# Arrendale State Prison

> Lee Arrendale State Prison, Georgia's largest women's facility, has been documented as a site of serial killings, sexual abuse by staff, condemned buildings reopened over health hazards, and systematic retaliation against women who speak out. The facility has been the subject of at least two confirmed homicide cases, a $1.5 million wrongful death settlement, a staff sexual assault arrest, and a documented pattern of GDC obstruction that includes physically blocking state legislators from entering the facility. GPS independently tracks deaths across the GDC system — the agency itself refuses to report cause-of-death information — and conditions at Arrendale reflect the broader crisis of neglect, understaffing, and accountability failure documented statewide.

**Published**: 2026-04-26
**Source**: https://gps.press/intelligence/facility/arrendale-state-prison/
**Author**: Georgia Prisoners' Speak

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## Serial Killings in the Mental Health Unit

The most alarming documented incident at Lee Arrendale occurred in spring 2024, when two women were strangled to death inside the facility's mental health unit within eight days of each other. Sherry Joyce was found dead in her cell in late April 2024. Hallie Reed, a 23-year-old who was housed in the same unit, called her mother in a panic after Joyce's death, reported that she had asked to be placed in protective custody, and was turned down. Days later, Reed was also dead. Arrest warrants allege that both women were strangled by the same prisoner, Jeanni Geuea, who had only recently been transferred into the mental health unit.

Reed's mother, Samantha Reed, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "I have a bigger problem with the GDC than I do with the girl who may actually have done this. They didn't do their job. The people there to protect Hallie failed miserably." The case raises a specific institutional question: why was a newly arrived prisoner with apparent violent tendencies not separated from two vulnerable women in a unit designed for people with significant mental health needs? The GDC offered no explanation for months. The killings contributed to Georgia prisons setting a new homicide record in 2024 — and represent an extreme failure of the classification and supervision protocols that are supposed to make mental health housing safer, not more dangerous.

## Death of Sheqweetta Vaughan: Decomposed Body, No Answers

On July 9, 2025, Sheqweetta Vaughan, a 32-year-old mother, was found dead in her cell at Lee Arrendale State Prison. By the time staff discovered her, her body had already begun to decompose — indicating she had been dead for a significant period before anyone checked on her. Vaughan had given birth in January 2025, just months before her death, and was reportedly battling postpartum depression, a condition requiring active medical monitoring and mental health support.

The decomposed state of her body at discovery is not incidental detail — it is direct evidence of a failure of basic supervision. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump publicly called for accountability, and her case was covered by NBC and included in The Marshall Project's record of deaths behind bars. Her family demanded answers and transparency. As of the time of reporting, the GDC had provided none. Her death follows the pattern GPS has documented repeatedly at Arrendale and across the GDC system: women with serious medical and mental health needs left without monitoring, their deterioration invisible until it becomes irreversible.

## Condemned Building Reopened: Asbestos, Mold, and Sewage

C-Unit at Lee Arrendale was previously condemned as uninhabitable. Inmates had been removed after the discovery of asbestos, mold, and sewage backing up through shower drains. Despite those conditions remaining unresolved, prison officials reopened C-2 to relieve overcrowding pressure — moving women into a structure documented as structurally and environmentally hazardous. Sources close to incarcerated women described feces rising through shower floors, mold visible on walls, and asbestos throughout the building.

The selection process for who was moved there compounded the harm. According to reports documented by GPS, women chosen for C-2 transfer were drawn disproportionately from G1, the honor dorm — women with good behavior records who were perceived as less likely to resist. They were reportedly warned not to file grievances. When inmate Inez Ottis raised concerns with Deputy Warden Ballenger, who oversees care and treatment at the facility, her complaint about sewage and building conditions allegedly led to retaliation rather than remediation. Asbestos exposure causes lung disease and cancer. Mold exacerbates respiratory conditions. These are not abstract risks — they are documented consequences of housing people in a building that institutional authorities had already determined was unfit for human occupancy.

## Staff Sexual Abuse and Corruption

In May 2024, Russell Edwin Clark, a lieutenant at Lee Arrendale State Prison, was arrested on charges of sexual contact with a prisoner. According to arrest warrants reviewed by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Clark allegedly fondled a prisoner's breast and kissed her under a dormitory stairwell — an area specifically noted as out of camera view at the Alto facility. Clark was terminated May 2, 2024, the same day as Alonzo McMillian, a deputy warden at Pulaski State Prison, who was arrested on separate but similar charges within 24 hours of Clark's arrest.

The fact that Clark chose a location deliberately outside camera coverage points to premeditation and knowledge of the facility's surveillance blind spots — a concern that extends beyond the individual case to questions about how those blind spots are identified and exploited. The GDC spokesperson stated that both men were terminated and that staff who violate their oaths are "immediately terminated and prosecuted." That framing obscures the structural reality: the AJC's broader investigation found more than 425 GDC employees arrested since 2018 for on-the-job crimes, the majority involving contraband but including sexual assault, brutality, and extortion. At Arrendale specifically, the 2024 arrest follows years of documented concerns about retaliation against women who report abuse — a dynamic that makes the true scope of staff misconduct impossible to fully assess.

## Retaliation, Legislative Obstruction, and Information Suppression

In 2021, GDC officials physically blocked state legislators from entering Lee Arrendale State Prison as they attempted to investigate allegations of inhumane treatment, inadequate medical care, and deaths of incarcerated women. Lawmakers were told they would need to make arrangements in advance — effectively ending an unannounced oversight visit. The incident is not isolated: the GDC spent six months fighting a DOJ subpoena for prison violence records, ultimately requiring a federal court order in June 2022 to force compliance. In March 2024, the agency announced it would no longer provide information on how prisoners are dying — a policy that GPS and investigative journalists have had to work around ever since using death certificates, family accounts, coroner records, and other independent sources.

For incarcerated women at Arrendale specifically, the culture of suppression operates at the cell-block level. GPS reporting has documented that women in the facility hesitated to report medical neglect because they knew it could result in solitary confinement or loss of privileges. When grievances are filed, retaliation has included transfers to lockdown units, fabricated disciplinary reports, confiscation of legal papers, and interference with mail and phone access to attorneys and journalists. Family members who have spoken publicly have reported denied visitation and mail returned. This ecosystem — in which institutional obstruction is matched by individual-level retaliation — is precisely what allows the conditions at Arrendale to persist undocumented and unaddressed.

## Legal Accountability and Settlements

The GDC paid $1.5 million to settle the wrongful death case of Agnes Bohannon, who was incarcerated at Lee Arrendale State Prison. According to the family's attorney, Darl H. Champion, Bohannon complained for days of serious illness but did not receive adequate medical care, and died as a result. Champion represented the family in a case that exemplifies what he described as interconnected systemic failures: understaffing, violence, lack of rehabilitation, and inadequate healthcare that cannot be fixed by addressing each problem in isolation.

The Bohannon settlement is part of a broader pattern of legal liability. Since 2018, the state of Georgia has paid out nearly $20 million in settlements for claims involving death or injury in GDC facilities — covering improper medical care, failure to protect prisoners from violent attacks, and failure to monitor prisoners who died by suicide. While these settlements represent documented legal accountability, they also represent the floor of what is known: many deaths remain unclaimed, families lack legal resources, and the GDC's refusal to release cause-of-death information makes it structurally difficult to build cases. The $1.5 million paid in the Bohannon case reflects what could be proven in court — not the full scope of neglect that GPS has independently documented at the facility.
