Class action lawsuit filed over sexual abuse at FCI Dublin women’s prison

DUBLIN – Survivors of sexual abuse by employees at FCI Dublin have filed a class action lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Prisons, saying not enough has been done to stop the abuse.

Attorneys representing the eight survivors filed the lawsuit at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

“The Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) has been aware of these problems for decades and has failed, and continues to fail, to take action to protect those in its care by preventing and addressing rampant staff sexual misconduct,” the plaintiffs said in their filing. “In recent years, staff sexual abuse at FCI Dublin has been so severe that the facility became the center of a sprawling criminal investigation, multiple Congressional inquiries, and national media attention.”

A scathing report by The Associated Press last year found that prisoners and workers at the all-women’s facility had dubbed FCI Dublin “The rape club.” The report found a permissive and toxic culture at the prison, enabling years of sexual misconduct, cover-ups and retaliation for inmates who had tried to speak up.

Eight former employees at the prison have faced criminal charges for abuse. Among them, former warden Ray Garcia, who was convicted late last year of molesting inmates and forcing them to pose naked in their cells.

Attorneys also said the agency has “long been aware of problems” at the facility, noting that three women who were assaulted at the prison in 1995 had filed a civil rights lawsuit and won a large settlement three years later.

“We cannot prosecute our way to a solution to the crisis at FCI Dublin,” said attorney Amaris Montes of  Rights Behind Bars, one of the groups representing the plaintiffs. “This isn’t a case of a few bad apples, we need systemic change that ensures survivors are released and receive care and that promotes safety for all those remaining inside.”

The lawsuit calls for the Bureau of Prisons to end retaliation of inmates reporting misconduct, immediately remove staff who have substantiated claims of abuse against them, ensure inmates’ access to counsel, along with an audit, regular inspections and ongoing monitoring by a third-party organization.

In a statement to KPIX, the Bureau of Prisons said it does not comment on matters of pending litigation, ongoing legal proceedings or ongoing investigations.

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