Search
and
Seizure:
Five-Day
Shackling
in
Colorado
Prison
to
Find
Swallowed
Drugs
Approaches
Torture
Level
7/28/06
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle-old/446/colorado-prison-shackling-drug-search.shtml
Authorities at the Colorado state prison in Buena Vista kept an inmate shackled to a chair for 5 1/2 days without sleep or exercise, never turned off the lights, and strip-searched and cavity-searched him 17 times even though he was under the constant watch of a guard. Prison officials suspected inmate Brian Willert, 29, of swallowing bags of heroin and wanted to collect the evidence.
They eventually did, but the judge hearing the case, Chaffee County District Court Judge Charles Barton, threw out the evidence, saying that prison authorities could have achieved the same goal in a few hours by obtaining a court order to administer a laxative. What prison officials did to Willert was an unreasonable search, Barton held.
"Forcing a shackled inmate to sit in a chair for over five days posed, in the court's opinion, an unreasonable risk to the life and health of the inmate," Barton said in his July 14 ruling. "It is difficult for the court to imagine a more intrusive procedure. Defendant was watched every minute for over five days. He was not permitted to meet the basic human need to lie down and sleep."
Barton also questioned what the repeated strip searches had to do with security and criticized prison officials for failing to check on Willert's health after he tested positive for methamphetamine on day four, suggesting a balloon had broken. But Barton rejected Public Defender Patrick Murphy's contention that what was done to Willert constituted cruel and unusual punishment.
Willert was placed in a "dry cell" without a sink or toilet after his girlfriend told prison authorities she had passed balloons of what she thought was heroin to him during a visit. That is standard procedure for the Colorado Department of Corrections, director of prisons Gary Golder told the Rocky Mountain News. But "dry cell" stays rarely last more than a day, he said. Still, Golden said, the department's inspector general will investigate. "Did the staff violate the policies or do something inappropriate?" he asked.
-- END --
Issue #446
-- 7/28/06
Editorial:It's
Time
to
Get
Real
About
Opium
in
Afghanistan
|
Feature:
Medical
Marijuana
Crisis
in
San
Diego
as
Feds,
Locals
Move
to
Shut
Down
Remaining
Dispensaries
|
Feature:
Bipartisan
Group
of
US
Senators
Introduce
Bill
to
Reduce
Cocaine
Sentencing
Disparities
|
Feature:
Holy
Smoke
Bust
Mobilizes
Interior
British
Columbia
Cannabis
Community
|
Law
Enforcement:
This
Week's
Corrupt
Cops
Stories
|
Sentencing:
Federal
Judges
More
Likely
to
Acquit
Than
Juries
|
Medical
Marijuana:
South
Dakota
Ballot
Description
Erroneous
and
Apparently
Illegal
|
Medical
Marijuana:
In
New
York
Democratic
Gubernatorial
Race,
Spitzer
Says
No,
Suozzi
Says
Yes
|
Search
and
Seizure:
Five-Day
Shackling
in
Colorado
Prison
to
Find
Swallowed
Drugs
Approaches
Torture
Level
|
Khat:
Feds
Arrest
62
in
Crackdown
on
Mild
East
African
Stimulant
Herb
|
Europe:
British
Conservatives
Call
For
Legal,
Licensed
Afghan
Opium
Production
As
Troop
Toll
Mounts
|
Web
Scan:
Tony
Papa
Debunks
Anti-RockReform
Report,
Horrendous
Nightline
Khat
Segment,
Drug
Reform
Candidates,
DrugTruth
Radio
|
Weekly:
This
Week
in
History
|
Announcement:
IJPD
Seeks
Article
Submissions
on
Women
and
Harm
Reduction
|
Errata:
Kershaw
Not
In
Kershaw
Anymore
|
Weekly:
The
Reformer's
Calendar
|
This issue -- main page
This issue -- single-file printer version
Drug War Chronicle -- main page
Chronicle archives
|
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