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Friday, August 31, 2012

Do US Prisons Violate European Human Rights Law? --Interview w/ Hamja Ahsan & Aviva Stahl

From Angola 3 News:  http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/08/22/18720114.php

August 22, 2012

An important ruling is expected early in September from the European Court of Human Rights, regarding whether or not US prisons respect human rights enough for the UK to extradite ‘war on terror' suspects to the US. We interview activist/journalist Aviva Stahl from CagePrisoners.com alongside Hamja Ahsan, the brother of Talha Ahsan, one of the appellants that will be seriously affected by the September ruling, imprisoned since 2006.
Do US Prisons Violate European Human Rights Law?
--An interview with Hamja Ahsan and Aviva Stahl

By Angola 3 News

On April 10, 2012, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) issued judgement in the case of Babar Ahmad and Others v The United Kingdom, thereby making a landmark ruling on the legitimacy of solitary confinement, extreme isolation and life without parole in US supermax prisons (view ECHR press release and ruling). The ECHR denied the appeal filed jointly by six appellants, consisting of four British nationals (Babar Ahmad, Haroon Rashid Aswat, Syed Talha Ahsan, and Mustafa Kamal Mustafa—aka Abu Hamza), an Egyptian national (Adel Abdul Bary) and a Saudi Arabian national (Khaled Al-Fawwaz) who have been imprisoned in the United Kingdom, pending extradition to the United States for alleged terrorism-related activities.

This judgement is now being appealed to the ECHR’s Grand Chamber, with a decision expected in September regarding whether or not the appeal will be heard. Arguing against their extradition to the US, the six appellants have asserted that the risk of imprisonment in the United States (with specific citation of long-term isolation at the notorious federal prison in Colorado, ADX Florence—also the subject of both a June Senate Hearing and a recent civil rights lawsuit initiated by prisoners alleging human rights violations there) would breach their right under Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights not to "be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment." Ruling against the appellants, the ECHR argued in their April 10 ruling that isolation in a US Supermax prison is “relative” and will become a violation of Article 3 ECHR (which prohibits torture), only if it extends indefinitely.

A third party intervention to the European Court of Human Rights in this case was jointly submitted in 2010 by INTERIGHTS, Reprieve, the American Civil Liberties Union and Yale Law School National Litigation Project, arguing that “U.S. legal protections against ill-treatment in imprisonment fall short of those provided under Article 3 ECHR.” Furthermore, “it is submitted that any protection the applicants will receive under U.S. law is speculative at best. The past two decades have seen a strong trend of limiting prisoner access to courts overall and restricting judicial oversight, particularly in the absence of overt physical harm. Moreover, the U.S. Constitution affords little in the way of real protections against the documented harms of prolonged sensory and social deprivation…To the extent the United States suggests that Petitioners will be adequately protected by administrative review, the record in cases involving ADX Florence is that such procedures are largely illusory.”

In this interview we speak with Hamja Ahsan and Aviva Stahl--two London-based activists working around this case. Aviva Stahl works as the United States researcher for CagePrisoners.com, a London-based human rights organization that is committed to defending the due process rights of detainees of the War on Terror. Her current work focuses on the criminalization of Muslim communities on American soil, and draws on the parallel past experiences of other communities of color. She also helps run a pen pal program in Britain that links folks across prison walls, with the aim of building relationships based on solidarity and mutual support.

An artist and curator by profession, Hamja Ahsan is the younger brother of appellant Syed Talha Ahsan, and leader of the Free Talha Ahsan Campaign. Declaring that Talha Ahsan, a British-born poet and writer with Asperger syndrome imprisoned since 2006 “deserves freedom or a fair trial in the UK," http://www.freetalha.org details how “Talha Ahsan was arrested at his home on 19 July 2006 in response to a request from the USA under the Extradition Act 2003 which does not require the presentation of any prima facie evidence. He is accused in the US of terrorism-related offences arising out of an alleged involvement over the period of 1997-2004 with the Azzam series of websites, one of which happened to be located on a server in America. He has never been arrested or questioned by British police, despite a number of men being so from his local area in December 2003 for similar allegations. All of them were released without charge. One of them, Babar Ahmad, was later compensated £60,000 by the Metropolitan police after a civil case in March 2009 for the violent physical abuse during his arrest. It was evidence from this incident which formed the basis of Talha’s arrest two and a half years later."

In this interview, Ahsan and Stahl discuss the extreme importance of the upcoming Grand Chamber ruling on a personal level for the six appellants fighting their extradition, as well as the ruling’s broader significance for all US prisoners and the communities around the world targeted by the US’ so-called “War on Terror.” Among the many prominent human rights activists speaking out is US author Noam Chomsky, who asserts that “with the sharp deterioration of protection of elementary civil rights in the US, no one should be extradited to the country on charges related to alleged terrorism…the prisons and the incarceration system in the United States are an international scandal,” and “the shallow and evasive charges” in Ahsan’s case “strongly reinforce that conclusion.”

Robert H. King of the Angola 3, released in 2001 after 29 years in solitary, recently met up with Ahsan and Stahl (read Stahl’s interview here) while touring the UK with Amnesty International, as part of their campaign demanding the immediate release of the Angola 3's Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace from solitary confinement, where they have now been for over 40 years (sign Amnesty’s petition here).

Angola 3 News: Hamja, how has Talha’s arrest affected you and your family?

Hamja Ahsan: The case is extremely disturbing and upsetting. In February of 2006 the police came and raided our family home at the behest of the United States. Neither I, nor my brother, nor my elderly mother or father, have ever been to the United States. How could a foreign country come and invade my house like that?

The police took everything – my diary, my mobile phone, my CD collection, my nephew’s cartoons, my camera, my university artwork and ridiculously, they even took my PlayStation 2 memory card. Six years later, other than our computers (which were returned the next day with all the content intact), we haven’t gotten anything back, despite a vocal assurance that we would. If there was anything dangerous or incriminating on those computers, why would they be returned intact? We still use those computers to this day.

My parents are average, middle class Asian parents--often excessively concerned about school grades, and stereotypically displaying little emotion. Now they regularly break down crying in public and on media. Julia O’Dwyer, the mother of British student Richard O’Dwyer, who is also fighting his extradition to the US, says it’s a punishment for the whole family, and you’re punished before you’re even found guilty.

During these last six years we’ve lived in uncertainty and fear. I didn’t think that being detained without charge, trial or evidence would last this long.

A3N: Can you please tell us about who your brother, Talha Ahsan, is as a human being and a member of your family?

