
Keith Alan Raniere
BROOKLYN, NY: Fifty-five new cases of Covid 19 were confirmed between Tuesday and Thursday at the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center. The total known number of those infected is 80, according to numbers compiled by the Bureau of Prison.
Prior to Tuesday, there had only been 25 confirmed cases since March.
A total of 49 staffers have also tested positive. Jail staff are required to get their own tests while inmates are tested by the jail. When a staffer tests positive, they are required to stay home and quarantine.
The low numbers of coronavirus cases at MDC prior to this past week were more than likely caused by a lack of testing.
Presently housed at MDC are Keith Alan Raniere, Clare Webb Bronfman, and Ghislaine Maxwel – along with some 1000 plus other residents, most of whom are pre-trial detainees who were unable to obtain bail. Maxwell is a pre-trial detainee. Raniere and Bronfman have been sentenced and are awaiting permanent prison placement.
It has not been confirmed if any of these high profile prisoners have Covid -19.
The outbreak might cause a delay in placing Raniere and Bronfman in a permanent prison.
The facility is reportedly on lockdown which means prisoners are confined to their cells all day and night and maximum segregation is imposed. Food is served in cells during lockdowns instead of at the tables set up in the units for that purpose.
On lockdown, the commissary is closed. Showers are reduced to once or twice a week. Phone calls are limited or suspended. Visits are suspended. Life for prisoners is the tedium of their small cells, with their bed, a toilet and sink, and sometimes a desk.
With everyone on lockdown, the black market is virtually closed.
Advice on Surviving as a Chomo for Raniere From a Former Prisoner
Although he denies he ever committed any sex offenses, Keith Alan Raniere was convicted and will be considered a Chomo, or child molester in prison. If he is assigned to a maximum-security prison and placed in general population, Raniere has told followers that his life will be forfeited.
Here is what Prison Resource’s Christopher Zoukis says about it. His view contradicts Raniere’s to a degree. Zoukis suggests that Raniere might be able to survive if he is smart and tough. He also suggests that Raniere should be assigned to a Sex Offender Management Program facility, where he will be comparatively safer.
By Christopher Zoukis
Author of the Federal Prison Handbook, Directory of Federal Prisons, Prison Education Guide, and College for Convicts: The Case for Higher Education in American Prisons.
For those convicted of sex-related offenses such as child pornography offenses, and for informants, the road can be much harder. At the lower security levels, they will simply be ostracized, unless they are incarcerated at a Sex Offender Management Program facility. At the higher security levels, their safety might be in jeopardy. For those likely to be targeted who arrive at a prison where they are not welcome, they will be informed in not-very-kind terms by fellow prisoners. This will most likely occur before violence is introduced. If a targeted prisoner fails to heed the warning, they might very well be beaten or stomped. In these instances, they will be removed from general population and placed in the hole for protective custody.
Sexual assault in prison is a hot-button issue. Vulnerable populations such as LGBT prisoners, sex offenders and younger prisoners tend to face an increased risk of being assaulted. While such prisoners will have to contend with verbal sexual jabs and solicitations, forcible rape is actually an unusual occurrence. It does happen each year across prison systems such as the Federal Bureau of Prisons, but despite what you might see on TV it is not a regular occurrence. Severe consequences imposed by the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) have had an impact on prison rape statistics.
If a prisoner engages in sexually promiscuous activities, they commonly become a target for unwanted sexual attention. The key to avoiding violence and sexual assault in prison is for prisoners to mind their own business, engage in respectable conduct, and mesh well within the prison culture and groups. These things help, but won’t guarantee safety.
When assaulted, it is important for the prisoner to throw everything that they have into protecting themselves to dissuade others from following suit. This means if you’re being assaulted, you fight hard. Hurting an offender as swiftly and brutally as possible is the right answer in this situation. Enacting swift self-defense protects you from the assailant and gives others considering you as a target a reason to think twice. The truth is that injuries sustained from fights only hurt so much, but the constant fear of being hurt is much more crippling. By harnessing this fear, even smaller prisoners who are not usually intimidating can become forces to be reckoned with, even if they never again have to throw another punch.
Some information and tips to remember on this topic:
At the camp (minimum security) and low-security levels, violence and sexual assault are very rare. Prisoners are concentrating on good behavior and being released. At the medium-security and, especially, the high-security levels where many inmates feel they have nothing to lose, violence is very prevalent, and sexual assault happens more often, though it is still not exactly commonplace.
If you are an informant or sex offender and are sent to a rough medium or high-security federal prison, there are measures to take to avoid being targeted. You can refuse to “walk the yard” by refusing to leave the Special Housing Unit upon their first arrival at the institution. This is where most new arrivals are held prior to being released into the general population. While this will result in you being placed in protective custody, it will protect you from being maimed until Federal Bureau of Prisons officials transfer you to an easier yard.
If you are being threatened by someone, don’t act weak. Dispel tension by talking. A simple “go to hell,” and walking away is better than saying “I’m not going to fight you.” It is essential to convey that when push comes to shove, you will act and you can handle a fight if required.
If someone punches you or puts their hands on you, react swiftly. It is a rule I strictly followed in prison. Words are only words, but once someone touched me, all bets were off. If someone harms you, you need to harm them. Traditional society would disagree with this notion, but in prison you are your only protector. The guards will not help you, and neither will your fellow prisoners.
It’s better to fight and lose or be caught fighting than to tell guards that someone hit or threatened you. This will brand you as a rat. The only time you should consider going to the guards is if you fear that your life is in danger, and you are willing to be locked in the hole and transferred elsewhere. Even then, you should not give them any names. Just state you fear for your life.
If someone is intimidating you sexually or trying to coax you to engage in sex, find a slick retort designed to embarrass them and make them go away. A transgender friend of mine while in prison used to tell people, “I’ll f*&k you, but it’s going to hurt.” No one expected this to come out of my friend’s mouth and it usually shamed people into leaving her alone. But there is also the risk of inciting violence by making such comments. The best rule of thumb should be to use words to dispel potential trouble, to ignore what you can, and to avoid putting yourself in positions where such comments are made.
If you are sexually assaulted, you have the right to file a PREA complaint through the TRULINCS Inmate-to-Staff Messaging function, by telling any staff member, or by writing a letter to the Department of Justice. This will result in a swift and severe response from prison officials and the DOJ official assigned to investigate the case. In most cases, I’m very much against telling on fellow prisoners, but in the case of sexual assault, I go the other way. I think that if someone is ever raped in prison that they should immediately file a report. This is required to protect the victim and get them the help that they need, and to protect others from the perpetrator.

