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Rights and Liberties

When the One You Love Is Behind Bars

By Silja J.A. Talvi, Colors Northwest. Posted February 2, 2008.


A justice system reporter explains how she fell in love with a jail-bound man and how their relationship was strained by his prison sentence.
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A story like this needs to be told, but it's painful in the telling.

I write articles for a living, because I need to tell people's stories. It's a blessing -- and sometimes a painful aspect of my existence -- that people from all walks of life seem to want to tell me their stories, whether I ask to be told or not. Sometimes I seek those stories out to begin with, and sometimes I ask permission to turn their stories into articles that allow others to listen to them. Journalism comes naturally to me. But I think of my profession more as a way of letting the stories be heard and considered than as a "career" that I've chosen for one reason or another -- and wealth or fame are certainly not among them.

I love writing meaningful stories of all kinds, but there's one kind that's my particular passion: "muckraking" journalism. Within that broader field, I've specialized in criminal justice/prison issues for the past decade. Through personal interviews, statistical analysis, research studies -- and a wide variety of visits to jails and prisons nationwide -- I've always sought to uncover what really happens behind imposing, concrete structures, barbed wire and the confines of tiny prison cells which now contain 2.24 million Americans. (The U.S. has the highest per-capita rate of incarceration in the world.) My work has always been framed in the context of the imperative that our society should provide fundamental civil and human rights for all. As a result, I have a rather obsessive passion for getting to the bottom of things, to understand why people behave the way that they do, and how social trends and public policies evolve (or devolve) in the way that they do.

Again, my journalism been about other people, but this is a different kind of story, about the pain and lasting trauma of experiencing my loved one getting arrested on a nonviolent drug charge. It's about the struggle to keep both of us going both during and after he was thrown into the vortex of the prison system.

It had been an awful, nearly unbelievable coincidence that Tommy* was sentenced shortly after I signed a book contract to write about the plight of women in prison. For the first few months after his arrest and sentencing, I didn't know what to do with myself. I had seen and interviewed so many people moving through the various echelons of the system that I initially reasoned that I could handle it. After all, I thought I knew what to expect. I understood criminal law, and what I knew from prisoners about doing time. But when arrest and imprisonment happens to a loved one, it cuts so deep that you start to feel as if you're serving time along with him. I had to watch Tommy struggle visibly with the untreated mental illness that directly contributed to the behavior that got him arrested in the first place. I watched him get marched into depersonalized jail hearings and treated like trash.

Like most drug-possession-related defendants in this country, Tommy pleaded guilty at the recommendation of just about everyone involved in his case. I didn't disagree, especially if it meant the possibility of a shorter sentence. The hard evidence was overwhelming, obtained through a number of "snitches" and two undercover buy operations. Tommy was selling ecstasy, actually eating most of it himself in an ill-fated attempt to try to stay "happy" after he lost custody of his kids; survived several suicide attempts; and had been living on the streets for several months.

Say what you will, but I had taken Tommy in six months before his arrest. All of this started with a chance meeting at a bus stop downtown. I sat alone, the way that I do almost everywhere I go, holding my own against any kind of chaos that might swirl around me. But Tommy broke through with the look in his eyes: sincere, kind, and a bit of an awkward goofiness that made me smile. After that, I kept running into him all across the city. Tommy's eyes still lit up, and he still had that goofy grin when he saw me, but he seemed worse for the wear. A couple of months later, I saw that the man with the gentle smile was on the verge of giving up altogether. He had nothing left, and I had something to give: a warm home, a couch, and the knowledge that he would not steal from or take advantage of me. People thought me crazy, but I knew that he needed to know, unconditionally, that someone actually gave a damn about whether he lived or died.

No matter what you think of that -- and there are many reading this who find the very idea of taking in a homeless person or his drug use reprehensible -- I saw the remnants of a brilliant, beautiful spirit in Tommy. In a way that was quite familiar to me, I saw that he was self-destructive, trying to stay afloat in the only way that made seemed to make sense to him at the time. I can't explain it, but we fell in love. Tommy moved in, and I set about trying to help him make it through.