HA: Talha had a job interview to be a librarian the day of his arrest in July. That’s the type of person he is, an academic type of librarian. He is diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, much like in the film My Name is Khan, which has become part of our campaign work, and the cause celebre for hacker Gary McKinnon. Talha is a published poet who has drawn the sympathy and acclaim of many other distinguished novelists, poets, and musicians, including Michael Rosen, Shailja Patel, Tariq Mahmood, Zita Holbourne, Avaes Mohammad and Riz Ahmed. The two most beautiful pieces written in support of Talha were by novelist A.L. Kennedy in the Guardian (1,2).

Talha is as much a threat to the American and British public as an average librarian is. His published book of poetry in prison was launched by A.L. Kennedy in Edinburgh in 2011, and it keeps selling out and having to be reprinted. Many people are touched by his words and a young filmmaker made a documentary based around his prison poetry called “Extradition.” Like so many others who write to him, Amrit Wilson, winner of the Martin Luther King award, said that despite her differences in age, religion, and gender, she found through correspondence that he was a deeply caring person.

Despite the psychological anguish of being detained without trial, he manages to care about other British causes such as Black deaths in police custody and environmental issues.

A3N: What is your response to the argument made by the European Court of Human Rights court that isolation in a US supermax prison is ‘relative’?

Aviva Stahl: First off, I want to quote from the statement released by Babar Ahmad and Talha Ahsan’s lawyers, Binberg Piece and Partners: “It will come as a considerable surprise to the inmates of ADX Florence, the prison in question, and their lawyers who struggle fruitlessly to challenge in the US courts their continuing solitary confinement for 8, 10, or 16 years, that the prisoners’ grim isolation could be considered only ‘relative’ and its continuance as justiciable. It will be equally surprising to international lawyers, who may include the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture, that the view of the European Court as to what constitutes isolation is apparently in conflict with their own.”

Secondly, it’s important to note that the European Court of Human Rights made that ruling based partially on the (mis)information provided to them by the Bureau of Prisons in the United States. In its submission to the Court, the BOP maintained that supermax prisons did not constitute extreme isolation on the basis that prisoners are able to shout to each other through ventilation systems – a claim which the Court readily accepted. The BOP also claimed that prisons are able to “step-down” within 3 years, even though there are many prisoners in ADX Florence who have been in solitary for over ten years.

If you doubt whether ADX Florence treats inmates humanely, read about the treatment of mentally ill patients on the inside. Two lawsuits were recently brought against the BOP for their failure to treat prisoners with mental illness, which in one case resulted in a suicide.

HA: As referred to in the statement, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, Juan Mendez, wanted to intervene in the judgement to say it amounted to ill treatment. He hasn’t been allowed to visit the United States to examine the international scandal of its prison system, particularly “supermax” prisons such as ADX Florence. Amnesty International has also frequently campaigned against the use of long-term solitary confinement, for example they are staunch supporters of the Angola 3.

There was such extensive support for Bradley Manning when he faced 11 months in solitary – but what about people who face that for a lifetime?

A3N: What are the key arguments of your campaign against extradition?

HA: To start with, the extradition treaty was introduced in 2003, a few months after the Iraq war and at the height of the George Bush-Tony Blair partnership. It’s part of the authoritarian, excess legislation introduced by the new Labour administration. David Blanket, the Home Secretary who introduced the legislation, now regrets it. It removes the need to have prima facie evidence.

A simple way of exposing the dangers of the new removal of this evidence bar is the case of Lotfi Raissi, an airline pilot accused of training the 9/11 hijackers. After the United States requested his extradition, he was held in Belmarsh prison; after five months, a British court ruled that there was no credibility to the charges against him and ordered his release. He was eventually awarded over £2million in a government payout, and also won an undisclosed sum from the Mail on Sunday newspaper in a civil suit for printing false information about the charges he faced

The extradition treaty removes the most elementary civil rights such as habeas corpus, the presumption of innocence until proven guilty, access to family, and protection from torture. And above all, the very first duty of government, which is to protect its own citizens.

It’s not just a Muslim issue, as we’ve learned from a number of high profile cases where the accused were white, such as Christopher Tappin, and the NatWest3 (who have been actively supporting our campaign, even though they’re from a more conservative establishment background). David Birmingham wrote an excellent book called “The Price to Pay,” outlining the cost of this legislation. The most ludicrous case is that of Richard O’Dwyer, a 23 year old student who ran TVShack, which isn’t even a crime in Britain. There are close family relationships between all the families affected by this legislation. In sum, a bad piece of legislation bites back at all British citizens.

Aside from reforming the legislation, there is also an immediate action point for these campaigns. Talha has never even been to the United States, so why should he be tried there? We want the Director of Public Prosecutions, Keir Starmer, to review the evidence against Babar Ahmad and Talha Ahsan in full – something he has never done. In November 2011, the Criminal Prosecution Service admitted they had never even seen the evidence seized from Babar’s home! The case of Regina v Sheppard & Whittle (2010) clearly established that a person should be tried in the jurisdiction in which a substantial measure of activity took place. So even according to case precedence, the most appropriate forum for Babar and Talha’s trial is in the UK, if there is indeed enough evidence to charge them.

We want a reform of the law to include a forum bar, meaning a judge rather than a prosecutor decides the best place that a trial should took place – similar to Ireland’s extradition treaties, and also an evidence bar – an incredibly important protection that was lost when the Extradition treaty was passed, as the case of Lotfi Raissi demonstrates. Even Lithuania has better protections for its own citizens in relation to extradition than Britain. In context, France doesn’t extradite its citizens at all. And within Holland, a foreign sentence is served on home ground.

A3N: What is it about being tried by the US criminal justice system that these six appellants before the European Court of Human Rights object to?

AS: In their appeal to the ECHR, Babar Ahmad & others argued that being extradited to the United States would violate the rights under Article 3 of the European Convention on Human rights, namely that “no one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment”, based on the conditions they’d face once on the inside. For example, some terrorism suspects in the States have faced up to three years of solitary confinement even prior to their trial - for example Fahad Hashmi (hear about what he went through here). Fahad was also one of many people subject to “Special Administrative Measures,” which are special conditions imposed on people (both pre and post trial) if the Attorney General deems it necessary. John Walker Lindh (“the American Taliban”) for example, was barred from speaking Arabic.

But it’s not only the conditions on the inside that we object to. The criminal justice system is incredibly flawed, especially for people facing charges of terrorism. There’s an immense amount of pressure to plead guilty once you get to court – in fact over 98% of people plead guilty in federal cases. Also, as many people here are aware of, the criminal justice system doesn’t treat all people equally. It’s racist, pure and simple, as is utterly evident from the case of the Angola 3.

