. CCCF Operations Manager, did not Then, on the morning of July 20, have adequate staff and munitions to 2004, there was a visible show of force control the initial disturbance and dewhen COs restrained an 18-year-old veloping riot, and had to wait for three Washington inmate in the yard and hours for special operations response Trial Talk Colorado Trial Lawyers Association Trine | TRINE’S TALES teams (S.O.R.T.) to arrive from distant facilities in order to retake control of the prison. In taking control, CCA indiscriminately treated all inmates as participants in the riot, even those who had been in their cells, the medical ward or the library throughout the riot. hours. Or those inmates who were tear gassed at close range while lying in the yard, cuffed, and being told, “That’s what you get for rioting.” Some inmates were under treatment following major surgery and begged not to be re-injured and their complaints ignored. Some had a serious asthma condition and were As a result, the plaintiffs (none of denied use of their inhalers. Some were whom participated in the riot) sustained under treatment for mental illness and physical and psychological injuries in their medications discontinued. Some varying degrees. Nearly every plaintiff were severely traumatized and have had suffered from smoke and gas inhalation, recurring nightmares of being trapped from fear of injury or death, from exand burned alive, or beaten to death by cruciating pain resulting from the crazy inmates. punishment inflicted on all inmates once the riot was under control and All of this because CCA transferred from months of lockdown. Most plain- a large group of unhappy Washington tiffs, after guards cuffed them and placed inmates to Colorado to fill newly built them in the yard, had to urinate in their units and increase profits, then ignored clothing and wear that clothing for many their complaints and the advance notice hours or even days. Many had to show- of a planned disturbance — a disturbance er at gunpoint, without curtains, in front that was not controlled because of CCA’s of female guards who made fun of them cost saving practice of understaffing its and videotaped them in the nude. Many prisons with untrained personnel.12 spent time in overcrowded cells with Lengthy investigations conducted by the no bedding, mattresses or hygiene pro- Colorado Department of Corrections ducts (even toilet paper) for days. Many (DOC), and the department’s Office of slept on concrete floors or hard steel the Inspector General,13 revealed the bunk beds for days. COs fed them cause of the riot to be directly related baloney sandwiches, by dropping the to the cost saving conditions existing food on the cell floors. COs mistreated at the prison and the bulk transfer of or punished all of them - the guilty and Washington inmates who were transinnocent alike - as rioters and locked ferred on short notice, and separated them down for up to three months with from friends, family and any support little or no contact with families. system.14 There were also injuries to some individual plaintiffs that were not common to all, but were unique because of preexisting conditions that were aggravated by the riot, or because of more brutal treatment inflicted on some. For example, those plaintiffs who were told to lie face down in their cells in sewage water that flooded their cells, then drug through the water by their ankles to be cuffed so tightly that the ratcheted plastic cuffs cut into their skin and numbed their hands and shoulders as they were left in that condition for Colorado Trial Lawyers Association never disclosed to the DOC or Office of the Inspector General. However, several COs testified that they were interviewed by the after action team, and one, the Captain who authorized the release of inmates to the yards on the evening of the riot, testified he was immediately put on administrative leave following the interview, and later discharged by CCA. CCA failed and refused to provide the “After Action Report,” which plaintiffs requested in formal discovery, claiming that they could not find the report. The trial court then granted plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions, ruling that plaintiffs were entitled to a jury instruction that would permit the jury to conclude that the report was favorable to the plaintiffs and adverse to CCA.15 Unresolved Trial Problems and Legal Issues The complexity of this litigation created unusual problems and legal issues. First, how would a jury hear the testimony of 198 plaintiffs over the course of 25 weeks and be able remember that testimony, particularly when each plaintiff was asserting injuries and damages unique to that plaintiff. Those still incarcerated would be testifying by telephone, compounding the problem. It was a foregone conclusion that there would be a mistrial, inconsistent verdicts CCA’s Spoilation or Destruction or inability to render verdicts. The of Evidence obvious solution would be an initial In the course of this litigation, we trial of just a few plaintiffs on all also discovered that CCA has a policy issues. If the plaintiffs prevailed on of conducting its own internal investigaliability, issue