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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

AFSC Releases “Survivors Manual” By and For Prisoners in Solitary Confinement

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/07/31/afsc-releases-survivors-manual-by-and-for-prisoners-in-solitary-confinement/

July 31, 2012

The American Friends Service Committee has put out a new edition of the vital publication Survivors Manual: Surviving in Solitary – A Manual Written By and For People Living in Control Units. The volume is a collection of letters, stories, poetry, and practical advice on surviving solitary confinement in prisons. AFSC released the following announcement last week:
Solitary confinement, characterized by 23-hour a day lockout with minimal exercise and lack of human contact, affects an estimated 100,000 prisoners in federal and state prisons in almost every state. Thus the need for “Survivors Manual,” which was first issued in 1998, is even more vital.

“The isolation of solitary confinement is torture according to the United Nations Convention Against Torture. The extended use of solitary severely affects all prisoners’ mental health, making re-entry to society all the more difficult. For those with pre-existing mental conditions, such consequences are even worse,” says Bonnie Kerness, Prison Watch Coordinator for AFSC.
In this powerful collection of voices from solitary, people currently or formerly held in isolation vividly describe their conditions and their daily lives. They also write about how they struggle to keep mind, body, and soul together in an environment that is designed to break them down. Many also analyze the political, economic, and social forces that shape their torturous situation. The collection also includes some stunning artwork and poetry.

A PDF of the manual is available online at the following link: http://www.afsc.org/document/survivors-manual-surviving-solitary. Copies can also be purchased for $3 each at the following site: http://www.quakerbooks.org/survivors_manual.php.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/MichiganCPR

Washington Prisoner Subjected to Solitary Confinement for “Involuntary Protection”

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/07/30/washington-prisoner-subjected-to-solitary-confinement-for-involuntary-protection/

July 30, 2012

A recent News Tribune article highlighted the relatively limited use of solitary confinement in Washington state. Only 2.7 percent of the state’s 17,800 inmates, or about 400, are currently held at the maximum custody level. According to Washington Department of Corrections policy, those placed in the Intensive Management Unit (IMU) are there for either being disruptive to the institution or for protective custody purposes. In the IMU, inmates are allowed one hour of exercise time  five days a week and three 10-minute showers a week.

The total number held in isolation, however, is unclear. Aside from the 2.7 percent officially held in solitary, those placed in Administrative Segregation units are not counted. Inmates in Ad-Seg may be there for days or months.

D. has been incarcerated for twenty years in Washington State. While Washington state claims to limit it’s use of isolation, D.’s experience has consisted of spending all of 2008, 2010, 9 months of 2011 and several months in 2012 in the IMU and Ad-Seg.

Disturbingly, D. has been repeatedly held in isolation for the purposes of “involuntary protection.”
In 2008, he was sent to the Monroe Correctional Complex IMU. While there, he “spent four months in a cell with two uninsulated walls exposed to outside temperatures and no heat in the cell during one of the “coldest springs in Washington State history.”

“We not only froze that spring, but also had to nearly riot to get medications (mine were heart, blood pressure, diabetes and pain) regularly as prescribed,” he recalls.

“Our breakfasts, every day, consisted of 2-packets of instant oatmeal with no hot water to prepare it, we had use just warm sink water; 2-boiled eggs and a banana. Lunch consisted of the general population’s previous nights dinner, placed on trays, refrigerated then reheated. Dinner, served at 3PM, was 1 sandwich, two vending machine sized chips, 1 cookie or cupcake, two pieces of fruit. We would try to save something from dinner for later, but the lunch portions were so small or inedible, we’d be too hungry for dinner to save anything,” D. says.

“One of my biggest complaints regarding solitary confinement is that it’s whole ‘intended purpose’ is being abused. As soon as a new IMU is opened, it is filled with inmates who were caught with tobacco, tattooing, verbal confrontations with staff…it’s also the quickest and most convenient way to resolve a conflict between an unaffiliated inmate and a ‘security threat group’ member.”

D. would be among those unaffiliated inmates “punished” for being attacked. As he tells it, on December 27, 2009 D., an African-American man,  was attacked by a white inmate while he spoke on the phone. In self-defense, D. fought back and knocked out the white inmate. The Shift Lieutenant, after viewing video of the incident, told D. that he “should be released back into my living unit, without any disciplinary action being taken against me.”

One month later, he remained in segregation. “In spite of being all alone in a cell, and no one being able to get out of their cells, I was taken to IMU South where I say for four more days, not even knowing why I was placed there. Then I was given an Ad-Seg referral, stating that a correctional officer had received confidential information that white inmates planned to kill me (being extremely upset over the injuries my attacker received, during his assault on me),” D. recalls.

At an Ad Seg hearing, he was told that he was recommended at a recent classification hearing that he be placed in medium custody. However, he was told that, due to his “defacto life-without-parole” sentence, his “transfer to medium custody would not be a priority.”

“By placing you on Ad Seg, with a request to transfer, your move will become a priority,” the hearing officer allegedly told D.

One month later he remained in solitary. “We are still waiting for Olympia to tell us to move you,” D. was told. He was finally transferred. To a segregation unit at Coyote Ridge Corrections Center.

For seven weeks, he remained in isolation, waiting for word that he would be transferred to a medium Custody facility. Instead, the Classification committee in Olympia voted 4-1 to have him sentenced to a six month IMU term at Stafford Creek Correctional Center.

Paperwork he was given from the Classification hearing read: “Assign to Max Custody/IMS [Intensive Management Status] Program at Stafford Creek; Earn and maintain six months infraction free behavior, level-4 privileges, complete Anger Management, Offender Change Program, and submit Behavior Modification Plan. Consideration for release to general population after six months.”