It’s not just against African Americans – it’s also incredibly racist against Muslims, especially those facing charges for terrorism. As I documented in a report published last year, Muslims face systemic due process improprieties in the American criminal justice system, from start to finish. Just think about how widespread Islamophobia is today, how purported terrorists are put on trial by the media even before they arrive in court, and then the kinds of attitudes towards Muslims held by the American public, who are Talha and Babar’s potential jurors. As a Muslim facing charges for terrorism, it’s impossible to get a fair trial today because you’ve essentially been found guilty before the trial even begins.

A3N: In the cases of both the Angola 3 and these six appellates, they are appealing to the international community about human rights abuses in US prisons. What other similarities do you see regarding these two cases?

HA: I met Robert King at one of his Amnesty International public events. He expressed strong solidarity and support for Talha and Babar, and gave my family’s campaign the last word. I asked him about what I could say to Talha as words of solace as he was about to face solitary. Robert talked about the strong grassroots campaign within America against extreme forms of solitary confinement. Robert signed a book in solidarity with Talha, that I will give to him when he’s freed. Talha has also shown a great deal of solidarity for the Angola 3. On the day of the Angola Three’s 40th anniversary, Talha had me express solidarity on Facebook, Twitter and other social media.

AS: I think there are several similarities between the two cases. The first and most obvious similarity, of course, is the issue of solitary confinement. Both the lawsuit being brought by the Angola 3 in the federal courts in the States, and the arguments made by Babar and Talha in arguing against their extradition, say essentially the same thing: that being held in solitary confinement or supermax prisons is torture. It’s cruel and unusual punishment. It doesn’t matter what you’re accused of or who you are. No human should suffer through that.

But I think there’s another really important parallel between these two cases - the way in which racism and racial paranoia are used to sustain dominant power structures. Consider the case of the Angola 3. Robert King has commented many times that they were convicted – not for any crime they committed – but because they were Black Panthers. Why might a jury convict them on those grounds? Well, in 1968, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover described the Black Panthers as “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.” How many of us would hear that now and think it was preposterous?

Today, when someone is accused of supporting terrorism – most of all a Muslim man –the details of the crime are insignificant. Just like we were socialized to fear Black men on the street, we’re taught to fear Muslim men on our planes. Certainly that aspect of racial fear is present. Men of color (whether Black or Brown) have been sites of fear, thought to embody some kind of evil. That fear is integral to justifying dominant white power structures, both at home and abroad.

A3N: The April 10 ruling by the European Court of Human Rights is now being appealed to the Grand Chamber of the Court and we are awaiting a decision about whether the appeal will be considered. In the meantime, how can our mostly-US-based readership best support the fight against extradition?

HA: We’re expecting to hear in September about whether or not the appeal will be considered by the Grand Chamber. In the meantime, it would be great if folks could write to Talha.

AS: The most important is to get involved with folks in the States campaigning against supermax prisons, solitary confinement and the prison industrial complex. Remember that Senate hearings about the legitimacy of solitary confinement happened just a few weeks ago. This is a crucial time for all of us to push back against the injustices happening on the inside. Please listen to some incredibly moving testimony here. Whether it’s with Amnesty, the Angola 3, theStopMax campaign, or other prisoner solidarity work…. Get involved!

A3N: In an interview conducted prior to the April ruling, SACC activist Richard Haley argued that “if the court blocks the men's extradition it will send a signal to the US that the harshness of the US penal system is damaging its international relations. On the other hand, a ruling in favor of extradition could open the door to harsher prison conditions in Europe.” If affirmed by the Grand Chamber, what do you think is the significance of the Court ruling for the US, UK, and Europe?

AS: Well, of course if it stands, the ruling will give greater legitimacy to the practice of solitary confinement and the conditions inside supermax prisons. The Court has essentially ruled that these conditions “aren’t that bad”.

But I think it’s also important to recognize the broader context, which is that the ruling will simply strengthen ongoing trends on both sides of the ocean – of increased criminalization, imprisonment and privatization. As I’m sure your readership is aware, the prison industrial complex has reached epic proportions in the United States – over 2 million people and counting are now held on the inside. But the same things are happening here in the UK. The prison population in England and Wales has hit a record high. After the uprisings (“riots”) of last summer, we saw kids being imprisoned for long periods of time for very petty theft, and the importation of policies from the US, including gang injunctions. With regards to privatization, G4S already operates several prisons in England and is bidding to run many more. We need only look at the wealth of evidence from the Olympic security debacle that privatization is a bad idea.

On the other hand, I think it’s important to recognize that the ruling has given us the impetus to generate new kinds of alliances. This case represents just how important it is for different communities to work together in challenging the prison system, especially in its most pernicious incarnations. The ruling draws new links of potential solidarity across the globe - from Pelican Bay Prison, to ADX Florence, to the Communication Management Units of Terre Haute and Marion, to Guantanamo Bay, to Bagram, to HMP Long Lartin, where Talha and Babar are held.

HA: A lot of the British right wing media failed to grasp that the ruling was about prison conditions and used a lot of racist, Islamophobic language referring to Talha and Babar as “unwanted guests” and “Muslim fanatics”, despite not having been found guilty of anything. This was a very terrifying and painful time for the family. I didn’t sleep or eat properly for many days.

A3N: What is the ruling’s significance for the communities targeted by the so-called “war on terror,” led by the US?

AS: I think that for Muslims in the US and the UK, this ruling just legitimizes the human and civil rights abuses they already experience - surveillance in their homes, mosques, and schools, entrapment from undercover agents, harassment by cops and border police, even criminal convictions for activities that should be protected – like bookselling! It’s to the point where Muslims’ very religious and political beliefs are being criminalized.

HA: The 2003 US-UK extradition treaty effectively gives a dangerous level of extraterritorial jurisdiction to the United States. If the websites in question did have a US server, it shows that most of us living outside the US can go home, check out emails (Google, Hotmail, Facebook, Twitter) and be on a US server. Most .com, or .net addresses work the same way. Effectively most emails in the world pass through a US server. So people are no longer being picked up on the battlefields of Afghanistan and Pakistan, but from their bedrooms and family homes, in our case, in South London. This is a frightening precedent for all of us. In Richard O’Dwyer’s case, the charges don’t even have to constitute a crime under British law. Entrapment and sting jobs which form part of Christopher Tappin and Nosratollah Tajik’s cases, are illegal and unacceptable under British law.

