The on Monday, Nov. 4, filed in charging that prison guards are sexually assaulting and abusing women who are locked up. All three lawsuits say these individual cases are part of a larger systemic problem in the state’s .
Former prison guard Benny Chee last year pleaded guilty to raping a woman in the state prison in Grants. The new lawsuit says she’d become pregnant during the assault and later had a miscarriage while she was incarcerated.
ACLU Staff Attorney Lalita Moskowitz said inside New Mexico’s women’s prisons, sexual abuse is normalized, ignored and dismissed. "One of the big issues that keeps coming forward is that staff very often retaliate against folks who do report this kind of abuse," she said. "Which means we can be pretty certain that more is happening than we even know about, because they’re so afraid of being retaliated against for reporting."
That could look like even more abuse, according to the lawsuit, or guards taking away someone’s good-time credits, which means more time in prison. Protocols aimed at preventing rape aren’t being followed in the prison, the suit states, like rules about video cameras and guards not having unsupervised time alone with an inmate.
Moskowitz says ex-guard Chee no longer works for the Department of Corrections but didn’t serve any time himself.