D. was reportedly told by the Associate Superintendent, who was among those who voted for his placement in IMU, that “I’m not being punished, but being placed in IMU for my own protection.”
D. describes his bleak IMU experience. “You are not allowed meaningful recreation, just an hour of exercise an empty 15 x 12 cell, no church attendance, real library service or educational programming. All of your personal possessions are denied to you. You will remain in your 7×12 cell for 23 of every 24 hours five days a week. Two days a week you will not come out of your cell at all. You will eat all of your meals within a few feet of your toilet. You will be in handcuffs each and every time your cell door is opened for any reason.”

Though D. is no longer in isolation, he has indicated that he feels prison authorities would place him back into isolation on a whim.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/MichiganCPR

Citizens for Prison Reform NAMI Walk 2012 - Walk with us!

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Rasaan Turner: Give young offenders a chance to change

From the Detroit Free Press:  http://www.freep.com/article/20120708/OPINION05/207080461/Rasaan-Turner-Give-young-offenders-a-chance-to-change?odyssey=nav|head&utm_source=News+Roundup+July+13&utm_campaign=WNR+7-13&utm_medium=email

July 8, 2012

As a 17-year-old, I constantly make mistakes as I travel the confusing path to adulthood. Every day, like many young people, I am faced with decisions that can lead to either personal growth or childish nostalgia.

So I find it incredible that a Michigan law forced judges to sentence someone as young as 14 to life in prison, without parole. That means your life is over before it barely begins, without an opportunity for redemption or a second chance.

The U.S. Supreme Court has taken the right step by deciding that mandatory life sentences for juveniles who are convicted of murder are unconstitutional. But life without parole remains a sentencing option for judges. State legislators can take that ruling one step further by prohibiting judges from sentencing juveniles to mandatory life in prison.

Michigan prisons hold more than 350 juveniles, people who were sentenced to mandatory life sentences before they were old enough to vote, legally buy cigarettes, or even have an eBay account.

Worse, about half of those young people didn't actually kill anyone. They got caught up in an action that led to tragic consequences. That doesn't make them blameless, but it shouldn't close any opportunity for change or growth.

Young people are inexperienced, and the majority of us love learning. Teaching requires seasoned hands to share one of their most sacred gifts: their knowledge and experience. And as pupils, we can't help but be excited that someone is patient and kind enough to share their treasure.

Kanye West may not have become the icon he is today if Jay-Z hadn't taken a risk and taken him under his wing. Now they stand side-by-side as colleagues, musicians and friends, as they did during last week's BET Awards.

Fourteen-year-old Joshua Smith killed his mother, Tamiko Robinson, after she tried to stop his involvement in a gang. No doubt, he killed someone and deserves to be punished. But should 100% of the burden be laid on his shoulders? What about the gang he associated with, the environment he was raised in, the video games he played?

"The 'prime time' for emotional, physical, social and motor skill development in children is birth to 12 years of age," said Sean Brotherson, a family service specialist at North Dakota State University. "A parent's efforts to nurture and guide a child will assist in laying healthy foundations for social and emotional development."

Children need to be seen as developing human beings, not future menaces to society.

Rather than force young people to spend the rest of their lives in prison, a judge could sentence young offenders into the juvenile system, where they could get help to make the changes they need. Then, upon reaching adulthood, the judge could determine, based on the juvenile's progress, whether he or she needs additional time in the adult prison system.

Such an approach would save money, too. It costs about $35,000 to house a prisoner annually, or nearly $2 million for a juvenile lifer who would spend his entire life locked up. That's money society could better spend on recreation centers, libraries and other services for young people and reduce crime.

As a 17-year-old who is still a work in progress, I know even the most reckless and immature of us can grow beyond measure. Don't lock the leaders of tomorrow in jail and throw away the key, without first recognizing our potential to become more.

Rasaan Turner, 17, of Detroit is a high school apprentice at the Detroit Free Press.


**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org

Friday, July 27, 2012

PCS Telcom website has moved

Are you having problems finding PCS Telcom website?...They have moved!  The new site is:
http://www.pcsdailydial.com/



Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/MichiganCPR

Greater Lansing Out4Life Coalition Meeting - Lois DeMott Presents

Watch Lois on You Tube!

http://www.youtube.com/watchv=Fgv0yO8MWTo&feature=my_liked_videos&list=LLKgoL75UyOjBn3YXPjrA_Ug


Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org



Opinion: N.J. sets a progressive example for juvenile justice reform

From NJ.Com:  http://www.nj.com/times-opinion/index.ssf/2012/07/opinion_nj_sets_a_progressive.html?utm_source=News+Roundup+July+13&utm_campaign=WNR+7-13&utm_medium=email

By Matthew M. House

“Youth matters,” as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan has said.

In her majority opinion in Miller v. Alabama, decided June 25, Kagan traces a history of legal precedent to the logical conclusion that mandatory sentences of life in prison without the possibility of parole are unconstitutionally cruel punishment for juveniles.

As a juvenile justice advocate and student of legal history, it appears to me that the court’s holding seems obvious, but juvenile law reform has not gone far enough. The same rationale differentiating youth from adults when considering the harshest sentences also underpins other compelling legal questions.

More than 100 years ago, in Weems v. United States, the Supreme Court recognized the “basic precept of justice that punishment for crime should be graduated and proportioned to both the offender and the offense.“

Through Miller and several other recent landmark juvenile cases, the court has reaffirmed that premise.
It is inconsistent with that principle to allow states to charge those under 18 in adult court, for example. Further, incarcerating juvenile offenders who are not dangerous contradicts the founding mission of the juvenile model, a rehabilitative counterpart to the punishment-focused adult penal system.

