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Rights and Liberties

StopMax: The Fight Against Supermax Prisons Heats Up

By Jessica Pupovac, AlterNet. Posted August 11, 2008.


With former prisoners and their families at the helm, the movement to abolish supermax prisons and end solitary confinement is gaining ground.
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"When I left Angola," says Robert King Wilkerson, who spent 29 years in solitary confinement in Louisiana's notorious Angola State Penitentiary for a crime he was later found innocent of, "I said, 'I may be free of Angola, but Angola will never be free of me.'" Since his release seven years ago, the vow has taken him to rallies, churches and talk shows across the globe. Earlier this summer, it brought him to Philadelphia for the first-ever StopMax Conference, where he told stories, analyzed the state of the American prison system and collaborated with a throng of like-minded activists determined to "end the use of solitary confinement and related forms of torture in U.S. prisons."

Wilkerson is a former member of the Black Panther Party and one of the Angola Three. He spent more than 30 years in prison for the killing of a prison guard, along with two other former Black Panthers -- Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace -- before being exonerated by the state of Louisiana in February 2001. Woodfox and Wallace still languish in prison. They are the longest-held prisoners in solitary isolation to date in the United States.

On a Friday early this summer, Wilkerson addressed a crowd composed of both supporters and curious passers-by outside Philadelphia's Eastern State Penitentiary, which opened its doors in 1829 as the first institutionalized experiment in long-term solitary confinement. Over the past 40 years, with modern advances enabling an unprecedented level of isolation and control, the practice has been systematized, standardized and forced upon thousands of people across the country, from murderers to drug addicts and petty thieves.

Wilkerson was one of many modern-day solitary survivors who brought focus and momentum to the StopMax Conference, organized by the American Friends Service Committee. Bonnie Kerness, Prison Watch coordinator for the AFSC, said that over the past two decades, the organization has received an "astounding" number of letters from people in solitary confinement describing the abuse that occurs in their desolate cells. She told AlterNet that "they describe in excruciating detail," among other things, "the uses of devices of torture -- forced medication, restraint beds, restraint chairs …"

"And now we're also starting to hear from juveniles," she says, "so it's almost at a point where, how could we not respond?"

According to Kerness, alongside the piles of letters from prisoners, the AFSC has seen a corresponding rise in phone calls it receives from people around the country wanting to know more about the issue of solitary confinement and looking for ways to help friends and family in isolation stay mentally strong and combat the abuse. The conference, then, she says, was "a natural way to move forward."

The crowd that assembled at Philadelphia's Temple University for the StopMax Conference included a motley crew of about 400 people from diverse backgrounds and perspectives. Members of the United Church of Christ dined alongside dreadlocked media activists. Traditional Aztec dancers rubbed shoulders with psychologists and doctors. Native American religious leaders joked around with young college students and black-clad anarchists. An older, soft-spoken lawyer and community activist co-facilitated a workshop on the New Jersey Department of Corrections gang unit program with a prominent leader in the Almighty Latin Kings and Queens Nation.

All of these people and hundreds more spent three days strategizing, comparing notes and working toward a common goal: to end the use of solitary confinement running rampant, and largely unchecked, in the U.S. prison system.

Prison Nation

The United States has the highest per capita incarceration rate in the world, at 2.2 million people as of 2006, according to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. At any given time, an estimated 10 percent of those prisoners are being held in isolation, according to a new analysis of prison data compiled by Dr. Terry Kupers, a mental health adviser to prison facilities and a leading expert on the effects of solitary confinement. That translates into roughly 220,000 local, state and federal prisoners held in solitary confinement at any given moment.


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See more stories tagged with: prison reform, prisons, angola three, solitary confinement, herman wallace, albert woodfox, criminal justice system, supermax prisons, robert king wilkerson, stopmax conference, american friends service

Jessica Pupovac is an adult educator and independent journalist living in Chicago.

