Log on:
Powered by Elgg

Menu

Join
About Us
Contact Us
Inmate Connection
Inmate Members Packet
Inmates World.com Memberships
Help
Home

Click here to view Platinum and Gold Members
Click here to view Silver Members

Free Newsletter

"If you would like to receive the InmatesWorld.com monthly newsletter to send to an inmate then just sign up below"


Members

Michael Robbins CDC# V98358 Tank Williams  CDC# V74237 News R. Dawson CDC# P88874 J. Demello  CDC# V-55804 SEND A "SHOUT OUT" TO AN INMATE! If you would like to send a voice message to any inmate member of InmatesWorld.com, simply click the call me button and type your phone number in the call box.Your phone will immediately ring and you can leave your message.Make sure you say the name and inmate number of the inmate you are leaving the message for. Inmates will receive these messages in their monthly membership packets in the form of text at the beginning of each month or if they are signed up for a "Call Me" Membership their messages will be sent off right away.All phone numbers are kept private from InmatesWorld.com (Inmates must have either a "Call Me" Membership or a Platinum or Gold Membership to enjoy this feature)

Your Ad Here

News :: Blog :: Order Restored After Disturbance: Cold Dinner Leads to Disruption Involving 35 Inmates

July 04, 2008

By Elissa Silverman and Allison Klein

A disturbance involving 35 inmates at the D.C. jail broke out Sunday night and ended early in the morning yesterday, but authorities said there were no escapes and no injuries.

"At no time was there a threat to the community," Assistant Police Chief Alfred Durham said.

The commotion started about 6:30 p.m. Sunday, when two inmates got into a fight as dinner was being served in the maximum security area in the jail's southeast wing, officials said. It took corrections officers two hours to quell the fight and restore order, officials said.

The staff then served dinner, which had gotten cold, to 160 inmates in that unit. The cold dinner set off the larger disorder, which began between 8:30 and 9 p.m. and continued until 3:30 a.m.

"The food that was ready was not reheated and prepared all over," said Anthony Diallo, a jail spokesman. "Most inmates complied by eating the food and going back to their cells, but 35 were highly disturbed."

Diallo said those inmates refused to return to their cells and complained about the facility.

"Some complained about the food, some said, 'I want more rec time, I want to have more visitors,' " Diallo said.

Corrections officers used pepper spray to get the group under control, he said. The inmates involved were later examined by medical personnel. No weapons were found. The two men in the initial fight were moved to a different section of the facility, officials said.

At 12:30 a.m., dozens of D.C. police officers were sent to the jail in Southeast Washington to assist corrections personnel. Several D.C. firetrucks and ambulances were also on the scene, as were vehicles from the department's emergency response team. Shortly before 2:30 a.m., red lights on the jail's roof were flashing.

"When anything happens at the jail, we always come to secure the perimeter," said Durham, the assistant police chief.

D.C. Council member Phil Mendelson (D-At Large) said he thought the corrections staff handled the incident well. He pointed out that the jail is under capacity; in recent years, crowding has contributed to occasional problems.

The jail has 1,900 inmates, 200 below capacity. 

Posted by News

You must be logged in to post a comment.