AS: Consider this: just before the ECHR released its decision, John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, said that a ECHR veto against extradition would call “into question the ability of Europe as a whole to be an effective partner in the war against terrorism.” Given the amount of pressure the US can exert on the rest of the world, are we really that surprised that the Court ruled the way it did?

The US has expanded its drone strikes into Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. It’s passed the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act, which essentially allows the US to detain anyone, anywhere, if the US alleges that they have links to Al Qaeda or associated organizations. This is just more evidence of the US government and military’s broad reach, justified in the name of the War on Terror.

**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, August 29, 2012

Kids Behind Bars: Illinois Rethinks Juvenile Justice

From npr.org:  http://www.npr.org/2012/08/18/159131971/illinois-seeks-new-approach-to-juvenile-justice

August 26, 2012

In an alley in Little Village on Chicago's West Side, the faint sound of music from a Spanish-speaking radio station wafts in the air and garbage cans are sprayed with gang graffiti. They look like the tattoos on 17-year-old Elias Roman's arms.

"This [alleyway] right here is where I caught my first gun case," says Elias, who was born and raised in the neighborhood, home to a large Mexican-American community.

Elias was 15 and a gangbanger when he was busted. He tells NPR's Cheryl Corley that like many kids he ran with at the time, he had a gun. Out late one night, the cops picked him up, and he was charged with gun possession. He spent a month in a detention center, and then was put on house arrest.

Elias cut off the electronic monitor the Department of Juvenile Justice had placed around his ankle to keep up with him. Four months later, he was picked up again, charged with unlawful use of a weapon. This time, he got a longer stint in the state's juvenile centers.


Rethinking The Recidivism Issue
His story of trips through the justice system is familiar in Illinois — one of a number of states rethinking how it pursues juvenile justice to make sure kids who've committed a crime once don't end up in a juvenile facility again.

Nationally, there were more than 70,000 juvenile in residential placement facilities in 2010, according to Census Bureau data. The number was about 2,200 that same year in Illinois.

A damning report [PDF] from the Illinois Juvenile Justice Commission called the state youth prison system an expensive failure. Its study showed that "well over 50 percent of youth" leaving the state's facilities will go back to juvenile facilities — and others will head to adult corrections system.

Some of the juveniles in Illinois' system committed serious offenses, the report shows. But many others are there for lesser crimes and, officials say, would be better served in treatment or educational programs.


What Requires Incarceration?
George Timberlake, a retired Illinois judge and the report commission's chairman, says the group observed more than 250 prisoner review board hearings and analyzed the files of about 400 young people whose parole was revoked.

He says many of the juveniles who ended up back in custody didn't commit new crimes, but instead were found guilty of technical violations of a parole order, such as skipping school and staying out late.

"How many teenagers do you know who are where they are supposed to be when they are supposed to be there?" Timberlake says. "Certainly, they need to be educated that time matters and it affects other people's schedules, but doesn't mean they need to be back in prison because of it."

Arthur Bishop, director of the Illinois Juvenile Justice Department, has been on the job for less than two years. He began his career as a caseworker in the state's child welfare agency. He says his team is in place to change the way kids in the system are treated. It's pretty simple, Bishop says: Treat kids who commit crimes more like kids, and less like adults.

The old model still exists, Bishop says. Parole officers who aren't necessarily trained to work with youth still handle many of the juvenile cases, but a new test model is up and running in the Chicago area.

Bishop says as soon as a young person arrives at a youth center, an aftercare specialist will begin to work with him or her, assessing any needs, like mental health issues. They may also have to develop a plan for their release.

"Not only does that aftercare specialist work with the youth, but they also begin to engage with families. And I'm emphasizing these points because that's not historically done," Bishop says. "Families are often put on what I call the 'pay no mind' list because many of the families ... have the same — I'll use my scientific word — 'messed up' backgrounds."


Shifting The Model
While the push to change the culture of Illinois' juvenile justice system may help reduce the number of kids who end up in facilities, it's also tied to the state's deep budget woes. In 2010, the Illinois auditor general said [PDF] that it costs an average of $86,861 a year to keep a juvenile in Illinois' Youth Centers – far more than for community-based strategies.

That point is underscored in a 2011 report released by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, which shows a dramatic difference nationwide between the average annual cost for housing a juvenile compared with community-based programs and public college tuition.


**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, August 28, 2012

Inmate's suicide leads to firing of Kalamazoo County Jail deputy, documents show

From MLive:  http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2012/08/inmates_death_leads_to_firing.html

August 27, 2012

KALAMAZOO, MI – Derrick Burroughs decided his own fate in March when he tied a bed sheet around a ventilation grate in his one-man cell at the Kalamazoo County Jail and then wrapped the sheet around his neck.

But investigators with the county sheriff’s office decided in the days after the death of Burroughs, 28, that his suicide may have been preventable had Deputy Jeffery Miller not violated departmental policy.

Miller, a four-year veteran of the agency, was terminated in April in the wake of Burroughs’ March 5 suicide following an internal investigation, according to documents obtained by the Kalamazoo Gazette under the Michigan Freedom of Information Act.

“Deputy Jeffery Miller did not cause Mr. Burroughs’ death but adherence to the sheriff’s office written directives may have prevented it,” Capt. Bill Timmerman concluded following the internal probe. “(Miller) was derelict in performing his duties on the morning of March 5, 2012 …”

Among the violations by Miller cited in the internal investigation was his failure to complete rounds to check on inmates at the beginning of his shift at 12 a.m. on March 5 and then every 30 minutes after.

Burroughs died between 12:06 a.m. and 1:36 a.m. on March 5, documents show.
The investigation found that Miller also failed to have Burroughs remove a sheet and towel from the bars of his cell that blocked Miller’s view into the cell the morning that Burroughs died.

Lt. Robert Phillips also noted in the investigation that an incident report authored by Miller about Burroughs’ suicide was “rejected more than five times due to conflicting information.”

“It was evident that his initial reports were falsified or at least misleading in relation to Miller seeing Burroughs in the cell the first time, and then seeing movement inside the cell as reported to Lt. (Wally) Kipp,” Phillips wrote.

Sheriff’s officials confirmed that the Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Deputies’ Association has filed a grievance contesting Miller’s termination. Union officials, including union president, Sgt. Jim Sandlin, could not be reached for comment and the union's attorney, Michael Ward, declined to comment for this report.

Miller could not be reached for comment for this report.

'Tell everybody I love them'

At the time of his death, Burroughs had been in the county jail for 11 days.

