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Prison Facebook Use Leads To Further Victimization

Prison Facebook

DON THOMPSON   11/21/11 04:22 PM ET   AP

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lisa Gesik hesitates to log into her Facebook account nowadays because of unwanted "friend" requests, not from long-ago classmates but from the ex-husband now in prison for kidnapping her and her daughter.

Neither Gesik nor prison officials can prove her ex-husband is sending her the messages, which feature photos of him wearing his prison blues and dark sunglasses, arms crossed as he poses in front of a prison gate. It doesn't matter if he's sending them or someone else is – the Newport, Ore., woman is afraid and, as the days tick down to his January release, is considering going into hiding with her 12-year-old daughter.

"It's just being victimized all over again," she said.

Across the U.S. and beyond, inmates are using social networks and the growing numbers of smartphones smuggled into prisons and jails to harass their victims or accusers and intimidate witnesses. California corrections officials who monitor social networking sites said they have found many instances in which inmates taunted victims or made unwanted sexual advances.

Like Gesik's case, it's often difficult for authorities to determine for sure who's sending the threatening material and the few people caught rarely face serious consequences.

"The ability to have these kinds of contacts is increasing exponentially. In many ways, the law has not caught up with these changing technologies," said Rob Bovett, an Oregon district attorney whose office prosecuted Gesik's ex-husband, Michael Gladney.

Timothy Heaphy, U.S. attorney for the Western District of Virginia, said criminals' use of social networks to reach witnesses has made his job harder.

"We deal every day with witnesses who are afraid of being identified," he said. "If there are increased instances where folks who are incarcerated can reach outside the walls of the jail, that's going to make it more difficult for us to get cooperation."

In a rare victory, Heaphy's office successfully prosecuted John Conner and Whitney Roberts after they set up a Facebook account that Conner used to intimidate witnesses preparing to testify against him on charges of burning two houses to punish a girlfriend and collect the insurance.

"How the hell can u b a gangsta when u snitchin and lien...," said a post from the pair that publicly exposed one witness who cooperated with law enforcement, according to federal court records.

The issue has emerged as cell phones have proliferated behind bars. In California, home to the nation's largest inmate population, the corrections department confiscated 12,625 phones in just 10 months this year. Six years ago, they found just 261. The number of phones confiscated by the federal Bureau of Prisons has doubled since 2008, to 3,684 last year.

Noting the increase, California legislators approved a law bringing up to six months in jail for corrections employees or visitors who smuggle mobile devices into state prisons, while inmates caught with the phones can now lose up to 180 days of early-release credit. But no additional time is added to their sentence, minimizing the deterrence factor.

In the old days, those behind bars would have to enlist a relative or friend to harass or intimidate to get around no-contact orders. Social networks now cut out the middle man.

In Gesik's case, Gladney used to harass her the old-fashioned way, sending letters and making phone calls through third parties. The Facebook harassment began in June.

Gesik, 44, got prison officials to contact Facebook to remove that account, only to have another message appearing to be from him in September. This time, there was a different spelling of his last name.

"I figure, if he's done all this from in prison, what's he's going to do when he gets out?" Gesik said.

A gap in state law meant that "no contact" orders like the one Gesik obtained against Gladney were deemed not to apply to anyone in custody, said Bovett, the prosecutor. "So they could do these very creative ways of reaching victims through third parties," he said.

Last June, Oregon legislators approved a law prohibiting inmates from contacting their domestic violence victims from behind bars.

In California, prison officials are working with Facebook to identify inmate accounts and take them down. But that only generally happens only after the damage is done.

Karen Carrisosa, who lives in a Sacramento suburb, was aghast when officials found Facebook postings from Corcoran State Prison inmate Fredrick Garner. Garner is serving a 22-year, involuntary manslaughter sentence for killing her husband, 50-year-old Larry Carrisosa, outside a church 11 years ago.

"My kids, they go on Facebook, I go on Facebook, and what if they decide to look us up?" Carrisosa said.

She was alerted by a Sacramento television station that Garner was posting messages to his mother and others. Garner was punished with a 30-day reduction in his early release credits for possessing a forbidden cell phone and has since been transferred to Salinas Valley State Prison.

Hector Garcia Jr. used a smuggled smart phone hidden in his cell at Kern Valley State Prison to rally support on Facebook for an inmate hunger strike this summer that sought improved living conditions for gang leaders housed in special secure cellblocks.

"Starving for my better future," he posted, according a July 1 screen grab from the corrections department. "Let's do this ... statewide..."

The discovery rattled Isabel Gutierrez. Garcia murdered one of her sons and wounded another in January 2005. Now Gutierrez fears her own social-networking left her vulnerable.

"I panicked," she said. "My photos are up of my family and my grandkids. I felt like they can see into my world."

Guards found Garcia's phone, punishing him with a 30-day cut in early-release credits and 30 days' loss of yard, TV and radio privileges.

Attorneys who represented Garcia and Gladney in their previous criminal trials did not return phone calls seeking comment on behalf of their former clients.

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lisa Gesik hesitates to log into her Facebook account nowadays because of unwanted "friend" requests, not from long-ago classmates but from the ex-husband now in prison for ...
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lisa Gesik hesitates to log into her Facebook account nowadays because of unwanted "friend" requests, not from long-ago classmates but from the ex-husband now in prison for ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
12:26 PM on 11/23/2011
I hope the local DAs severely prosecute all the inmates who use Facebook (or any medium) under the tough victim/witness intimidation statutes. Keep them in prison where they belong.
03:12 PM on 11/22/2011
My niece's husband is in prison for B&E. He has to jump through hoops to make a phone call to her or write a letter to her. How on earth does this guy have access to Facebook? This is insane. It's a whole new way of stalking. Just what a convicted kidnapper needs. Dear God, what were they thinking, and who was doing the thinking? Someone needs to think about them finding a new job. This is lunacy.
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Redhunteur
If I damn yer POV will u turn the other cheek?
04:19 AM on 11/23/2011
"How on earth does this guy have access to Facebook?"

