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Thread: Screws who boiled prison inmate alive face no charges

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    Platinum Lord of the Fraud's Avatar
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    Screws who boiled prison inmate alive face no charges

    He was incarcerated for the heinous crime that is "cocaine possession".


    America is widely seen as having a third world justice system. And this shameful cover-up won't help a country that is already drowning in its own shame.



    On June 23, 2012, Darren Rainey, a schizophrenic man serving time for cocaine possession, was thrown into a prison shower at the Dade Correctional Institution. The water was turned up top 180 degrees — hot enough to steep tea or cook Ramen noodles.

    As punishment, four corrections officers — John Fan Fan, Cornelius Thompson, Ronald Clarke and Edwina Williams — kept Rainey in that shower for two full hours. Rainey was heard screaming "Please take me out! I can’t take it anymore!” and kicking the shower door. Inmates said prison guards laughed at Rainey and shouted "Is it hot enough?"

    Rainey died inside that shower. He was found crumpled on the floor. When his body was pulled out, nurses said there were burns on 90 percent of his body. A nurse said his body temperature was too high to register with a thermometer. And his skin fell off at the touch.

    But in an unconscionable decision, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle's office announced Friday that the four guards who oversaw what amounted to a medieval-era boiling will not be charged with a crime.

    “The shower was itself neither dangerous nor unsafe,’’ the report says. “The evidence does not show that Rainey’s well-being was grossly disregarded by the correctional staff.’’

    Rundle's office announced the results of its investigation in a Friday afternoon news-dump, the kind that public officials typically only use to bury unflattering news or information. Rundle's office would clearly like this case to vanish over the weekend — but the facts of the case are so inhumanely grotesque that the decision should haunt the office for eternity.

    Rundle took over as Miami-Dade's top prosecutor in the 1990s, after then-State Attorney Janet Reno left to join the Bill Clinton administration. She has remained the state attorney every since. In that time, she has never charged a Miami police officer for an on-duty shooting.


    http://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/fl...-death-9213190


    How the US is 'officially' ranked as high as the 7th best country on earth is truly beyond me.

     
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  2. #2
    King of Lost Wages LarryLaffer's Avatar
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    what's that old saying?

    all cops are bastards?

    how about mother fuckers like this shouldn't even pass go, they should just be killed on the spot. Boiling a guy to death? fucking wastes of life.

    seriously, firing squad isn't even good enough here. i'm talking a slow painful death.
    "Winning is the most important thing in my life, after breathing. Breathing first, winning next."

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    Welcher jsearles22's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lord of the Fraud View Post
    He was incarcerated for the heinous crime that is "cocaine possession".


    America is widely seen as having a third world justice system. And this shameful cover-up won't help a country that is already drowning in its own shame.



    On June 23, 2012, Darren Rainey, a schizophrenic man serving time for cocaine possession, was thrown into a prison shower at the Dade Correctional Institution. The water was turned up top 180 degrees — hot enough to steep tea or cook Ramen noodles.

    As punishment, four corrections officers — John Fan Fan, Cornelius Thompson, Ronald Clarke and Edwina Williams — kept Rainey in that shower for two full hours. Rainey was heard screaming "Please take me out! I can’t take it anymore!” and kicking the shower door. Inmates said prison guards laughed at Rainey and shouted "Is it hot enough?"

    Rainey died inside that shower. He was found crumpled on the floor. When his body was pulled out, nurses said there were burns on 90 percent of his body. A nurse said his body temperature was too high to register with a thermometer. And his skin fell off at the touch.

    But in an unconscionable decision, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle's office announced Friday that the four guards who oversaw what amounted to a medieval-era boiling will not be charged with a crime.

    “The shower was itself neither dangerous nor unsafe,’’ the report says. “The evidence does not show that Rainey’s well-being was grossly disregarded by the correctional staff.’’

    Rundle's office announced the results of its investigation in a Friday afternoon news-dump, the kind that public officials typically only use to bury unflattering news or information. Rundle's office would clearly like this case to vanish over the weekend — but the facts of the case are so inhumanely grotesque that the decision should haunt the office for eternity.

    Rundle took over as Miami-Dade's top prosecutor in the 1990s, after then-State Attorney Janet Reno left to join the Bill Clinton administration. She has remained the state attorney every since. In that time, she has never charged a Miami police officer for an on-duty shooting.


    http://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/fl...-death-9213190


    How the US is 'officially' ranked as high as the 7th best country on earth is truly beyond me.
    There ain't no shower that goes up to 180 degrees or stays hot for 2 straight hours
    It's hilarious that we as a society think everyone can be a dr, a lawyer, an engineer. Some people are just fucking stupid. Why can't we just accept that?

