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Convicted Child Molester Beaten To Death During First Week In Prison

A convicted child molester was beaten to death only six days after he arrived at Wasco State Prison.

Wasco, CA – A convicted child molester only lasted six days in prison before he was beaten to death by another inmate.

Agustin Duran, 66, entered the Wasco State Prison on July 2, after being sentenced in Los Angeles County to 55 years in prison with the possibility of parole for the offense of lewd and lascivious acts with a child under 14 years old, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said in a news release.

On July 7, Duran was in a prison dayroom at approximately 7:20 p.m., when another inmate, 19-year-old Andres Ayon, attacked him by hitting him in the torso and face with his fists.

Prison officials sounded an alarm and all of the inmates dropped to the ground, with the exception of Ayon, who continued to viciously beat the convicted sex offender.

Prison staff deployed a “pepper spray grenade” to break up the attack, at which point Ayon laid down in a “prone position,” according to the news release.

He was handcuffed and escorted to a temporary holding cell, while corrections officers rushed Duran out of the dayroom on a gurney.

Duran was transported to a local hospital by air ambulance, where he succumbed to his injuries at 4:48 p.m. on July 8.

Ayon was treated at the prison for minor injuries and has been placed into segregation while the incident was being investigated.

The news release said that Ayon entered the Wasco State Prison on June 22, after being sentenced to six years for use of a deadly weapon and second-degree robbery in Kern County.

Wasco State Prison’s primary function is to classify and evaluate new inmates for the most appropriate long-term placement in other penal facilities, the news release read.

The facility employs about 1,500 people and houses approximately 4,900 inmates.

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Burgers Allday
Burgers Allday

I get your argument. Some attacks in prison will always happen, so you argue that prisons have no duty to protect and can never breach a duty to protect. Not a good argument, and I shouldn't have to explain why.

Hi_estComnDenomnn
Hi_estComnDenomnn

Well, lets play the prisons' attorney, how can anyone read someone's mind and know who they're going to beat? Everyone in prison should be considered dangerous, else why have them in prison? They're criminals. Maybe the states can spend a few hundred billion dollars of money they don't have, but will gladly tax you for giant single person cell prisons where everyone gets separated from everyone else, and it is hand delivered fresh food, and have their own showers and day rooms and toilets, and work out rooms, and libraries, no one ever encounters another living soul other than prison guards. THEN someone will want to sue for psychological damage for being held in isolation.

If I stick my dick in your wife, and you beat the shit outta me I kinda should had that coming to me don't you think? I wouldn't sue you if I did.

Hi_estComnDenomnn
Hi_estComnDenomnn

Have you ever been to a prison? Either as an inmate or correctional officer? They're pretty under staffed. Its like a fisherman being in charge of all of the oceans.

Burgers Allday
Burgers Allday

No, prisons have a duty to keep all inmates safe -- even the ones who did really bad things.

Hi_estComnDenomnn
Hi_estComnDenomnn

Burgers you wondering whether the prison will be sued for allowing this to happen is akin to wondering if the dentist should be sued for your rotten mouth.

Hi_estComnDenomnn
Hi_estComnDenomnn

Hey Burgers no guns in prison, I wonder if stricter gun control would have prevented this man's death by fists?

Memaw187
Memaw187

...and they all lived happily ever after

Omakaren
Omakaren

Poetic justice

61mouse
61mouse

Why waste an air ambulance on this POS

No. 21-30
JBo
JBo

I wonder whether stricter federal fist control laws could have prevented this tragedy