Category: Torture No Prisoners

Every State Needs a Law against Torture

Your State Needs This Law

1.  A person is guilty of torture if he intentionally causes severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, to be inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity.  It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.

2.  Torture includes solitary confinement in any correctional facility beyond seven days, except when there is the threat of imminent physical harm to the prisoner or others, but any such exception must be approved by a justice of the Superior Court after a hearing at which the prisoner is present.

3.  Torture is a Class C crime.

4.  A person who tortures another also commits a civil violation.  The court shall adjudge a civil fine of not less than $25,000 for the first violation, none of which may be suspended, and a civil fine of not less than $50,000 for a 2nd or subsequent violation, none of which may be suspended. The court also may order a person adjudicated as having violated the laws against torture to pay the costs of the medical treatment and care for the person tortured.

For information contact George at: 415 464 7744 or george@katrinasdream.org

Email after the 2009 Episcopal Convention

Dear Family and Friends,

Just a few minutes ago the House of Bishops concurred with a previous action by the House of Deputies and passed resolution C020 against torture “in any location in the world.”

The first to speak to the resolution was George Packard, Bishop for Chaplaincies, including the Armed forces of the United States.  A decorated hero from Vietnam, Packard praised the resolution and urged Episcopalians to support all members of the armed forces whose lives may have been injured by Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo.
For Packard’s remarkable life story CLICK HERE

The second speaker was Catherine Roskam, Suffragan Bishop of New York.  She seconded Packard’s remarks about international torture and pointed out that the second resolve supported the “cessation of torture in American jails, prisons, and immigration detention centers.”  For a description of Roskam CLICK HERE

The Episcopal church calls upon “lawyers who are Episcopalian and dioceses . . . to procure or provide pro bono legal counsel to help defend any Episcopalian in military, police . . . who faces discharge or disciplinary action for refusing to order, engage or assist in torture….”

The Episcopal Church calls “upon the United States government, and all governments, individuals and organizations in any location in the world to comply with the Geneva Conventions and the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights . . . enacting policies to prevent the use of torture and extraordinary rendition both domestically and abroad.”

Finally, in response to the National Religious Campaign Against Torture the Episcopal Church calls “upon the President and Congress to devise and implement truth and reconciliation-based methods of accountability to make transparent to the American people governmental practices of torture and extraordinary rendition.”

Needless to say I am deeply grateful to a great many people here at the General Convention — too many to list at this time — whose decency and political wisdom caused this resolution to pass.

The text of the resolution is below my name.  Probably a few words will be adjusted in the final “editing” of all resolutions.

Surely the dear G-d is with and within you always.  Let us hold the torturers and the tortured in our hearts so they may know the love of the dear G-d in their hearts.  They have suffered so much.

George

Resolution:

C020

Title:

Condemnation of Torture

Topic:

Human Rights

Committee:

09 – National and International Concerns

House of Initial Action:

Deputies

Proposer:

Diocese of Newark

Resolved, the House of Bishops concurring, That the 76th General Convention condemn the use of torture and the practice of extraordinary rendition by the United States and any government, individual or organization in any location in the world; and be it further

Resolved, that Episcopalians shall not engage in, order, or assist in the torture of any human being, and shall not counsel the use of torture for intelligence gathering or any other purpose; and be it further

Resolved, that lawyers who are Episcopalians and dioceses are urged to procure or provide pro bono legal counsel to help defend any Episcopalian in military, police, civilian governmental or contractor service who faces discharge or disciplinary action for refusing to order, engage or assist in torture, or for refusing to approve or to provide counsel justifying the use of torture for any purpose, or who faces discharge or disciplinary action for exposing such practices; and be it further

Resolved, That the General Convention call upon the United States government, and all governments, individuals and organizations in any location in the world to comply with Geneva Conventions and the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the administration of Justice, enacting policies to prevent the use of torture and extraordinary rendition both domestically and abroad; and be it further

Resolved, that the General Convention call upon the President and Congress to devise and implement truth and reconciliation-based methods of accountability to make transparent to the American people governmental practices of torture and extraordinary rendition.