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Silja J.A. Talvi is an investigative journalist and the author of Women Behind Bars: The Crisis of Women in the U.S. Prison System (Seal Press: 2007). Her work has already appeared in many book anthologies, including It's So You (Seal Press, 2007), Prison Nation (Routledge: 2005), Prison Profiteers (The New Press: 2008), and Body Outlaws (Seal Press: 2004). She is a senior editor at In These Times.

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» pathetic fool... Posted by: gazooks
The Absurd Cost of Institutionalized Vindictiveness ...
Posted by: gazooks on Feb 2, 2008 5:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... is paid and repaid in an endless chain of organized, reinforced, compounding misfortune.

We should all be required by conscience and self interest to personally witness the system of "justice" that we so passively accept for our presumed "safety and security".

Anyone who actually has seen it from the inside in a purely observational perspective as opposed to one of it's 2 million or so unnecessarily imprisoned non violent inmates, can readily attest to it's myriad, mindless contradictions, it's stifling atmosphere of putrid, social hypocrisy and it's relentless refinement and reinforcement of motives for violent behavior.

From the detention of the emotionally immature, socially and parentally disregarded, and violently victimized teens, the millions of neglected mentally ill, societal misfits, patrons of "vice", the economically desperate and the obscenely greedy, the civil dissenter, and the completely innocent victims of circumstance to the most malevolent sociopaths our system of "justice" is our nations most abject failure and self perpetuating enterprise of violence and corruption.

It is an expansive, commercially exploitive industry replete with lobbies that utilize federally mandated sentencing guidelines to stack the supermax with profits for life, partnering ambitious prosecutors and corrupt judges for filling the needed commodity with horrific human cost at enormous public expense.

Our judicial system is now the instrument by which our fascist leadership secures a future of fearful submission and regimentation. It not only cultivates the fear of crime it aggressively manufactures criminals as a means.

When we have a political environment that harbors yet another Attorney General with the backbone and moral constitution of a whelk, and a Congress largely composed of lawyers that have no sense of honor to anything higher than their own ascension to a higher level of corruptibility, the light of hope for our culture dims to an imperceptible grey.

In this political year with it's frenetic dialog of war and economy, while the toll on those issues deserves our relentless attention, here in the land of the free 1 in 137 is no longer able to comment here, vote or have the daily decision to meet personal needs at will.

As that number continues it's trend, and there are corporate interests banking that it will, it should strike those of us still able to muster the consciousness that the war(s) of abroad compete with the war right here at home.

We all must wonder when any one of us may be unwittingly included when it's 1 in 136, 135, 134 and what the consequences are to a culture of acquiescence.

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advice
Posted by: waltermoss on Feb 2, 2008 10:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This story reminds me a lot of my girlfriend's former room mate. Interestingly, this girl was Scandinavian as well (Swede), working in the US as a nanny. Anyhow, she was dating an African American guy back in the Bronx for about a year. I think she had some pretty fantastical ideas about this man. She was always talking about how he was going to "make it" with his hip-hop career and would take good care of her. What I saw was that he never seemed to be at work, had 3 kids with two different women, complained about money, but had the cash to buy an Escalade (yes with fancy rims...to complete the cliche). In short, the guy was a bum and probable drug dealer.

Well, this girl got pregnant, moved in with him and gave birth to baby #4. Soon after, while she was in the city with her parents (who flew in from Sweden for the Christening) men broke into their apartment and shot her boy friend (over drug business), killing him in their bed. The only good parts of this miserable story are that she was away with the kid (being spared), and that she is now free from this disastrous man.

So, advice to the author: these stories always, always end badly. If your family and friends are distancing themselves, it's probably for a good reason; they don't want to see the inevitable wreckage that occurs from following a bad, unwise path. From the sketch you made, this guy "Tommy" sounds like a wretch. He is incapable of taking care of himself or his children (don't get pregnant). It's unlikely he'll ever be anything more than a burden on you.

