Posts Tagged ‘Prison’

Michigan Triplets, 21, Are Now All Behind Bars on Felony Charges

Thursday, December 13th, 2012

Shivers brothers

Meet the Shivers triplets.

As of yesterday afternoon, the 21-year-old Michigan brothers are all locked up on felony charges.

As seen in the above photos, Deshawn (left) and Juronn (center) were convicted Monday of robbery and conspiracy in connection with the July 2010 theft of money and a cell phone from a Saginaw man.

The brothers, remanded to the Saginaw County jail following the jury verdict, each face a maximum of 15 years in custody when they are sentenced next month. If sent to prison, the duo will join their brother Devon (right) as wards of the state.

Devon Shivers is locked up until at least February 2042 following his sentencing last year for home invasion, weapons possession, and assault with intent to commit murder.

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/buster/triplets-in-michigan-prison-683412

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Suspect pleads not guilty to rape, murder

Tuesday, September 18th, 2012

A 25-year-old man charged in the rape and murder of a Tracy motel owner pleaded not guilty Monday.

Stephen Andrew Carreiro, an Army veteran, was escorted into a Stockton courtroom in an orange jailhouse jumpsuit to set a preliminary hearing. His attorney entered a not guilty plea on his behalf.

Carreiro is accused in the rape and murder of 62-year-old Lalitaben Patel and of assaulting the woman’s 84-year-old mother in the Hacienda Inn on July 7.

The elderly woman survived the attack, but Patel died from her injuries. She was the third homicide victim this year in Tracy, where there were no homicides in 2011 and three in 2010. Responding officers reported that they had located Carreiro naked, and he resisted arrest.

Carreiro, of Virginia, is a former Army private who was administratively discharged in July 2010, the Army confirmed.

Carreiro returns to court Nov. 26 for a preliminary hearing. He is being held without bail at the San Joaquin County Jail.

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Outlaws motorcycle gang raid called long time coming

Thursday, July 12th, 2012

The brown house at 2204 E. New York St. now sits empty.

In a Wednesday morning raid, the FBI stripped it of its contents: pool tables, signs with skulls and, most notably, the bikers who are members of a national motorcycle gang.

 

The only thing left was a barricade of yellow crime tape.

 

Forty-two people associated with the Indianapolis chapter of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club have been charged with 37 counts of federal crimes. All but one Wednesday were in the Marion County Jail. Prosecutors said that if convicted, they could be sentenced to decades in prison.

 

U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett touted the arrests as the largest organized crime prosecution federal prosecutors have ever pursued in Indianapolis.

 

The gang’s crimes, authorities said, ranged from hiding one another’s cars so they could collect insurance on the “stolen” vehicles to threatening to make people “disappear” if they didn’t pay their debts to others.

 

Their reputation on New York Street was just as varied. Some neighbors said they kept the neighborhood safe; others said they were bullies.

But Hogsett said during a news conference Wednesday that the city’s streets are much safer without the Outlaws.

 

“This indictment describes a dangerous criminal operation that was as well-layered and sophisticated as most businesses in this city,” Hogsett said in a statement. “Today’s announcement serves as a warning that we as a city will not accept this kind of behavior on our streets — not now, not ever.”

 

Some of the Outlaws have been arrested in the past, but Hogsett said he was unsure why no one previously tried to dismantle the organization, which has been around for decades and made no secret about its ties to criminal activity.

 

The club displayed signs that said it was part of the “1 percent,” a term that means it’s among the small portion of motorcycle clubs that don’t abide by the law.

 

Bob Hammerle, an Indianapolis attorney who represented several Outlaws from the 1970s to the 1980s, likened the group to the Hole in the Wall Gang from the classic western “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” except, he said, the gang members “are not as attractive as Paul Newman and Robert Redford,” who played the lead roles in the movie.

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Two Prison Fights Saturday Send Three to Hospitals

Tuesday, June 26th, 2012

Three inmates were taken to the hospital from the Lea County Correctional Facility after two separate incidents on Saturday, the Corrections Department said.

The first fight began in a housing unit at about 5 p.m. and ended when two inmates, including 25-year-old Sharoski Jackson, were stabbed, a release from the department said. The other inmate’s name was not released because his family had not been contacted….

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Prisoner admits gruesome jail murder of Wolverhampton paedophile Mitchell Harrison

Friday, June 22nd, 2012

Mitchell Harrison, aged 23 and originally from Wolverhampton, was serving an indefinite sentence for raping a 13-year-old girl when he was killed.