Press Release: Malcolm Boyd’s New Poem

Manset, Maine – June 25, 2009 – Katrina’s Dream published a new poem today by Malcolm Boyd about torture in American prisons.  The poem connects torture in our American jails and \in Anaheim this July to pass a resolution asking Congress to outlaw torture in American jails and prisons.  The resolution is on the internet at http://www.opinion.katrinasdream.org/?p=107 

Boyd, 86, is poet/writer-in-residence at the Episcopal Cathedral Center of St. Paul in Los Angeles.  After a career in Hollywood and television, Boyd was ordained an Episcopal priest.  He founded a college coffee house in Colorado and opposed segregation in Louisiana in 1959. He joined 27 other Episcopal priests, Black and white, in a Louisiana Freedom Ride in 1961, and registered voters in Mississippi and Alabama in 1965, the year “Are You Running with Me, Jesus?” was published.  A fortieth anniversary edition has been published with additional poems.

In 1966 national media reported on his gig reading prayers and his dialogue with audiences about God in the San Francisco nightclub, the hungry i.  He performed with Dick Gregory, Vince Guaraldi and Charlie Byrd.

The New York Times wrote, “Malcolm Boyd is a latter-day Luther or a more worldly Wesley, trying to move religion out of ‘ghettoized’ churches into the streets where people are.”  In 1968 Boyd was with Martin Luther King, Jr. in a nonviolent protest against the Vietnam War inside Arlington Cemetery, directly below the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.  He was arrested in the Pentagon for being part of a Peace Mass protesting the Vietnam War.

Bobby Dellelo, 67, spent 40 years of his life in reform schools and prisons, five years in solitary, with three escapes.  He works on the American Friends Service Committee Criminal Justice Program.  He was featured in the March 30, 2009, New Yorker Article “Hellhole” about torture in solitary confinement.

Katrina’s Dream was founded in memory of the late Katrina Martha Swanson, one of the “Philadelphia Eleven” ordained priest irregularly in 1974.  When the Equal Rights Amendment was voted down, Katrina always said the Pledge of Allegiance, “With Liberty and Justice for Some.”  Katrina’s Dream is dedicated to the full inclusion of women in society and Liberty and Justice for All.

Among other justice issues, Katrina’s booth at the Episcopal Convention will support a resolution that “requests the Congress of the United States to prohibit torture including long-term solitary confinement and every cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of prisoners in all prisons, jails, and other places of confinement within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction, following the definition of torture in the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.”  Bobby Dellelo will help staff the booth at the Episcopal convention and speak at the legislative hearing on the resolution which he helped write.

Change Us
By Malcolm Boyd
General Convention 2009

We’ve mainstreamed torture, haven’t we, Jesus?  Turned it into just another word in the clutter of everyday news.  Not something to work up any sweat about.  It seems to me our worst sin is to torture people who are already in our power as prisoners.  Like people in our prisons.  Like Bobby Dellelo.


The 33 years you spent with us here, Jesus, including when we nailed you, still hasn’t taught us what we need to know about love and justice, has it?  Our prison system seems an agonizing and endless system of crucifixion.  Why don’t we wake up, Jesus?  Prison torture is torture of flesh and blood beings.  It’s not unlike our torture of you when you dwelt among us.


Please convert us, Jesus, to work against prison torture.  Change us into community organizers for peace, justice, nonviolence and your love.  Thank you, Jesus.

First Email from the 2009 Episcopal Convention

Dear Family and Friends,

The General Convention is a window into the Episcopal Church.

The exhibit hall is one example.  We see the foolish expenditure of lavish booths — some with piles of silver and gold chalices costing thousands and thousands of dollars — displayed in architecturally marvelous booths.  There are also booths of indigenous people around the world selling various items to support their very lives.  There are a few progressive movers and shakers — troublers of Israel — who want justice to flow in every direction.  And sales of Bishop’s Blend Coffee to help poor coffee farmers.  Publishers sell mostly expensive books on prayer, bible study, and self improvement.

The debates have been thoughtful and generous — as far as I have seen.  Bobby Dellelo has covered the House of Deputies.  I am now in the House of Bishops as they debate the possibility of studying possible liturgies for blessing same gender couples.

I fear that the General Convention will — inadvertently — condone torture INSIDE American jails, prisons, and immigration detention centers.   The unintended consequences of C020′s silence on torture in America is, in fact, condoning torture in America.

