Prison Guards Boiled Black Man To Death

Are we not allowed to have an opinion? I can see how that would sound coming from a white person but I’m pretty knowledgeable when it comes to melanin so I have evidence to support my claim.

It’s ws who claim we’re inferior, so why do they fear us if that’s the case? And im of mixed race my mother is Filipino.
nah i agree with u
im just sayin folks was mad when i brought this up


i think it was in this thread
i can reply to it so maybe it wasn't this one cause i was banned from it originally
https://niketalk.com/threads/existe...oven-to-be-true-would-you-worship-him.646469/
 
Florida OKs $4.5 Million Payout for Brutal Prison Shower Death of Darren Rainey
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Darren Rainey was serving a short sentence on a drug charge when he died after being locked in a shower for nearly two hours. Florida Department of Corrections

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/special-reports/florida-prisons/article196797554.html

The family of Darren Rainey, the 50-year-old schizophrenic inmate whose barbaric shower death led to sweeping reforms in the Florida prison system, has settled a civil rights lawsuit against the state of Florida and others for $4.5 million, the Miami Herald has learned.

The deal comes nearly six years after Rainey’s death, which was all but ignored by authorities until 2014 — when the Miami Herald wrote about it as part of a three-year investigation into the abuse and suspicious deaths of inmates in the Florida Department of Corrections.

It also comes as Florida is set to open a new residential prison treatment facility next month for state prison inmates with mental illnesses. The program is one of a number of initiatives for inmates with disabilities begun since the Herald’s series.

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The shower in the mental health unit at Dade Correctional Institution stripped the skin off of Darren Rainey’s body after he collapsed.

Rainey’s daughter, brother and sister filed the civil lawsuit against the state; Corizon, the Department of Corrections’ former mental health contractor; Jerry Cummings, the former warden at Dade Correctional Institution; and two former corrections officers, Roland Clarke and Cornelius Thompson. It charged that they had subjected Rainey to cruel and unusual punishment, in violation of his constitutional rights.

“I’m thankful for the family appears to have reached a resolution. However, it is not finalized at this moment, so I am reserving any further comment,’’ Milton Grimes, the Rainey family attorney, said on Thursday.

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Inmate Harold Hempstead wrote to the Miami-Dade state attorney and other law enforcement offices, describing what had happened to Darren Rainey. He was ignored until his story was reported in the Miami Herald. He has been moved to a prison in another state for his own protection.
Florida Department of Corrections


Harold Hempstead, the whistleblower who alerted the Herald to Rainey’s death, said he is grateful that the case not only led to changes in Florida, but prompted other states to rethink the way they treat and house inmates with disabilities.

“Even though it was a really bad and evil thing, when I look back and see the good that came as a result of attention to the problems in the prison system, I’m happy. It’s sad that someone had to die to make change happen. But they say God has a way of bringing good out of evil,’’ said Hempstead, who is now assigned to a prison out of state for his protection.

On June 23, 2012, Rainey was locked in a blistering hot shower by corrections officers who had specially rigged it to punish inmates who misbehaved in the prison’s mental health unit, the Herald found. The temperature controls were in another room.

Rainey screamed and begged to be let out of the steaming stall for nearly two hours until he finally collapsed and died, his skin peeling off his body, the Herald found.

Dade CI’s guards also used other forms of torture: dousing prisoners with buckets of chemicals, over-medicating them, forcing them to fight each other and starving them. A group of officers at the prison that served inmates empty food trays was known as the “diet squad.’’

For more than a year afterward, Hempstead, an orderly at the prison, sent letters to Miami-Dade homicide detectives, the county medical examiner, the office of Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernández Rundle and the prison system’s inspector general, telling them that the guards at the prison had killed Rainey and were harming other inmates. But no action was taken.

Authorities, facing public pressure after the Herald stories, finally reopened the case. The Department of Corrections forced the warden and assistant warden out, the head of the agency stepped down and dozens of officers accused of abusing inmates across the state were fired or forced to retire.