Because of SMUGGLED SMARTPHONES! How on earth did you miss that pertinent detail?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:30 AM on 11/22/2011
Prison should be just that, prison. In your cell 23-hrs a day, no tv, radio, yard, etc.
There shouldn't even BE internet capable computers for the inmates to use.
So much for VICTIMS rights!
And before you bleeding-hearts out there say that the prisoners have rights too, they can change, blah, blah, blah, save it. I will never put a convicts safety and comfort over that of their victims(S).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jandos
Realistically optimistic
10:33 AM on 11/22/2011
I feel for Gesik. It would be awful to be harassed like this. How will she, and others like her, ever feel safe?

I do think they should use common sense, though, and cancel their Facebook accounts period. The prisons shouldn't allow inmates access to stuff like this either - it's too easy for them to keep tabs on people they victimize this way.
09:04 AM on 11/22/2011
I know where I work they have facebook blocked completely.... they are in prison for a reason how about blocking access to facebook? This doesn't take rocket science....
08:09 AM on 11/22/2011
Prison inmates should not have access to cell phones or computers...problem fixed.
03:35 AM on 11/22/2011
It is not because they can't,they just don't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
03:07 AM on 11/22/2011
After reading many of these posts, it's really apparent many are just completely naive about Prison.

Not all inmates are bad, but not all cops are good. See my point??? And it's not just Cali prisons either

http://www.cambstimes.co.uk/news/prison_guard_jailed_for_smuggling_drugs_and_mobile_phones_into_hmp_peterborough_1_1125896
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cheechazteca
Thank you very much!
11:45 PM on 11/21/2011
Prison inmates would be more productive generating power like in "The Matriceseses"
Thanks Mike Tyson!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea J Petro
10:56 PM on 11/21/2011
Im sorry but NO ONE in prison should have access to facebook, myspace, cellphones or other means of communicating with the outside world. They are in there for a reason and should have NO privlidges at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
02:58 AM on 11/22/2011
ah no color TV? Why not, their people too ya know (I'm just kidding!)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seriously77
02:02 PM on 11/22/2011
color TV? They shouldn't have ANY tv. lol and yes, I see you're JK.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea J Petro
08:41 PM on 11/22/2011
Thanks. Truly some of them truly deserve nothing.
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Redhunteur
If I damn yer POV will u turn the other cheek?
04:23 AM on 11/23/2011
That's probably why they don't give prisoners phones and that's probably why the article states that the smuggling of cellies to prisoners is a problem. You know, because they AREN'T supposed to have something they can use to access the internet. Way to read and comprehend the story people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea J Petro
09:57 AM on 11/23/2011
DUH I did comprehend the story. Way to be rude? I was stating that NO one in prison should have any privledges at all period. If they have internet access they can do a lot. harass someone on the outside. I understood it fully, and I understood cellphones get smuggled in.
10:50 PM on 11/21/2011
If cellphone smuggling is a large issue, why not institute some sort of device frying when they get admitted? Check for any metal implants that are non-removal, then go to town with a large neodymium magnet. Any device they may have squirreled away will become an expensive paperweight.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
03:00 AM on 11/22/2011
Do you think it's only inmates or their families / friends that smuggle phones or drugs into prisons?
01:29 PM on 11/22/2011
Fair enough. I don't see why what I proposed earlier would be any harder to apply to the guards too. Same mentality behind making airline pilots go through security.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
globaltrekkie
We are all bacon grease....
10:18 PM on 11/21/2011
"Neither Gesik nor prison officials can prove her ex-husband is sending her the messages, which feature photos of him wearing his prison blues and dark sunglasses, arms crossed as he poses in front of a prison gate"

Really? They can't prove it? Are prison workers that stupid? They want this woman to be afraid.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
12:27 PM on 11/23/2011
It seems obvious to you and me he is sending the photos, but proving something in a court of law is totally different.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Valerie Buchanan
Breakfast of Champions = Cold Pizza & Hot Coffee
04:41 PM on 11/29/2011
The photos could have been taken by someone else, possibly someone on the outside who sent them to her under his direction. If this guy is getting close to getting out, do you really think he's going to consciously do something such get caught with a smuggled cell phone at this late stage of the game? The way Facebook keeps changing the privacy settings it really is pretty easy to find people even if they take heed to all of the precautions available. I'm on Facebook and I'm dealing with the privacy issues, if I could have my personal choice NONE of my personal information would be available because everyone that's my friend on there is someone I personally know and they already know dang near everything about me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
globaltrekkie
We are all bacon grease....
10:26 PM on 11/29/2011
"If this guy is getting close to getting out, do you really think he's going to consciousl­y do something such get caught with a smuggled cell phone at this late stage of the game?"

Do not ever swear for anyone, especially a person who tried to commit murder. Genius.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnQpublic81
I like Jesus, it's his fan club that scares me
10:07 PM on 11/21/2011
If it makes you feel any better, I looked over his facebook profile, and it shows that he is a committed relationship with Bubba.
09:25 PM on 11/21/2011
I love California people they are so entertaining with their brain power. I have to go to the library 12 miles away for my internet service. That is because with two jobs and a family I can't afford it. If I would have known that all I have to do is go to your state and go to prison and I to can have free internet and health care with dental. Wow you guys are something else. Guess it is the golden state.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramon Moreno
Read below.
08:28 PM on 11/21/2011
They should serve out the rest of their time in Farmville.