Ohio guards laughed as supremacist stabbed cuffed black inmates, suit says

Authored by eu.cincinnati.com and submitted by Chainsaw_Hamster
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'Just let them die': Ohio guards laughed as supremacist stabbed cuffed black inmates, suit says

An Ohio prison staff acted with callous indifference as a white supremacist attacked four black inmates handcuffed to a table, according to a federal lawsuit filed earlier this month in the Southern District of Ohio.

Two correctional officers, identified only by their surnames, Faye and Dalton, laughed as the four black inmates were brutally stabbed in June 2017, the suit says. The incident was captured on surveillance footage and viewed by millions.

The suit seeks $75,000 in damages on behalf of two of the victims, Shamieke Pugh and Maurice Lee. It claims the victims' civil rights were violated, including that they suffered cruel and unusual punishment because of the prison guards' inaction.

Pugh, Lee and two other black inmates were strip searched before they were allowed out of their cells for recreational time. They were then handcuffed to a table.

But Greg Reinke, who pleaded guilty in the attack, was not strip searched before he was cuffed to an adjacent table.

Reinke is identified in the suit as a member of the Aryan Brotherhood, a violent white supremacist group.

Guards "gave Reinke a key" or "knew or should have known that Reinke" had a key or device to unlock his handcuffs.

More: Reinke pleads guilty in brutal stabbing of a Lucasville correction officer

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Reinke used an 8-inch blade in the attack and had a 12-inch blade in his sock.

Faye and Dalton, the guards, stood nearby behind a locked door and "laughed as Mr. Pugh, Mr. Lee and the other inmates were stabbed."

Two of the inmates suffered several stab wounds and heavy bleeding while the other two sustained minor injuries.

After one victim escaped his cuffs and tackled Reinke, guards pepper-sprayed the victim and not Reinke.

The guards, including a sergeant identified as John Doe, did not immediately render aid to the victims, and 10 minutes passed before nurses arrived.

At one point, one of the guards said, "We should just let them die." The guard who made the statement is not specifically identified in the suit.

Reinke had a history of carrying knives. On two occasions prior to June 2017, he'd stabbed or attempted to stab other inmates.

The Lucasville prison's warden, Ronald Erdos, is also named as a defendant in the suit, which says he and the facility's staff knew Reinke was a violent threat, "yet did nothing to prevent this violence."

The suit also accuses unidentified correctional officers of later beating Pugh when he sought medical attention for chest pain and high blood pressure.

The suit includes 11 charges of civil rights violations, including that the victims' right to equal protection was violated.

In addition to Faye, Dalton and Erdos, the suit also names as defendants unidentified nurses, health care provider and other correctional officers.

Reinke was sentenced to 54 years in the bloody attack, video of which was obtained by the Associated Press and went viral late last year.

Reinke was sentenced to an additional 32 years behind bars for an attack about eight months later on a corrections officer. Prosecutors said Reinke and another inmate stabbed the officer 32 times.

Reinke was already serving a life sentence for a 2004 Cleveland murder before the stabbings.

The AP recently reported Reinke is on a hunger strike because he believes he's being mistreated in prison.

More: Southern Ohio Correctional Facility inmate who stabbed 4 prisoners goes on hunger strike

deftones5 on April 20th, 2019 at 16:15 UTC »

So they charge the guy with more years even though he's already on life term. What's the point? He might as well continue stabbing them later

kimya_d on April 20th, 2019 at 15:46 UTC »

The suit seeks $75,000 in damages on behalf of two of the victims,

That’s it? Is there some ridiculous statutory limit on what prisoners can recover?

Edit: I pulled up the complaint itself and it doesn’t have this number in it. It asks for the following as relief:

a. Full and fair compensatory damages in an amount to be determined by a jury; b. Punitive damages in an amount to be determined by a jury; c. Reasonable attorney’s fees and costs of this action; and d. Any such other relief as appears just and proper.

Edit 2: The article is wrong. $75,000 is the minimum for federal jurisdiction. The reporter must’ve seen “at least $75,000” checked off somewhere and thought it was the amount being sued for.

Edit 3: as others have pointed out, the $75,000 is irrelevant here because it’s a federal question case (complaint cites 28 USC 1331, not 1332). So God knows where the reporter got $75k.

BeautifulShower on April 20th, 2019 at 15:42 UTC »

Reinke had a history of carrying knives. On two occasions prior to June 2017, he'd stabbed or attempted to stab other inmates.