Here is the current resolution against torture — C020.

CURRENT VARIANT
/Resolution:/    *C020*
/Title:/    *Condemnation of Torture*
/Topic:/    *Human Rights*
/Committee:/    *09 – National and International Concerns*
/House of Initial Action:/    *Deputies*
/Proposer:/    *Diocese of Newark*

————————————————————————

/ Resolved,/ the House of Bishops concurring, That the 76th General
Convention condemn the use of torture and the practice of extraordinary
rendition by the United States and any government, individual or
organization in any location in the world; and be it further

/Resolved, that Episcopalians shall not engage in, order, or assist in
the torture of any human being, and shall not counsel the use of torture
for intelligence gathering or any other purpose; and be it further/

/Resolved, that lawyers who are Episcopalians and dioceses are urged to
procure or provide pro bono legal counsel to help defend any
Episcopalian in military, police, civilian governmental or contractor
service who faces discharge or disciplinary action for refusing to
order, engage or assist in torture, or for refusing to approve or to
provide counsel justifying the use of torture for any purpose, or who
faces discharge or disciplinary action for exposing such practices; and
be it further/

/Resolved/, That the General Convention call upon the United States
government, and all governments, individuals and organizations in any
location in the world to comply with Geneva Conventions and the United
Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the administration of
Justice, enacting policies to prevent its use /the use or torture and
/extraordinary rendition both domestically and abroad/; and be it further/

/Resolved, that the General Convention call upon the President and
Congress to devise and implement truth and reconciliation-based methods
of accountability to make transparent to the American people
governmental practices or torture and extraordinary rendition./
Members of the National and International Issues legislative committee told me that it does not refer to torture in our jails, prisons and immigration detention centers.

—————————————————————————–
So we have asked a few bishops and a few deputies to add the following phrase to C020:

including American jails, prisons and immigration detention centers

Sadly enough — if they only condemn FOREIGN torture they are offering silent acceptance of domestic torture.  They will have failed to consider Sheldon Weinstein — attacked in his cell on April 20, 2009 in a Maine Prison.  He was a sex offender.  The guards left his cell door open.  Guards are aware that sex offenders are often killed by other prisoners.  He was kicked in the groin over and over again.  He died four days later. Nothing new.  Just what happens in prison.

One can see Maine guards Macing a naked prisoner in the face after he is strapped into a restraint chair.  It’s on the web at:  CLICK HERE

A BBC documentary shows torture in jails and prisons all over America:  http://novakeo.com/?p=109

Some things have really helped our cause:

Last night Malcolm Boyd gave a DYNAMIC poetry reading backed by inspired jazz musicians — guitar, piano and drums.  The reading was held in the Jazz Kitchen, a Disneyland bar.  Boyd was flying high — soft gentle poems in loving phrases — loud strident rhythms of painful subjects.  Boyd explained about torture INSIDE America — and recited the poem in the second attachment.  He wrote this poem in response to a request from Katrina’s Dream — about torture in American prisons and about Bobby Dellelo.  For a press release about Boyd –  CLICK HERE

On Sunday Bobby Dellelo gave a moving personal talk as one of the Consultation speakers.  Ed Rodman introduced him and led a question session afterwards.  People listened to Bobby and asked good questions.

Now it is late at night.  Time for sleep.

Blessings always,

George

The Poem Challenges Torture

Katrina’s Dream published a new poem today by Malcolm Boyd about torture in American prisons.  The poem connects torture in our American jails and prisons with Jesus’ suffering.  The publication is timed to encourage the Episcopal Convention in Anaheim this July to pass a resolution asking Congress to outlaw torture in American jails and prisons.  It is on the internet at http://www.opinion.katrinasdream.org/?p=114

Change Us
By Malcolm Boyd
We’ve mainstreamed torture, haven’t we, Jesus?  Turned it into just another word in the clutter of everyday news.  Not something to work up any sweat about.  It seems to me our worst sin is to torture people who are already in our power as prisoners.  Like people in our prisons.  Like Bobby Dellelo.
The 33 years you spent with us here, Jesus, including when we nailed you, still hasn’t taught us what we need to know about love and justice, has it?  Our prison system seems an agonizing and endless system of crucifixion.  Why don’t we wake up, Jesus?  Prison torture is torture of flesh and blood beings.  It’s not unlike our torture of you when you dwelt among us.