He was arrested Feb. 23 by Kalamazoo Public Safety on three outstanding bench warrants and charges of second-offense domestic violence, fleeing and eluding police, possession of marijuana and driving while his license was suspended.

Records show he was moved to a close-supervision cell on March 1 after he sent out a communication to jail staff asking for help because he was depressed, suffering from panic attacks and having issues at home.

Burroughs later saw a Community Mental Health worker, was cleared and then moved March 2 to the one-man cell in the B-South wing where he would be found dead three days later.

Documents from the sheriff’s office show that Burroughs made threats of suicide on March 4 in phone calls he made from the jail to family and friends.

Burroughs made a total of 163 collect phone calls from the jail between March 4 and 5. In several of the calls, he pleaded for family members to pay his bond so he could get out of the jail.
None of the collect calls were accepted, records show.

“I’m (fixing) to kill myself ... Just tell everybody I love them,” Burroughs said in one of the recorded phone calls, placed at 9:44 p.m. on March 4.

Burroughs’ grandmother, Daisy Burroughs, said they were notified of her grandson’s suicide shortly after it happened and the family had been in contact with a sheriff’s detective about the incident as recently as May.

However, she said the family did not know about Miller’s termination.

“Nobody’s told us nothing,” Daisy Burroughs said in an interview MLive/Kalamazoo Gazette. "You know more than we do.”

Records from the sheriff’s office contained four letters authored by Derrick Burroughs. In each he speaks of despair and sadness about his life. He also, at one point, says his family “gave up on me in my time of need.”

“I needed y’all more than ever but it didn’t matter to y’all so that’s why I give up hope,” Burroughs wrote. “If I don’t have a family I don’t have nothing. Don’t cry. Be happy. This is what you all wanted.

“I’m gone. Have a good funeral for me. Pour out a lil liquor.”

Policy not followed

Sheriff’s office policy required that Miller make his first round to check on inmates in the B-South wing within the first five minutes of the start of his shift on March 5.

But records show his first round wasn’t completed until 12:57 a.m. that day. From that point, it appears he did not consistently make rounds every 30 minutes, as required but documents do not show specifically when Miller’s rounds after the 12:57 a.m. walkthrough were completed.

One deputy interviewed during the internal investigation said he remembered seeing Miller in a jail control room twice on March 5 between 12 and 1:30 a.m. and that on each occasion Miller was in the control room for 15 to 20 minutes.

Documents show that as the internal investigation of Miller progressed, his supervisors found that his conduct of not making regular rounds was commonplace.

In some instances, documents show, Miller started his midnight shift and then did not do his first round until after 1 a.m. On March 4, the day before Burroughs committed suicide, Miller did not do his first round to check on inmates until 1:31 a.m.

“There is a clear pattern of rounds being done late,” Sgt. Heather McTavish said of Miller.

Investigators did note that during the probe of Miller, they found some of the wands deputies used to log their movements in the jail through a “round-tracker system” were not working properly and, in some instances were showing deputies were not completing rounds, as required, even though video-camera footage showed that they were.

Asked if investigators noted any deficiencies with the wands Miller used on his shifts to log his movements in the jail, Undersheriff Pali Matyas declined to elaborate but did say, “It was, in the end, not that pertinent to the issue.”

During his disciplinary hearing on April 24, Miller contended that he did not do an initial check on inmates within five minutes after starting his shift because his experience had been that an inmate count done by deputies coming off the clock counted as a first round for deputies coming on the clock.

“I know that’s against actual written policy but that is basically the way things have been done since I’ve been working here,” said Miller, who began working in the jail in August 2008 after a stint patrolling at the Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport.

“You know, on the midnight shift we’ve always done that. It’s pretty common practice.”
Matyas said that at the time of Miller’s termination, he met with supervisors in the jail division “and reinforced that polices will be followed.”

“The sheriff’s office has many policies and procedures regarding its operation of the jail in place,” Matyas said. “And when those policies and procedures are not followed then the sheriff takes corrective action.”

At one point during the hearing, records show Miller was asked by Matyas if Miller thought Burroughs’ suicide could have been prevented had Miller followed policy.

“I don’t believe so,” Miller said. “I really don’t. I believe that Burroughs is, is been part of our system before, I believe he knows that he had half an hour no matter when I did a round and I believe he would have timed it to that.

“Especially with his three-page note and his intent.”

**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

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Jeff Gerritt: Vice presidential hopeful Portman could make prisons part of election

From the Detroit Free Press:  http://www.freep.com/article/20120810/BLOG2505/120809052/Rob-and-Romney-and-vice-and-president

You’re probably heard a few things lately about U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, a frontrunner to become Mitt Romney’s running mate. You may know that Portman served as former President George W. Bush’s budget director, has a serious game face, and can tout swing state roots. But even as Romney’s list of potential VP’s shortens, you probably haven’t heard this: Portman, quietly and without fanfare, has become a leading voice on prison reform in Washington, mostly through his advocacy of re-entry programs to help the 700,000 men and women who leave state and federal prisons each year.

Advocating for ex-inmates is not what most people associate with conservative Republicans. For Portman, though, it's a natural fit. Making parolees successful -- and keeping them out of prison -- reduces crime and lowers the enormous costs of locking people up. The nation incarcerates more than 2 million people, costing taxpayers nearly $70 billion a year. Michigan, for example, spends more on prisons — $2 billion a year — than higher education. And half of those who leave prison go back. “High rates of recidivism mean thousands of new crimes,’’ Portman, 56, told me in an interview this week. “For the taxpayer, a steadily rising prison population is a very expensive proposition. If you’re a fiscal conservative, you should be interested in this issue. I’ve never viewed this in a partisan way. Every community has an interest because you want people to become productive. Ninety-five percent of the folks in prison will get out. We don’t want them coming back to communities unable to be productive, or good citizens.”

As a vice presidential candidate, Portman could make prison policies part of the national campaign debate this fall -- and it's long overdue. “I don’t expect to be nominated vice president,’’ he said. “But if that should change, I will continue to have a strong interest in this area.” Portman, in fact, has already changed the debate in Congress. In 2004, as a Republican leader in the U.S. House, he authored and championed the Second Chance Act, arguably one of the most important pieces of corrections legislation in decades. It shifted the debate from building more prisons to changing what happens to inmates while they’re in prison and after they’re released. Portman and Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., have also proposed the Second Chance Reauthorization Act, which extends and consolidates Second Chance programs.

