BOP employees

Its sad that I must let everyone know that we lost another Federal Corrections Officer on Evening Watch Yesterday. While in Jose Rivera's probationary year (10 months young), the 23 year old Officer was doing his job when he was attacked and murdered, in F.C.I. Atwater, by an inmate. The entire Bureau is in mourning and our prayers for him and his mother are being heard far beyond our borders. God Bless Jose !
:(~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:(~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:(
 
Please forgive me, I must vent. Other then A&E which brings America into
many State Prisons, I can't help but remember how the rest of the media
seems to always portray Correctional Officers (we hate the word Guards)
as on the take, corrupt and without morals. Well, I'm here to tell you
differently. You have young men (like Jose) and old heads (like me) who
get little to no recognition for putting it on the line every time we walk
through those doors and get locked up with the worst of humanity. We
have babies and loved ones at home waiting for our return. Sometimes
we don't make it back. Thats the reality of what we do. Jose never got
the opportunity to get married, have children or experience all that life
had to offer. Yes, we applied for the job and accepted the risks that are
associated with such an environment. And we're damn Proud of it. So if
you ever get the chance to meet someone who works at a prison, I ask
two things of every living, breathing person that reads this. Please, call
him an "OFFICER" and remember what I just wrote. It only touches on
few of my thoughts during this very sad day, but its all I could muster.
God Bless Jose and May He Rest In Peace.
 
Sad to here about another Public Servant losing his life in the line of duty. That is really a tough job, to tell you the truth I wouldn't want to deal with the scum of the earth every day. We should all be grateful for the job you people are doing.
Norman
 
I will pray for jose rivera. I agree the word "Guard" runs right threw me. Its just as bad as someone calling me lazy. I hope this will open the eyes of the Men/Women in charge and see that cut backs and staff reduction is not the way to go. That is what caused this problem. I've known for awhile now that an Officer would get killed soon. It's very sad.
 
Its sad that I must let everyone know that we lost another Federal Corrections Officer on Evening Watch Yesterday. While in Jose Rivera's probationary year (10 months young), the 23 year old Officer was doing his job when he was attacked and murdered, in F.C.I. Atwater, by an inmate. The entire Bureau is in mourning and our prayers for him and his mother are being heard far beyond our borders. God Bless Jose !
:(~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:(~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:(

May God bless and console Officer Rivera's family, and be with the staff of FCI Atwater. May God protect us all who serve... <><
 
The news of officer Rivera's death sickens me. At our facility we got the news through the Union first .... there is still nothing posted on Sallyport. This is not the Bureau that I hired on to 16 years ago - too much has changed.
 
squalebear,

Originally posted this on your thread, but think that this may be a good forum for it as well:

Originally Posted by squalebear
Please forgive me, I must vent. Other then A&E which brings America into
many State Prisons, I can't help but remember how the rest of the media
seems to always portray Correctional Officers (we hate the word Guards)
as on the take, corrupt and without morals. Well, I'm here to tell you
differently. You have young men (like Jose) and old heads (like me) who
get little to no recognition for putting it on the line every time we walk
through those doors and get locked up with the worst of humanity. We
have babies and loved ones at home waiting for our return. Sometimes
we don't make it back. Thats the reality of what we do. Jose never got
the opportunity to get married, have children or experience all that life
had to offer. Yes, we applied for the job and accepted the risks that are
associated with such an environment. And we're damn Proud of it. So if
you ever get the chance to meet someone who works at a prison, I ask
two things of every living, breathing person that reads this. Please, call
him an "OFFICER" and remember what I just wrote. It only touches on
few of my thoughts during this very sad day, but its all I could muster.
God Bless Jose and May He Rest In Peace.
Squalebear,

I for one, have a lot of respect for Correctional Officers. I do agree with you about the bad rap they get on the media, but so do the so-called minorities: the criminals and or suspects always used to be African Americans, but now they are called Hispanics. Well, here you have Jose Rivera, a Hispanic who was trying to contribute with such a tremendous responsibility to society and to this country. My heart and prayers go to him and his family, as well as to all his peers who put their lives on the line every day they go to work.

I used to work for THE BEST OF THE BEST DOD AGENCIES, sorry but it's true -our commander's "supervisor" is the President of the US. Almost monthly we attended funeral services for service members killed in the line of duty, or by friendly fire, accidents while on "enemy territory", but most of them were blown to pieces by "the enemy". (And yes, BLACK HAWK DOWN is the most accurate account of what we dealt with every day, for those of you who care). It really hurts to see young men who did not make it to adulthood, who belonged to ALL ETHNIC GROUPS, and to have to see the pain in their families receiving all kinds of honors bestowed on their children, medals of honor, flags and letters of condolence and appreciation for their valor, signed from the President on down to the Governor, to the "commands" they served under.

Excuse me if this sounds like I am venting also, but this is something that really hit home and I never had a chance (for lack of time or for honoring "the quiet professionals" code that I never had the opportunity to mention anything about it. But believe me Squalebear, I know what you mean and my heart and respect go out to you and all of your peers. Some people just don't know how lucky (or unlucky ?) they are to not have any idea of what goes on in some areas of work. I say unlucky also, because having full knowledge and understanding of what happens out there "in the real world" makes us appreciate even more all the blessings we receive day after day.

Thank you Squalebear, your feelings were heard, and we are here for you.

CorMaGa34
 
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The news of officer Rivera's death sickens me. At our facility we got the news through the Union first .... there is still nothing posted on Sallyport. This is not the Bureau that I hired on to 16 years ago - too much has changed.