Please convert us, Jesus, to work against prison torture.  Change us into community organizers for peace, justice, nonviolence and your love.  Thank you, Jesus.


Boyd, 86, is poet/writer-in-residence at the Episcopal Cathedral Center of St. Paul in Los Angeles.  After a career in Hollywood and television, Boyd, was ordained an Episcopal priest.  He founded a college coffee house in Colorado and opposed segregation in Louisiana in 1959. He joined 27 other Episcopal priests, Black and white, in a Louisiana Freedom Ride in 1961, and registered voters in Mississippi and Alabama in 1965, the year “Are You Running with Me, Jesus?” was published.  A fortieth anniversary edition has been published with additional poems.

In 1966 national media reported on his gig reading prayers and his dialogue with audiences about God in the San Francisco nightclub, the hungry i.  He performed with Dick Gregory, Vince Guaraldi and Charlie Byrd.  The New York Times wrote, “Malcolm Boyd is a latter-day Luther or a more worldly Wesley, trying to move religion out of ‘ghettoized’ churches into the streets where people are.”  In 1968 Boyd was with Martin Luther King, Jr. in a nonviolent protest against the Vietnam War inside Arlington Cemetery, directly below the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.  He was arrested in the Pentagon for being part of a Peace Mass protesting the Vietnam War.

Bobby Dellelo, 67, spent 40 years of his life in reform schools and prisons, five years in solitary, with three escapes.  He works on the American Friends Service Committee Criminal Justice Program.  He was featured in the March 30, 2009, New Yorker Article “Hellhole” about torture in solitary confinement.

Katrina’s Dream was founded in memory of the late Katrina Martha Swanson, one of the “Philadelphia Eleven” ordained priest irregularly in 1974.  When the Equal Rights Amendment was voted down, Katrina always said the Pledge of Allegiance, “With Liberty and Justice for Some.”  Katrina’s Dream is dedicated to the full inclusion of women in society and Liberty and Justice for All.
Among other justice issues, Katrina’s booth at the Episcopal Convention will support a resolution that “requests the Congress of the United States to prohibit torture including long-term solitary confinement and every cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of prisoners in all prisons, jails, and other places of confinement within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction, following the definition of torture in the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.”  Bobby Dellelo will help staff the booth at the Episcopal convention and speak at the legislative hearing on the resolution which he helped write.

Contacts
Katrina’s Dream:   George Swanson,   415 464 7744,  george@katrinasdream.org
Malcolm Boyd:    malcolmboyd@ladiocese.org
Boyd is on the web at
http://malcolmboyd.com/nineties.htm
Bobby Dellelo:   339 226 0475,   bdellelo@yahoo.com
Dellelo is described in the New Yorker Article “Hellhole”
Click Here

Malcolm Boyd’s Poem

We’ve mainstreamed torture, haven’t we, Jesus?  Turned it into just another word in the clutter of everyday news. Not something to work up any sweat about. It seems to me our worst sin is to torture people who are already in our power as prisoners. Like people in our prisons. Like Bobby Dellelo.

The 33 years you spent with us here, Jesus, including when we nailed you, still hasn’t taught us what we need to know about love and justice, has it?  Our prison system seems an agonizing and endless system of crucifixion. Why don’t we wake up, Jesus?  Prison torture is torture of flesh and blood beings.  It’s not unlike our torture of you when you dwelt among us.

Please convert us, Jesus, to work against prison torture. Change us into community organizers for peace, justice, nonviolence and your love. Thank you, Jesus.

– Malcolm Boyd

Author of “Are You Running with Me, Jesus?”

KatrinasDream.org Booth at July 2009 Episcopal General Convention

Our Agenda at General Convention

We will strive for justice and peace build respect for the Dignity of Every Human Being.
Baptismal Covenant—Prayer Book page 305

The booth will pursue the church’s mission: to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ and promote justice for women, prisoners, Indigenous Peoples, and students in Africa.  The words in italics are from the first two questions about the church on page 855 in the Prayer Book.

We will promote justice for women by disseminating information from organizations such as the EgualRightsAmendmend.org.  Click her for the ERA organization.