Last year, Congress set aside $80 million for grant programs under the Second Chance Act. Hundreds of local and state programs helped offenders successfully move from prison to their communities, using housing, employment and other assistance. The programs have helped lower recidivism rates in Michigan and Ohio from nearly 50% to just over 30%. In Ohio, Portman meets with business leaders, urging them to provide job opportunities to people with criminal records. It's no small matter. In Ohio and Michigan — and much of the rest of the country — one in six adults has a criminal record.

Portman’s interest in prisoner re-entry started in the 1990s, when he saw how substance abuse aggravates crime and recidivism. In the House, Portman authored the Drug Free Communities Act, which has supported hundreds of community anti-drug coalitions. Portman also founded and headed an anti-drug coalition in greater Cincinnati. U.S. prison populations have increased eightfold over the past 40 years, shredding urban communities while having no demonstrable impact on crime rates. What we’re doing hasn’t worked. U.S. Sen. James Webb, D-Va., tried to push national prison reform but failed to pass key legislation. Congress defeated a plan by Webb to create a National Criminal Justice Commission that would have made recommendations for reform. Now, a conservative Republican from Ohio may be the best hope of finally putting the nation’s failed prison policies on a national political stage.


**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

Saturday, August 25, 2012

U-M takes on case of prisoner whose release Granholm canceled

From the Detroit Free Press:  http://www.freep.com/article/20120823/NEWS06/308230131/U-M-takes-on-release-Granholm-canceled

August 23, 2012

LANSING -- Three days before Christmas 2010, a Michigan inmate got a remarkable gift: Gov. Jennifer Granholm said she would commute his life sentence for first-degree murder, ensuring his release after two decades in prison for setting up a robbery that led to the fatal stabbing of a co-worker.

But Matthew Makowski's dream of freedom was dashed within 48 hours.

The governor, who was days from leaving office, got cold feet and rescinded her own order after the victim's family protested.

A warden delivered the news to Makowski. Instead of going home, he would remain behind bars as inmate No. 198702.

Nearly two years later, Granholm's reversal has touched off an extraordinary legal challenge from a professor and students at the University of Michigan law school. They argue that the governor's decision to commute the sentence was final as soon as she signed and filed the document.

There is no history of an about-face like Granholm's. The case, now at the state appeals court, is an unprecedented test of constitutional power granted to Michigan governors.

"She got very bad advice," said Charles Levin, a former state Supreme Court justice who supports Makowski. "There's no place that says she can undo an act of this kind. It doesn't exist. This is a very unusual story."

In response to the lawsuit, the state Attorney General's Office said courts cannot review how a Michigan governor uses constitutional authority to change an inmate's sentence. And even if courts do, the attorney general says, Granholm was free to change her mind, especially since Makowski never had a commutation certificate in his hands, 110 miles away at prison.

"Without delivery," Assistant Attorney General A. Peter Govorchin said in a court filing, "the commutation was not complete."

A setup turns slaying

Behind the dispute are the events that put Makowski in prison and the sharp feelings that still exist nearly 25 years later.

In 1988, he was 20 and working at a fitness center in suburban Detroit with Pietro (Pete) Puma, 19. There is no dispute that Makowski came up with a plan to have Puma robbed away from the health club. But the confrontation spun out of control when Puma was fatally stabbed while defending himself.

Makowski wasn't present for the attack and had no idea that one of the robbers had a knife. Nonetheless, he was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without a chance at parole because he hatched the ambush.

"Truly from the bottom of my heart, I am sorry, you know, for all the things that I did. I can never make any excuse or justifications for it," Makowski, now 45, told the Michigan parole board in 2010.

At that time, he had received only two misconduct violations during 22 years in prison. Supporters said Makowski became a devout Catholic and led many inmates to Christianity.
"There is nothing hardened about him," said Beth Kjerrumgaard, who holds Catholic services for inmates. "I'm very confident that God has a different plan for him rather than being in prison for life."

Decision and backlash

In November 2010, the parole board voted 8-7 to recommend the governor commute Makowski's life sentence and allow his release. Granholm agreed on Dec. 22. Makowski's lawyer called the decision "courageous."

But Puma's siblings were outraged after reading an Associated Press story about the case. They didn't even know Makowski was being considered for release and hadn't received notice of his parole board hearing.

Puma's parents are deceased, and no relatives were registered with the state Corrections Department.

Two days later on Christmas Eve, with a week left in office, Granholm said she was yanking the commutation, although the document was signed, stamped with the state seal and filed with the Secretary of State. The governor's attorney, Suzanne Sonneborn, personally retrieved the records and had them destroyed.

The Corrections Department had not mailed a commutation certificate to Makowski, apparently because of a thin staff around the holidays. Parole board Chairwoman Barbara Sampson was greatly relieved.

"Please return all of the certificates to Suzanne Sonneborn asap! Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!!" she said in a Dec. 27 e-mail.

The rescission question

Makowski did not respond to a letter from the Associated Press requesting an interview at a prison in Coldwater. His mother, Patricia Makowski, declined to comment, as did Granholm, now a cable TV host.

"It has been a long road, and it seems like the light at the end of the tunnel was almost there, and then it was snuffed out," said Kjerrumgaard, who described Makowski as "numb" and "devastated" in the days after the swift reversal.

Paul Reingold, a professor at the University of Michigan law school, often handles litigation on behalf of prisoners, especially in civil rights matters. In a court filing, he said Granholm had no authority to rescind her action simply because Puma's family protested.

"There was no fraud in the commutation process," Reingold said. "No one has alleged any misstatement or misrepresentation in the petition, in the supporting documents or in the public hearing. ... The allotted time for the prosecution's and the family's objections to be heard was long past, and there is no claim that any of the statutory procedures were not properly followed."
No date for arguments has been set. Puma's brother, Anthony Puma, said he was unaware of Makowski's legal challenge.

"He tore the Puma family apart. Life without parole," Puma said, "is supposed to be life without parole."

**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

Thursday, August 23, 2012

In Prison, Women Inmates Forge Ties That Bind

From truth-out.org:  http://truth-out.org/news/item/10985-in-prison-women-inmates-forge-ties-that-bind#.UDI6ngbWEnM.email

August 21, 2012

By Viji Sundaram, New America Media

Claremont, California - When a number of formerly incarcerated women last year received what they thought was a distress e-mail from a friend, Gloria Killian, saying she was stranded in Scotland penniless and needed to have money wired to her ASAP so she could fly back to California, at least two of them rushed to their banks to see how much they could pull out.

Another decided she would send Killian everything she’d been saving up – more than a years worth of savings -- to put herself through school.