preclusion (collateral tion of the cause of riots in its facilities, estoppel) would permit trying the and did so in this case by immediately remaining cases in groups of ten to sending a team of five Wardens selected the same jury, which would decide from other CCA facilities as an “After only damages. If the first trial Action” team to conduct the investigaresulted in defense verdicts, the court tion. The team leader authored an would have to dismiss the remaining “After Action Report” for the home cases based on the doctrine of issue office, which was kept secret and preclusion. Trial Talk April/May 2013 47 TRINE’S TALES | Trine However, collateral estoppel only applies when the court enters the final judgment. Entry of final judgments would allow the parties to file appeals following the first trial, thus delaying trial of the remaining cases. If courts affirmed liability on appeal, the plaintiffs would have to try the remaining cases before a new jury, necessitating a duplication of the liability evidence that supported punitive damages. Therefore, it would take a stipulation of the parties agreeing to apply collateral estoppel to the results of the first trial - without entry of final judgments - in order to proceed with a series of trials, using the same jury to decide only the issue of damages. The parties would also have to agree to delay entry of final judgments until the conclusion of those trials. CCA was unwilling to enter into such an agreement. Instead, it proposed a bellwether approach16 that would divide plaintiffs who might have similar injuries into groups, then proceed to trial with only a representative of each group as a plaintiff. Everyone in a designated group of plaintiffs would then be bound to accept the same amount of damages that the jury awards to the group representative. We could not ethically or legally utilize the bellwether approach (sometimes used in class actions when it is easy to calculate the damages to each member of the class) where each plaintiff’s noneconomic damages were unique. Further, this was not a class action, and the court had no jurisdiction to order a bellwether approach absent the consent of all parties. Because it was unethical to group plaintiffs in the manner requested,17 and we could not group the plaintiffs’ by their damages, we would not stipulate to a bellwether agreement. Instead, we filed a motion for separate trials, asking the court first to proceed with a trial of only a few 48 April/May 2013 plaintiffs on all issues. If plaintiffs prevailed on liability, then we wanted to use the same jury to decide the damage issues in trials of the remaining plaintiffs in groups of ten. The court denied the motion, and the Colorado Supreme Court refused to intervene.18 Hence, in the absence of an agreement or court-ordered separate trials, we prepared for a 25-week trial for 198 plaintiffs, certain that the trial would end in a mistrial or reversible error resulting in an appeal. It understaffed the facility with inadequately trained COs. CCA knew that a riot would harm many innocent inmates and place its own employees at risk. In fact, when the rioting began, frightened employees abandoned the yards and housing units. Many later resigned. Why work at low wages when your employer fails to protect you from harm. CCA was the legal custodian of the innocent inmates - responsible for their health and safety. It was also responsible for the safety of the surrounding The second problem was a practical, community and for those who responded not legal problem. The court denied to the riot. It was responsible for the our motion to change venue out of safety of its employees. This villain Crowley County when CCA was the violated all of those duties and respononly remaining defendant. The trial sibilities - blinded by the desire for court and the parties knew that jury greater profits. selection would be very difficult. There were only 2,826 residents in Crowley The plaintiffs were victims. The County exclusive of prisoners, includ- employees were victims. The reing children and others who were not sponders were victims. I can also qualified for jury service. The prison argue that the Washington inmates system employed many of those resiwho started the disturbance and riot dents or they knew people who worked were victims of CCA’s total indifference there. In addition, the small courtroom to their need for family contact and would accommodate only a handful of rehabilitation, when transferring them jurors. In an effort to remedy these to an isolated prison in Colorado. The problems, the trial court set aside the plaintiffs, who had no control, could first week of trial for jury selection in a only trust that CCA would protect church in Ordway, which the state them. CCA betrayed them instead. rented for that purpose. Then the state So, did CCA learn anything from the summoned 360 residents to appear there Crowley experience? Apparently, it did as jurors on two consecutive days in not. It contracted with the California groups of 180. Finding jurors willing to DOC to send its inmates to the 2400sit for 25 weeks would alone pose a pobed medium-security prison operated tential insurmountable barrier