comments_image -

With Its Prisons Dangerously Full, Why Is California Fighting for Custody of a Dying Prisoner Across the Country?

While other states release low-risk, high-cost prisoners, CA officials want to jail another terminal prisoner, on taxpayers' dime.
 
 
LIKE THIS ARTICLE ?
Join our mailing list:

Sign up to stay up to date on the latest headlines via email.

 
 
 
 

Gloria Johnson-Ester was on her way to church early on November 2, 2008, when she received a phone call telling her that her son's prison sentence had been commuted, and he would be coming home after spending the last 15 years behind bars.

"I just went to church and cried and couldn't sit still. I just got overjoyed," she recalls, beaming. "I thought, 'He's free! He's free!'"

Her son, Montell Johnson, is terminally ill, struggling through the advanced stages of chronic progressive multiple sclerosis. According to the phone call to his mother, his condition had convinced former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich to grant him a rare executive clemency order, which commuted his sentence to time served.

The day after she got the good news, Johnson-Ester raced to government and social service agencies all over Chicago, applying for social security and Medicare benefits for him and trying to piece together a plan to care for him at her home on the South Side, where she lives alone. She cleared out her dining room to create a makeshift hospital room. When a parole officer called her to find out where Montell was going to live, she gladly reported that he would be staying with his mother.

But no sooner had Johnson-Ester begun her preparations than she was hit with news that would grind her frantic preparations to a halt. Despite the order for his release from the Illinois prison system, officials in California were now saying that rather than go home, her son should be transferred to their custody. As per a ten-year-old agreement between the former governors of Illinois and California, Montell Johnson was to be extradited to California, to finish out the remainder of a life sentence for a different crime. (In April 1997, Johnson was found guilty of murdering an alleged drug dealer during an altercation in a Los Angeles liquor store that took place three years prior. The trial, in which Johnson acted as his own attorney, resulted in a life sentence.)

Montell Johnson, once a stocky man, now weighs 70 lb. and is paralyzed from the waist down. On good days, he is able to move the upper left side of his body. On bad days, he is unable to speak. There is no hope that he will ever be able to rid himself of the feeding tube that provides him with sustenance, or the catheter and fecal bag that replace any modicum of independence. Occasionally, nurses have to use a suction device to remove phlegm from his throat when he is unable to cough or rely on an oxygen tank to help him breathe.

Johnson requires "total care," according to a court statement submitted this summer by Chicago neurologist Dr. Norman Kohn. "He is severely impaired in speech and communication. His speech is almost unintelligible," the statement reads. "He relies on his mother for communication and decision-making." Indeed, his mother has worked out a system in which she goes through the alphabet and he opens and closes his eyes to try to signal the words he is trying to say. She says she is the only person patient enough to walk him through the process.

Despite all this, California officials are pressing forward to take him back -- and the state of Illinois is cooperating. According to a sworn affidavidt by the Chief Legal Counsel for the Illinois Department of Corrections, an "air ambulance company" has already been contacted to arrange the transfer of Johnson to California. On August 5, Judith Harper, Assistant Chief Counsel for the CDCR wrote to James Doran, a lawyer in the llinois Attorney General's office, to "confirm our conversation this morning" that the CDCR "is expecting that [Johnson] will be returned to California to serve out the sentence imposed on him here."

submit to reddit

-
Email
Print
Share
LIKED THIS ARTICLE? JOIN OUR EMAIL LIST
Stay up to date with the latest AlterNet headlines via email
Advertisement
Most Read
Most Emailed
Most Discussed
On REDDIT
On DIGG
 
loading most read content ..
Advertisement
Republican NLRB Member Accused of Leaks to Romney Campaign Resigns

By Laura Clawson | Daily Kos Labor

 
 
Record 45% of Iraq and Afghanistan Vets Have Filed for Disability

By Muriel Kane | Raw Story

 
 
President Obama's Memorial Day Address: "Honoring Those Who Made the Ultimate Sacrifice"

By Julianne Escobedo Shepherd | AlterNet

 
 
"Tubes": What the Internet is Made Of

By Laura Miller | Salon

 
 
Students at Stuyvesant Take Issue With Sexist Dress Code

By Jill F | Feministe

 
 
Chris Hayes on Memorial Day: Glamorizing and Justifying War with the Term "Hero"

By Julianne Escobedo Shepherd | AlterNet

 
 
Cory Booker vs. Philly Mayor Michael Nutter on Mitt Romney

By BooMan | Booman Tribune

 
 
How Florida Governor Rick Scott Could Steal The Election For Mitt Romney

By Judd Legum | ThinkProgress

 
 
Renowned Economist Simon Johnson Calls for a National Safety Board for Finance Ticking Time Bomb

By Lynn Parramore | AlterNet

 
 
Veterans' Gap

By Ed Kilgore | Washington Monthly

 
 
 
 
 
loading ...
POWERED BY DIGG'S USERS
 
[ page served from web 1 ]