Florida man cooked to death in scalding shower as punishment by prison guardsby aletho |
Police State USA | May 21, 2014
MIAMI,
FL — A torturous “punishment” session turned fatal for a mentally-ill
prisoner, when prison guards forced him to stand in a tiny shower stall
while being blasted by scalding hot water until his skin began to
shrivel away from his body and he died. Fellow inmates say he begged
for his life before collapsing in the shower.
* * * * *
Darren
Rainey, 50, died while incarcerated a the Dade Correctional
Institution. He was serving a 2-year sentence for a victimless crime;
possession of cocaine. At the time of his death, he had only one month
to go before his release.
Rainey,
who suffered from mental illness, was accused of defecating in his cell
without cleaning it up. The Florida’s Department of Corrections often
comes up with cruel and imaginative punishments for prisoners —
allegedly ranging from starvation diets to forcing prisoners to fight so
the guards could place bets.
Rainey’s
punishment was to stand confined in a narrow chamber, being blasted
with hot water and steam, and left to suffer there for over one hour.
“I can’t take it no more, I’m sorry. I won’t do it again,’’ Rainey screamed over and over, the Miami Herald discovered from a fellow inmate’s grievance complaint.
The
Miami Herald reports that it was DOC Officer Roland Clarke who was on
video placing Rainey in the shower at 7:38 p.m on June 23, 2012. He was
found dead at 9:30 p.m.
When
Rainey’s body was found, his skin was cooked to the point where it was
coming loose from his body, a condition known as slippage.
The
facility then did its best to cover up the death. Sources say that it
was alleged that Rainey had a heart attack, yet DOC refused to perform
an autopsy. The official cause of death has never been announced.
Conveniently, the camera outside the shower “malfunctioned” right after Rainey was forced in.
The
Rainey investigation has remained open since 2012, with no explanation
about why it has taken so long. No one has been charged with the death
of Darren Rainey.
“Two
years is a very long time to wait to find out why your brother was
found dead in a shower,” said Rainey’s brother, Andre Chapman.
When
a fellow inmate tried to provide information to police and the media
about the Rainey case, he was threatened with punishments of his own.
Numerous other inmate complaints paint a disturbing picture of what
justice looks like in Florida’s prisons.
Justice
seems to be a fleeting concept in a society where people are imprisoned
for non-violent, victimless offenses, and housed by sadistic torturers
who themselves belong in a cage.

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