The Feds Will Close a Notorious California Prison Where Guards Abused Women with Impunity
In 2021, the Associated Press uncovered rampant sexual abuse at FCI Dublin. After three years of failing to fix the problem, the Bureau of Prisons is shutting it down.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) announced Monday that it will close a federal women's prison in California where sexual abuse was so common that it was known as the "rape club."
The Associated Press first reported that the BOP is closing Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Dublin, a low-security women's prison in California's Bay Area, after several years of failed efforts to root out systemic misconduct and abuse.
The closure comes as the BOP tries to address larger, system-wide problems. The agency has been in crisis mode since before the COVID-19 pandemic, dogged by embarrassing security lapses, high-profile deaths, chronic understaffing, and persistent corruption. One result of all this is that zero-tolerance policies for sexual assault and federal laws that ban any sexual contact between staff and inmates go unenforced, and in many cases where an incarcerated person tries to invoke them, it only subjects them to retaliation.
BOP Director Colette Peters said in a statement provided to Reason that the agency has "taken unprecedented steps and provided a tremendous amount of resources to address culture, recruitment and retention, aging infrastructure and—most critical—employee misconduct."
"Despite these steps and resources, we have determined that FCI Dublin is not meeting expected standards and that the best course of action is to close the facility," Peters continued.
A 2021 Associated Press investigation revealed "a permissive and toxic culture at the Bay Area lockup, enabling years of sexual misconduct by predatory employees and cover-ups that have largely kept the abuse out of the public eye." Eight Dublin employees, including a former warden, have since been convicted or pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting incarcerated women under their control.
Eight inmates at FCI Dublin filed a lawsuit last year alleging that despite the prosecutions, the culture of abuse and whistleblower retaliation continued.
Last month, the BOP removed the fourth warden to be put in charge of FCI Dublin since 2021, after allegations that the warden retaliated against an inmate who testified in a lawsuit against the prison.
Shortly after the warden's departure, the federal judge overseeing the Dublin inmates' lawsuit announced she was appointing a special master to oversee operations at the prison, writing in her order that the BOP "has proceeded sluggishly with intentional disregard of the inmates' constitutional rights despite being fully apprised of the situation for years."
"The repeated installation of BOP leadership who fail to grasp and address the situation strains credulity," U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of California Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers wrote.
And there is also a long-running FBI investigation into Dublin staff and leadership.
It seems the BOP decided that Dublin wasn't worth the trouble anymore. However, this is not the first time the BOP has resorted to shuttering a scandal-ridden prison.
In 2021, the BOP closed down a minimum-security women's camp at FCC Coleman, a federal correctional complex in Florida. A Reason investigation detailed how a cadre of Coleman guards abused incarcerated women at Coleman with impunity for years, and how those guards were allowed to retire and escape prosecution, despite giving sworn statements to investigators admitting to assaulting inmates.
Peters, the former director of Oregon's prison system, had a reputation as a reformer when President Biden appointed her in 2022, but she inherited a sprawling federal agency with an entrenched culture. The repeated attempts to find a warden who could clean up Dublin failed not because the prison was an extreme outlier, but because it was so average.
The women currently incarcerated at Dublin will be transferred to other federal prisons, and Peters said in her statement that no BOP employees would lose their jobs as a result of the closure.
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Blame the building?
Abusing women with impunity?
You mean like dissolving their agency by exempting them from the consequences of their actions and extorting their identities from them because you assume they’re too stupid to understand the basic facts underpinning mammalian biology for themselves?
TL;DR, but it says there's a problem caused by people, and all they can think to do to fix it is to close the place? Like if the firehouse were chronically staffed by pyromaniacs, all you could do is close the firehouse? If they kept hiring embezzlers at the bank, all you could do would be to close the bank building? If the Indians kept scalping, close the reservation?
See, that's where Reason is setting an example. Commenters mouthing off? Charge 'em $25!
Well thank God these women won't be assaulted by staff anymore. Now they only have to worry about inmates who identify as women with raging hardons.
Well they could castrate / staple shut the guards that are doing the abusing; that could be a plan … instead of shutting the building down.
Or fire / arrest / prosecute the perpetrators if you want to be a normie.
"......Peters said in her statement that no BOP employees would lose their jobs as a result of the closure."
seems to be a big misunderstanding on what the problem is here. like others said, it isn't the building.... it is the people.... moving those people to a different facility does not correct the problem.
Let me guess, those people belong to public sector unions. Closing the building is the easier response. Does not solve the problem, but it is easier.
Are unions still exempt from Rico prosecutions? Not that it will matter until we have a DOJ willing to prosecute a union. I suspect that not only requires a Republican President, but one willing to get rid of the careerists and the doctrinaire leftists by firing _every_ lawyer in the DOJ at once and starting over on hiring.
But, thank god, this administration has avoided the scourge of private prisons where a powerful union and an entire department of the government is dedicated to concealing misdeeds and perverting justice . . . *checks script* Oh, what, that is the DOP. Never mind.
Though all prisons are terrible we at least see some minimal accountability in the private ones. But best to just reduce the amount of people the Governments (Federal, State and Local) lock up.
Could be worse, they could've been sentenced to death by a 9-3 split decision... or found "hanged" while under suicide watch in federal custody and nothing else happened.
I know as long as none of those people were raped, my innate sense of my own unwavering moral rectitude will allow me to sleep tonight.
The BOP culture is so depraved that even other guards aren't safe from the guards. This article starts by talking about harassment and attacks by inmates, then mentions guards allowing it, then mentions guards doing it. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/17/us/prison-sexual-harassment-women.html
I read something from a former inmate who said he saw so many honest guards doing an unpleasant (for everyone) job without being abusive that they made up a solid 10-20% of the workforce.
Well good. Now they can send them to better, safe, women's prisons. Where they also house violent inmates pretending to be women. Who then rape and abuse the actual women.
Y'know, to appease the rainbow cult.