Correctional Officer Accepted Bribes to Smuggle Contraband
Into Prison, Including Drugs
Greenbelt, Maryland – Correctional Officer Janel Griffin,
age 41, of Baltimore, pleaded guilty today to a federal racketeering charge for
participating in a scheme to smuggle contraband into the Maryland Correctional
Institute Jessup (MCIJ), including narcotics, unauthorized flash drives,
tobacco, and cell phones into the prison.
Inmate Corey Alston, a/k/a “C,” age 29, pleaded guilty on September 18,
2019, to the same charge.
The guilty pleas were announced by United States Attorney
for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur; Special Agent in Charge Jennifer C.
Boone, of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; and Secretary
Robert L. Green, of the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional
Services.
“This case demonstrates that we will not tolerate employees
in positions of trust violating their oaths.
Federal, state, and local officials will continue to work together to
root out corrupt employees and others who undermine the administration of
justice at our prisons,” said U.S. Attorney Robert K. Hur.
According to court documents, MCIJ was a medium-security
prison in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, that housed approximately 1,100 male
inmates, with 262 custody staff or Correctional Officers (COs) and 52
non-custody staff, including case management, medical, and administrative
staff.
According to her plea agreement, Griffin smuggled contraband
into MCIJ for at least inmate Corey Alston, including narcotics and
tobacco. At Alston’s direction, Griffin
met with co-conspirator facilitators, including Tyirisha Johnson, to receive
contraband as well as bribe payments.
Recorded jail calls between Alston and others confirm that between April
16 and August 14, 2017, Griffin met with Johnson or another facilitator on at
least six occasions to obtain contraband and at least $2,800 in bribe payments. Griffin smuggled the contraband, including
Suboxone and Percocet, into MCIJ.
Inmate Corey Alston admitted that he was a leader in the
racketeering conspiracy. As detailed in
the plea agreement, Alston conspired with four outside facilitators, including
Johnson, who obtained and packaged contraband, met with the correction officers
and employees to provide contraband and bribe payments, and managed the
proceeds of illegal contraband sales for Alston. According to his plea agreement Griffin and
another MCIJ employee brought the contraband into the prison for Alston, in
exchange for bribe payments, and Alston conspired with another inmate to sell
the contraband to other inmates.
Alston was overheard by law enforcement on a series of
recorded calls arranging for contraband to be smuggled into MCIJ and arranging
payment for the contraband and for bribes.
Griffin and Alston each face a maximum sentence of 20 years
in prison. U.S. District Judge Paula
Xinis has scheduled sentencing for Griffin on February 6, 2020, at 1:00
p.m. Tyirisha Johnson, age 23, of
Baltimore, pleaded guilty to her role in the conspiracy on July 23, 2019. Johnson and Alston are also expected to be
sentenced in February 2020.
This case arose from the efforts of the Maryland Prison Task
Force, coordinated by the U.S. Attorney’s Office and comprised of local, state,
and federal stakeholders that meet regularly to share information and generate
recommendations to reform prison procedures and attack the gang problem that
has plagued Maryland in recent years.
The work of the Task Force previously resulted in the federal
convictions of more than 80 defendants, including 16 correctional officers, at
the Eastern Correctional Institution, and 40 defendants, including 24
correctional officers, at the Baltimore City Detention Center.
United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI and
the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services for their work in the
investigation. The U.S. Attorney expressed appreciation to the Department of
Public Safety and Correctional Services, whose staff initiated the MCIJ
investigation and have been full partners in this investigation. Mr. Hur thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Lauren E. Perry and Sean R. Delaney, who are prosecuting this case.
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