We will promote the newly formed network, Connecting Anglican Women in Theological Education (CAWTE) by handing out their brochures and bookmarks.  CAWTE was recognized and endorsed at the recent Anglican Consultative Council meeting in Jamaica: Click Here for Article on CAWTE.
We will promote justice for prisoners and respect for their dignity as human beings by lobbying for our resolution asking Congress to outlaw torture in all American jails and prisons.  Bobby Dellelo, a victim of fives years torture in solitary confinement will be at the booth to educate deputies and bishops about prison torture.  He will also speak at the convention’s legislative hearing on the resolution.  Bobby is quoted in a March 30, 2009 New Yorker article “Hellhole.”  Click Here for the New Yorker Article.
We will promote a resolution would put the Episcopal Church on record condemning the doctrine of discovery and supporting Indigenous People’s call for repudiation of the 1496 Royal Charter granted to John Cabot and his sons and other similar Royal Charters which sanctioned European invasion of the Western Hemisphere.

We will promote justice for students in Africa by publicizing the work of Think Tank Thuto.  Click here for Think Tank Thuto’s Web Site. 
Last summer we asked the bishops at Lambeth to welcome women and children and men, straight and gay, equally in Jesus name.  We will Ask General Convention to do the same.  We will give away pins with Katrina’s picture and the words “God is Beyond Gender” that we gave to hundreds of bishops in Canterbury at the Lambeth conference last summer.  We will also give away the story of Katrina’s lifelong pilgrimage into inclusiveness that we distributed at Lambeth.

A Resolution for General Convention

Title:  Prohibit the Torture of Prisoners in the United States of America

Resolved, the House of _________ concurring, that the 76th General Convention requests the Congress of the United States to prohibit torture including long-term solitary confinement and every cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of prisoners in all prisons, jails, and other places of confinement within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction, following the definition of torture in Part 1, Article 1, Paragraph 1 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.

Explanation:

“If you have done it to one of the least of these you have done it to me.”  Testimony of guards and prisoners and photographs of prisoner abuse provide evidence of torture in our prisons.  A federal law is necessary to stop torture because prisoners are commonly transferred from one state to another.

The United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment defines torture:

1. For the purposes of this Convention, the term “torture” means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.

Who Gets Tortured Most?

We torture tens of thousands of prisoners in the USA.

They are largely BLACKS, HISPANICS, MENTALLY ILL, POORLY EDUCATED, just plain POOR, and if any of the above speak out and demand justice and fair treatment they are shipped far away from friends and allies as POLITICAL PRISONERS.

A BBC documentary on USA prison torture is at:
http://novakeo.com/?p=109
An Official Maine Department of Corrections video shows a Swat Team cutting the clothes off a prisoner, carrying him naked and screaming down a hall, strapping him in a restraint chair and Macing him in the fact.  This is at:

http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/other_stories/documents/05104664.asp

The previous sites describe physical torture and murder.  A recent article in the New Yorker shows mental torture of perhaps more than 50,000 people:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/03/30/090330fa_fact_gawande
Lance Tapley’s talk to the National Lawyers Guild about torture in solitary confinement is on KatrinasDream.org at:
http://www.opinion.katrinasdream.org/?p=100
God, bless America and its prisoners.

Washing State Prison Reform?

          Summary

Report by The Washing State Institute for Public Policy

Under current long-term forecasts, Washington
State faces the need to construct several new
prisons in the next two decades. Since new
prisons are costly, the 2005 Washington
Legislature directed the Washington State
Institute for Public Policy to project whether
there are “evidence-based” options that can:
  • reduce the future need for prison beds,
  • save money for state and local taxpayers,
  • contribute to lower crime rates.

We conducted a systematic review of all
research evidence we could locate to identify
what works, if anything, to reduce crime. We
found and analyzed 571 rigorous comparisongroup
evaluations of adult corrections, juvenile
corrections, and prevention programs, most of
which were conducted in the United States.

We then estimated the benefits and costs of
many of these evidence-based options.
Finally, we projected the degree to which
alternative “portfolios” of these programs
could affect future prison construction needs,
criminal justice costs, and crime rates in
Washington.

We find that some evidence-based programs
can reduce crime, but others cannot. Per dollar
of spending, several of the successful
programs produce favorable returns on
investment. Public policies incorporating these
options can yield positive outcomes for
Washington.

