EXCLUSIVE: Blood, Cockroaches and Gigantic Rats - Inspection Reports Reveal Filthy Conditions In Arizona Prison Kitchens kjzz.org/content/168320…
Twelve months of inspection reports conducted at all 16 state prisons in 2020, provided to KJZZ through a records request, detail pest infestation, broken equipment, and frequent use of expired food
The records show that while almost all of the facilities were consistently found to have critical violations, the prison kitchens were given “satisfactory” ratings by oversight agencies, and allowed to continue serving food to incarcerated people.
Bird feathers in ceiling vents, roach infestations in food warmers, rats living in the walls of the dining halls - it goes on and on and on
At the Lewis prison, an inspector made note of a roach problem twice a month for nearly an entire year. By September 2020, the inspector wrote: "Roaches starting to get bad." In every instance, the kitchen was given a “satisfactory” rating.
I found lots of examples of the prisons using expired foods as well, which supports what incarcerated people have been telling me for years, and directly contradicts repeated denials from DOC and Trinity Services Group
.@jalexandriahunt told me she was repeatedly ordered to cook with expired food at the Perryville prison, and instructed to put false expiration dates on ingredients in order to deceive kitchen inspectors:
Hunt said one experience preparing breakfast food stayed with her throughout her time at Perryville - they call it "French Toast Bake" 😬
Most of the employee bathrooms in the prison kitchens were found to be without soap and paper towels - during a pandemic no less. One inspector wrote:
"Restroom was so dirty to the point where it should have been closed for no use at all (this is an ongoing issue)"
.@LongevityGreg was incarcerated in several Arizona prisons over 10 years. He told me many of the facilities at the state prison in Florence were infested with pests:
“When we were eating in the chow hall, you could hear the rodents in the wall"
Goodman said the prisons would also wash and reuse disposable plastic cups:
“Once, I was issued a drinking cup that a previous guy had used as a spit cup for chewing tobacco. It was disgusting. The bottom was yellow and there was actually dried chewing tobacco still in it.”
Several of the reports note that the kitchen workers had been alerted in advance of the inspections.
"Waiting outside for 10 mins to get into the kitchen,” an inspector wrote. “Inmates were cleaning."
Hunt said despite the conditions, "They would give us a ‘satisfactory’ even if they found dead rats. It was like there was a camaraderie between the inspectors and the Trinity employees and the prison employees. So even if the kitchen was a mess, they’d let us get away with it.”
She believes there is a lack of accountability from the prison administrators:
“They act like you’re being unreasonable for wanting a clean eating environment,” Hunt said. “But I know they wouldn’t accept rats and roaches and expired, moldy food in their own homes.”
If you can stomach it, review the records for yourself. We've uploaded thousands of pages of kitchen and warehouse inspection reports from all 16 state prisons here: kjzz.org/content/168320…
We used @documentcloud to post all the records DOC gave us in response to our request. They're sorted alphabetically by prison at the bottom of the post. Take a look and you'll see the extent of these problems - it's truly systemic
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Going through Arizona Department of Corrections food inspections - Kitchens with dead cockroaches and mice droppings get a "Satisfactory" rating - these would be critical violations in any commercial food service facility
Walk-in coolers don't work. Dishwashers don't work. Civilian staff not wearing gloves. Roaches in the kitchen. Warm milk. Warm lunch meat. Rating? "Satisfactory"
"Pest infestation still present in main kitchen, at serving lines, beverage stations, and dish room."
"Hot Holding Cabinets out of service for being infested with cockroaches"
An incarcerated person at the Lewis prison in Buckeye, AZ says they are washing their clothes in buckets, exposed to bug infestation, served moldy food and brown drinking water
NEW RECEIPTS: Amidst continued "frivolous" appeals from the state, Arizona prison health care lawsuit spending now exceeds $21 MILLION kjzz.org/content/167020…
Attorneys for the Arizona Department of Corrections say they are appealing the most recent contempt fine of $1.1 million dollars from a federal judge for failing to provide constitutional health care in state prisons. kjzz.org/content/166191…
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the department in 2020 when it appealed a similar, $1.4 million contempt fine. kjzz.org/content/141840…
Breaking: Arizona is finally vaccinating incarcerated people in state prisons - DOC says it has received 3,940 doses
3,337 total vaccines have been administered so far in state prisons. "Additionally, the private prisons have administered 1,034 vaccines to date. Currently, ADCRR has an inmate population of 36,768" - no details on which vaccine but sources tell me it's Moderna
DOC shared videos the with press of incarcerated people receiving the vaccine in Arizona prisons
Coming up at 10:00 AM - House Appropriations Committee agenda includes HB2167, a bill that would create an independent ombudsman and oversight committee to monitor the Arizona Department of Corrections - Watch Live: azleg.gov/videoplayer/?c…
EXCLUSIVE: Whistleblowers tell @kjzzphoenix a software bug is keeping hundreds of inmates in Arizona prisons beyond their release dates - Sources say Department of Corrections leadership has known about the problem since 2019 kjzz.org/content/166098…
According to Arizona Department of Corrections whistleblowers, hundreds of incarcerated people who should be eligible for release are being held in prison because the inmate management software cannot interpret current sentencing laws.
As of 2019, the Department had spent more than $24 million contracting with IT company Business & Decision, North America to build and maintain the software program, known as ACIS, that is used to manage the inmate population in state prisons.