Now that Miller has cast a spotlight on the fundamental differences between the maturity and judgment of adults and adolescents, it is time to examine why the United States tries so many juveniles as adults. More than 200,000 juvenile cases go to adult court annually, though only 5 percent of juvenile arrests are for violent crime and only 24 percent are even for crimes against persons.

The original juvenile court framework permitted trying youth as adults in extreme circumstances. However, today’s proliferation of transfers to adult court abuses what the pioneers of the system intended as a rare exception. The court system faces increased but undue public pressure to exact harsher punishments on juveniles. Neither scientific research nor legal history supports that shift.
Juvenile sentencing is also outmoded and ineffective. Judges rely on incarceration today as the pioneers of the juvenile court never would have supported. The juvenile system aimed to reform youth with forward-looking strategies, an approach now abandoned in favor of more punitive means. The United States jails more adolescents than any other nation — 336 per 100,000 — five times more than the next-highest country.

To accomplish what? Up to 62 percent of youth released from juvenile custody are rearrested within three years. By contrast, Missouri, a model of reform by its de-emphasis on incarceration, boasts a three-year re-incarceration rate of 16 percent. Rehabilitation works; communities deserve to be safer, instead of merely feeling safer.

New Jersey also prioritizes reducing its dependence on incarcerating juveniles. The Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative named New Jersey its first “Model State.” New Jersey’s count of incarcerated adolescent offenders is 40 percent lower than the national average.
New Jersey has the eighth-lowest rate of juvenile incarceration among the 50 states, despite having the ninth-highest rate of adolescents arrested for violent crimes. From 2003 to 2008, most New Jersey counties reduced in-custody juvenile populations more than 25 percent. The state jails fewer youth because balancing the needs of the offenders and the community is more effective.

Such reforms are also economically sensible. Beyond being vastly less effective, incarceration is exponentially more expensive. Nationwide, the average yearly cost to hold a juvenile in custody is more than $70,000 — up to 20 times the price of alternatives. We are paying more but getting less.

However, there is hope. The most expedient improvements will come from addressing overreliance on incarceration and adult court.

New Jersey’s emphasis on society-wide collaboration respects the original juvenile court’s commitment to integrating delinquents rather than isolating them.

In New Jersey, mentors from the communities where the youth reside connect the juveniles with resources and help them take responsibility for preventing crime in their neighborhoods. The Juvenile Justice Commission trains and supports the mentors, who collaborate with youth services authorities.
If the juvenile system held only those dangerous to the community or to themselves, the population of secure juvenile facilities would plummet by 90 percent. Juvenile departments would better meet a wide spectrum of needs. Secure facilities, if more sparingly used, would cease to be money-hemorrhaging meeting halls for low-level juvenile offenders to compare notes with more experienced criminals.

Letting judges decide whether a case merits a rare transfer to adult court will also return juvenile court to its roots. Prosecutors with no duty to the accused, and legislators needing votes from constituents rattled by rare instances of high-profile juvenile crime, should not usurp the function of the unbiased judge.

Although the Supreme Court is gradually restoring the character of the juvenile court system, the recent Miller decision should not be unduly celebrated. Despite New Jersey’s progressive example, juvenile justice throughout the United States as a whole is still gasping for breath.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Suicide in Solitary: The Death of Alex Machado

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/07/24/suicide-in-solitary-the-death-of-alex-machado/

July 24, 2012

Alexis “Alex” Machado was a prisoner at Pelican Bay State Prison’s isolation units for nearly two years when he took his own life on October 24, 2011.

According to the autopsy report, Machado was last seen alive at approximately 12:15 AM “as he was examined and then cleared by medical staff for a complaint of heart palpitations.” Thirty minutes later, at 12:45 AM, an officer found Machado and reported that “….Machado [was] hanging inside his cell…” He was seen “sitting on the floor with a sheet tied to his neck and the sheet tied to the top bunk.”

Concluded the autopsy: “The decedent died as a result of asphyxiation due to strangulation by hanging.” Toxicology reports were negative.

As institutional records and letters from Machado in the year leading up to his death show, he had been suffering severe psychological problems in response to his prolonged isolation. Once a jailhouse lawyer whose writings were both clearly and intelligently composed, his mental state would decline at Pelican Bay.

Machado had been incarcerated since 1999 on a robbery charge and a related shooting. He was sentenced to an 80-to-life prison term. Described as an intelligent and thoughtful man with a warm smile by his sister, Cynthia, he generally experienced no problems in his initial 11 years of incarceration. For most of his time, he was held at Kern Valley State Prison.

Things began to change in late 2007, when a race riot took place. “The prison said he was the one who started the riot,” according to Cynthia, “when he really had nothing to do with it.”

His involvement in the riot would result in his being placed in Administrative Segregation Unit (ASU) in December 2007. Though he was never officially found guilty for the riot, prison gang investigators would begin to build a case for his validation as a gang member. In December 2008, he was placed in the ASU again for “manufacturing a weapon”; in January 2009, a confidential informant was officially cited by prison officials as evidence of his gang activity.

He was finally validated as a gang associate, in large part due to the confidential informant, on February 4th, 2010.  In his appeal of the validation, he argued that the source items used in his validation were insufficient, saying that “these allegations are not true and I initiated nothing.”

He further charged in his appeal that his validation as a gang member was in retaliation of his acquittal in the racial riot case.

He was sent to Pelican Bay to serve an indeterminate SHU sentence on February 17th, 2010 from the Kern Valley ASU.

