MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Deandre Roney told officials at the Alabama prison he was incarcerated at that he feared for his life because another inmate had been threatening him, his sister said. On June 8, months away from his scheduled release date, the 39-year-old was stabbed to death.
Money the family had saved to help him restart his life out of prison was instead used to bury him, family members said.
''We just want justice and answers,'' Chante Roney, his sister, told a committee of state lawmakers during a Wednesday meeting on prison conditions.
Family members of people incarcerated in Alabama prisons packed the public hearing held by the Joint Legislative Prison Committee, a panel of lawmakers focused on prison oversight. Some wearing T-shirts with photos of their loved ones, family members described assaults, rapes, extortions, deaths and rampant drug availability and overdoses behind bars. They also expressed frustration over the state's lack of progress in improving conditions.
The Alabama prison system has long come under criticism for high rates of violence, crowding and chronic understaffing. The U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit in 2020 against Alabama arguing that conditions in the prison system — which the Justice Department called one of the most understaffed and violent in the country — are so poor that they violate the ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
One woman described how her son was beaten in a 2016 prison riot. Other speakers described paying thousands in extortion payments to other inmates threatening to harm their loved one. At least four speakers described how their family members died in Alabama prisons.
Chante Roney said her brother told prison staff at William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility about his fears that he would be attacked. On the day he died, he called his family and asked them to try to speak with someone in charge so he could be moved.
''Two hours later, we received a phone call that my brother was stabbed in his head and in his back and that he was left outside,'' Chante Roney said. ''I feel DOC should have done more to protect him. Now, all we have is memories, and no answers and broken hearts."