We project the long-run effects of three
example portfolios of evidence-based options:
a “current level” option as well as “moderate”
and “aggressive” implementation portfolios.
We find that if Washington successfully
implements a moderate-to-aggressive portfolio
of evidence-based options, a significant level of
future prison construction can be avoided,
taxpayers can save about two billion dollars,
and crime rates can be reduced.

Suggested citation: Steve Aos, Marna Miller, and
Elizabeth Drake. (2006). Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction, Criminal
Justice Costs, and Crime Rates. Olympia: Washington
State Institute for Public Policy.

          Legislative Direction for the Study

The legislative language directing the Institute’s
study is shown verbatim in the accompanying
sidebar. In brief, the legislation requires the Institute
to study the net short-run and long-run fiscal savings
to state and local governments if evidence-based
intervention, prevention, and sentencing alternatives
are implemented in Washington State.
The Institute is directed to examine three broad
types of public policy options the legislature could
consider.

1. Intervention programs. For people already in
Washington’s juvenile and adult correctional
systems, the language directs the Institute to
estimate whether investments in evidencebased
programs could cost-effectively lower
recidivism rates and, as a result, the need for
additional prison beds.

2. Prevention programs. The legislative
language also instructs the Institute to estimate
whether investments in evidence-based and
cost-beneficial prevention programs could help
reduce the need for future prison beds. Since
most prevention programs are for young
children, effective evidence-based prevention
resources can be expected to affect adult prison
use in the longer run. Prevention programs hold
the potential, of course, to offer other near-term
and long-term advantages, such as improved
educational outcomes. In this report, we include
some representative prevention programs but, in
order to complete this report on budget, we were
not able to update our earlier study of prevention
programs.2 Subsequent versions can include
additional prevention programs.

3. Sentencing options. The legislation directs the
Institute to examine possible changes that could
be made to Washington’s sentencing laws,
including sentencing alternatives and the use of
risk factors in sentencing. These options are to
be analyzed in conjunction with the Washington
State Sentencing Guidelines Commission.
After analyzing the economics of each of these
policy options, the task for the study is to project the
total fiscal and prison bed impacts of alternative
implementation scenarios. The goal of these policy
choices is to allow the legislature to consider
different combinations of options that have the ability
to keep crime rates under control while also lowering
the long-run fiscal costs of Washington’s state and
local criminal justice system. In financial terms, this
means identifying “portfolios” of policy choices that
replace lower rate-of-return investments with
strategies that produce higher rates of return on the
taxpayer’s dollar.

Source and Complete Report:  CLICK HERE

NAACP leader challenges Maine prison policies

By LANCE TAPLEY  |  December 10, 2008

Like a movie hero, the NAACP’s new, young national president, Benjamin Jealous, swept into the 900-inmate Maine State Prison in Warren on Monday, quelling protests among the prisoners and, at least temporarily, rescuing the organization’s prison chapter from being snuffed out by state corrections officials.

This is the story as told by inmate Michael Parker, the chapter’s leader. He said Jealous and representatives of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s Portland branch were the prison group’s “saviors” in negotiations with state Corrections commissioner Martin Magnusson and prison officials.

But prison budget cutbacks — Magnusson admitted they were a behind-the-scenes cause of the contention — may get worse, and their consequences could again stir up inmates, who treasure their few social and service activities, which they saw being squelched.

One of the most active prisoner groups, with about 70 inmate members, the NAACP had protested the prison’s recent tightening of control over prisoner organizations. Officials had demanded approval of groups’ officers, strict limitations on fundraising — including on total dues, thereby capping enrollment — and a maximum of one meeting a month per group.

“Since July we’ve only been able to meet twice,” Parker said in a prison interview. The new policies, he added, would have destroyed the organization.

The NAACP was also concerned that the new restrictions would kill the “re-entry” program it has proposed to help prisoners get ready for life in the outside world as their sentences end. The prison provides little re-entry guidance. And the NAACP feared its program of providing educational videos to inmates would die.

The policies also upset other inmate groups. The 25-year-old Long Timer’s Group had complained in a letter to the Phoenix that the restrictions had ended its program of photographing prisoners with family members in the visitors’ room.