Being screened into Pelican Bay, he reported no psychological problems.

Soon after arriving, however, he reported in letters that he was consistently harassed by the guards. In a letter dated March 10th, 2010, he wrote that “when I first got here an officer told me that he was being pressured to make a bogus psychologist referral on me…I guess they want to make it look like I am going crazy.” He reported that guards took him to debrief in an attempt to make him look like an informant. Further, he was told that a green light (hit order) had been placed on him; a claim that he didn’t believe.
An ASU classification document indicates that he received some mental health services in May 2010, and previously in October 2009.

A mental health chronos indicates his first significant problem at Pelican Bay surfaced on January 24, 2011 with a mental health referral from a correctional officer for paranoia.” Also beginning in January, he was noted to have decreased the number of showers he took, from a regular of three a week to only once or twice a week.

He received a 115 (rules violation report) on March 1, 2011 for  ”willfully resisting” officers after “fishing line” for communication with other inmates was found and he refused to “cuff up.” He told the health care worker who saw him after his extraction with pepper spray that “I want you to put down that they are denying my legal mail.”

On May 31st, a mental health referral reported that he “stated he is being watched, listened to, cell has bugs and cameras. He also stated he hears knocking on all his cell walls.”

Things would decline significantly in June. On June 5th, a mental health record reports that he was depressed, anxious, poor hygiene/grooming, hallucinations, paranoia and delusion. He reported that is presenting complaints were listed as “hearing voices, can’t sleep anxiety a ttacks, someone/something controlling thoughts, hasn’t cleaned cell in three days.”

Days later he would receive another referral for anxiety and reporting increased heart rate and breathing. On June 12th, he was placed in a crisis room for threatening to kill himself.
The following is from a Counseling Chrono dated June 21, 2011:
On Thursday, June 16, 2011 at 1440 hours I was summoned to the cell of Inmate Machado…by Registered Nurse…Upon looking in the cell window, I observed a noose hanging from the air duct. I observed the No-Tear Mattress lying on the cell floor torn apart. I ordered Machado to submit to handcuffs, to which he complied. After handcuffing Machado I placed him in holding cell #136 so Dr. N could speak with him. I returned to cell 188 and observed feces smeared on the right wall. It appears Machado had torn off the outer layer of the mattress, fashioned a noose from it, and tied the noose to the vent…
Just days after the incident, he was issued a notice that he would be placed in Pelican Bay’s Administrative Segregation Unit:
You were endorsed by the CSR on 02/04/10 to serve an indeterminate SHU term, due to your validation as an Associate of the …prison gang…On 06/22/11, your Mental Health Level of Care (LOC) was elevated to Correctional Clinical Case Management (CCCMS), PBSP-SHU Exclusionary; therefore, your placement in PBSP-SHU is no longer appropriate. Due to the above, on 06/22/11, a decision was made to place you in the PBSP Administrative Segregation Unit. Single celled due to prison gang validation.
By June 30th, he was deemed to have “active psychotic symptoms” but had a low risk of suicide.
On July 6th, he threw his breakfast through his food port and refused breakfast the next day. On the date of the incident a referral indicated ”inappropriate behaviors”, “hallucinating” and “poor impulse control.” The referral notes that he believed “electromagnetic pulses are interfering with his thoughts.”

A mental health document says later that “[he] is believed to be in a desperate situation with an equal amount of anxiety. During ICC in Ad Seg, he refused the debriefing process; hence his situation appears to be deteriorating possibly leading to [his] current state of mind.”

In June and July, he was variously diagnosed with Antisocial Personality Disorder and Brief Psychotic Disorder. According to his sister, though he was officially granted a vegetarian diet for religious reasons, he would primarily subsist on an unhealthy cheese-only diet due to his being allergic to peanuts, the other primary component of a prison vegetarian food tray. This is believed by his sister to have been one of the factors that contributed to the already physically and mentally stressful environment.

Machado’s sister noticed her once coherent and seemingly adjusted brother decline in his time at Pelican Bay. “I noticed he started writing strange things, about seeing things,” she says. Around this time, she and her mother called Pelican Bay after receiving a despondent letter from Alex. “I’m afraid for my sons life,” Machado’s mother told one of his mental health counselors.

Though CDCR has previously gone on the record to say that he was not a participant in the hunger strikes, the Machado family believes that he in fact did participate in the strikes. He reportedly mentioned the strike many times in letters sent to his family.

In late July or early August, he sent a letter to his sister claiming that he saw “someone I know and I saw another in pieces and demons…I don’t know the significance of it…I hope it was a hallucination.” He wrote that was taken to the infirmary for leg pains, where he further wrote:
I was handcuffed in a cell and was being watched by two officers I never seen before…I was handcuffed for what seemed like an eternity. I felt like I was in that room handcuffed for days but it was only an hour…the shooting in my case flashed in my mind and they suggested I died that day in the shooting and that I was now in ‘purgatory’ or in ‘Dantes Inferno.’ I felt trapped. I thought I was condemned to be handcuffed in that cell forever. They made me believe I was killed in real life. I thought I was caught in another realm. I saw insects in the cell and demons. It was way out I don’t know what happened…
Also written while at Pelican Bay, Machado reflected on his decade long incarceration, writing ”I wish my life was different and that we could all be out there together…I don’t know what to do. I’m stuck and I have been away from home for a long time now.”

In the final months of his life, he would continue to spend over 22 hours a day in a small cell. His letters came less and less frequently. During his time at Pelican Bay, he told his family not to make the over 700-mile trip to visit him. He didn’t want them to see him in chains.

