Correctional
Officer Also Participated in the Stabbing of an Inmate
Baltimore,
Maryland – Chief U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar sentenced Correctional
Officer Rachelle Hankerson, age 28, of Salisbury, Maryland, on August 24, 2018,
to 52 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release, for a
racketeering conspiracy operating at the Eastern Correctional Institution in
Westover, Maryland, and for deprivation of rights under color of law for
participating in the stabbing of an inmate.
The sentence was
announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur;
Special Agent in Charge Gordon B. Johnson of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; Postal Inspector in Charge Eric Shen of
the U.S. Postal Inspection Service - Washington Division; Secretary Stephen T.
Moyer of the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services;
and Colonel William M. Pallozzi, Superintendent of the Maryland State Police.
“As demonstrated
by today’s sentence, public servants who violate their duty for personal gain
will be held accountable. We will continue to work closely with state officials
to root out and prosecute correctional officers who bring cell phones, drugs
and other contraband into correctional facilities,” said U.S. Attorney Robert
K. Hur.
According to
court documents, the Eastern Correctional Institution (ECI) is the largest
state prison in Maryland, operating since 1987 near Westover, in Somerset
County, on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. During the conspiracy, Hankerson was a
Correctional Officer (CO) at ECI.
Hankerson
admitted that she accepted payments from facilitators and inmates to smuggle
contraband into ECI, including narcotics, cell phones and tobacco. Hankerson charged at least $500 per package
of contraband she smuggled into ECI.
Hankerson also admitted that she approached a co-defendant who was a
member of the Bloods gang at ECI for whom she smuggled contraband, and asked
the inmate to confront inmate D.S., with whom Hankerson had had a verbal dispute. Hankerson twice allowed her co-defendant onto
the tier where D.S. was housed. The
second time that the co-defendant entered D.S.’s cell he violently attacked
D.S., stabbing him multiple times.
Another inmate told Hankerson about the violent confrontation, but
rather than notifying prison authorities, Hankerson left the area. She later told an inmate to provide a false
story to prison authorities that Hankerson had not been on the tier when the
attack occurred. Law enforcement
intercepted multiple calls in which Hankerson and others working with her
discussed contraband, arranging meetings with correctional officers, and
payment for contraband.
Of the 80
defendants charged in this case, 77 have been convicted, including 16 of the 18
correctional officers charged. All the
defendants who have been sentenced to date have been ordered to serve a term of
imprisonment, ranging from a year and a day in prison to 65 months in prison.
The U.S. Attorney
expressed appreciation to Secretary Moyer, whose staff initiated the ECI
investigation and who has made the full resources of the DPSCS available to
assist the three-year investigation.
U.S. Attorney Hur also commended the efforts of the Maryland Prison Task
Force which has brought together federal, state and local agencies in meetings
to generate reforms in prison procedures and facilitate joint investigations of
prison corruption and prison gangs. Mr.
Hur thanked the members of the Maryland Prison Task Force and the other
agencies who assisted in this investigation and prosecution.
United States
Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service,
the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services, the Baltimore PoliceDepartment, and the Maryland State Police for their work in the
investigation. Mr. Hur thanked Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Leo J. Wise, Robert R. Harding, and Daniel C. Gardner, who are
prosecuting this Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force case.
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