The world's unfair to him? Well, he's part of this world. Is it fair that his kids don't have a father? Is it fair that he's taking advantage of a kind-hearted hippie?

Listen to the sensible advice you get from your loved ones and stop being mooched off of by some street hustler...you're an educated woman! If you choose to carry him, stop complaining about how hard it is. It was your choice to take this guy in, your choice to pay for his mistakes, and your choice to continue paying.

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» RE: advice Posted by: Joe
» RE: advice Posted by: Vic Fedorov
» RE: advice Posted by: desidid
Dear Silja and Tommy
Posted by: kerttu on Feb 2, 2008 2:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am amazed by your courage to go on and to think about a better tomorrow. That to me is the true American spirit, besides the true spirit of courage.
As the world and it's people keep pounding you to the ground, please, do know that there is one old lady who admiers your courage.And if I am one in a million there are nine of me in New York City alone and about 300 in America
May the force be with you.

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Welcome to the Prison-Industrial Complex
Posted by: nherkowitz on Feb 2, 2008 8:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a very accurate story about what happens. People who have not had to deal with the so-called justice system don't have clue how it really operates. The fiction that you received about justice when you were in school is nowhere near reality.

Actually this story is probably a little bit kind to the system. You didn't add in the items about the $1 a minute phone calls which profits the politicians.

The whole system is designed to destroy the people and their families who are in it. It should be known as the criminal vengeance system. You get no help in jail or out of jail. Governments spend a fortune to operate the police and jail systems, but won't spend anything on probation officers or any help once the prisoner is released.

The whole justice system is a crooked scandal, not unlike our military and secrecy service. Billions of dollars wasted on corporate welfare that accomplishes nothing except enrich those with enough influence to take advantage of the system.

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thank you
Posted by: P. Sophia on Feb 2, 2008 8:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for writing this article.


excerpt from review of play: Titled “Relative Captivity,” Kelso's work is the result of seven years of research exploring how the relatives of those in prison are equally impacted by what has happened to their loved ones.

partial review below

'Relative Captivity' captures audience's attention at HSU
Beti Trauth/For the Times-Standard
Article Launched: 12/06/2007 01:27:29 AM PST

Seeing a new play is always as fascinating a theatrical experience as it is totally unpredictable, especially when the work is truly a world premiere script in its initial, infant stages of development.

However, when it's time to finally bring the rehearsals to an end and display the collective result on stage in front of an audience on opening night, that's when the real artistic test begins.

That's when all of the ideas and visions that have been swirling around in the playwright's head have completed the first series of steps in the creative process.

Now the script has evolved into dialogue, the dialogue into conversation -- verbal exchanges that illuminate the thoughts of the characters as they deal with the challenges of communicating with each other.

It's tricky business as each tells their side of a story that has impacted their lives, a challenging process that could ultimately break down the emotional barriers that separate them from understanding another human being.

It's all about relating and relationships -- about love and hate, laughter and tears, anger and loss, separation and incarceration, freedom and captivity. When all is said and done, it's all relative. That's the paradoxical nature of the bold new play written by HSU professor, Margaret Thomas Kelso that opened its limited run last weekend in HSU's intimate Gist Hall Theatre.

Titled “Relative Captivity,” Kelso's work is the result of seven years of research exploring how the relatives of those in prison are equally impacted by what has happened to their loved ones.

And, yes, in spite of the crimes they may have committed, these prisoners still have relatives outside who care, but people whose own lives have also been negatively impacted. Some deal with it, some don't.