Though his letters in the two months leading to his death were increasingly distorted, he did have some glimmer of hope. He had secured a lawyer who was in the process of challenging his original criminal conviction.

His sister describes his plight this way,
“It takes one inmate informant to report you falsely. Then you are in solitary confinement. When you want to fight to get out it is impossible because of all the torture that goes on in there physically and mentally.”
After years of isolation, paranoia, and gradual deterioration, he took his life.
“He was a loving brother, son, and uncle…raised by a single mother and got lost in the system,” says Cynthia. “He wanted to be treated fair.”

The Machado family welcomes any assistance in getting Alex Machado’s story out. If you’d like to contact the Machado family email the author of this article at: Sal_SolitaryW@yahoo.com.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/MichiganCPR

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Editorial: Michigan's awful gaps in mental health care

From the Detroit Free Press:  http://www.freep.com/article/20120721/OPINION01/207210346/1068/NLETTER42/Editorial--Michigan-s-awful-gaps-in-mental-health-care

July 21, 2012

In recent decades, Michigan and many other states have dismantled inpatient treatment programs for the severely mentally ill. Now a new report by the national nonprofit Treatment Advocacy Center -- No Room at the Inn -- suggests Michigan has become one of the worst of the worst.

The report says Michigan provides the fourth-lowest number of public psychiatric beds, per capita, in the nation, with only about six beds for every 100,000 people.

Between 1987 and 2003, Michigan closed three-quarters of its 16 state psychiatric hospitals, including Northville in suburban Detroit. Ten of the 12 closures came during the 1990s, under former Gov. John Engler.

"We closed too many, too quickly, without providing viable alternatives," said Mark Reinstein, president of the Mental Health Association in Michigan. "It wasn't done in a planned, rational way. The result has been mentally ill people flooding emergency rooms, more mentally ill people homeless and more in the criminal justice system."

In Michigan and other states, county jails have become the largest mental health institutions, while police officers have become, in effect, front-line mental health workers -- a job they are unequipped to do.

Mental health advocates continue to have a legitimate debate over "deinstitutionalization," or how to balance hospital care with lower-cost community mental health services. But few would argue that Michigan hasn't gone too far in closing public psychiatric hospital beds, especially without an adequately funded community mental health care system. Here and around the country, fewer than half the people who need community health services get them, the report said.

The report recommends a minimum of 50 public psychiatric hospital beds per 100,000 people. (England had 63 per 100,000 in 2008.) That would mean funding about 5,000 beds in Michigan, which currently has fewer than 700. In the past, Michigan mental health experts and advocates have recommended a system that includes roughly 2,000 beds across the state, Reinstein said.

On a per-capita basis, the nation now provides 14 state psychiatric beds per 100,000 people, the same ratio as it provided in 1850.

At the very least, Michigan ought to put a moratorium on closing any more psychiatric beds, while beefing up a strained community mental health system. With hospitals closing, Michigan's community mental health agencies were supposed to pick up the slack, but they never received the resources to do so. Adequate community mental heath care costs about $10,000 a year for each person in the system -- about twice what Michigan spends on average -- compared to more than $800 a day for a hospital stay.

Cuts in mental health care have cost Michigan dearly. State prison stays, for example, typically cost $35,000 a year per person. A University of Michigan study in 2010 found that more than 20% of the state's prisoners had severe mental disorders -- and far more were mentally ill. The same study found that 65% of prisoners with severe disabilities had received no treatment in the previous 12 months.
At least a third of Michigan's 100,000 homeless people, including 20,000 in Detroit, are mentally ill and untreated. With the uncertainties and disruptions of street life, they face enormous difficulties in managing the medications and medical appointments needed to control their illnesses and maintain their health.

To be sure, community mental health care will remain the most effective -- and lowest cost -- option for most people. Still, fixing Michigan's crisis in mental health care also will require making more public psychiatric hospital beds available for the state's most severely mentally ill.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org

Monday, July 23, 2012

Voices from Solitary: “A Sort of Solitary Psychosis”

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/07/22/voices-from-solitary-a-sort-of-solitary-psychosis/

July 22, 2012

The following comes from an inmate at Utah State Prison, Draper’s Uinta 1 facility. Uinta 1 serves as Utah’s death row, long-term supermax, as well as the Draper institution’s disciplinary segregation unit. The writer wrote over a period of days detailing a particularly violent few days in his unit requiring multiple cell extractions following several inmates covering their windows and flooding their cells. –Sal Rodriguez

Saturday
3:00 PM
It’s around 3:00 PM Saturday here. Last night my neighbor flooded his cell by flushing his toilet a lot with socks in toilet so it flooded the whole section, except my cell (I plugged it off with plastic and towel). Then another neighbor slipped in his cell on water, hit head on sink, had seizure, and was extracted, then returned to cell. I notice that a lot of these guys have seizures. I don’t think this is a faked issue. You can tell a true seizure by just listening to their head bounce off the cement floor.

8:30 PM
Cells 1, 2, 3, 4 have all proceeded tonight (8:30PM–it’s almost 10:30pm) to pull all their sprinklers, cover all their windows, and flood cells by running sink and flushing toilets repeatedly. The damn sprinklers emitted no water for some reason. This means if there was truly a fire the captive would burn to death. They are going to fight the SWAT teams. So pepper spray/blood/maybe death is on the roster tonight. Water’s barely seeping into my “house” but it’s plugged off pretty good. I don’t mean to sound like a sportscaster. This shit’s not cool one bit. People die fucking around doing this shit.
A sort of solitary psychosis, no person can stop these guys.

Guess they are now shitting and pissing into the water. We now wait for SWAT. Pretty soon they’ll become hip to the skip and shut off the water. I’m going to fill juice bags with water to drink! Almost forgot.