for jury by CCA in Sayre, Oklahoma, resulting in selection. The other legal issues and a riot started by the California inmates problems are best left for a future on October 11, 2011, seven years after “Trine’s Tales. the Crowley riot. The Oklahoma riot resulted in injuries to many inmates. Conclusion One thing is clear: when a private The only villain in this case is CCA prison company’s duty as a custodian, who transferred a large group of unto protect the safety and welfare of its happy Washington inmates to Colorado inhabitants, conflicts with its desire to for a profit, knowing that the transfer create profits for its shareholders, the placed the prison at high risk for a riot profit motive always prevails. ▲▲▲ that CCA would be unable to control. Trial Talk Colorado Trial Lawyers Association Trine | TRINE’S TALES Bill Trine has been a successful trial lawyer for 54 years. He has logged more than 150 jury trials throughout his storied career. A past president of CTLA and the first recipient of the Norm Kripke Lifetime Achievement Award, he also founded and served as president of Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a Washington D.C. based public interest law firm. He is on the Board of Directors of the Trial Lawyers College in Wyoming and the Human Rights Defense Center in Vermont, which publishes Prison Legal News. Endnotes: 1 Adams v. Corrections Corporation of America filed in the District Court of Crowley County, State of Colorado, Case Number 2005CV60 Div. B, consolidated with Abrahamson v. CCA, Case Number 2006CV08. 2 We filed lawsuits for more than 230 inmates. Several died during the lengthy litigation. Some returned to Washington prisons after the riot and did not respond to discovery requests or other court orders. Some became homeless, and we lost contact. The court dismissed their cases. Of the 198 remaining who received offers of settlement, we could no longer locate five. One had permission to visit his dying mother, but failed to return to the halfway house and remained a fugitive. Another had been deported, and we could no longer locate him. The others essentially “disappeared” with no family contacts. 3 My co-counsel and daughter, Cheryl Trine, was an enormous asset from the beginning. She assisted in writing briefs, taking and defending depositions, arguing motions and preparing for trial. I would also be remiss in not publically giving credit to my dear friend and great trial lawyer from Washington D.C., George Shadoan, who helped defend the depositions of our clients and assisted me as a consultant. I also credit my able assistant, Jenny Lindberg, who has had constant contact with the plaintiffs since 2004. Colorado Trial Lawyers Association 10 Crouse deposition at pages 60-62. See, Adams v. Corrections Corporation 11 of America, 187 P.3d 1190 (Colo. App. In a perverse system of kickbacks, 2008) and Adams v. Corrections prisons contract with private companies Corporation of America, 264 P.3d 640 to operate the prison’s phone systems. (Colo. App. 2011). Adele Kimmel, a The private companies charge prisoners lawyer with Trial Lawyers for Public “commission fees” on every minute of Justice, authored the winning brief in the each call. Those commissions create an first appellate decision, 187 P.3d 1190, incentive to select phone companies that making new law to permit inmates to sue charge the prisoners more. See, Drew in Colorado courts without first Kukorwski, “The Price to Call Home: exhausting administrative remedies. State Sanctioned Monopolization in the 5 Nearly all were by telephone, each Prison Phone Industry.” PRISON POLICY lasting 2-3 hours. Many of the INST., Sept. 11, 2012, and Justin Moyer, inmate/clients were in prison facilities in “After Almost a Decade, FCC has yet to WA, CO and WY. We had to prepare for Rule on High Cost of Prison Phone depositions with each client by Calls,” WASH. POST, Dec. 2, 2012. telephone. Colorado trial lawyers who For the 2.7 Million children who have one assisted as volunteers in defending or more parents incarcerated, a phone depositions of plaintiffs are Deborah call from mom or dad can cost $20.00 or Taussig and John Taussig of Boulder and more for just a few minutes, jeopardizing Steve Shanahan of Fort Collins. the finances of families already in peril. 6 If the phone calls cease, it further CCA argued that even if the plaintiffs did isolates prisoners from family and not actively participate in the riot, 47 were guilty of comparative fault by friends. 