Teacher Assaulted In Arizona Prison By Sex Offender Reaches Settlement

Published: Tuesday, December 29, 2015 - 8:53am
Updated: Sunday, February 28, 2016 - 11:17pm
(Photo courtesy of Arizona Department of Corrections)
Jacob Harvey

A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit brought by an Arizona prison teacher who was raped by an inmate in 2014, her attorney confirmed Tuesday.

Terms of the Dec. 22 settlement were not disclosed. The woman’s attorney, Scott H. Zwillinger, would only say the settlement is satisfactory to his client. A spokeswoman for Attorney General Mark Brnovich said a court order prohibits talking about the settlement.

KJZZ does not identify victims of sex crimes.

Jacob Harvey was sentenced to life in prison this year after pleading guilty to the January 2014 rape at the Eyman state prison in Florence. He was in the first year of a 30-year term for raping a suburban Phoenix woman during a home invasion when he assaulted the teacher in a classroom.

Harvey repeatedly stabbed the teacher with a pen before raping her, according to investigative reports and the teacher. The AP generally doesn't identify people who report being victims of sexual assault.

The state's workplace safety agency fined the Corrections Department $14,000 for failing to ensure the teacher's safety, but that fine is being appealed.

After the rape, prison officials sent out only a vague news release that referred to an assault on an employee. The details of the assault came to light after the AP obtained documents under a public records request and interviewed people familiar with the case.

The teacher told the AP in a 2014 interview that she felt traumatized by the attack.

The workplace-safety investigation was launched in July after the AP story provided the first detailed account of the assault.

The lawsuit accused prison employees of failing to establish proper security. It also said the department's health care provider improperly assessed the Harvey's health, allowing him to be classified as a low-risk offender.

Corrections Department spokesman Doug Nick in 2014 called the assault a "cowardly and despicable crime" but also said the department disputed the lawsuit's allegations.

The attorney general's office argued unsuccessfully in court that the lawsuit should be thrown out. Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Weisbard wrote that the teacher routinely worked in classrooms and there is always a risk of assault when working with prisoners.

However, the judge hearing the case refused to dismiss the lawsuit, saying it raised plausible allegations that top officials created a dangerous environment that led to the rape.

After the assault, prison officials installed cameras in prison classrooms, increased patrols and issued pepper spray to civilian workers. They have said issuing pepper spray was planned before the rape.

UPDATED 11:33 a.m. 12/29/2015