10:35 PM
SWAT called cell 1 and 3 “unresponsive.” Could be hanging from the sprinkler. Cells 2 and 4 aren’t going through with it. Negotiator didn’t work. Just sprayed a grip of pepper spray…Cops are scared to go in! They sprayed each cell five or six times then they both cuffed up. Both alive. It’s over for today–or not.

Sunday
5:00 AM
The cops put them back in the cells at 5:00 AM on “strip cell” and now cell 3 is going to pull his sprinkler again. The cells were soaked when they put them back in them. They are complaining of not being able to see from pepper spray. They were “put on a wall”–handcuffed behind back this whole time 8:45 to 5:00 AM. Both had to just piss on themselves. I’m tired from just watching, not as young as I used to be, and those dudes got three/four days of strip cell to look forward to. Hateful shit.

One of them had a seizure when “put on the wall.” They’ve refused him medical attention for this. The cops haven’t fed them today. This is what I mean by subtle abuse. The “blowers” (big fans) are on in section. This trips temperature a good ten degrees. They do this to make these two on strip cell suffer. The blowers are off all other times.

Cells 2 and 4 are preparing to battle here Wednesday.

Hours later
It’s been decided. I wouldn’t say we do these things for attention. It’s more “getting back at them the only way possible.” And the cops have to scrub our shit, squeegee the water up. Actually work.

8:30  PM
Cell 4 is unresponsive. Windows covered. Guards are talking of using “C.S.” gas, which is a grenade. We had the Sgt. admit that he cannot be the man in charge of extraction because he used too much O.C. gas on the two yesterday.

9:30 PM
The true SWAT tream came in on cell 4. Last night it was just staff in bio-hazard suits. They deployed the gas grenade. I can’t breathe or see right now. Whole section, all cells, are smoked up. There’s a big fan blowing the shit, supposedly out of our section. But it’s just blowing it around and its coming in the cells.

3:00 AM
Fans still blowing. Smokes still burning face, eyes, throat. Seems like we’re in for a long smokey couple days. The CS gas is so strong it leaves black smudges on the cell door frames. Got a pain in my left lung or heart. The smells lingering here in my cell but can’t pinpoint exactly where its coming from.

Wednesday
4:45 PM
Cell 3 is “unresponsive” again. Cell windows covered. Cells flooded. Sprinklers pulled. SWAT team has been called again. Negotiators negotiating. Its a standoff. They took Cell 3 to medical center after standoff  to remove staples. I’m going to try and mail this to you. I’m tired.

Welcome to my world.

8:30 PM
Cell 2 covered window. Officers brought a stick (stick used to push mattresses away from door) and opened cuff port to see into the cell to make sure he isn’t dying. SWAT called and we just barely got rid of the CS gas from earlier.

Cell 3 has been moved to Section 4, which has cameras in the cells. Now we wait.

They CS’d him (Cell 2) and he had a seizure…Its pretty bad in here…

Later
You know, I didn’t realize…Now that I’ve read it all back to myself I see…this shit isn’t cool. What is it thats caused me to become used to all this? I remember as a boy growing up wanting to be cool with a burly Raiders jacket and tattoos with a cool bowl cut. I wanted to emulate an older kid named Steve. Now Steve is dead. He hung himself with a string in his trailer closet in my hometown with a power extension cord.

It’s now 1:00 AM Thursday.

I made a list once of all those I’ve known and grown up with and most have died horribly and they never went through this type of hell. My family considers me crazy. So do my captors. So do my fellow captives. So do I at times but I must be crazy to make it. Strong crazy not weak crazy. I’ll turn thirty in four months. Can you see the isolation I’m drowning in?

I remember as a boy I loved to play in the stream behind our house. Chase “water-skeeters.” Pile rocks and dam up the river to play in. Lie on the grass. Build little huts out of old discarded wood. Play spin the bottle with the neighbor girls. Drink homemade root beer and eat homemade ice cream with my grandma.

I’ve never killed anyone, and I won’t. I’ve never hurt a soul and I will not. I slipped my handcuffs while drunk and got caught with two grams of dope and now I’m here. Punished…

HFP - Pickin' and Grinnin' II

From Humanity for Prisoners...

Monday, July 30, 6-8 PM, Coffee House of COVENANT LIFE CHURCH, 1st and Columbus, GH
Musicians John Mulder and Doug Tjapkes team up in a fundraiser gig, presenting favorite gospel tunes in a new and fresh style.  They'll be accompanied by guest musicians Lee Ingersoll, Cal Olson and David Mulder.  Refreshments.  Gifts.  Displays. No cover charge.  Contributions expected.  All donations go toward the support of HUMANITY FOR PRISONERS, a Grand Haven-based prisoner advocacy program.  Come and go as you please.  Nothing formal.  Requests welcome.  Great Music for all ages. 
We support HFP and all the work they do!

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org

Can You Help a Prisoner Today?