Florida lawmakers and the governor then undertook a number of statewide reforms in the treatment and housing of inmates with mental illnesses and other disabilities. Next month, a new residential mental health treatment center is scheduled to open at Wakulla Correctional Institution, located in the Panhandle.

Rainey, who grew up in Tampa, was serving a two-year sentence for drug possession and had been at Dade for about four months at the time of his death. He had reportedly soiled himself in his cell and refused to clean himself up, angering the guards, who forced him into the shower.

The officers claimed they checked on Rainey every half an hour and that he was fine.

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Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernández Rundle chose not to charge corrections officers in the death of Darren Rainey. An inmate’s letters to her office stating that Rainey was locked in the shower and begged to be let out, only to be mocked, were ignored.
CBS4


In March 2017, Fernández Rundle issued a final report on the case, announcing her decision not to file charges. She pointed to the autopsy results, which concluded that his skin damage was not caused by burns, and her contention that many of the witnesses, including Hempstead, were not consistent in their statements.

A Miami Herald analysis of her investigation, however, showed that the detectives failed to pursue key lines of questioning and ignored or downplayed leads provided by credible witnesses, such as medical personnel and corrections officers.

Rainey’s death nevertheless led to the growth of an active prison reform movement by human rights groups, among them a local group called SPAN (Stop Prison Abuse Now). Its activists have held protests and pressured the state for changes.

Disability Rights Florida, the Florida Justice Institute, the Southern Poverty Law Center and the ACLU of Florida — along with many civil rights attorneys around the state — spearheaded a call for the more humane treatment of Florida’s 99,000 inmates.

The U.S. Department of Justice continues to investigate Rainey’s case. Miami FBI spokesman Michael D. Leverock said: “We are not in a position to comment on this matter at this time.”

In confirming the settlement, FDC Secretary Julie Jones issued the following statement: “Since my appointment in 2015 we have worked to make meaningful improvements to our state correctional institutions — with a specific focus on the mental health population in our custody. We have achieved significant mental health accomplishments that ensure these inmates are given appropriate clinical services. I am absolutely committed to continuing this important work and our focus on the rehabilitation of those with behavioral health needs, as FDC works to become a national leader in correctional mental health.”

As part of the settlement, the Department of Corrections was dismissed from the suit.

Martha Harbin, director of external relations for Corizon, said: “Although every defense lawyer in the case knew Corizon had no liability for Mr. Rainey’s death, Corizon contributed $100,000 to the settlement in order to bring the case to a conclusion. Later, an FDOC representative thanked Corizon for making a contribution of any kind.”
 
Examiner Who Said Rainey's Burned Body Showed No Trauma Got a Promotion and an Award
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Miami-Dade medical examiner Emma Lew

https://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/...death-was-an-accident-gets-promotion-10796694

Earlier this month, New Times revealed that the Miami-Dade corrections officer who in 2012 locked inmate Darren Rainey in a scalding-hot shower until he died had gone on to become a patrol cop with the Miami Gardens Police Department. The backlash over his employment with MGPD prompted the city to begin the process of firing Clarke. Yet there is another key player in the Rainey drama who has also escaped much public scrutiny: Dr. Emma Lew, the medical examiner who said Rainey's horrific death wasn't anyone's fault.

Four years after the scalding, in 2016, Rainey's autopsy report was finally released. Although gruesome photos of Rainey's body show huge portions of his skin peeling off his back, legs, and arms; blistering red skin; and exposed tissue, Lew concluded his death at Dade Correctional Institution was an accident.

Video footage and statements from inmates to investigators revealed that on June 23, 2012, Florida Corrections Officer Roland Clarke locked inmate Rainey in a shower with scalding-hot water as punishment for defecating in his cell. The schizophrenic 50-year-old was serving a two-year sentence for cocaine possession, and inmates interviewed by homicide detectives said he was screaming inside the shower for two hours. By the time Clarke returned to let Rainey out, he was dead. The shower locked from the outside, and the temperature and water controls were also outside the shower.

