After two recent assaults against corrections officers at the St. Louis County Justice Center, the acting director has changed jail policies amid big staffing shortages.
On Oct. 9, prosecutors say, an inmate at the jail brutally attacked corrections officer Pristina Hanning. St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell on Tuesday charged Zahmeen Manuel with first-degree assault. Prosecutors said he wrapped his hands and arms around her neck and threatened to break her neck and kill her. (STLPR is naming the victim with her attorney鈥檚 permission.)
At the time of the attack, Hanning alone was responsible for more than 70 inmates.
鈥淔ollowing the assault of Pristina, we implemented a policy for roving officers on each floor to provide additional support,鈥 explained Scott Anders, acting director of the St. Louis County Department of Justice Services. 鈥淎nd we do have unit managers that walk through routinely and do keylock searches and who are there to assist.鈥
But Hanning鈥檚 assault was followed by another inmate attack on a St. Louis County corrections officer last week. On Nov. 10, Christina Nieto was sitting at a desk at the justice center when, prosecutors say, an inmate struck her in the face multiple times in the face with a closed fist. Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell鈥檚 office filed a first-degree assault charge in that case too.
After last week鈥檚 attack, Anders locked down the jail for two days. On Wednesday鈥檚 St. Louis on the Air, he acknowledged that both attacks were horrible assaults. He said he implemented more policy changes after meeting with Nieto鈥檚 family and listening to their concerns.
Anders, who鈥檚 been acting director since Oct. 1, said new procedures require two officers in each pod that holds 72 people.
In addition to staff shortages, he blamed pandemic conditions for increasing the risk of violence.
鈥淭he majority of court hearings were not being held,鈥 Anders said. 鈥淭he Department of Corrections and Bureau of Prisons were not taking people that were sentenced.鈥 Beyond that, the inmate population at the jail is now a more dangerous one. Said Anders: 鈥淟aw enforcement agencies were arresting violent crimes and not pursuing incarceration for other municipal ordinance type violations. So about two-thirds of the jail now is at higher risk.鈥
Requiring two officers per pod comes with challenges; the department is short-staffed by 80 officers, Anders said.
At last night鈥檚 St. Louis County Council meeting, . Anders said that he鈥檚 hopeful for a pay increase and that 50 people are scheduled for interviews later this week.
Also joining the program was St. Louis attorney Elad Gross. He represents Hanning and Nieto.
Gross described the horrific assaults his clients experienced. He said both officers are now resting at home, dealing with both the physical and mental fallout from being attacked.
Both want to see change in the justice center鈥檚 operations, he said.
鈥淲e're willing to work with the county on all these issues,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I know people are like, 鈥極h, you鈥檙e a lawyer, you want to file a lawsuit.鈥 That is not something that we're always interested in doing if we can resolve the situation the right way. But if folks aren't going to step up and take responsibility for what they did and do the right thing, then yeah, absolutely. We'll see them in court.鈥
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