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哥伦布、匹兹堡及各地消息
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Justice Department Announces Investigation
into Conditions in Georgia Prisons
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WASHINGTON – The Justice
Department announced today that it has opened a statewide civil
investigation into conditions of confinement of prisoners held in
Georgia’s prisons.
The investigation will examine whether Georgia provides prisoners
reasonable protection from physical harm at the hands of other
prisoners. The department also will continue its existing
investigation into whether Georgia provides lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender and intersex prisoners reasonable protection from sexual
abuse by other prisoners and by staff.
“Ensuring the inherent human dignity and worth of everyone,
including people who are incarcerated inside our nation’s jails and
prisons, is a top priority,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen
Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “The
Justice Department’s investigations into prison conditions have been
successful at identifying systemic constitutional violations and
their causes, fixing those causes and stopping the violations. We
are investigating prison violence and abuse in Georgia’s prisons to
determine whether Constitutional violations exist, and if so, how to
stop them.”
“Individuals sentenced to prison in Georgia Department of
Corrections facilities deserve to be treated humanely,” said Acting
U.S. Attorney Kurt R. Erskine for the Northern District of Georgia.
“Our office is committed to ensuring state prisoners are safe while
serving their sentences. We look forward to working cooperatively
with the Georgia Department of Corrections to ensure the safety of
all individuals in its prisons.”
“Prison conditions that enable inmates to engage in dangerous and
even deadly activity is an injustice, jeopardizing the lives of
detainees, staff members and other corrections personnel,” said
Acting U.S. Attorney Peter D. Leary for the Middle District of
Georgia. “Our local law enforcement and corrections partners, with
whom we work with closely each and every day, are indispensable to
our united goal of achieving a safer Georgia for all. Under the
leadership of the department’s Civil Rights Division, we look
forward to collaborating with our state partners to address our
mutual concern for safety in the corrections system.”
“This investigation is an example of our office’s commitment to
stamping out violence in our district, no matter where it is found,
no matter who the victim is,” said Acting U.S. Attorney David H.
Estes for the Southern District of Georgia. “We look forward to
working with the State of Georgia, the Georgia Department of
Corrections, the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice,
and our counterparts in the U.S. Attorney’s Offices for the Northern
and Middle Districts of Georgia to further our shared mission to
keep correctional facilities safe for the sake of our community, the
prisoners housed there and the dedicated staff who work there.”
The department has not reached any conclusions regarding the
allegations in this matter. The investigation will be conducted
under the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act (CRIPA).
Under CRIPA, the department has the authority to investigate whether
any violations of prisoners’ constitutional rights result from a
“pattern or practice of resistance to the full enjoyment of such
rights.” The department has conducted CRIPA investigations of many
correctional systems, and where violations have been found, the
resulting settlement agreements have led to important reforms.
The Special Litigation Section of the Department of Justice Civil
Rights Division is conducting this investigation jointly with the
U.S. Attorney’s Offices for the Northern, Middle and Southern
Districts of Georgia. Individuals with relevant information are
encouraged to contact the department via phone at (844) 401-3736 or
by email at Community.GeorgiaDOC@usdoj.gov.
Additional information about the Civil Rights Division’s CRIPA
investigations related to prisons and jails can be found here:
https://www.justice.gov/crt/rights-persons-confined-jails-and-prisons. |
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