  4. #4
    King of Lost Wages LarryLaffer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jsearles22 View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Lord of the Fraud View Post
    He was incarcerated for the heinous crime that is "cocaine possession".


    America is widely seen as having a third world justice system. And this shameful cover-up won't help a country that is already drowning in its own shame.







    http://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/fl...-death-9213190


    How the US is 'officially' ranked as high as the 7th best country on earth is truly beyond me.
    There ain't no shower that goes up to 180 degrees or stays hot for 2 straight hours

    sooooo what are you saying? these guys didn't kill this inmate?

    or since it's rather obvious that you don't even take showers, we're supposed to take your word for it?
    "Winning is the most important thing in my life, after breathing. Breathing first, winning next."

    George Steinbrenner

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    Platinum Lord of the Fraud's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jsearles22 View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Lord of the Fraud View Post
    He was incarcerated for the heinous crime that is "cocaine possession".


    America is widely seen as having a third world justice system. And this shameful cover-up won't help a country that is already drowning in its own shame.







    http://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/fl...-death-9213190


    How the US is 'officially' ranked as high as the 7th best country on earth is truly beyond me.
    There ain't no shower that goes up to 180 degrees or stays hot for 2 straight hours


    The shower was apparently fixed to make it hit 180

  6. #6
    Platinum BetCheckBet's Avatar
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    I'd suggest you guys actually read the real report because its very different than what the article makes it out to be. No I'm not gonna summarize it for you. It's 100 pages but an easy read nonetheless.

    I will say though that prison's are not properly equipped to handle severely mentally ill patients which is the real issue here.

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    Platinum Lord of the Fraud's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LarryLaffer View Post
    what's that old saying?

    all cops are bastards?

    how about mother fuckers like this shouldn't even pass go, they should just be killed on the spot. Boiling a guy to death? fucking wastes of life.

    seriously, firing squad isn't even good enough here. i'm talking a slow painful death.


    Think about how many decent people are sitting in prison as we speak due to some bullshit charges. Yet those prison officers boil a man alive with any repercussions.


    In cases like this it should be taken way up high so those torturing murderers get to face justice.


    I mean even the bitch who failed to press charges should go straight to jail for this.

  8. #8
    Platinum Lord of the Fraud's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BetCheckBet View Post
    I'd suggest you guys actually read the real report because its very different than what the article makes it out to be. No I'm not gonna summarize it for you. It's 100 pages but an easy read nonetheless.

    I will say though that prison's are not properly equipped to handle severely mentally ill patients which is the real issue here.

    Err no. A man got boiled alive by the very people who are supposed to protect him. That's the REAL issue here.


    And if your reply is to tell me to go read 100 pages. I'll take my chances with the cliff option.

  9. #9
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    Greater in-depth read on the ruling. imo this just confirms the cover-up even more.

    http://www.miamiherald.com/news/loca...139206653.html


    A 101-page investigation released Friday concludes that corrections officers who locked a schizophrenic inmate in a hot shower at Dade Correctional Institution and left him there for nearly two hours — until realizing he was dead — committed no crime.

    The report, issued by Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernández Rundle, said the death of 50-year-old prisoner Darren Rainey was an accident, the result of complications from his mental illness, a heart condition and “confinement in a shower.”

    At least six inmates claimed that the shower was specially rigged so that corrections officers controlled the temperature and were able to crank it up to scalding — or down to an uncomfortably frigid spray, thereby using it as punishment to control unruly inmates, most of whom suffered from mental illnesses.

    But the state attorney’s two-year probe decided that the inmates’ statements were not credible.

    While the report cited significant inconsistencies in the accounts of inmates, it acknowledged the same was true to a lesser degree of the accounts of staffers, although there was “general agreement on a core set of salient facts.”

    Sgt. John Fan Fan, and officers Cornelius Thompson, Ronald Clarke and Edwina Williams — the staffers involved in putting Rainey into the shower — did not act with premeditation, malice, recklessness, ill-will, hatred or evil intent, the state attorney said.

    The report includes photographs, videos, dozens of witness statements, the medical examiner’s summary, prison housing logs, timelines and other documents.

    Milton Grimes, the attorney representing Rainey’s siblings, suggested the report’s release, late on a Friday, on St. Patrick’s Day, was meant to limit public scrutiny of the clear “inadequacies” of the investigation.

    “We are appalled that the state attorney did not look deeper into this case and see the criminality of the people who were involved,” Grimes said. He said the family is disappointed, but remains hopeful that federal investigators still probing possible civil rights abuses will find justice.