Lew's determination on December 30, 2015, that Rainey's death was an "accident" caused by "complications from schizophrenia, heart disease, and confinement to a shower" were key to Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Rundle's decision not to file criminal charges for Rainey's cruel death. As reported by theMiami Herald, Lew claimed Rainey's body had no burns and no trauma.

Now, Lew's personnel file shows she has since received a promotion, an award (for which Rundle nominated her), and a raise. Through a spokesperson, Lew declined to be interviewed for this story. A public information officer for the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner's Office noted that both Lew and the previous medical examiner, Dr. Bruce Hyma, worked on the autopsy report together and that the prison where Rainey died was run by the state, not the county.

Four months after Lew's autopsy report was completed, Mayor Carlos Gimenez sent a letter to the Board of County Commissioners appointing Lew interim director of the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner Department following Hyma's death.

Then, on September 13, 2016, Rundle and her second-in-command, chief assistant of the Felony Division, Kathleen Hoague, wrote a letter praising Lew and nominating her for the 2017 In the Company of Women Award for being an "Outstanding Woman in Government."

"Over the years, Dr. Lew has become our most trusted witness and medical resource to guide and assist us in all phases of death investigations and even medical issues in non-death prosecutions," Rundle and Hoague wrote. (The letter reads, "Sincerely, Katherine Fernandez Rundle" but is signed by Hoague.)

That same month, Mayor Gimenez sent a letter to the Board of County Commissioners naming Lew the new department director. "I am confident that Dr. Lew will continue to successfully lead the Medical Examiner Department as one of the leading forensic pathology institutions in the world," he wrote.

With that appointment came a 10.4 percent pay raise, Lew's personnel records show. In October, less than a year after she released an autopsy report stating Rainey's body showed no burns or trauma, Lew's biweekly paycheck increased from $9,058 to $10,000 — to about $260,000 per year.

On March 17, 2017, nearly five years after he was killed, Rundle's office closed the investigation into Rainey's death. Rundle concluded he was killed in an accident caused by complications of his mental illness and "confinement in a shower." A memo cited Lew's autopsy report as a major reason for her decision.

That same month, Lew was awarded for being an "Outstanding Woman in Government."

"I never expected to be nominated," Lew said in the video related to the prize. "I'm very honored."

Eduardo Padrón, president of Miami Dade College; and Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen wrote Lew letters congratulating her on the award.

Lew's personnel file is filed with certificates of appreciation from the Board of County Commissioners, Miami Dade College, and the Metropolitan Police Institute, which cited her "outstanding support" in internal affairs investigations. In June, 2017, Nova Southeastern University in Broward County offered her an affiliate faculty position with the university's College of Allopathic Medicine. Her role in the Rainey controversy is not mentioned.

Similarly, the corrections officer who locked Rainey in the shower advanced in his career with little culpability for his role in the brutal death. After being hired by the Miami Gardens Police Department in 2014, he was investigated for everything from pursuing personal relationships with women while on duty to losing evidence sought by homicide detectives after a drowning victim's death. He even crashed his police cruiser into another car after running a red light. He was nominated for the Dade County Police Benevolent Association's Officer of the Year Award in 2017.

As reported by the Herald, Alexander Lopez, a paramedic who saw Rainey's injuries the night of his death, wrote that Rainey was found "with second- and third-degree burns on 30 percent of his body."

The photos speak for themselves.

Lew told the Herald in 2017 she was so confident Rainey's injuries were not burns that she took only one skin sample to check. Two forensic pathologists interviewed by the Herald debunked the autopsy report by pointing out numerous faults in Lew's work. Both said photos clearly showed evidence of burns covering Rainey's body. They also questioned Lew's decision to take only a single tissue sample. Asked by the Herald about where on the body she had removed the sample, Lew did not answer.

