Michigan Prison Films Women in Showers — and Caught Guards Saying Lewd Things, Lawsuit Says

06.05.2025    The Intercept    2 views
Michigan Prison Films Women in Showers — and Caught Guards Saying Lewd Things, Lawsuit Says

A million lawsuit filed Monday in Washtenaw County Circuit Court is taking aim at the Michigan Department of Corrections alleging that prison functionaries subjected hundreds of incarcerated women to illegal surveillance by recording them during strip searches while showering and even as they used the toilet The suit describes the violations as a profound breach of privacy and basic human rights At the heart of the circumstance is a deeply controversial and according to experts unprecedented approach implemented at Women s Huron Valley Correctional Facility the only women s prison in Michigan Under the Michigan Department of Corrections program directive prison guards were instructed to wear activated body cameras while conducting routine strip searches capturing video of women in states of complete undress The suit brought by the firm Flood Law alleges a range of abuses including lewd comments from prison guards during recorded searches and long-term psychological trauma inflicted on women several of whom are survivors of sexual violence What these women continue to endure is nothing short of horrific What these women continue to endure is nothing short of horrific This event exposes a grotesque abuse of power that directly retraumatizes survivors of sexual assault Todd Flood reported in a Tuesday press release ahead of announcing the suit Despite multiple warnings about the agenda s illegality from advocacy organizations and state legislatures MDOC representatives have failed to fully halt these privacy violations Attorneys for the plaintiffs named women with hundreds more expected to join argued that this practice not only deprived women of their dignity but also violated widely accepted detention standards No other state in the country permits such recordings several have explicit prohibitions against filming individuals during unclothed searches recognizing the inherent liability of abuse and the acute vulnerability of the people being searched Michigan the attorneys noted stands alone The plaintiffs are suing the Michigan Department of Corrections Department of Corrections head Heidi Washington Gov Gretchen Whitmer and more than a dozen other high-ranking agents Neither the Department of Corrections nor Whitmer s office right away responded to requests for comment Violating Their Rights The lawsuit lays out a sweeping series of alleged legal violations accusing state executives of moving across constitutional and moral lines It maintains the functionaries are ultimately responsible for a blatant invasion of privacy through the unauthorized recording of women in vulnerable states the deliberate infliction of emotional trauma through policies that retraumatized sexual assault survivors and systemic sex-based discrimination in violation of Michigan s Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act The Elliott-Larsen law which protects against sex-based discrimination was meant to protect against precisely this kind of gendered abuse The suit says the program suggests that women in state custody are being surveilled in approaches no male prisoner would be The complaint also asserts that the plan and its continued enforcement stand in direct conflict with multiple protections enshrined in the Michigan Constitution suggesting a failure at every level of oversight and accountability According to the complaint the body camera guidelines began in January and was only partially rolled back in March after inhabitants pressure Although the Department of Corrections changed its protocol to stop recording strip searches the suit alleges that officers continue to film women in showers bathrooms and other private settings actions that the complaint says amount to felonies under Michigan law The trauma has taken a measurable toll Women have communicated acute anxiety disrupted sleep digestive problems and worsening of chronic soundness conditions The psychological impact has led a large number of to isolate themselves quit their work assignments and disengage from educational programs One woman who had served as a Prisoner Observation Aide for years resigned from the role due to repeated exposure to recorded searches The plaintiffs are seeking not just financial damages but also an injunction to halt any remaining recordings destruction of existing footage and mandatory staff training to prevent further abuse This isn t just about privacy Flood commented in the declaration It s about dignity trauma and the state s responsibility to uphold the basic rights of every person in its custody The post Michigan Prison Films Women in Showers and Caught Guards Saying Lewd Things Lawsuit Says appeared first on The Intercept

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