    Grimes suggested that police and state attorney investigators gave too much weight to corrections officers’ testimony and not enough to the broader context — news reports and inmate grievances suggesting prison staff has been abusing inmates at the prison for years.

    Others also questioned whether the case was thorough.

    “A lot of evidence was tampered with because the people there who had an interest did not want it to come out,” said Harriet Krzykowski, a former mental health counselor at the prison who was not interviewed as part of the probe.

    Among the most controversial portions of the state inquiry is the temperature of the shower. The report gives no indication that crime scene investigators turned on the water to see how hot it ran. A prison captain, assigned as the environmental health and safety officer, tested it two days after Rainey’s death and found it to be 160 degrees, far greater than the 120-degree limit set by the state.

    But her reading was dismissed as not indicative of the temperature when Rainey was inside.

    Other than two prison officers, a nurse and a paramedic, no one was interviewed by police — including multiple inmate witnesses who had reached out to various law enforcement authorities — until two years later, when the Miami Herald began raising questions about the case as part of what would become a three-year probe into corruption in Florida prisons.

    The final report does not address why the case was put on hold, or why, nearly five years later, the autopsy has never been released.

    Dr. Emma Lew, Miami-Dade’s medical examiner, was emphatic, however, that Rainey did not suffer burns of any kind, and there was no evidence of any trauma on his body, according to the state attorney’s report issued Friday.

    However, a never-released preliminary report written the day of the autopsy refers to “visible trauma … throughout the decedent’s body.”

    A nurse told the Herald early on that Rainey’s body temperature that night was so high it could not be measured on a thermometer.

    One fact is undisputed: Rainey’s skin was peeling off his body when he was pulled out of the shower.

    Since 2014, police detectives spoke with 26 inmates who were in the mental ward, called the transitional care unit (TCU) at the time of Rainey’s death. At least six inmates said that the shower had been used to punish inmates who misbehaved. And three reported that they themselves had been subjected to punishing showers. Some say the shower was used by inmates without any problem. Fourteen inmates were either too mentally ill to say anything credible — or they refused to talk to police altogether.

    Lew also discounted what the prisoners said because the prison nurses police interviewed claimed they had never treated — nor heard about — any inmates who had burns as a result of the shower.

    But Krzykowski and others medical workers at the prison have told the Herald that they were pressured to keep quiet by both their employer, a private contractor, and by corrections officers who threatened to leave them unprotected when dealing with unstable inmates.

    David Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor who reviewed the report for the Herald, said it’s clear that the evidence did not meet the legal standard required to charge any of the officers with a crime.

    “If you want to buy the government-conspiracy theory that the state attorney never charges corrections officers because they are part of the conspiracy, you are going to say they twisted the facts to support their theory,” he said.

    “But if you look at it objectively, I don’t disagree with the results that were released. The only person that says that Rainey was burned and scalded was one inmate — and when you compare that to the rest of the evidence, it’s not consistent.”

    That inmate, Harold Hempstead, was an orderly in the mental ward when Rainey died. It was Hempstead who first raised concerns about the episode, writing letters and filing complaints with police, the medical examiner and the state attorney about Rainey’s death as well as other alleged abuses inside the TCU.

    He and other inmates and mental health staff told the Herald that state prison guards used forms of torture, including dousing prisoners with buckets of chemicals, over-medicating them, forcing them to fight each other and starving them. A group of officers at the prison that served inmates empty food trays, known as “air trays.” was known as the “diet squad’’ and they often preyed on inmates who were too ill to coherently report what had happened, prisoners said.

    Around the time of Rainey’s death, another inmate hanged himself from an air conditioning vent, leaving a note sewn into his shorts detailing a litany of alleged abuses against inmates in the mental health unit.

    “I’m in a mental health facility … I’m supposed to be getting help for my depression, suicidal tendencies and I was sexually assaulted,” wrote Richard Mair, 40.

    The Department of Corrections never investigated Mair’s complaints, and the state attorney’s investigation in the Rainey case was limited to the facts surrounding Rainey’s death.

    State investigators said they didn’t find Hempstead to be credible because his timeline was at odds with events reflected on a video surveillance camera. Also, Hempstead could not have seen some of the things he claimed to have seen because his window was covered with paper for part of that time. The document suggests he pressured other inmates to report things that didn’t happen, pointing out that many of the inmates’ statements were “inconsistent with the testimony of correctional personnel, all of the nurses, as well as the physical evidence.”

    Hempstead was relocated to another state Friday, yet undisclosed, through a prisoner exchange, making him unavailable for comment. Prison officials said the timing was coincidental.