Sad and true... :(
 
Update from ABC News concerning Officer Rivera

http://abclocal.go.com:80/kfsn/story?section=news/local&id=6225995

The Unions message is clear. The Tazer and vests mention are questionable
solutions. First things first. Stop Federal Prisons from operating at 85% staffing
levels and get more Correctional Officers on duty. Mandatory O/T use to be a
duty 24/7 for every Correctional Worker. Now, Correctional Workers are above
doing what every officer does on a daily basis and mandatory work, based on
the Bureaus refusal to hire staff, is like taking someone from their family due
to lack of caring. Officer Rivera Rest In Peace.
 
U.S. prison officials considering safety vests, union says
By Michael Doyle | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Bureau of Prisons officials are now considering equipping federal guards with safety vests following the murder of Atwater correctional officer Jose Rivera, union leaders revealed Wednesday.

In what one participant termed a "heated" meeting, Bureau of Prisons Director Harley G. Lappin indicated knife-resistant vests could be a viable option for at least some of the nation's 16,000 or so federal prison guards. Some think a vest might have saved Rivera, who died June 20 after being stabbed through the heart with a prison-made shank.

"This is something that I think is pretty hard to argue with," said John Gage, president of the American Federation of Government Employees. "I think it's pretty much a no-brainer."

No final decision, however, has yet been made on obtaining the vests, at a cost of roughly $400 each. And in other areas ranging from staffing levels to the use of non-lethal weapons, Rivera's violent death has only underscored sharp differences still separating the Bureau of Prisons, members of Congress and the union that represents federal correctional workers.

The 22-year-old Rivera was the first federal correctional officer to be murdered since 1997. Assaults, however, remain relatively common. A total of 1,362 armed and unarmed inmate-on-staff attacks were tallied in federal prisons in Fiscal 2006, Justice Department figures released by the union show. This marked a 6 percent increase in assaults from 2005. Atwater's high-security penitentiary led the nation in armed assaults by inmates on staff members in 2006, with 10 such attacks, according to the Justice Department records. The union obtained the prison violence records from the department's Web site, which apparently no longer posts them.

"Every minute that goes by, the staff is in danger from the inmates," said Bryan Lowery, legislative coordinator for the AFGE's Council of Prison Locals.

Two inmates reported to be suspects in Rivera's murder, James Leon Guerrero and Joseph Cabrera, have been transferred and remain under investigation. Bureau of Prisons spokesman Mike Truman said no agency official was available to comment late Wednesday afternoon about the meeting with union leaders. Bureau officials stressed their concern to union leaders Wednesday that nothing be said that might interfere with the investigation.

Union leaders want an additional 10,000 federal correctional officers hired, starting with about 280 to boost staffing immediately at high-security facilities. They want officers who now carry only a radio to be armed with batons or Tasers or other non-lethal weapons. They want, politically speaking, Rivera's murder to serve a purpose. "We're hoping this event will really push the public, and the Congress, and the pencil pushers," said Phil Glover, legislative liaison for the Council of Prison Locals.

Glover, Gage and Lowery met with Lappin to present what Gage termed the union's "demands." It's a wide-ranging list that predates Rivera's death; in February, for instance, correctional officers picketed Justice Department headquarters to call attention to their grievances. Some of the union's renewed demands, like opposition to prison privatization, appear unrelated to the specifics of Rivera's death.

In some ways, the meeting Wednesday may have only confirmed pre-existing tensions. Lowery announced he was "highly offended" by the Bureau of Prisons' responses, while Gage used a mocking tone to say the Bureau was "poor-mouthing us" on the budget questions.
The agency, part of the Justice Department, has an annual budget of about $5.1 billion and employs about 34,000 staffers overall, not all of whom are correctional officers.

A recently passed supplemental spending bill includes an additional $178 million for the Bureau of Prisons. Rep. Dennis Cardoza, D-Merced, is preparing a letter urging the Bureau to spend at least some of the money on safety vests.

"We've heard from the Bureau that they will review the (vest) policy," Cardoza's press secretary Jamie McInerney said Wednesday.
McInerney added that Cardoza's staffers are brainstorming other ideas, potentially including addressing the pay disparity that shortchanges federal guards compared to their California correctional counterparts.

Nationwide, the Bureau of Prisons holds about 165,000 inmates in its facilities and another 35,000 in contract or privately run prisons. The agency reports that it's been hard to keep staffing up, citing budget problems and the loss of guards to reserve military duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.
 
According to the union at my institution vest are being authorized for Penitentiary's accross the country. Another staff member on D/W and E/W for rovers between the units. Not sure if this is one officer per side per shift or if it's actually one officer per letter unit ie (A1 and 2, B1 and 2,) per shift. We'll see.
 
According to the union at my institution vest are being authorized for Penitentiary's accross the country. Another staff member on D/W and E/W for rovers between the units. Not sure if this is one officer per side per shift or if it's actually one officer per letter unit ie (A1 and 2, B1 and 2,) per shift. We'll see.

To my understanding, your right. USP's- High Admin's and alike for the
vests. 1 additional support officer is a play on words. We have 2 sided
units. 1 officer on each side. Say,,,,, Alpha Left & Alpha Right. Although
this won't affect my FCI, I can see them adding one officer for both sides
to act as a rover. It's easy to figure that, what ever way is cheaper,
thats what they'll do. It would seriously surprise me if the BOP would add
one additional officer for each side. Making it 4 officers for every unit.
Each side houses about 165 inmates. Thats 370:1 on M/W (lockdown) and
165:1 on D/W & E/W. My guess is they'll say we're safer then before with
a 165:1.50 ratio. But again, this won't happen with Mission Critical FCI's.
 
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