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Rape as a disciplinary tactic
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August 23, 1999 |
Dillard was transferred to the cell of Wayne Robertson, better
known as the "Booty Bandit." For a time, his vocation was
beating, torturing and sodomizing fellow inmates while prison
guards looked the other way. This psychopathic serial rapist was
the guards' resident enforcer, one whose specialty was reining in
abrasive young toughs. Dillard protested the transfer, pointing out that Robertson was a known
predator. "Since you like hitting women, we've got somebody for
you," came the reply. There, in a tiny box with the Booty Bandit,
began the tragic re-education of Eddie Dillard. Lessons commenced with verbal abuse and threats, soon
progressing to a violent and bloody assault in which Robertson
beat the smaller, younger Dillard into submission. For the next
several days Robertson beat, raped, tortured and humiliated
Dillard, tearing open his rectum in the process. Guards and other
inmates listened to the echoes of the young man screaming,
crying for help and begging for mercy. When the cell door finally opened to let him out, Dillard rushed
onto the tier and refused to go back inside. But it was too late: He
had been "turned out." He was reduced to a psychologically
broken, politically servile "punk" -- in the prison argot, the lowest
form of life. Dillard was now jailhouse chattel, to be sodomized,
traded and sold like a slave. Robertson, on the other hand,
received new tennis shoes and extra food for his services. When he was released from prison, Dillard told the Los Angeles
Times of the trauma he still suffers: "They took something from
me that I can never replace. I've tried so many nights to forget
about it, but the feeling just doesn't go away. Every time I'm with
my wife, it comes back what he did to me. I want a close to the
story. I want some salvation. But it keeps going on and on." Dillard's case is not an isolated incident. Though using rape as a
management tactic may sound like an extreme concept, the
Dillard case appears not to have been an isolated incident. The
Boston Globe, for example, reported that guards in Massachusetts
prisons have used known rapists in the same fashion as their
California counterparts: "Several prisoners at Shirley [State
Prison] said that Slade [a notorious prison rapist] has had a long
history of attacks there, but that he is typically reshuffled by the
guards into cells with 'fresh fish,' or new inmates." | ||
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