A female guard was sexually assaulted by a male inmate at an
Arizona prison in the second such attack on an employee in the last 18 months,
corrections officials said.
The April 13 attack at the state prison complex in Yuma was
only revealed by the state Department of Corrections late Friday after
inquiries by The Associated Press.
When asked why the department didn't acknowledge the attack
earlier, corrections spokesman Andrew Wilder said the agency was focused on
investigating the assault.
"Our priority is to have a full and thorough
investigation of the facts and make sure that is conducted to ensure that
justice is served for the victim in the matter," Wilder said.
The assault follows the January 2014 rape of a female
teacher at another prison that brought intense criticism of the Arizona prison
procedures for safeguarding corrections workers. The bare-bones details of that
attack were announced by the department shortly after it occurred, and other
inmate assaults on staff often are announced by the department in news
releases.
The most recent attack occurred in an office while the
corrections officer was meeting with inmate Fernandes Masters, Wilder said.
"The inmate attacked the officer during a scheduled
meeting in the housing unit office, and no weapons were involved," Wilder
said. "The officer called for assistance, staff in the housing unit
immediately responded to the location and pulled the inmate away from the
officer and secured him."
A criminal investigation by prison officials is ongoing, he
said.
"Pending the outcome of this investigation and due to
the nature of this violent attack, the department intends to pursue criminal
charges against inmate Masters, including sexual assault, kidnapping and
attempted murder," Wilder said.
The Yuma County Sheriff's Office and police in San Luis,
where the prison is located, were unaware of the attack when contacted by the
AP on Thursday. Roger Nelson, chief criminal deputy at the Yuma County
Attorney's Office, said he also was unaware of the incident. But Wilder said
Saturday that prison investigators have consulted with a deputy county
prosecutor.
Masters pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in 2007 in a
plea agreement that came after prosecutors dropped the death penalty, Maricopa
County Superior Court records show. He was sentenced to life without the
possibility of parole.
According to the original criminal complaint provided
Saturday by the Maricopa County Attorney's Office and a Glendale police
probable cause statement, Masters admitted stabbing his stepfather to death so
he could steal his cellphone and vehicle to sell for drug money on Dec. 22,
2004.
Police discovered the crime after a fire was reported in the
apartment of the stepfather, Warren Taylor. Masters told detectives he used
three different knives to kill him.
Prison records show Masters, 31, has repeatedly been
disciplined and has a history of assaults. Online Corrections Department
disciplinary records show at least three previous assaults, including one on a
prison staff member, and an indecent-exposure incident.
Emilio Ruiz, a board member for the state prison guard's
union who represents staff at the Yuma prison, declined to comment Saturday.
Calls to the executive president of the Arizona Correctional Peace Officers
Association were not immediately returned.
The teacher who was raped last year is suing corrections
officials for failing to protect her. She was alone in a classroom giving
assessment tests to inmates in a sex offender unit at the Eyman prison in
Florence when she was attacked.
The state workplace safety agency opened an investigation
after details of the teacher's assault were reported by the AP in June. In
January, the agency levied fines of $14,000 for two violations of
workplace-safety rules, but the Department of Corrections is appealing.
Inmate Jacob Harvey, who was less than a year into a 30-year
sentence for a brutal home-invasion and rape, lingered after other inmates left
the room on Jan. 30, 2014, then repeatedly stabbed the teacher with a pen
before raping her, according to investigative reports and the teacher.
Harvey, now 21, has pleaded not guilty to sexual assault,
kidnapping and assault with a deadly weapon charges and awaits trial. His
public defender, Paula Cook, has repeatedly declined to comment on the charges.
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