Picture this:  Male inmates meeting together to make quilts for children attending the One Day With God events, and making teddy bears and handbags for abused children.  These men are in prison for life and using their time serving others.  They're members of the National Lifers Assn. at Macomb Correctional Facility, doing good things.  I'm hoping our members might feel moved to provide 
some of the materials they need:
- white thread
- sewing needles with LARGE holes
- cotton fabric (juvenile prints esp. welcome - can be  
  pieces left over   from a sewing project at least 12 x 12 
  inches)  Larger pieces very welcome!
- yarn (one man crochets)
- polyester batting (filler) for quilts (for example, 120"
  x 120" can make four quilts)
- polyester stuffing for teddy bears
- cotton blankets (can find twin size on sale for $5 or 
  less) to be used instead of more expensive polyester
   materials
- 40%-off coupons for Jo-Ann Fabrics and Michael's
If folks just want to throw in a few dollars, we could pool that money to purchase the more expensive items.  Materials are always needed but especially right now.  Can drop off in the mail room with "lifers" or my name on it.  
Please call me (734-261-6298) if you have any questions.  Thanks!
Margaret Smith
Northridge Prison Ministry

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Death in Pennsylvania Solitary Confinement Cell Raises Questions

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/07/20/death-in-pennsylvania-solitary-confinement-cell-raises-questions/

July 20, 2012 by

On April 26 of this year, John Carter died in his solitary confinement cell at State Correctional Institution (SCI) Rockview in central Pennsylvania. According to accounts by other men imprisoned on his cell block, Carter’s death followed a violent “cell extraction” in which corrections officers used pepper spray and stun guns, though the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections makes no mention of such actions in its official statements, and state police have yet to interview inmate eyewitnesses.
In 1995, John Carter took part in a robbery that resulted in the murder of one man in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  He was sixteen at the time, and was convicted of second-degree felony murder. In Pennsylvania, which has more juvenile lifers than any other state, his conviction meant a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole. (Under the Supreme Court’s June 25 ruling, in Miller v. Alabama, that mandatory life sentences without parole for juveniles were unconstitutional, Carter would likely have had his sentence reconsidered, had he lived to see the day.)

At some point during Carter’s sixteen-year imprisonment, he was placed on what’s called the Restricted Release List, a form of indefinite solitary confinement that can only be ended with approval by the Secretary of the Department of Corrections. Jeffrey Rackovan, the Public Information Officer at SCI Rockview, admitted that this designation meant John could have “spent the rest of his life in solitary confinement.” Before his death Carter had spent the last ten to eleven years in solitary. According to prisoner reports he had been known to break the rules of his unit in order to share food, hygiene items, and writing utensils with newcomers to his block, and adamantly used both the grievance process and legal system to challenge acts of abuse and retaliation by prison staff.

On April 27, the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections issued a press release announcing that John Carter had been found “unresponsive in his cell” the day before. Reports from the unit soon began to reach Carter’s family and the Human Rights Coalition, a Pennsylvania-based prisoner advocacy and abolitionist organization. The reports explained that Carter had been subject to a cell extraction on the day of his death after a dispute with guards who refused to issue him a food tray instead of nutraloaf, a dense, unpalatable substance issued as punishment in place of meals. The cell extraction was the second Carter had been subjected to that week, during which guards entered his cell in full riot gear, armed with OC spray and electroshock weapons.

The statements from prisoners explained a brutal scene, with excessive amounts of pepper spray being pumped into Carter’s cell so as to flood the whole tier with the choking gas. According to prisoner accounts, guards then broke down the door to the cell and proceeded to shock Carter seven times with electroshock shields and guns. Many of the reports end with Carter being dragged from his cell, paramedics arriving 10 to 15 minutes later, and an unresponsive Carter being removed from the block. He was pronounced dead at Mount Nittany Medical Center a short time later.

Andre Jacobs, a jailhouse lawyer housed on the same block as John wrote a five page declaration detailing the events of that day. Many others sent in the story as they heard and saw it, all of them asserting that John Carter was “murdered . . . here in this RHU torture zone, where guards come on the tier calling people racial slurs.”

The press statement released by the Department of Corrections made no mention of a cell extraction, or any confrontation at all occurring on the day of Carter’s death. Reports from inside the prison claimed that superintendent Marirosa Lamas came to the Restricted Housing Unit tier the night of John Carter’s death alleging that he had committed suicide, an assertion never made to the public. But officials first claimed that no cell extraction took place the day of Carter’s death, then that there was an extraction but no video footage, and finally that an extraction took place but the footage may have been “damaged.”

Because Carter died from what was considered unnatural causes, the Pennsylvania State Police were brought in to investigate his death.  By May 10th the police had released a statement that notes John Carter was found “unresponsive in his cell,” but goes on to describe that he had “barricaded himself in his cell and refused numerous orders” which precipitated “the DOCs response to the inmate’s cell.” The statement goes on the say that autopsy reports were “inconclusive” and evidence had indicated “no foul play” in Carter’s death. Once again no mention was made of the use of pepper spray or electroshock weapons.

Calls to the state police were met with the assurance that a “thorough” investigation would be carried out. However, according to statements from prisoners held on John Carter’s block, not one of them was ever questioned as to the events of April 26.

Jeffrey Rackovan told Solitary Watch that the prison had “done its part” in the investigation, handing over video footage and allowing investigators to enter the prison. Rackovan noted that investigators surely spoke to those they “needed to”–the “officers involved in the extraction.” He also assured that John Carter’s cell had been inspected, though numerous prisoner reports claim that it was thoroughly cleaned shortly after Carter was removed.

According to advocates at the Human Rights Coalition, the investigation carried out by the state police fits within a general pattern of refusal by state authorities to investigate and prosecute the alleged crimes of prison guards and officials against the prisoners in their care. No statements have been made by the State Police since May 10.  Toxicology reports from the coroner’s office are still forthcoming more than two months after John Carter’s death.

