4.7 • 8K Ratings
🗓️ 23 March 2024
⏱️ 51 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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When Valentino Rodriguez graduated from the academy to become a correctional officer for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, he was promised a brotherhood. At his graduation, the new officers took an oath to protect the innocent, be honest and hold each other accountable.
But when he started his job at the high-security prison in Sacramento, informally known as New Folsom, he found the opposite. He told his wife and father about misconduct in the prison and harassment, threats and mistreatment of incarcerated people. KQED reporters Sukey Lewis and Julie Small learned of Rodriguez’s experience after he was found dead, just six days after reporting the misconduct he witnessed. Their series, On Our Watch, follows Rodriguez’s case and his father’s investigation into his son’s death.
This episode opens with Lewis and her reporting team meeting the Rodriguez family at their home and Rodriguez’s wife, Mimy. They tell the reporters about who Rodriguez was and his journey through New Folsom. In the prison, Rodriguez earned a spot as a member of an elite unit investigating crimes committed in the prison. But his colleagues made it clear they didn’t think he deserved the promotion and demeaned his work. As the job weighed on Rodriguez and his mental health, his father, Val Sr., started to see him change.
After his son’s death, Val Sr. collects all the evidence he can on his son’s experience in the prison and shares it with Lewis and Small. This includes a copy of Rodriguez’s cellphone that he used for work, with proof of the misconduct he reported from members of his unit. Through this personal record of Rodriguez’s life, along with disciplinary records obtained through a recent transparency law passed in California, Lewis and Small find a pattern of misconduct that goes deeper than Rodriguez’s experience.
In our last segment, Reveal host Al Letson sits down with Lewis and Small to discuss any accountability taken by prison officials. Only two of the men who harassed Rodriguez were disciplined, but none of the supervisors with knowledge of the harassment seem to have faced consequences. The reporters talk about other cases of misconduct they uncovered from public documents from the state corrections department, and they share how Rodriguez’s father and wife have been since their reporting became public.
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0:00.0 | From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is reveal. |
0:04.6 | I'm Al Lettson. |
0:05.6 | So it is my privilege to introduce to you, Mr and Mrs. Valentino and Imma Rodriguez. |
0:11.6 | You may kiss the bride, |
0:13.2 | on Bessel. |
0:14.2 | On a hot day in early October 2020, |
0:21.2 | Valentino and Irma, who goes by Mimi became Mr and Mrs Rodriguez. |
0:26.0 | I wore this big white ball gown. It had a cream undertone and then it had like white lace and it sparkled it was really nice. |
0:35.0 | They were married in a cathedral in downtown Sacramento. |
0:39.0 | The church was beautiful. I mean so many people showed up. |
0:41.0 | My parents were they both walked me down the aisle |
0:44.0 | and then at the end of the aisle I got to see his parents |
0:47.0 | and it was just nice. |
0:49.4 | I have a great partner in life. |
0:51.1 | I couldn't ask for anything different. This whole wedding I felt |
0:55.4 | it strange that I wasn't nervous or I wasn't dreading the day. I was excited and I |
1:01.2 | wanted it to happen and it clicked with me when I was excited and I wanted it to happen. |
1:02.6 | And it clicked with me when I was standing up there |
1:05.3 | on the altar today that I'm right where I'm |
1:08.1 | supposed to be in life. |
1:09.9 | Earlier that year, Valentino had taken a leave |
1:12.4 | from his job at the California Department of earlier that |
... |
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