On February 28, 2021, simply after 9pm, 9 Muslim males eliminated their sneakers, lined up in single file, and knelt quietly for Isha, their religion’s necessary evening prayer, inside a Missouri state jail within the small metropolis of Bonne Terre.
Their motion was neither uncommon nor provocative. The lads had been praying collectively within the frequent house of their wing at Jap Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Middle (ERDCC) for a number of months with out incident, as much as 4 instances a day, after COVID restrictions put the jail’s chapel off-limits.
They lived in Housing Unit 4 or 4-Home’s B wing, which was often known as the “honour dorm” and was reserved for prisoners with no latest infractions. In different wings of the lads’s jail, prisoners got restricted day out of their cells. However within the honour dorm, the lads could possibly be out of their cells all day lengthy within the wing’s floor ground frequent space, heating meals that they’d bought on the commissary within the shared microwave, or gathering to speak or play playing cards or chess at tables bolted to the concrete flooring.
The group of worshippers who gathered to wish behind the frequent space started with three prisoners and had grown to between 9 and 14. Qadir (Reginald) Clemons, 52, who normally gave the decision to prayer, says he had periodically checked in with the jail chaplain, and the “bubble officer” within the management room, which commanded a view of all 4 wings, to verify that there could be no drawback with the group praying. Christian prisoners additionally held communal prayer circles all through ERDCC, together with within the honour dorm.
On this evening, nonetheless, the kneeling males could be charged at by jail guards. 5 of them could be doused with pepper spray till they writhed in ache. Seven could be shackled and, most of them shoeless, marched about 50 metres by way of the winter mud of a recreation yard to a different housing unit the place they’d be put into solitary confinement, additionally referred to as administrative segregation, AdSeg, or just – “the Hole”.
The group’s chief, Mustafa (Steven) Stafford, 58, a brief, jovial man whom the others referred to as “Sheikh” attributable to his dedication to Islam, could be assaulted en path to AdSeg and once more as soon as there. After their launch from the Gap 10 days later, Stafford and others would face additional retaliation.
Not one of the males – who dubbed themselves the “Bonne Terre Seven” after the incident – have been accused of something other than disobeying a lieutenant’s orders to cease praying, which their religion dictates they can not do, besides in an emergency. Based on the now-retired lieutenant, no jail official was disciplined over the incident.
This account of a peaceable prayer’s violent disruption and its aftermath is predicated on dozens of in-person and phone interviews, together with with six of the Bonne Terre Seven, eight different prisoners who witnessed the assault and several other officers. It’s bolstered by accounts from a lawsuit filed in 2022 by Clemons, now amended to incorporate his eight fellow worshippers, who’re petitioning the courtroom to declare that the Missouri Division of Corrections (MODOC) can’t deny their non secular rights and to award them damages for what they suffered. It additionally attracts on interviews with human and prisoner rights advocates and the lads’s legal professionals from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
The image that emerges is of a facility, and a bigger jail system, that usually treats Muslim prisoners, nearly all of whom are Black, with suspicion, hostility and racism.
Even towards this backdrop, the ERDCC assault stands out for its savagery. “I’ve never seen a case that involves this level of violence,” says Kimberly Noe-Lehenbauer, a CAIR lawyer representing the 9 victims.
The jail
ERDCC is positioned on the outskirts of Bonne Terre within the low, rolling hills of the Ozark Plateau, 60 miles (96.6km) south of Missouri’s second-largest metropolis, St Louis.
Bonne Terre is in St Francois County, which is sort of 93 % white and squarely Republican; 73 % of voters supported Donald Trump within the 2020 election. Trump indicators nonetheless proliferate at present, together with different markers of native beliefs; a “Jesus Loves You” billboard sits on the aspect of a state freeway, adopted quickly after by a entrance door wrapped within the Accomplice flag.
ERDCC opened in 2003, bringing a brand new predominant business to the previous mining city, whose centre sits atop a big mine that was shuttered in 1962. Town has a inhabitants of below 7,000, together with the prisoners, which as of July 2020 numbered almost 2,600 males.
ERDCC is a sprawling D-shaped mixed-security encampment. It has the state’s largest jail inhabitants and encompasses 11 housing items, 10 of these with 4 wings and a management unit or “bubble” within the centre.
The encampment additionally has a eating corridor, a constructing housing academic programmes and a medical facility, three leisure yards, an consumption space, and a small manufacturing facility the place some prisoners produce cleaning soap and different cleansing provides. A visitation room lies in a constructing simply previous the jail entrance. That very same constructing homes Missouri’s solely execution chamber, although condemned prisoners are held in Potosi, 15 miles (24km) west, and dropped at ERDCC shortly earlier than their scheduled execution.