September 17, 2022
New Jersey’s only female prison, which is under independent oversight after brutality and sex abuse scandals, will hire a “gender specialist” to support transgender inmates, has outfitted all correctional officers with body cameras, and has expanded efforts to recruit female guards.
State Department of Corrections officials and independent monitors reported the changes during a public meeting held Friday to detail progress the troubled Edna Mahan Correctional Facility has made since the U.S. Department of Justice accused the state in 2018 of long-ignored civil rights abuses.
Under a settlement agreement made last year, the state is required to implement wide-ranging reforms. Friday’s meeting covered progress made from February through August this year and marked the end of the first year of the three-year agreement.
Jane Parnell, the appointed monitor, said she spent recent months making site visits and talking with inmates and staff. She expects to issue a written report in early November.
The changes reported include:
The aging prison in Hunterdon County remains slated for closure, although Kuhn declined to say when because officials are still waiting on recommendations and a timeline from a consultant hired to identify a new location. Edna Mahan now houses about 400 women, according to departmental data.
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