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Prisons dont work...
Posted by: The_Curse on Feb 2, 2008 9:46 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here in my state, there are several "for profit" prisons. I have heard from folks in jail that what goes on there might be better described as torture. It is unlikely someone will come out of a US prison a "rehabilitated" person. When one comes out of the jailhouse, they go onto a probation of some kind and they (parole officers) are just scrutinizing everything the person does. The scrutionizer does not offer any advice like give them suggestions on how to live a better life, but if the parolee makes one slip up, back to jail no questions asked. There may not even be a hearing right away, (for parolee's you can be arrested and held indefinitely without trial up until the end of your sentence) it's the officer's word that keeps them locked up. Folks caught up in the legal system are often assumed guilty and will often catch the blame for things upon release into society. Very rarely are there actual working treatment options that actually rehabilitate. And the overall "Amerikan" method of incarceration that includes power with out any sort of checks and balances to it no accountability on the jail officials or corrections department. If I made make ten sprockets and nine break I would probably get fired, but most prisoners that come out of our USA prison complex usually end up back inside within a month or so. Prisons don't work.
I also think our prison system is heavily influenced by money, such as $30,000 per inmate per year that goes to the prison housing them. It is unsustainable and in the end I can imagine a lot of changes and a lot more activism that or the government taking more and more freedoms away that we used to take for granted...

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please don't bash the author
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Feb 2, 2008 11:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
please don't bash the author. there is a universe of women in love with and supporting inmates. check out www.prisontalk.com to see how common this is. i don't support women falling in love with inmate pen pals but it's an epidemic.

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Know people out of jail?
Posted by: Vic Fedorov on Feb 3, 2008 9:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know people who have been in jail, mostly for a month or two, but several longer, and several very long, and they all seem to be doing as well as they are doing.

They engaged in stupid behavior, and the police cracked down on them, and they realize the limitations to society; but to a man they are not at all messed up by jail time, because they were either messed up well before, or because they are proactively dealing with what happened nor ever want to go to jail again.

Frankly all the men I know who have been to jail, are men in perhaps the truest sense of the word, in that they are scraping to get by, enjoy getting by, stay out of trouble, and suceed in their own way. They were not destroyed by prison, quite the oposite, there is some instillation of manners and understandings that can make a person a better person.

The connundrum of prison is that we are a forgiving society. Despite what the mainstream media projects, we are generally a christian and humane society when it comes to being wronged. I have seen a man killed and his family feel no vengeance to the truck driver, quite the oposite, it was beauty within tragedy.

And the problems people have are caused by a society that does not put their head together and think about what they want from tomorrow locally.

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The benefits of doing the time (where is my tongue)
Posted by: GPFrank on Feb 3, 2008 11:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sun> Feb. 3,2008
Comments on Alternet Postin(Rights and Liberties)"When the One You Love is Behind Bars), Silja J.A. Talv February 3,2008

1.Prison is the cure for crime, right? Therefore our beloved country that has the most prisons
and the most inmates per capita is the paradise most free from crime among nations. Aristotelean logic,
enjoyed by monks and scholars of the Middle Ages. Perhaps we should include among our national hymns, such as,
'Stone walls do not a Prison Make.".

2. While in Wisconsin I spent enough time waiting and working in jails and prisons for a class B misdemeanor,
on behalf of some charged .
. But what comes to me most is the descriptions in Alexander Solynetsin's "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch".
I think it is on account of of "Ivan" not daring to turn his head either to the right or to the left
under peril of getting shot. by guards with ready rifles.
Now perhaps we and our prisoners should think how lucky it is guards in America do not carry rifles,
only blackjacks and handcuffs, along with those minute by minute instructions. How fortumate it is, then
not having to decide what to do at any time., unless disobedience is actually a decision.

3. For the investor, then, looking for profits; consider seriously the yields from new prison construction,
and agencies that hire correction officers.As prison population in Grafton County, NH almost doubled from 60 to 112 in four years
the prospect is that it may double again in a short time.Warren Buffet could not do much better than that.
While taxpayers may feel hard pressed by proposals for a new prison , consider the boost to the economy.
in Grafton County, NH

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codependent and enabling
Posted by: mnlefty on Feb 4, 2008 8:50 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do not support prison sentences for drug offenses for the most part, and I do sympathize with many aspects of the situation, but please step back and take a look at your actions. You took in a homeless addict because you had love to give? What exactly are you getting out of this relationship? I am more worried about your mental state than his!! I am sure he's a lovely guy, but seriously...he has kids he doesn't care for, he apparently has mental health issues that cause him to have psychotic episodes in public. Oh yeah, and he could be selling ecstasy to my kids. I do not mean to 'bash' the author but your 'love' sounds more like an addiction than a healthy, mature relationship.