More broadly, a Long Timer’s Group representative, Charles Whitehouse, protested “degeneration in every crucial area of prison life: food, activities, programs, visits, mail, and overall staff attitude toward rehabilitation.”

Emerging from the closed-door negotiations, Magnusson and Jealous said in a news conference they had agreed the controversial policies would be re-examined, with a January 15 deadline for results from the next round of negotiations. Magnusson said he had never intended to cap enrollment in prisoner organizations.

He and Jealous also announced that the NAACP prison voter-registration drive held earlier this year would become annual, and that Magnusson would ensure prison staff would not treat Parker unfairly because of his activism. Parker has previously complained he has been “harassed” by guards. Magnusson admitted “inappropriate action” had been taken against the 32-year-old Parker, who is serving 20 years for robbery and assault.

“This facility is small enough to solve problems,” observed Jealous, who has been involved in prison issues around the country. Nationally, African Americans are imprisoned at a much higher rate than whites.

Magnusson said he had instituted the rules to treat each prison group equally, though he conceded that “budget problems” — not enough staff to “cover” prisoner group meetings — were one reason for promulgating them.

But now Magnusson’s tight prison budget may get tighter, as state government braces for another round of cuts by Governor John Baldacci and the Legislature to deal with a recession-induced gap between tax revenues and expenses over the next few fiscal years. The gap is expected to run into many hundreds of millions of dollars.

“There’s no question we’re going to have reductions,” Magnusson said, noting he’s already straining to pay overtime — necessitated by guard shortages — and has cut back on guard training.

Jealous, 35, an activist since the age of 14, took charge in September of the country’s oldest civil rights group, headquartered in Baltimore. He previously had directed Amnesty International’s US human-rights program. A Columbia University graduate, he was a Rhodes Scholar at England’s Oxford University.

Early in the day, Jealous had spoken to students at Portland’s Deering High School, his father’s alma mater. He had also addressed close to 100 inmates at an NAACP meeting at the prison.

In the evening, Jealous charged up several hundred people as the keynote speaker of a colorful, emotional, joyous, and sometimes somber celebration of International Human Rights Day at the University of Southern Maine. The NAACP and Amnesty International also sponsored the event. A multiethnic children’s chorus sang, and a Jewish rabbi, a Muslim imam, and a Hindu recited prayers remembering the Mumbai terrorist victims. Human Rights Day is actually December 10, the 60th anniversary of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Introducing Jealous at the USM event, Rachel Talbot Ross, the Portland NAACP president, turned to Governor Baldacci, who had spoken briefly, and told him commandingly: “We got some work to do, governor, at the prison!” The audience applauded.

Baldacci, who has kept a hands-off attitude toward the prison’s problems, also clapped, but weakly.

Source:  Click HERE.

Mass Torture in America

Mass Torture in America
And how to stop it
By Lance Tapley
An address given at the National Lawyers Guild
70th Anniversary Convention in Washington, D.C.
on October 31, 2007.
Some prisoners howl in constant agony.

On Halloween, I have a true ghost story to tell: the story of 50,000 ghosts in America, the largely invisible inmates of our solitary-confinement “supermax” prisons.
What is their life like? It is torture. It is isolation, sometimes for years — 23 hours a day in a tiny cell, with the other hour in a small cage outdoors. It’s sensory deprivation — usually, no radio or TV and few books. If you are disobedient, you may suffer beatings and Mace in the face when Swat teams “extract” you to put you in a restraint chair. Feces, urine, and blood coat the cellblock walls, floors, and ceilings — splattered there by the many insane and enraged men. Guards “checking” on prisoners deprive them of sleep, and so does the usual pandemonium; like ghosts, some prisoners howl in constant agony. Inadequate food is shoved through an unsanitary slot in the door. The prisoners get poor medical and dental care; in Maine, many Supermax inmates are not allowed toothbrushes. Mental health care is a cruel joke. Medical professionals are complicit in the torture; they try to keep prisoners capable of enduring more suffering. Guards sexually humiliate prisoners and taunt suicidal ones. Rare “no contact” visits with family take place through a window and a tinny speaker. Prisoners typically are allowed one telephone call a week. There is arbitrary censorship of mail and little or no access to education and other possibilities for rehabilitation. Read the full post »