John Carter’s family is not satisfied with the investigation thus far and are resolved to find justice in his death. They arranged for a second autopsy, and filed a criminal complaint with the Center County District Attorney, Stacy Parks-Miller, in June. As a response the DA’s office is now overseeing the investigation carried out by the State Police, but has released no further information on its progress. When contacted, Ms. Parks-Miller’s office would not respond with any comment on the investigation.
John Carter’s sister, Michelle Williams, explained in a May 7 interview with me for Rustbelt Radio that she wants justice not only for her family but for all of the other families with loved ones inside of Pennsylvania prisons. “Just because they are in jail,” she said, ”doesn’t mean you can treat them as anything else but human.” Listen to the full radio report here.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org


 

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Voices from Solitary: Can’t You Hear Us?

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/07/14/voices-from-solitary-cant-you-hear-us/

July 14, 2012
The following is an excerpt from testimony submitted to the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Human Rights, and Civil Rights by Pelican Bay Security Housing Unit inmate Gabriel Huerta. He has been in isolation since November 1986; like most in the SHU, he was validated as a gang member on questionable evidence of gang activity. He writes about the latest basis for his renewed SHU term, the need for social contact, and argues that long-term solitary confinement constitutes an act of torture. The rest of his testimony can be read here.–Sal Rodriguez

Many people may not know what it’s like to be isolated for so long, the way that we’ve been here, and I would say that it’s like being locked in the trunk of a car with just enough weather stripping removed so you can breathe, and with enough food and water stuffed in every day so that you can physically survive. You’re soon going to realize what it actually means when it’s said that we’re social beings. You’re going to crave social interaction and human contact. Soon you’ll be hollering out there, “anyone” you can at least talk to for even a brief time. Just like that Pink Floyd song says, “Hey you out there beyond the walls, can you hear me?” And yet every time you talk, every time you act like a human being and interact with other human beings, you’re told that that’s gang activity and you have to stay another 6 years now before your next review.

A book was found in my cell on 12/8/08, that my neighbor had let me read. It had his name and number on the book cover. This same neighbor also shared with me some pages from a Readers Digest that someone had sent him–the jokes section. These pages also had his name and number on them. It was concluded by staff that, “A friendship with a validated gang member proved through this lending and borrowing personal property solidifies the association with the gang itself.” My next review will bow be 2014.

Now let me ay this, there are many of thus who can endure this and much more–to the very end. But you know what? It doesn’t make the is existence any less “sorry.” It’s a sorry existence no matter how well you can endure it. I myself can, if I let myself, get lost in my own little world within the trunk of this car, reading my books and drinking my little pulque. I myself can, if I let myself, become “comfortably numb.” But that’s sorry, and so I’ve got to struggle in whatever way that I can.

The US is under the jurisdiction of the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT) and under CAT torture includes “…any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted…”Using indeterminate total lockdown to extract confessions is torture by international standards as is the use of prolonged solitary confinement.

And here we are, we’re being tortured!! We’re being held in prolonged solitary confinement trying to break our bonds and ties to family, friends and community in an effort to extract information from us, in an effort to make us “debrief.”

There’s this giant junk yard over here in Crescent City, full of hundreds of wrecked cars, one stacked on top of another, and there’s human beings locked in each of the trunks–can’t you hear us?

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org

Mandatory life without parole serves no one

From the Washington Post:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/mandatory-life-without-parole-for-juveniles-serves-no-one/2012/07/06/gJQAHrJeSW_story.html?utm_source=News+Roundup+July+13&utm_campaign=WNR+7-13&utm_medium=email

WHEN IT COMES to matters of sentencing, the Supreme Court has repeatedly, and correctly, made clear that children — even children who have committed heinous crimes — must be treated differently from adults. The court has prohibited the death penalty for juveniles and barred sentences of life without parole for juveniles who commit crimes short of murder. In a 5 to 4 ruling last week, the court wisely extended that principle, invalidating mandatory life sentences without the possibility of parole for juveniles convicted of homicide.

Indeed, the court went out of its way to suggest that even if such sentences were imposed on a discretionary basis, rather than automatically, they would require particularly stringent justification under the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. Given “all that we have said in [earlier cases] and this decision about children’s diminished culpability and heightened capacity for change,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the majority, “we think appropriate occasions for sentencing juveniles to this harshest possible penalty will be uncommon.”

The two cases before the court involved relatively sympathetic defendants, both 14 at the time of the murders. In a case from Arkansas, Kuntrell Jackson and some friends decided to rob a video store; Kuntrell learned en route that one of the boys was carrying a shotgun, stayed outside for most of the robbery, but was in the store when another youth shot and killed the clerk. A case from Alabama involved more horrifying facts but more mitigating circumstances: Evan Miller beat a neighbor with a baseball bat and set fire to his trailer after a night of drinking and drug use; the neighbor died of smoke inhalation. Evan’s father abused him, and Evan had attempted suicide six times, the first at age 5.

Writing the main dissent, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. emphasized the large number of laws invalidated: 28 states and the federal government impose mandatory life without parole for some juveniles convicted of murder. Foreshadowing his majority opinion in the health-care ruling, the chief justice argued that the court was improperly substituting its judgment for that of lawmakers.

These are important points. The chief distinction, as Justice Kagan noted, involves the mandatory nature of the sentencing, preventing judges or juries from considering the age of the juvenile, the nature of the crime and other relevant circumstances. Moreover, as Justice Kagan noted, it is not clear that the large number of jurisdictions imposing life without parole for juveniles convicted of homicide was the product of deliberate choice rather than the confluence of two separate statutes (one letting juveniles be tried as adults, the other imposing mandatory life without parole for homicide).

In the end, the majority has the better argument. Juveniles who commit crimes need to be treated differently because of their lesser culpability and greater capacity for rehabilitation.

**This information is being shared by Citizens for Prison Reform for purely informational purposes.

Citizens for Prison Reform
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"
-Martin Luther King
Website:  www.micpr.org