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Prison guard charged with smuggling cellphones into California’s death row

An armed California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation officer stands guard at San Quentin State Prison's death row on Aug. 15, 2016. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)

A prison guard and two others have been charged with a scheme to smuggle contraband cell phones into California’s death row, authorities said Wednesday.

Keith Christopher, a 37-year-old corrections officer at San Quentin State Prison, is charged with conspiracy to commit honest services fraud using interstate wires, the U.S. attorney’s office said in a statement.

A judge in San Francisco on Wednesday appointed a public defender to represent Christopher and released him on $50,000 bond, prosecutors said.

Isaiah Wells, from Tracy, Calif., and Tanisa Smith-Symes of Las Vegas, Nevada face the same charges. Wells also was released on bond Wednesday while Smith-Symes had a scheduled court hearing Thursday in Las Vegas.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether they had attorneys to speak for them.

Federal prosecutors say that the three conspired to smuggle 25 cell phones into the prison’s East Block, where condemned inmates are housed. Authorities allege that Smith-Symes had a relationship with a death row inmate who sold the phones for up to $900 each.

“Cell phones create safety and security risks for prison employees and other inmates, and state law deems them contraband and prohibits their possession by inmates,” the U.S. attorney’s statement said.

If convicted, Christopher could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.