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Triumph of the Spirit: the author's take.
Posted by: siljatalvi on Feb 8, 2008 6:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was about as vulnerable a piece as I've ever written, and so the heartfelt compassion is a balm to my soul. The vitriolic presumption and judgment here is another matter. In these cynical days, even vulnerability and the triumph of spirit can be fodder for 'mean-speak.'

Re: the most recent of these postings, I can only say (with just a bit of an acidic bite) that 'self-help-speak' is usually the product of someone so obsessively immersed in that world that emotional projection is a likely result.

Other tangential off-base comments to correct. Finland isn't a Scandinavian country. We have our own, non-Scandinavian language, a distinctly separate migratory history, and a particularly stubborn, headstrong culture built on the notion of "sisu:" a tenacious sense that nothing in our path is insurmountable. W are indeed considered a Nordic country (just as Sweden is), largely united in the idea that social welfare is actually a good idea in the short- and long-term.

Another clarifying point. As much as we should value their contribution to the spectrum of American subcultures, I am absolutely *not* a hippie. Not in the past, present, or future. I take umbrage, sir! For the record, I am a very complex human product of the early-mid-80s L.A. hardcore punk scene, with bits of the San Francisco punk scene interspersed whenever my steel toes would take me running up that way. I suppose I would have been one of those dregs of humanity being posted about by an armchair pundit on a popular political website. That is, if they had existed back then. (The websites, that is, not the armchair pundits.)

There are certainly nuances to this story that I couldn't or wouldn't share with the public at large. Having said that, the notion that I am pathetic for having fallen in love with "Tommy" is a presumption without basis and utterly offensive, to boot. I wasn't sitting at a bus stop in the Seattle winter cold, looking desperately for love. I found it in the most accidental and unusual of ways.

The life experiences of the man I fell in love with aren't alien to me. I may be an enigmatic woman behind a byline these days, but I've also been the individual who has lost all hope with the world around her, and with herself. I've lost friends to suicide, to AIDS, to senseless gang violence. From a very early age, I saw my peers in L.A. get tossed into the juvenile justice system and come out worse for the wear. Perhaps you haven't walked those kinds of paths, or seen anyone suffer the ravages of poverty, untreated mental illness, or violence. This story may even be threatening to you in some fashion, for reasons that even you can't explain.

Prejudice like this is disheartening, but it is also a strong reminder of how we can build so many cages to hold human beings without asking why, and toward what end? I always ask my readers to consider that the people so easily castigated live all around us. Mental illness and economic deprivation are all around us. The 7 million Americans who do time at some point in any given year are scattered throughout this land. They're more than likely to be somewhere in your extended family. They work, live, eat, walk, and suffer right alongside you, and they're not going to disappear because you wish them away or wish them ill.

I don't romanticize anyone's plight, much less the plight of all people in prison. While I believe in the potential of most human beings, I tend to approach them with tremendous caution. I wrote this piece because I feel a constant imperative to report on the darker shadows of our country's darkest corners, and to tell the stories of people who would otherwise not be heard. Right now, my voice is one of those, alongside that of my partner's. As with most individual stories, there's a thread, a link to a greater truth, often unheard.

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I am like you
Posted by: Cheryl on Feb 8, 2008 9:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I, too, fell in love with a man who has many difficulties and is now in jail. I admire your openness and honesty. I know what it is like to have people say the kinds of things that people have said to you in these comments. If your love works, it works for you and it will be good for you in your life. We all have troubles. What I don't understand is this jail system. I have never felt so utterly controlled and utterly without power to help someone. I can't call him and I can only visit a few hours a week. I never get any information about him and only rudeness from people I contact. Sigh.

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» RE: I am like you Posted by: siljatalvi
» RE: I am like you Posted by: Cheryl