He was found dead in his cell at Durham’s Frankland Prison in October having been disembowelled.

Fellow prisoner Michael Parr, 32, pleaded guilty to murder during a brief hearing at Newcastle Crown Court via videolink from prison yesterday.

He will be sentenced on July 12.

Nathan Mann, 23, is also charged with Harrison’s murder, but he did not appear before the court.

After his murder, Harrison’s family released a statement saying: “Although we never condoned his past actions, he was serving his time and was by all accounts a model, trusted prisoner who did not deserve to die in this horrific way.”

Harrison, of Kendal, Cumbria, was jailed two years ago after raping the schoolgirl.

The unsuspecting youngster had accompanied him back to his flat where he said he was going to get money for cigarettes and drink.

But once he had lured her inside he ordered the terrified girl to strip and raped her twice. She managed to escape when another man arrived and was found naked in the street with her clothes in her arms.

The pervert was jailed indeterminately at Carlisle Crown Court as it was the third time he had been involved in sex attacks on young girls.

At the age of 13, Harrison got a formal police warning for indecently assaulting a seven-year-old in an incident which would now be classed as rape. And two years later he was in court for threatening to rape a 15-year-old girl whose breasts he grabbed during a lesson.

In the 13-year-old schoolgirl rape case, Prosecutor Rob Dudley said Harrison had sexual activity with another underage teenager just a few days before the attack.

Judge Peter Hughes, QC, said Harrison had to be locked up for public protection because he posed a substantial risk to young girls.

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ACLU Threatens to Sue Feds Over Arizona Immigration Detention

Thursday, June 14th, 2012

The American Civil Liberties Union has threatened to sue the federal government for alleged mistreatment of immigration detainees at an Arizona jail.

Immigrants detained at Pinal County Jail in southern Arizona do not have access to outdoor exercise facilities, are denied face-to-face visits with family members and face unwarranted punishment, the ACLU alleged in a letter sent to Immigrations and Customs Enforcement Tuesday.

“The confinement of immigration detainees at Pinal County Jail, at least under current conditions, has no place in any system that aspires to civility,” the letter says.

The Pinal County Sheriff’s Office denied the allegations, saying it had raised standards in the jail since contracting with ICE to house detained immigrants.

“A lot of these inmates that we have live and eat a lot better than they would in their home countries,” Elias Johnson, a spokesman for the Sheriff’s office told Fox News Latino. “They’re treated quite well.”

Immigration detainees now have access to microwaves and more frequent changes of clean underwear and socks than before the ICE contract, Johnson said.

But in the 12-page letter, the ACLU describes abysmal conditions, including verbal abuse by prison guards, arbitrary lockdowns and searches and inadequate medical care. The outdoor recreation facility is blocked on three sides by concrete walls and only allows light in for an hour a day, the letter says.

The ACLU bases its allegations on interviews with detainees and a visit to the jail in March.

Most people detained for illegal immigration face civil violations rather than criminal charges, so they are entitled to higher standards of treatment than common criminals, the ACLU says.

The ACLU letter threatened to sue if authorities did not address the allegations.

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Man sentenced for hate crime

Thursday, June 7th, 2012

One of two men indicted in March on a hate crime charge has pleaded guilty and been sentenced to four years in prison with a recommendation for the impact incarceration, or boot camp, program.

Prison boot camp is a four-month, structured rehabilitation program that, if successfully completed, can replace prison time.

As part of his guilty plea, an aggravated battery charge was dismissed against Robert Hunt, 18, of the 1300 block of East Black Avenue.

Anthony Ishmael, 18, of Williamsville also is charged with a hate crime and misdemeanor aggravated assault in connection with a Feb. 8 incident involving a Lanphier High School custodian.

Hunt and Ishmael allegedly approached a Lanphier custodian as he was salting a school parking lot at 11th Street and Converse Avenue about 7:30 a.m. Feb. 8.

The victim, who is black, told police that as he walked back toward the school with his equipment, three men approached and that one, allegedly Hunt, punched him in the back of the head and made a racial remark to him.

The custodian called for school security, and the attacker asked if he was calling the police.

When the custodian replied that he was, the three men surrounded him, and a second man, allegedly Ishmael, swung a fist at the custodian but missed.

The custodian said he pulled a pocketknife to defend himself, and the men ran.

Assistant state’s attorney Karen Tharp prosecuted the case. Hunt was represented by Springfield attorney Ryan Cadagin.

