Smear marks are blood. |
This prison riot was the
second deadliest in U.S. history. On February 2, 1980, a group of maximum-security
prisoners managed to take control of the entire penitentiary, and they and many
other prisoners proceeded to wreak havoc for 36 hours.
Grievances
The New Mexico Penitentiary
was extremely overcrowded by the 1970s. The guards were understaffed, poorly paid and most
didn’t have sufficient training. The warden had instated a “snitch system” that
infuriated many of the inmates. The prison personnel was basically
overwhelmed, and this system helped them maintain discipline.
Several prisoners had brought
the issues of overcrowding, inmate discipline, plus the awful food and lack
of educational services to the warden’s attention more than once. Their
complaints were ignored.
A Ticking Time Bomb
On Friday night the riot
started a small group of hard-core prisoners were drunk on prison hooch. This
group should have been locked in the maximum-security block, but their cells were still being built so. Instead, they were temporarily being housed in a
cellblock that was dormitory style.
Against procedure, this dorm was unlocked.
Against procedure, this dorm was unlocked.
That night one inexperienced
guard was assigned to 100 prisoners in this area. As the riot began, there
were only 15 guards on duty in the entire penitentiary to watch over more than 1,100
prisoners.
Riled up that their
grievances were being ignored and after several hours of drinking, this small
group of prisoners overpowered this guard and took his keys.
The first place they headed
was the prison pharmacy to get access to the drugs. They also unlocked many other
areas--letting more prisoners out to roam.
They would have been confined
to just this one area of the prison but for the fact that they gained access to
the prison’s control center. Against regulation, the gate to this area was unlocked.
Ironically, new bulletproof glass had been installed in the control center in recent days, but the prisoners managed to shatter this glass with a fire extinguisher.
Ironically, new bulletproof glass had been installed in the control center in recent days, but the prisoners managed to shatter this glass with a fire extinguisher.
Smashed Control Center |
They now had access to the
entire penitentiary.
Cell Block 4
Warning: these stories are
graphic and disturbing.
Cell Block 4 |
The original group joined by others had one goal--they wanted revenge. They headed for Cell Block 4. This is
where the snitches were housed.
They started accessing these
cells the following morning.
These prisoners were locked
in individual cells for their protection. Under normal circumstances, the
revenge seekers might not have gained access to them--but for one item that was
left behind by outside workers the day before. The prisoners found their
Acetylene or welding torches.
These cut through the bars. Forty
of these prisoners did manage to cut a hole through one wall and escape out
into the yard, but many others didn’t. Most of the 33 deaths that occurred
during the riot took place in this Segregation unit.
They tortured these prisoners still using these torches. They hung one prisoner up and burned his gentiles and other parts of his body until he died. Another prisoner had his head torched until it exploded. Yet another prisoner was thrown over the upper tier
with a rope around his neck--hanging him.
The burn marks from one tortured prisoner can still be seen in Cell Block 4 on the concrete floor. The outline of his body is still evident. This area has been steam cleaned and painted but the burnt shape always
reappears.
Decapitation indents and burnt outline. |
One prisoner who shouldn’t
have even been at the state pen--because he was mentally ill--wasn’t a snitch
but was just in protective custody. They decapitated this man and placed his
head on a rolling cart for all to see. One witness reported seeing two inmates
with brooms hitting his head around the floor as if it were a ball.
Injured Prisoners
Over 90 prisoners were
injured. Some died of drug overdoses. Prisoners raped prisoners. Others where
stabbed or beaten. Some were piled in the prison’s gym and set on fire.
Views of the penitentiary during the riot. |
Many minimum-security prisoners stood at their cellblock windows or in the yard during the riot and requested
help. They called out to the Natural Guardsmen that encircled the outside
perimeter of the prison during most of the 36-hour uprising.
The fate of the Guards
Of the 15 guards on duty, only four managed
to hide or to escape. Many prisoner groups
captured eleven of these guards. Several of these men were tortured and
repetitively raped.
No guards were killed, but
none of them returned to their job afterward, and most will not talk about what
happened--not surprisingly this horrific nightmare scarred them.
Aftermath
Early Sunday morning the riot
finally ended--with all of the prisoners surrendering as the National Guard entered the prison. Not one prisoner was
ever tried or convicted for the murders that took place--many were just
transferred to other prisons.
This riot did impact how prisons are run in New Mexico. Under the Duran consent decree, the feds were forced to come in to provide oversight for New Mexico prisons for the next two years.
After the riot, the state pen was closed down. This site located just south of Santa Fe has a newer maximum-security prison across from Old Main where the riot took place.
After the riot, the state pen was closed down. This site located just south of Santa Fe has a newer maximum-security prison across from Old Main where the riot took place.
Parts of Old Main today are used to store movie props, and the rest of the buildings have been used in films, but mostly they remain empty. These buildings are considered to be New Mexico’s
most haunted.
In 2013, historical tours of
the old prison started to be offered to the public once a month. Before this several
small groups including paranormal groups were allowed access to Old Main.
In New Mexico State Penitentiary Riot, Part ll I share two stories about the hauntings in Old Main.
Books about riot: Politics of a Prison Riot, by Adolph Saenz, The Hate Factory by Georgette Hirliman, The Devil's Butcher Shop, by Roger Morris.
What an incredible event!I remember it happening and it being on the news back then! Truly is amazing what people can do to their fellow humans! Thanks for creating the article!
ReplyDeleteDevils and evil truly exist.
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