California prison inmates, none of whom are sex offenders or men who have murdered sex offenders. Photo via Flickr user San Quentin News.
California prison inmates, none of whom are sex offenders or men who have murdered sex offenders. Photo via Flickr user San Quentin News
"That's the culture in California prison," Kilo, a Blood doing life in California under the three strikes law, tells me. "It's taboo and pretty much all the races make an issue out of it, as far as dealing with child molesters and stuff like that. But the Hispanics and the whites—they really make a big issue out of it, as far as stabbing them and getting them out of the prison population."Much of prison life in America is about making a spectacle of violence. The gangs and others like to publicly prove who's the biggest, baddest and most violent, and going after sex offenders is an easy way to demonstrate that. But as Terry Thornton, deputy press officer for the California Department of Corrections (CDC), points out, prisoners are attacked for a variety of reasons—not just because their crimes are deemed uniquely heinous."There are a number of factors that can contribute to violence in our prisons," Thornton tells us via email. "While an offender's commitment offense may play a role, we believe drugs are a major contributor to violence in our institutions. I believe we had something like 50 drug overdose deaths in 2014. Many inmates are threatened and attacked due to drug debts."While Thornton does not dispute that gang members despise pedophiles, she pushed back on the idea that it's open season on these guys."While this is historically true, our analysis of recent homicide incidents reviewed by the Office of the Inspector General and the AP shows that most of these incidents were in-cell homicides and in some cases, the perpetrator was also a sex offender," Thornton says. "The California Department of Corrections strives for a safe and secure environment for all offenders."
Annoncering
Annoncering
Annoncering