A Texas prisoner accused of killing 22 older women over two years, preying on them so he could steal jewelry and other valuables, was slain Tuesday by his cellmate while serving a life sentence, prison officials said.

Billy Chemirmir, 50, who was convicted last year in the slayings of two women, was found dead in his cell at a prison in rural East Texas, Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesperson Hannah Haney said. He was killed by his cellmate who was also serving a prison sentence for murder, according to Haney.

Chemirmir’s death comes about two weeks after Texas’ 100 prisons were placed on a rare statewide lockdown because of a rise in the number of killings inside the facilities, which prisons officials have said were related to drugs.

Haney did not release the name of the cellmate, how Chemirmir was killed or what may have led to the slaying.

  • Neato@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Chemirmir’s death comes about two weeks after Texas’ 100 prisons were placed on a rare statewide lockdown because of a rise in the number of killings inside the facilities, which prisons officials have said were related to drugs.

    So prisons can’t maintain the one thing they are there for: security. The prisons or the government funding them are allowing this to happen. They are complicit in homicide. Society judged this man and sentenced him to life, not to execution. Being lax in duty resulting is death is negligent homicide.

    • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      I love how they blame drugs when Texas prisons have been hitting record-breaking temperatures. Enough so to cause deaths. But yeah, drugs are the problem…

      Aside from that, this guy probably fucked with the wrong one. Someone probably wanted this asshole gone.

    • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      So prisons can’t maintain the one thing they are there for: security.

      Oh ya? Says who? And security for who?

      If you think prisons are here to keep prisoners safe you are 100% misinformed.

      In America prisons are for-profit. Their only job is to make sure you stay there and don’t return to the public. Whether you stay safe or not isn’t a concern to them. They don’t give a fuck about your well being.

      In America prisons are designed to be cruel, not to rehabilitate.

      • Neato@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        While I understand the sentiment, it is patently false.

        In America prisons are designed to be cruel, not to rehabilitate.

        This is unconstitutional and illegal, besides. Therefore the governments and the victims are well within their rights to hold the prisons accountable and liable.

          • Neato@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Uh, Citation Needed.

            Equal protection for protected classes in prison isn’t relevant when the issue is prisons not properly protecting their inmates.

          • GladiusB@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Prove it. That’s the issue. It’s systemic and hard to prove that it’s from the top down. Even if you can get some instances, then you need many forms of evidence. Which has a way of disappearing or waiting so long that witnesses die.

        • GlendatheGayWitch@lib.lgbt
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          1 year ago

          The only falsehood about their statement is the implication that all prisons are for-profit.

          For example, Louisisna has state and privately owned prisons. Many, if not all, of Louisiana’s private for-profit prisons are owned by members of law enforcement. This gives them incentive to fill the cells as much as possible. The rules for these prisons are much more lax than the state-run prisons. While the state prisons have libraries and vocational training, the Private prisons usually don’t. At least that’s my understanding from a few years back.

          Louisiana is also not the only state with private prisons, however most, if not all states, have public prisons as well.

    • CTdummy@artemis.camp
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      1 year ago

      Given prisons in the US are pretty much a source of slave labour and the fact that a lot of these guards are on the take (hence drugs seemingly be freely available in practically any prison) this failure of duty seems more like business as usual.