    The report itself is inconsistent in some areas. On page 68, for example, the investigation says that only one inmate, Halden Casey, gave information about being placed in the shower with excessively hot water.

    Earlier in the report, it mentions two other inmates: Lawrence Smith said he had been put in the hot shower about a month before Rainey died and that he had reported it to the nurses. Another inmate, Timothy Sliders, said he had been left in the hot shower for 30 minutes, but he managed to avoid injury by standing outside the spray. Another time, when he mentioned the water was comfortable, a guard went into the janitor’s closet and turned it up hotter, he told police detectives according to the report.

    Rainey, who grew up in Tampa, was serving a two-year sentence for cocaine possession and had been at Dade for about four months at the time of his death. He reportedly had soiled himself in his cell and refused to clean up, so the officers led him to the second-floor shower, despite other showers being closer to his cell.

    Lew, the medical examiner, noted that people with schizophrenia have an impaired ability to compensate for “heat stress” and that this, combined with the powerful medication he was taking, could have contributed to hyperthermia and created a predisposition to cardiac arrest.

    She attributed his skin slippage to as an event that happened post-mortem consistent with “exposure to a warm, moist environment” and the effects of changes during the early stages of body decomposition.

    Six inmates claimed that Rainey yelled that he wanted out of the shower. No member of the prison staff reported hearing anything.

    Julie Jones, secretary for the Department of Corrections, said she was appreciative of the effort by police and the state attorney. The agency remains focused on implementing reforms in the way it cares for mentally ill inmates.

    “We will continue to integrate services which ensure these inmates successfully re-enter society and lead crime-free lives upon release,’’ she said.

    Following the Herald’s stories, Dade Correctional’s warden and assistant warden were forced out, and, later, then-Secretary Michael Crews stepped down amid political pressure. He was replaced by Jones. Other high-level prison officials have also left, including the prison agency’s inspector general, Jeffery Beasley — the system’s “watchdog” — who was accused by his own investigators of thwarting investigations.

    Two of the guards identified as locking Rainey in the shower left their prison jobs, but were allowed to keep their law enforcement certifications. Roland Clarke is now a police officer in Miami Gardens and Cornelius Thompson works as a federal corrections officer.

    Rainey’s family filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the Florida Department of Corrections in 2016. It is still pending.

    The U.S. Department of Justice is still investigating possible civil rights abuses in Florida prisons.

  10. #10
    Canadrunk limitles's Avatar
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    The difference between a cop and a criminal is a uniform or something to that effect.
    Another good one

    Policemen so cherish their status as keepers of the peace and protectors of the public that they have occasionally been known to beat to death those citizens or groups who question that status.
    David Mamet

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    Diamond hongkonger's Avatar
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    It's not news that the United States is a barbaric country. Never heard of anyone boiled alive though.
    HILLARY WON

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    King of Lost Wages LarryLaffer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lord of the Fraud View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by LarryLaffer View Post
    what's that old saying?

    all cops are bastards?

    how about mother fuckers like this shouldn't even pass go, they should just be killed on the spot. Boiling a guy to death? fucking wastes of life.

    seriously, firing squad isn't even good enough here. i'm talking a slow painful death.


    Think about how many decent people are sitting in prison as we speak due to some bullshit charges. Yet those prison officers boil a man alive with any repercussions.


    In cases like this it should be taken way up high so those torturing murderers get to face justice.


    I mean even the bitch who failed to press charges should go straight to jail for this.
    just know this....judges, and prosecuters have blanket immunity and can't be held accountable for this kinda shit. They can't even be sued in a civil court for a wrongful conviction.

    that's right folks!!
    "Winning is the most important thing in my life, after breathing. Breathing first, winning next."

    George Steinbrenner

  13. #13
    100% Organic MumblesBadly's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LarryLaffer View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Lord of the Fraud View Post



    Think about how many decent people are sitting in prison as we speak due to some bullshit charges. Yet those prison officers boil a man alive with any repercussions.


    In cases like this it should be taken way up high so those torturing murderers get to face justice.


    I mean even the bitch who failed to press charges should go straight to jail for this.
    just know this....judges, and prosecuters have blanket immunity and can't be held accountable for this kinda shit. They can't even be sued in a civil court for a wrongful conviction.

    that's right folks!!
    The individual prosecutors may not be sued, but a majority of states have means for the wrongfully convicted to be compensated for their years in prison directly from a fund or the right to sue the *state* for such compensation.

    But the real problem with the system is how rare it is for badly-behaving prosecutors to be have their careers damages or worse for intentionally violating defendant's rights. *Extremely* rare.
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