The pathologists also noted a bruise on Rainey's right hand, corroborating inmates' claims he was banging on the shower door, begging for help. Lew did not mention a bruise in her autopsy report.

On January 26, 2018, the family of Darren Rainey settled a civil lawsuit against the State of Florida, Clarke, and others for $4.5 million.
 
Justice... wow.
I'm really at a loss for words. It's just so wrong. I hope the victim finds eternal peace after enduring that torture.
 
This doctor Emma Lew is MAGA and happy being a tool for white supremacists
 
Guard Who Scalded Inmate to Death Now a Cop, Caught on Duty With Side Chick


Roland Clarke (Image Source: Miami Gardens Police)

https://rollingout.com/2018/10/09/g...ath-now-a-cop-caught-on-duty-with-side-chick/

It takes a special kind of person to scald a mentally ill inmate to death and then get a job as a cop. But that is the case with Roland Clarke, who may soon lose his job as a Miami Gardens, Florida, cop after a series of bad choices.

In 2015, Roland Clarke was seen on camera leading Darren Rainey, 50, a mentally ill Muslim prisoner into a shower cell. Clarke left Rainey in a scalding hot shower for two hours after he defecated in his cell at the Dade Correctional Institution. The guards were upset that Rainey did not clean up the cell.


Darren Rainey (Image Source: Florida Dept. of Corrections)

The temperature in the shower was controlled by the guards and other prisoners heard his screams and pleading during his torture. When the stall was finally opened, Rainey’s skin had peeled away and his lifeless body was on the floor. The guards removed him and a prison nurse administered CPR to no avail. Shockingly, the autopsy report stated that Rainey’s death was accidental due to complications of schizophrenia and heart disease. This year, Rainey’s family settled a civil lawsuit against the state, Clarke, and others for $4.5M.

Because of that ruling, Clarke was not charged with manslaughter and was able to get another job, this time as a cop with the troubled Miami Gardens Police Department. A 2014 report by Fusion Magazine showed that police in the city had conducted stop and frisk detainments of over half of the city’s population of 110K. The police even targeted the elderly and children as young as five for being labeled as suspicious.


A married Roland Clarke on duty and enjoying a steak dinner at his sidechick’s house for his 34th birthday (Image Source: Miami Gardens Police)

Now Clarke’s poor judgment will once again cost him his job after being caught for a second time having intimate encounters with a woman while on duty. The Internal Affairs Department has repeatedly investigated Clarke for a variety of issues, which include losing evidence in a possible homicide of a drowning victim as well as running a red light in patrol car and striking another vehicle.

But his latest hook up was apparently discovered by his wife and she was not pleased. According to an interview she gave to the New York Times, she was confronted by her husband’s mistress and given pictures of Clarke at her home. The pictures were taken on his 34th birthday and show him eating a steak dinner and also the rose covered bed that he later was intimate in. His wife filed for divorce and informed IA, who launched their own investigation and even recovered incriminating audio.

In the audio, Clarke is heard complaining about the first woman that got him in trouble with IA: “That b*** tried to get me fired. Cause she know I can’t come round there acting crazy with her cause I’m an officer so this ho called anonymously saying, “this n***** be coming to my house and f****** me on duty.”‘


Roland Clarke has a bed of roses while on duty (Image Source: Miami Gardens Police)

Clarke’s behavior and the new reports sparked this comment from Miami Gardens Mayor Oliver Gilbert, who said the city is currently working to fire Clarke: “The city manager has informed me that the officer in question is in the process required by law and collective bargaining before an officer can be officially terminated. The behavior of which [Clarke] is accused, and the poor judgement which he has allegedly shown, is not consistent with the high standards to which we hold all city employees.”

He further stated, “As mayor, I have no say in the hiring and firing of police officers. This is handled by our professional city manager through his chief of police. The conduct allegedly engaged in by this officer is something any person in our community would find disgusting and distasteful.”
 
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