View Full Version : U.S. Accuses Guard of Ties to Gang


sunkissed
07-30-2004, 03:00 PM
July 30, 2004
The LA Times
By David Rosenzweig, Times Staff Writer
U.S. Accuses Guard of Ties to Gang

The corrections officer at Chino state prison helped Nazi Low Riders distribute drugs and attack inmates, a federal indictment alleges.

A state corrections officer was arrested Thursday on charges of helping a white supremacist prison gang distribute narcotics and attack other inmates at the California Institute for Men in Chino.

Shayne Allyn Ziska, 43, of Fontana was accused in a five-count federal grand jury indictment of taking part in a racketeering conspiracy run by the notorious Nazi Low Riders gang, aiding in the commission of two violent crimes and depriving inmates of their rights under color of authority.

Ziska was described in the indictment as a white racist ideologue who bears a Nazi tattoo, depicting double lightning bolts, on one arm.

He associated with the Nazi Low Riders' leaders at Chino, according to the indictment, taught gang members martial arts and preached his views on race to white inmates.

Formed in the 1970s as a skinhead youth gang, the Nazi Low Riders has since extended its reach to prisons throughout the state and into Nevada, Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico. Closely allied with the prison-based Aryan Brotherhood, experts say the gang now appears driven as much by profit motives — from the sale of narcotics — as by ideology.

In an interview with The Times last year, Ziska denied any involvement with the Nazi Low Riders, although he said it was impossible to work at the prison without coming into contact with members of the group.

As for allegations that he helped distribute illegal drugs, he said, "They're crazy. They offend me. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't do any of that."

Ziska, who has worked at the prison since 1984, was relieved of guard duty in October 2000 during an inquiry by investigators from the California Department of Corrections.

The investigation was taken over several months later by the FBI, which was engaged in a major crackdown against the Nazi Low Riders. Two years ago, 12 gang members and associates, including several key leaders, were indicted for controlling white inmates in the state prison system through murder, intimidation and drug trafficking. Seven of those defendants have been convicted and five are scheduled to go on trial next year.

Ziska was accused of helping some of those defendants distribute illicit drugs and engage in violent reprisals against other inmates while he was assigned to a housing unit at the 6,500-inmate prison.

The indictment unsealed Thursday cited four separate incidents from 1998 through 2000 in which Ziska allegedly transported heroin and methamphetamine for gang members. It also accused him of ferrying a surreptitious message between inmates to confirm that a quantity of drugs had arrived.

Ziska was also accused of allowing various Nazi Low Riders to move freely between different tiers and halls at the sprawling facility, enabling them to conduct gang business without interference.

In some instances, that included violence, according to the indictment. Ziska was charged with aiding and abetting gang attacks on two inmates in 1999 and 2000. One victim was stabbed under an eye and the other was slashed across the neck. Both survived.

Ziska is being held at the federal Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles pending arraignment Monday.

He faces a maximum of 60 years in prison if convicted of all charges.

His arrest comes at a time when the state Department of Corrections has been reeling from an assortment of scandals involving prison guards. A 150-page report last month by a federal court monitor accused the state prison guards union of enforcing a "code of silence" that has made it exceedingly difficult to investigate alleged misconduct by corrections officers.

Kathy
08-02-2004, 12:34 PM
:eek: I'm SHOCKED! Thanks Christy!

sunkissed
08-05-2004, 07:12 PM
July 30, 2004

CORRECTIONS OFFICER ARRESTED ON FEDERAL RACKETEERING CHARGES
Guard Faces Federal Racketeering Charges
By Liz Valsamis
Daily Journal Staff Writer
LOS ANGELES - A Chino prison guard was arrested Thursday on federal racketeering charges for allegedly helping the Nazi Low Riders prison gang distribute drugs and impose violent discipline on other inmates behind bars.
Shayne Allyn Ziska, 43, a correctional officer at California Institute for Men in Chino, was indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles.
The Nazi Low Riders is a prison gang with a white supremacist ideology that seeks to control white inmates in California prisons, authorities said.
Ziska, also known as "Z," allegedly allowed gang members to slit the neck of inmate Mark Krueger in August 1999. The following summer, he allegedly allowed gang member Joseph Sulkey, aka "Diamond," to stab inmate Nathan Johnson, aka "Chance," below the eye.
Both men were hospitalized but survived the attacks.
Ziska's lawyer, Ira Salzman, said the correctional officer will plead innocent.
"[My client] is looking forward to clearing his name," Salzman said. "He maintains he's done nothing illegal."
In 1998, Ziska allegedly transported speed for gang member Ricky Seevers, aka "Peckerwood."
Later that year, he took heroin from member Mark Dresden Matthews to member James Prescott, aka "Irish," the indictment alleges. He transported drugs between gang members in the jail on two other occasions, according to the document.
Ziska also allegedly assisted in moving members of the gang from one cell to another, taught them martial arts and taught white inmates about racial ideology, the indictment says.
During his employment, Ziska allegedly got a tattoo on his arm of double lightning bolts, which the indictment refers to as a Nazi tattoo.
The Nazi Low Riders gang began in the 1970s in the California Youth Authority, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Adam Kamenstein, who said the gang includes hundreds of members. The indictment described the gang as one that uses violence and intimidation to maintain control of the white prison populations in California, as well as Nevada and Oregon.
"They largely control the illegal activities of the white prison population throughout the California prison system," said Kamenstein, a prosecutor on the Ziska case.
In February 2002, the U.S. attorney's office charged 12 members and associates of the gang with racketeering. Two of them pleaded guilty, Kamenstein said, including senior member "Michael Bridge, aka 'Snake,'" whom Ziska allegedly helped move around the prison. Five of the 12 are awaiting trial. Kamenstein declined to comment on the status of the last five, one of whom the indictment mentions in relation to the attack on Johnson.
The state Department of Corrections put Ziska on paid administrative leave in 2000, according to Captain T.J. Padilla of the Chino prison. He returned to work eight months ago doing clerical work at a different facility, Padilla said. Ziska has been a correctional officer since January 1984.
The Fontana man is charged with five counts of participating in a Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations conspiracy, participating in a violent crime in aid of racketeering, and civil rights violations.
"As contained in the allegations of the indictment, defendant Ziska's conduct goes back years" in assisting the gang, Kamenstein said.
"Whatever his motivation was is not something I can comment on," Kamenstein added.
The U.S. attorney's office is asking for no bail for Ziska. Ziska made a brief appearance Thursday in federal court, where his lawyer asked that the arraignment hearing be postponed. The judge scheduled the hearing for Monday, when Ziska intends to plead not guilty, according to Salzman.
Ziska faces 20 years for each of the three racketeering charges and a maximum of 10 years for two counts involving the deprivation of prisoner's rights.

Kathy
08-07-2004, 03:20 PM
MATT GRAY STATED:
Leave it to the Feds to pick up where our own state government lags behind.

Recall last year's hearing on Senator Brulte's anti-quarterly packages bill, SB 206, when the CDC and CCPOA representatives asserted the influx of drugs into our institutions was through families & quarterly packages (alleging some 32 instances which were soon found to actually be associated with regular and legal mail -- not quarterly packages -- and these representatives could only provide a vague verbal account of the typical drug smuggling through QP's).

Still, CDC proceeded with allowing change-overs to vendor based QP's without any thought as to considering that guards may play a significant role in the influx of drugs into our institutions...