Cross-posted at Facing South
Texas-based blog Grits for Breakfast is covering the shocking news that Galveston Island's sheriff -- despite official warnings that those who stayed in Galveston faced "certain death" -- refused to evacuate at least 1,000 people in the county jail.
People in the jail were terrified. The Galveston Daily News quoted a mother who spoke to her son Friday night in the jail:
"He said, ‘Mom. I’m worried, scared and hungry. All of us are here cramped into this little room on the first floor. The flood waters are rising and we’re not going to evacuate.’"
Nuzzo said her son didn’t see water in the jail, but heard it was rising on the island.
"I called but they’re not answering the phones. It’s ludicrous they left the inmates there."
Tuttoilmondo said the jail is primarily one level. Its phones were ringing all day.
Grits for Breakfast has been scouring the news for updates and hasn't been able to find out what happened to the inmates.
What is known is that the Galveston historic district, where the jail is located, flooded up to 7 feet, according to CNN.
State officials aren't talking. As of this morning, Governor Perry's spokesperson said she "did not know about any Ike-related deaths and did not have any information about inmates at a jail on Galveston that was not evacuated."
UPDATE: A commenter at Grits for Breakfast whose nephew is in the Galveston jail reports that the jail was on a "skeleton crew" because most of the staff had been evacuated. The family was "infuriated" to learn that the lives of 1,000 inmates were put in danger.
UPDATE 2: A woman comments on an Austin-American Statesman story, noting that even if county jail inmates survived the flood, they are still trapped in a town that is unlivable:
I'm still worried about the 1300 inmates and guards in the Galveston Jail. There is no running water on the island. Water for 1300 people takes up a huge amount of room. Do they have enough for everyone?
What are they using for sanitary facilities? Port-a-potties take up a lot of room when there are no trucks to empty them.
How are they ventilating the cells? Temperatures in an unventilated cell in a crowded jail can exceed 100 degrees if the air conditioning is not working. Are these people OK?
UPDATE 3: The Galveston County jail has a checkered history of poorly treating its inmates. Earlier this year, the jail received bad publicity when over 550 inmates got food poisoning. The jail is also facing a lawsuit from the parents of a mentally disturbed teenager who committed suicide after being thrown in solitary confinement.
UPDATE 4: As we at the Institute for Southern Studies documented in our report on Hurricane Katrina and human rights, abandonment and mistreatment of prisoners was a major issue in New Orleans. From our report released earlier this year [PDF]:
During the storm and for several days afterwards, several thousand men, women, and children as young as ten -- many of them being held in pre-trial detention on minor offenses -- were effectively abandoned as floodwaters rose and the power went out, plunging the cells into darkness. As deputies fled their posts, prisoners were left standing up to their chests in sewage-contaminated floodwaters, without food, drinking water, or ventilation.
UPDATE 5: I called the office of Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott for comment. I will let you know when/if they get back to me.
UPDATE 6: IngeniousGirl makes this report in the comments below:
I just talked to the Deputy on duty at the jail, yes they do answer the phone, and they are all ok, I'm an attorney with 25 years of experience (including criminal law, and investigation experience with all the 3 lettered agencies you can think of).
I grilled the Deputy very hard, and she was professional. All is ok, my comment is all the way down below so here is the link. I have emailed the diarist with more details and numbers of my call and to please update this diary with this information.
If true, this is very good news. We will keep on top of this.
UPDATE 7: There seem to be a few comments below (a small minority, but there nonetheless) which suggest that this serious issue shouldn't have been reported on. I strongly disagree, for several reasons:
(1) The inmates of Galveston County jail were still apparently not evacuated. Given the extremely dire warnings that those left in Galveston would "certainly die" and calling for mandatory evacuation of everyone else, Galveston officials have some explaining to do about why jail inmates should have been excluded from the evacuation order. This is true whether they are "ok" or not.
(2) If some of the inmates DID end up being evacuated, Galveston officials still have to explain (a) Why they initially claimed they would NOT be evacuating the inmates, and (b) Why they told family of jail inmates that their loved ones would be put at risk. [UPDATE: It appears this is moot, because the officials appear to be admitting they didn't evacuate them.]
(3) There is precedent here. After Katrina, jail inmates were famously abandoned, put in cages next to rising waters, and subjected to other horrific human rights abuses (see report above). Galveston County jail has its own checkered record. Such abuses can only be curbed if we stay vigilant and call out threats to human rights wherever we see them. Trying to minimize or dismiss such threats is a sure way to ensure they are allowed to happen again.
Oh, and stop trashing Texas. I have lots of good friends in Texas. Plenty of good folks there.