Some of Killian’s more streetwise friends, however, decided they would check the authenticity of the e-mail before deciding how they could help. That morning, Killian said, “my phone rang off the hook.”

She quickly went online and alerted her contacts about the email hack.

“The fact that so many friends were ready to jump in to help, shows we are there for each other,” said Killian, 65, who had spent the better part of two decades inside a California prison, for a crime she didn’t commit.

Exonerated in 2002, Killian is now the executive director of the Action Committee for Women in Prison. She is also the co-host and co-founder of the weekly webcast, “Women Behind the Walls,” the only show in the United States that is by, for and about incarcerated women.

Many of the women who rushed to Killian’s aid were there for each other even while incarcerated in the California Institution for Women (CIW) in Corona. They formed bonds behind bars that only grew stronger after they were released, observed Killian.

“Women prisoners allow their personalities to come out, and friendships develop,” noted Wayne Davison who, during his 25-years as a prison warden in California, worked in both women’s and men’s prisons. “They form families.”

Familial bonding
It wasn’t long before 16-year-old LaKeisha Burton – at the time of her trial, she was the youngest female ever to be tried as an adult in California -- became a part of one of those families, after she landed in the Corona prison in 1989 on an attempted murder conviction. The wide-eyed girl with a megawatt smile immediately became “little sister” to some of the inmates, and “daughter” to some others.

“When we see a ‘new baby’ in our world, we instinctively feel we need to make sure she knows how to take care of herself,” said Robin Keeble, 55, an organizer of AKA Angels, a statewide network of formerly incarcerated women started in 1996 by the women themselves. “Some women look at the newcomer and say, ‘Oh my gosh, she is the same age as my daughter. I can’t take care of my daughter, so let me take care of her.’”

Keeble, who spent a total of 20 years in California’s prisons on multiple convictions – her first was for burglary at age 20 and she was subsequently locked up for drug-related offences – noted, “Just because you are in prison doesn’t mean your maternal instincts are dead.”

Dawn Davison, a former warden at CIW who was hugely popular among the prison’s inmates due to reforms she put in place there, would be the first to agree: “Women are still women when they go behind prison walls.”

They might fight and argue, she said, but “it’s mostly over relationships.”

“The sisterhood between them is so strong that when a woman gets out, those left behind – even lifers who know they never will -- wish her well,” Davison remarked.

Burton, who is now 33 and has been out of prison for six years, said she still has formerly-incarcerated friends watching her back. Clad in a pretty, ankle-length floral frock, she dropped in at Killian’s Claremont home one recent day to say hello. She considers Killian among her cheerleaders, encouraging her to bigger and better things.

Men bond less
Bonding the way women prisoners do is not as common among their male counterparts, some prison officials say.

Tseday Aberra, senior psychological supervisor at CIW, who worked for nine years in a male prison prior to her current job, observed: “On the instinctive level, women do better in a network – you see this on the outside, as well. They do better when there are people in their lives.”

The way men socialize, on the other hand, is through an activity or engagement, Aberra said. And there’s not necessarily the kind of emotional connection between them that women have, she continued, nor do they depend on each other for emotional support.


Wayne Davison, the husband of Dawn and also a retired prison warden, said he frequently observed this. Women inmates seen huddling together in prison yards, he said, were more likely to be nurturing each other and offering words of encouragement than “plotting,” which is what he observed often with the men. In prison, bonding between men can often manifest as gang activity.
“With the men, there’s a pecking order in which race is often involved,” noted Wayne Davison. Friendships between male prisoners, he said, are made mostly to protect themselves; once released, they often go their separate ways.

Reuniting on the outside
A week before Christmas last year, Killian again hosted what has become a popular annual “Convicts Christmas Potluck Party” at her home in Claremont.

“It’s probably my sick sense of humor that made me give it that name,” Killian said with a laugh, when asked how she came up with the title.

By prior arrangement, it was agreed that everyone attending the party would leave with just one present. Partners and other family members were welcome, but alcohol was taboo. “You don’t need to drink to have fun,” Killian said.

About 60 people, most of them women, showed up. Three women who’d been out of prison for less than 72 hours were among the guests.

There was a lot of catching up to do; stories to be shared. And even though there “was a lot of tears,” noted Killian, “everyone seemed happy to be back together again.” And, as it always happens, new friendships were struck and new networks formed.

Keeble, whose 82-year-old aunt recently broke her dentures and couldn’t afford to get a new set, tapped into one of those networks. She sent them to Dee Cliburn, a fellow ex-inmate who knows how to mend broken dentures.

“It was nothing, really,” Cliburn said with a grin. “I just glued the broken parts together.”

**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

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Family: Ex-Shock player needs mental illness check

From The Spokesman Review:  http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2012/aug/10/he-knows-something-is-wrong-in-his-mind/

August 10, 2012

A former pro football player arrested for arson in June remains in solitary confinement at the Spokane County Jail, and his mother says his mental health issues will worsen without treatment.

Kevin Marcus Ellison, 25, who was a starting linebacker and defensive back for the Spokane Shock arena football team, has twice been denied release from jail for mental health treatment. His lawyer appealed U.S. Magistrate Cynthia Imbrogno’s last decision, but U.S. District Court Judge Lonny Suko rejected the appeal Aug. 1, citing in part an altercation Ellison had with jailers last month.

Ellison’s mother, Judy Reisner, traveled from Los Angeles to Spokane to visit Ellison in jail on Wednesday. He’s not doing well, she said.

“The longer they have him in a cell locked up, the worse he gets,” Reisner told The Spokesman-Review. “He knows something is wrong in his mind. He feels it when it happens. He just wants help. Who’s going to get him help?”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Harrington said Ellison is a danger to the community.

Ellison is scheduled for trial Nov. 5 for a federal arson charge that carries a minimum sentence of five years in prison.

Ellison has no criminal history but was arrested in San Diego in May 2010 after police reportedly found 100 Vicodin tablets in his car without a prescription. The charges were dropped.

He was a celebrated football player at the University of Southern California, where he earned a bachelor’s degree and was a team captain.

He played for the San Diego Chargers and spent time with the Seattle Seahawks in 2010 before joining the Spokane Shock arena football team. The Shock had rented units at the Big Trout Lodge Apartments in Liberty Lake for Ellison and other players.

Ellison jumped from his burning third-floor apartment June 14 and told police God told him to start the fire. He told Shock general manager Ryan Rigmaiden that he started the fire with a marijuana blunt and that he was Jesus Christ, according to investigators. The blaze displaced residents and caused about $50,000 in damage.

