The incident highlights the difficulties inherent to investigations of deputy misconduct inside the jails. “Allegations of deputy brutality in county jails are common but hard to substantiate,” says the Times. “Aside from other deputies, usually the only witnesses are inmates, whose accounts are inherently considered less credible, experts say.”
Indeed, establishing the veracity of an inmate claiming abuse is tricky, to say the least. Inmates have various incentives to fabricate allegations against deputies, sometimes in the hope of a transfer to more desirable housing, sometimes in revenge for perceived mistreatment, and sometimes in an effort to miss the bus that will take them to their court appearances, the outcomes of which they would rather avoid.
But so too do deputies have incentive to deny or minimize their roles in incidents where improper force is alleged by inmates. Like any jail or prison, the L.A. County jails are ruled through intimidation and sometimes force. Thousands of inmates are minded by a relative handful of deputies, who depend on their charges being fearful of the consequences if they step out of line.
My own contact with the county jails has been limited to supplying occupants for a good many years, but on one occasion some time ago my duties took me deep within the walls of the Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles. I was there at the behest of detectives who instructed me to retrieve a particular inmate from the general population so that some additional bureaucratic procedures could be followed in the case against him. To do this, I went with a lone deputy into a large room where perhaps a hundred inmates were jammed cheek by jowl. We had to get to the opposite end of the room where another door would lead us to the inmate I sought. So there we were, outnumbered 50 to 1, wading through this sea of humanity which, had the notion seized them, could have beaten us both to mush in no time at all. I don’t mind saying I was a little frightened, but I followed my escort, a man of no imposing dimensions, as he pushed and pulled the inmates this way and that so as to clear a path for us. He was firm but professional, and yes, perhaps a bit rough with those few inmates who failed to clear the path as quickly as others had. This served as a lesson for me: that deputy wasin control of that room and everyone in it for as long as he chose to be there.
That was a distillation of how the L.A. County jails, the nation’s largest jail system, are governed. But in such an environment physical conflict is inevitable. The deputies must control large numbers of individuals who have for one reason or another landed behind bars, thereby demonstrating to varying degrees they are incapable of controlling themselves. Inmates do indeed challenge and assault deputies, sometimes going to creative and downright vile lengths to torment their guards. Makeshift weapons are routinely discovered during searches. ...
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