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St. Louis mayor fires embattled jail commissioner Jennifer Clemons-Abdullah

Corrections Commissioner Jennifer Clemons-Abdullah speaks to the media
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
St. Louis Jail Commissioner Jennifer Jennifer Clemons-Abdullah turns to the camera as media ask questions regarding the City Justice Center鈥檚 upgrades in May 2022 outside the City Justice Center in downtown St. Louis.

Jennifer Clemons-Abdullah is out as St. Louis' corrections commissioner.

Mayor Tishaura Jones fired Clemons-Abdullah on Saturday and named Tammy Ross as the acting commissioner of corrections, according to a statement from the mayor's office.

Clemons-Abdullah faced years of public scrutiny over her management of the City Justice Center, including calls for her resignation from members of the St. Louis Detention Facilities Oversight Board.

Her rocky three-year tenure was marked by a 2023 incident in which detainees took hostage a guard in his 70s and injured him and the deaths of 13 detainees at the jail. Attorneys say they鈥檝e struggled to speak to their clients in the jail.

Clemons-Abdullah returned to work Dec. 9 after a nearly three-month leave of absence. The reason for the leave has not been explained publicly. Her return to office drew rebukes and skepticism from critics of the jail.

The corrections commissioner has been at odds with the Detention Facilities Oversight Board over a lack of transparency and poor conditions at the city jail. But during her first week back, Clemons-Abdullah told the oversight board鈥檚 chairman, the Rev. Darryl Gray, that she would make corrections officers available to the board to review internal and external complaints. 鈥淢y jaw hit the ground because that鈥檚 all we鈥檝e been asking for, for the last three years,鈥 Gray told STLPR this week.

After Clemons-Abdullah鈥檚 firing Saturday, Gray said he hoped the jail鈥檚 next administration will honor the commitment to allow access to complaints. 鈥淚 hope that her absence or departure does not give the public safety department an excuse to renege on the commitment that she made,鈥 he said in a statement.

A spokesman for Board of Aldermen President Megan Green, long a critic of Clemons-Abdullah, said Green also hoped the new corrections commissioner would work to ensure 鈥渕eaningful collaboration鈥 between the city and the oversight board.

鈥淥ur office believes the new commissioner of corrections needs to prioritize the safety, dignity and rights of those awaiting trial,鈥 the spokesman, Yusuf Daneshyar, added.

Fourteenth Ward Alderman Rasheen Aldridge, among the first politicians to call for Clemons-Abdullah to resign, agreed strongly that conditions at the jail need to be the first priority of a new leader.

鈥淔or years, we have witnessed countless situations at the jail that have raised more questions than answers,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ew leadership must ensure that the jail is no longer a place that treats inmates inhumanely, especially those who have not been convicted of a crime.鈥

Aldridge told STLPR that Clemons-Abdullah appeared defensive during her tenure.

鈥淪he always seemed like it was her versus everybody," he said, "rather than saying, 鈥楬ow can we work together?鈥欌

Aldridge鈥檚 colleague, 4th Ward Alderman Bret Narayan, said the public safety committee he chairs 鈥渞emains committed on continuing to work to address the issues that CJC faces in tandem with the full Board of Aldermen, the new commissioner, the administration鈥 and Doug Burris, the retired head of the St. Louis County jail who was recently hired by the city as a consultant.

ArchCity Defenders, a nonprofit legal advocacy firm, said in a statement that 鈥渋t had been clear for some time that Commissioner Clemons-Abdullah was an obstacle鈥 to reform at the jail.

鈥淭he question is whether her removal will lead to substantive improvement in conditions, transparency, and accountability,鈥 the organization said. ArchCity Defenders is part of a federal class-action that claims corrections officers excessively and indiscriminately used mace and paper spray on detainees.

Clemons-Abdullah was making $158,574 when she was fired. Ross was making about $109,000 as a deputy commissioner.

Rachel is the justice correspondent at 漏 2024 外网天堂.
Brian Heffernan is the interim news director at 漏 2024 外网天堂.