Ishmael’s case is set for trial June 25.

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Nearly 200 Years in Prison for Man Convicted of Sexual Assault of Boy

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

A Corpus Christi man has been sentenced to 171/2 years in prison after admitting that he sexually assaulted a 13-year-old boy at an elementary school and recorded the encounter on cellphone video.

David Hernandez also must serve life on supervised release and pay restitution of $10,000 to the boy and almost $10,000 to the victim’s father. A U.S. attorney’s statement says evidence presented to Senior U.S. District Judge Hayden Head in Corpus Christi on Tuesday showed Hernandez had been exploiting the child for several years.

According to court evidence, police found Hernandez sexually assaulting the boy at the school on March 12, 2011, and was found to have several videos on his cellphone showing several assaults on the boy dating to December 2010.

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Gang started prison riot in Mississippi

Saturday, May 26th, 2012

A gang fight in a prison for illegal immigrants quickly escalated into a riot involving as many as 300 inmates, some lashing out with sticks or homemade knives as the uprising spread through the sprawling prison, a sheriff said.

A guard was beaten to death and at least 19 other people were injured. The riot began Sunday afternoon and lasted into the night, with inmates dragging mattresses and wood to an outdoor recreation yard to set ablaze, Adams County Sheriff Chuck Mayfield said.

While law enforcement agencies from several counties waited outside the Adams County Correctional Facility in Natchez, authorities inside responded with tear gas and tactical units. They slowly corralled the inmates into a yard and searched them. By 2:45 a.m. Monday, all prisoners were back in their cells and the prison was locked down.

Mayfield said it’s not clear if the violence began within a gang or it was a dispute between rival groups, but “once it got started, it spread like wildfire.”

“They had makeshift weapons, broom handles, mop handles, anything they could pull apart, trashcan lids for shields, anything they could grab,” Mayfield said.

The prison holds nearly 2,500 low-security inmates, with most serving time for coming back to the United States after being deported, said Emilee Beach, a prison spokeswoman. Some of the inmates have also been convicted of other crimes, but their offenses were not immediately clear.

The facility is owned by Nashville, Tenn.-based Corrections Corporation of America, one of the nation’s largest private prison companies.

Catlin Carithers, who joined CCA in 2009 and was a senior correctional officer, was beaten during the mayhem, Mayfield said.

“He liked protecting people,” Carithers’ cousin, Jason Clark, told The Associated Press.

Carithers was engaged to be married and excited about a recent promotion that took him off the weekend shifts. He had been trained in recent years as part of the prison’s special response team and was called into work Sunday to help with the uprising, Clark said.

More than two dozen officers were held hostage or were trapped at some point, the sheriff said. Sixteen prison employees were treated for various injuries. At least three inmates were hurt. The sheriff said the inmates hurt each other, with one getting stabbed and another had broken ribs.

Bill Chandler, executive director of the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance, said his group has gotten complaints about the facility in the past year, mostly from people saying they weren’t getting adequate health care.

Frank Smith, who runs the online prison watchdog group Private Corrections Working Group, said those are the kinds of conditions that usually trigger a riot.

“The big problem is CCA tries to cut corners in every possible way. They short-staff, they don’t fix equipment, and things just get more and more out of control, and that’s what leads to these riots. It’s just about maximizing short-term profits,” Smith said.

The sheriff said the conditions at the prison had nothing to do with this riot, and he said there was probably little CCA could have done to stop the disturbance.

“I think this kind of thing can happen anywhere at any time,” he said.

In a brief statement, CCA spokesman Steve Owen said the company would work with authorities to investigate what happened.

CCA houses about 75,000 offenders and detainees in more than 60 facilities around the country, according to its website.

In 2004, inmates at a different CCA prison in Mississippi set fire to mattresses, clothing and a portable toilet. No injuries were reported. The company announced after that disturbance that it would add about 25 guards at the Tallahatchie County facility.

In Idaho, violence at a CCA-run prison has prompted federal lawsuits, public scrutiny and increased state oversight. In 2010, Vermont inmates being held at a CCA prison in Tennessee were subdued with chemical grenades after refusing to return to their cells.

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DIETRICH, OTTO

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012

(1897-1952) Established important contacts between the Nazis and a number of industrialists during the 1920s. Reich press chief of the party, 1933-45. In 1949, Dietrich was sentenced to seven years in prison but was released in 1950.

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