12 leaving their cells during the riot to See, Terry Carter, Prison Break: Budget phone family or by remaining in the Crises Drive Reform, But Private Jails yards when they could not return to their Press On, A.B.A. J., Oct. 2012, quoting units - they were locked out. CCA Judith Greene, director of the non-profit argued that this conduct constituted an Justice Strategies, who states that the “assumption of risk.” profit margins of private prisons “depend 7 CCA named over 483 inmates as mostly on spending less for the biggest designated nonparties, claiming some business cost - personnel. That means participated in the riot, 189 made paying less for prison guards, already an extremely low-paying occupation. One telephone calls during the riot, 106 were result is high turnover and the on the facility grounds “and/or outside incompetence that inexperience brings. their assigned cell/unit, failing to lockdown” and that 21 were allegedly Also see Scott Cohn, Private Prison involved in an assault on another inmate. Industry Grows Despite Critics, CNBC CCA also designated, wholesale, the Oct. 18, 2011, quoting Alex Friedman, ed., PRISON LEGAL NEWS, “Literally, you Colorado Department of Correction’s can put a dollar figure on each inmate SORT and ERT teams who responded to that is held in a private prison. They are the riot. In striking all of the nonparties, treated as commodities. And that’s very the court adopted plaintiffs’ arguments dangerous and troubling when a that the designations did not comply with company sees the people it incarcerates C.R.S. 13-21-111.5(3)(b). 8 as nothing more than a money stream. . . On Jan. 1, 1999, Crowley County . You have fewer guards that are less entered into an agreement with a experienced, that are paid less, who get Delaware company, Crowley County fewer benefits. . . .” Also, see Sheldon Correctional Services (CCS) to operate and Teji, Collateral Consequences of CCCF. Interstate Transfer of Prisoners, CTR. ON 9 Selman’s deposition testimony at pages JUVENILE AND CRIM. JUSTICE (July 2012). 14-16. 4 Trial Talk April/May 2013 49 TRINE’S TALES | Trine 13 See, Colo. Dept. Corrs. After Action Report - Inmate Riot: Crowley County Correctional Facility, July 20, 2004, pub. Oct. 1, 2004, at 13-17. Id. We filed the motion for sanctions pursuant to C.R.C.P. 37, supporting it by Aloi v. Union Pac. R.R. Corp., 129 P.3d 999, 1002 (Colo. 2006) (The court has the inherent power to provide the jury in a civil case with an adverse instruction as a sanction for spoliation or destruction of evidence), and see Pfantz v. Kmart Corp., 85 P.3d 564, 568-69 (Colo. App. 2003) (The court is not limited to imposing a sanction only for intentional spoliation, but may impose one based on gross negligence or recklessness.) The tendered instruction in the instant case provided: Colorado law required that the defendant, Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), produce a copy of the After 14 15 Action Report resulting from the investigation of the riot by a team of five Wardens assigned by CCA to conduct an investigation. CCA was ordered by the Court to provide plaintiffs with a copy of the report and CCA did not do so. Therefore, you are instructed that you may conclude, in your deliberations, that the report was favorable to the plaintiffs and adverse to CCA. A typical bellwether approach selects some plaintiffs as representatives of the larger group(s) of plaintiffs and the selected plaintiffs proceed to trial. The verdict(s) for or against each group(s)’s representative binds the large group(s) of plaintiffs, and each member of a group receives the same damages as the group representative. 17 Contracts and ethics bound the plaintiffs’ counsel to treat each client’s case individually and separately. Noneconomic damages varied by individual; 16 Stodola Engineering Limited Motor Vehicle /Bicycle/ Pedestrian/ Product Liability /Premise Liability - Slip, Trip, Fall/ Mechanical Failures/Guarding Vast Experience in a Wide-Range of Engineering Matters Extensive Testimony History Nationally Established Professional Highly Satisfied Clientele ANNE STODOLA, MS, P.E. DANIEL A. GODRICK, MS, P.E. 4450 Arapahoe Avenue, Suite 100 Boulder, CO 80303 303.448.8868 {ph) 303.415.2500 (fax) Email: annestodola@gmail.com 50 April/May 2013 we could not group them. Even if we could place plaintiffs in clear and distinct categories, this technique could deprive non-parties to the exemplar trial of their Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial and violate substantive and procedural due process. See, In re Chevron U.S.A, 109 F.3d 1016 (5th Cir. 1997) (“this is not one case but 3000 cases filed individually, not as a class action, and aggregated for trial management. . . . The individual circumstances of each plaintiff’s claim defy easy aggregated treatment.” Also see, Abbott v. Kidder Peabody & Co., 42 F. Supp. 2d 1046 (1999) (a violation of contractual and ethical obligations to clients) and Hayes v. Eagle-Pitcher Industries, Inc., 513 F.2d 892 (1975). 18 Colo. Sup. Ct. Case No. 12SA350. Pet. for Rule to Show Cause Pursuant to C.A.R. 21 denied en banc Dec. 21, 2012. Petition for rehearing denied Jan. 9, 2013. Have you ever wondered what to do when a colleague needs help with an addiction? Do you know where to turn for confidential peer support? Colorado Lawyers Helping Lawyers, Inc. is a courtapproved, volunteer Board of Directors consisting of lawyers and law students who offer confidential support for colleagues experiencing problems with substance abuse (alcohol/drugs) and mental health issues. CLHL provides free confidential support group meetings for judges, lawyers, and law students: in recovery; experiencing mental health issues; women’s group; virtual telephone support group. For more information, call (303) 832-2233 or (800) 432-0977. Visit our website at www.clhl.org. Trial Talk Colorado Trial Lawyers Association