Inmate killings in S.C. prisons at 20 this year

A police vehicle sits outside the Lee Correctional Institution on Monday, April 16, 2018, in Bishopville, S.C. Multiple inmates were killed and others seriously injured amid fighting between prisoners inside the maximum security prison in South Carolina. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford)
A police vehicle sits outside the Lee Correctional Institution on Monday, April 16, 2018, in Bishopville, S.C. Multiple inmates were killed and others seriously injured amid fighting between prisoners inside the maximum security prison in South Carolina. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford)

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- The gang-fueled bloodshed that left seven prisoners dead this week at Lee Correctional Institution raises to 20 the total number of South Carolina prisoners killed at the hands of fellow inmates in the past 16 months -- violence that has some legislators calling for changes at the state Department of Corrections.

At a news conference, Corrections Department Director Bryan Stirling said officers stormed in and took the first of three dorms back from rioting prisoners about four hours after this week's melee began. He said the officers were assembled at the rural prison as quickly as possible and went in only when it was safe to do so.

After the institution was back under control, it then took more time to get injured inmates to hospitals. The prison is 40 miles east of Columbia.

"It shouldn't take five hours to get in there and put some water on these fires," said state Rep. Justin Bamberg, a Democrat and lawyer whose clients include the families of several inmates who were attacked in previous instances.

Contraband cellphones and staffing shortages are often blamed for many of the department's woes. Stirling, who oversees 21 prisons and more than 19,000 inmates, has said he's hired some of the 500 corrections officers he needs, but stresses the need for funding more officers.

Sen. Gerald Malloy, whose district includes Lee Correctional, said the government has a responsibility to keep the prison population safe and thinks lawmakers need to look at whether cost savings in corrections has been efficient.

"The burden comes back to the General Assembly, what are you going to do?" he said.

Stirling -- who served as then-Gov. Nikki Haley's chief of staff before she appointed him to lead the prisons in 2013 -- said his No. 1 security threat is cellphones, which gives inmates unfettered communication that helps them commit crimes inside and outside of prison. He said the riot started Sunday night as a gang war over territory, money and illegal items such as cellphones.

Stirling has urged the Federal Communications Commission to allow the prison to block or jam cellphone signals to prevent inmates from using them.

Violence at Lee and other institutions throughout South Carolina is not surprising, Republican Gov. Henry McMaster noted at the news conference. McMaster echoed Stirling's call for the ability to jam cellphones in prison but didn't propose any other alternatives.

"We do the best we can," the governor said.

From 2001-14, an average of 60 inmates died annually in state prisons across the country, according to the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics. In 2017, a dozen South Carolina inmates were killed by other inmates.

"That's staggeringly out of proportion," said John Pfaff, a Fordham law professor who tracks prison data. "It makes a prison that is supposed to be a secure facility -- a place with no weapons, a place where you can't leave -- as dangerous as living in the most dangerous city in America."

Information for this article was contributed by Jeffrey Collins and Christina Myers of The Associated Press.

A Section on 04/18/2018

Upcoming Events