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» SPAM SPAM SPAM Posted by: strahlungsamt
Iron Curtain between the prisons and the Constitution in America?
Posted by: Richard House on Aug 11, 2008 1:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The “Marionization” of US prisons has played an important role for the imprisoning of America. There is no doubt about it that America has a brutal prison system, one reason I’ve keep my visits short and infrequent. Not because I’m guilty of anything but because there’s always a chance I could get pulled over by the police and eventually end up in a prison through errors in the system for some minor legal infraction which would be considered frivolous and a waste of the justice system’s time in most European countries. And once in prison, it usually gets worse (since most prison systems have no plan for rehabilitation; their main tasks being to incapacitate, deter, and punish. Period. And this from a nation which according to 90% of the population considers itself a Christian nation and from a country which wants to bring “democracy” to the world. The fault of America’s unjust prison system also lies in the decisions of our Supreme Court which has for decades set an unsympathetic tone for Eight Amendment prison cases. So the fault comes from the top in the home of the brave and the land of the free. They set the tone and now we know the end-game plan. And that there is very little intellectual debate over this in America between politicians, policy-makers, and psychologists shows me that America has no real intention on becoming a civilized society any more than North Korea.

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» Not a Christian nation Posted by: hankhawk
» RE: Christian nation Posted by: Harris20
StopMax: The Fight Against Supermax Prisons Heats Up
Posted by: Willy on Aug 11, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Given the authoritarian streak in our society and the fact that the prison industry is very profitable, the chances the current situation changing are very slim.

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the Quakers actually promoted solitary imprisonment, not imagining that it would be worse than
Posted by: Suzon on Aug 11, 2008 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
flogging. They thought that putting a bad man in a room with nothing but a Bible for company would transform him.

Isolation is but one part of the prison system that needs doing away with. The whole concept has a very vile and shameful source.

Monarchists thrive on other people's poverty since poverty leads to crime (sometimes through genuine need, like stealing food, other times through a need to escape a painful reality through drugs) and crime allows the rich to castigate the poor. The rich need "criminals" to distract us from the fact that poverty is deliberately (if not consciously) caused.

How judges can conclude that isolation isn't cruel and unusual punishment is beyond me. People are social animals. Scientific fact. To deprive any animal of its natural behaviour (stopping a chicken from scratching with its feet, for example) is cruel. Scientific fact.

We should let most of the prisoners out and put most of the CEOs and all of their enabling politicians inside. The world would be a far safer place if we did.

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» Visit Prisoners Posted by: PaulK
Only a limited role
Posted by: brunowe on Aug 11, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The idea of using SuperMax confinement for disciplinary cases is absurd. However, there is a case for using it as an alternative to capital punishment.

There needs to be an additional level of punishment for capital crimes committed by people serving life without parole (which is the alternative to the death penalty). SuperMax can be used for that.

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» RE: Only a limited role Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: Only a limited role Posted by: brunowe
» RE: Only a limited role Posted by: reelectnoone
» RE: Only a limited role Posted by: brunowe
Don't think it can happen to you? Guess again!
Posted by: aussidawg on Aug 11, 2008 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our prison population thrives because of overzealous politicians, prosecutors, and judges. These worthless dirtbags use the misfortune of others or lack of knowledge of existing laws to advance their own careers at the expense of others. If you ever happen to check out what your state legislator do during session, you will find that they are constantly passing new laws, many of which are felonies, for the most obscure of reasons. Then you have the "for profit" prison industry, those corporations such as CCA and Whackenhut whose bottom lines depend on prevelant crime. Further, many of the investors in these for profit prisons are judges, district attorneys, and others in the criminal justice field who stand to profit by sending more inmates to these facilities. These for profit prisons are notorious for mistreating prisoners in order to cut corners on operating costs (food, sanitation, inexperienced guards, etc.) When one considers all of the drug laws, domesic disturbance laws, DUI laws, sex crime laws (date rape?), tax laws, perjury laws, gambling laws, prosititution laws, traffic laws, and all of the other many laws that most people have no idea even exist, it really isn't all that difficult to find yourself facing prison time. So it should be everyone's concern that these frequent cases of solitary confinement exist. Just one minor slip up, you may find yourself facing this very thing!

