Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Police to investigate abuse claims in 22 Texas youth prisons

Police sent to 22 Texas youth prisons

By JIM VERTUNO, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 35 minutes ago

Police were sent to 22 Texas Youth Commission facilities and the agency headquarters Tuesday to investigate claims that young inmates were sexually abused and that agency officials covered it up.

Jay Kimbrough, appointed by the governor to look into the allegations at a West Texas youth prison, said the officers would conduct interviews at the prisons and halfway houses, secure equipment and collect documents if necessary.

He also issued a warning to agency employees.

"If you are part of this gig, you need to move on or we're going to find you and prosecute you," Kimbrough said.

The Texas Youth Commission houses offenders ages 10 to 21 who are considered the most dangerous, incorrigible or chronic. Its new board of directors chairman pledged Tuesday that the agency would cooperate with the investigations.

"I'd like to assure everyone that the board is very, very interested in a new direction of the Texas Youth Commission," Don Bethel said. "We are going to cooperate with everyone."

Late last month, state lawmakers questioned agency staff about an investigation in 2005 that had found evidence that high-ranking officials at the West Texas State School in Pyote had repeated sexual contact with some of the 250 boys and young men housed there. An internal investigation found prison staff members had complained about the abuse to their supervisors but that no one took action for more than a year.

The Texas Senate asked Republican Gov. Rick Perry last week to fire the board and take over the troubled agency.

Perry instead demoted the board's chairman and appointed Kimbrough, his former deputy chief of staff, as a special master to conduct an independent investigation. He also ordered the agency's acting executive director to design and implement a rehabilitation plan.

The recently appointed acting executive director, Ed Owens, said the agency will have a "zero tolerance policy of any type of mistreatment of youth."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have worked for the agency and know that employees who do complain about abuse are repramanded I was lucky enough to only work there for 9 months but that was still to long. Teens not only face abuse by staff but by other teens in the same dorm. Staff get sexually harrassed by other staff memembers and when a complaint is filed it is ignored. I believe that the reason alot of the teens go back to prision is because we failed them when they were under the state watch.

Marc Parent mparent7777 mparent CCNWON said...

Let's hope some justice is done.