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THINKING ABOUT ROBERT HANSSEN
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Aug 11, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He's in the prison in Colorado considered the worst in the country. He was an FBI agent who sold secrets to the Russians for 15 yrs. He had the highest level of gov. clearance so who knows what they got and what they did with it. My question: is he there as 'punishment' or because we aren't supposed to know exactly what he stole and passed along. It's not as though 60 Min. can go there and interview him. Many secrets are safe in those prisons. ANNA

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Prisons thrive for many reasons
Posted by: nfamous on Aug 11, 2008 9:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are many reasons the prison system in America thrives. One and the most important is white fear of nonwhite people. Second is rampant corporatism and the prison industrial complex. Third is the complete lack of rehabilitation. Fourth is the criminal background checks that keep ex-cons from finding gainful employment once they are released resulting in recidivism. Fifth is the criminalization of petty drug crimes like marijuana possession. Until all of these corporatist and racist practices are ended nothing will or can change. It's that simple. Americans have to demand change because politicians are bought and owned by corporations.

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Jesus of Nazareth got the max
Posted by: PaulK on Aug 11, 2008 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For 2000 years and more, this has happened over and over. People get the max because they were just a bit too progressive. In Jesus's case He was politically unpopular with the Pharisees, so He was railroaded into a conviction, lumped into a threesome and was crucified between two thieves.

These days, the feds don't go after Osama Bin Laden, they go after the domestic Quakers. The IRS goes after an Episcopal Church in Southern California for having a preacher deliver a borderline sermon.

The problem with building a vast American Gulag is that it tempts corrupt politicians to use it for the purpose of political revenge. We have a rotten to the core democratic structure, and you reading this are a potential target.

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Heading down a well-trodden path ...
Posted by: stellabloo on Aug 11, 2008 9:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... and cheerfully oblivious to boot!

Two million prisoners and counting is alarming enough, but China is still ahead of the US. Eleven hundred known labour camps exist in China housing between 10-20 million people, in fact the very basis of China's thriving economy.

I don't know if I was more surprised that Laogai and Re-education Through Labour (RTL) still existed or that political institutions the world over have conspired to keep me ignorant of this fact my entire life. I mean, it's not like it's making headlines? And hence my post ....

My obvious concern is that at some point the pols will get the idea that the huge prison population here could be put to good use in the same way, ultimately making the prison system self-supporting if not downright profitable. And apparently we're already there - elderly prisoners run call centres and convicts are now being shipped across state lines to work in the newly revived chain gangs - please correct me if I'm wrong! Because I don't like the way this is going ... :.(

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Supermax waste of money...
Posted by: jackpagan on Aug 11, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If it's a clean cut murder case, the best option for everyone is to but the beast down. Once you cross that line, there is no rehabilitation. It's a waste of money and resources to have them locked up in any capacity.

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Also note this long-time organization. CURE
Posted by: reelectnoone on Aug 11, 2008 2:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This organization has been leading the fight to bring sense to a bad justice system for more than 30 years. Check them out.

CURE


International CURE

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Nothing new here
Posted by: zorba1 on Aug 11, 2008 7:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Way back in the 1950's when i was 13, i layed out our school principle.
He kept refering to my dad as a DP, finally i could not take it anymore.
I was sent to "reform" school.
I rebelled there and spent five months in solitary confinement.
It had a stainless steel john with no seat, a SS sink, a concrete rack with no mattress and a shielded light which was always on.
Food trays were pushed through a slot in the door,the food was always cold.
I had the runs a lot, at night they pushed in a blanket.
I had to wear a gown, no clothes or shoes.
The worst was twice a week i was taken to a special room for behavoral modification.
I was strapped to a gurney, eletrodes were attached to my ankles and temples, a 3/4" oak stick was put in my mouth to keep me from biting my tongue off and the psychiatrists and psychologists turned up the juice so much sometimes i bit through the stick and once broke a 6" wide leather strap across my chest.
Was that cruel for a 13 year old?
It was legal in Ohio in the 1950's, when my parents tried to sue later when they found out the case was dismissed by the court.
I took the "treatments" for eight weeks, they only stopped when they realized i would not give in.
Each time they turned the juice off i was asked questions.
I answered saying i would kill them or simply fuck you. (After all my ancestors were Spartans.)
It was already an old type of modification when i got there.
As a result i hated judges, cops, social workers, psychiatrists and psychologists for years. Every time i hear one of them gets killed i am honestly happy and celebrate.
I try to be a good Christian but my hate for these scum never fades.

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