The Shock dismissed Ellison from the team shortly after his arrest.

Rocky Seto, defensive passing game coordinator for the Seattle Seahawks, coached Ellison at USC. He described him Thursday as an outstanding young man and team role model.

“This is absolutely shocking to me,” Seto told The Spokesman-Review. “I never would have thought he’d be in this situation.”

Seto said he and Seahawks Coach Pete Carroll, who also coached Ellison at USC, have offered their support to Ellison and his family.

“Something’s going on, and he needs to get some help,” Seto said.

Reisner said she’s desperate for her son to get help. But she’s frustrated that the federal court system won’t allow it.

“He knows he has mental illness. He can feel the episodes coming on,” Reisner said. But, “he’s just a number in the jail, and he understands that.”

Ellison is Reisner’s youngest child. He has a sister with a master’s degree in marketing, a brother who played football for the Buffalo Bills and a brother who is a lawyer. All take turns visiting Ellison in jail, where Reisner said he’s allowed only an hour of visitation each week.

Ellison has visited with the jail’s mental health professional, but until he’s evaluated there’s not much treatment he can get.

Spokane lawyer David Miller said it’s been more difficult than usual lately to get anyone released from jail who’s awaiting federal charges because of public outcry surrounding the release of Charles Wallace, who shot two Spokane County sheriff’s deputies June 19 after escaping from drug rehab. Imbrogno had allowed Wallace to leave jail to attend rehab while awaiting his heroin-trafficking trial.

“Right now, I don’t even think I could get Mother Teresa out to go to rehab,” Miller said.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office told the federal public defender’s office just after the shooting that they would seek full penalties for any defendant seeking pretrial release for drug rehab, but U.S. Attorney Mike Ormsby later said that was only a consideration.

Prosecutors are aware of Ellison’s possible mental health problems. Assistant U.S. Attorney Aine Ahmed said Ellison “may have some mental issues” when arguing against his release from jail in June. His public defender, Kim Deater, had asked Imbrogno to allow Ellison to be allowed to leave jail and live with his mother and brother in Los Angeles and seek mental health treatment there.

Staff at the hospital where Ellison was treated for smoke inhalation and minor burns also suspected something was wrong. They contacted a Spokane County Mental Health professional who met with Ellison and said “she believed he qualified for detainment within a psychiatric facility,” according to court documents prepared by Deater. “However, Mr. Ellison was shortly thereafter arrested and taken into federal custody.”
Deater tried again in July to win Ellison’s release – this time asking for him to be moved to a psychiatric facility.

Kristina Ray, the jail’s mental health supervisor, testified at the July 20 hearing that Ellison suffered from hallucinations, delusional thinking and disorientation. She said the jail had access to a physician and psychiatrist “but did not have adequate treatment facilities” for a person with Ellison’s problems. Ahmed told Imbrogno he didn’t object to Ellison undergoing a mental health evaluation, but he was concerned about Ellison’s safe return to custody afterward.

Affirming Imbrogno’s decision, Suko cited a July 10 incident in which Ellison attempted to head-butt deputies who were trying to get him out of his cell.

But Suko also noted that Ellison was responsive in court and cooperative. He also noted his lack of criminal history and his accomplishments in education and sports but said he’s currently unemployed with “no readily accessible support system in Spokane.”

**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

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Report: Progress on juvenile justice, problems remain

From NYaltnews:  http://nyaltnews.com/2012/08/report-progress-juvenile-justice-problems-remain/21642/?utm_source=News+Roundup+August+17&utm_campaign=WNR+8-17&utm_medium=email

CHICAGO — In juvenile justice circles, things are seen to be improving: Youth prisons are closing. Mental health screenings are becoming standard. Right-to-counsel for young offenders has been affirmed.

For a variety of reasons, including cutting costs, state legislatures are moving away from the punishment-focused policies for young offenders passed in the 1980s and 1990s, when juvenile crime was rising, and moving towards rehabilitation, according to a report released this week by the National Conference of State Legislatures.

“Youth is not a defense,” Robert Schwartz of the Juvenile Law Center told a conference session here, “but it is a mitigator.”

Some states, including Connecticut, Rhode Island, Missouri and Illinois, have raised the juvenile court age from 17 to 18, according to the report, which analyzed trends in juvenile justice legislation from 2001 to 2011. Colorado gave judges more discretion about which youth are transferred to adult court jurisdiction. And 29 states enacted laws to improve mental health care for the young, after research showed that up to 70 percent of youth arrested have some kind of mental health problems.

At the same time, juvenile crime has dropped off in the last decade, according to the most recent U.S. Department of Justice data. Current youth arrest rates are lower than they were in 1980. That has led Texas and New York to close youth prisons. Illinois’ Governor Pat Quinn is currently advocating that a youth prison in Murphysboro be closed, but the correction officers’ union has sued to halt the closure.

But while these trends are good news for juvenile advocates, problems persist. The number of girls in the juvenile justice system has risen steadily over the last decade, the report says, and few states offer any gender-specific treatment for girls in the juvenile justice system.

For instance, in Maryland, because the state does not offer the same alternative sentencing options for girls as they do for boys, girls are more likely to be locked up away from their families than boys who commit the same crime. Nearly 80 percent of girls placed in residential facilities have been convicted of only a misdemeanor, according to a Maryland Department of Juvenile Services report.

Violence at youth facilities is another big problem that continues. Last November, a 17-year-old was beaten to death by another inmate inside of a Georgia youth detention center. Juvenile lockups in Texas saw violence increase over the last 10 years, according to analysis from the Texas Tribune. And youth housed in the Baltimore Detention Center told the Baltimore Sun that they are routinely targeted for beatings.

But juvenile advocates are hopeful that in the wake of the recent Miller v. Alabama decision, legislators will be forced to reexamine youth sentencing policies. The U.S. Supreme Court relied heavily on new developments in adolescent brain science to rule that a mandatory life-without-parole sentence is unconstitutional. They left it up to the 26 states that have this sentencing structure to change their practices to come in line with the law, and many states are expected to change their structures in the next legislative session.

“In 2012,” said Schwartz, “science has found that youth should be treated differently.”


**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

Letters: Mental care can prevent violent crimes

From the Detroit Free Press:  http://www.freep.com/article/20120817/OPINION04/308170037/1068/NLETTER42/Letters--Mental-care-can-prevent-violent-crimes

August 17, 2012

In response to the plea agreement for Jared Loughner: May we all benefit from the wisdom and compassion of Gabrielle Giffords, retired member of Congress, and her husband, retired NASA astronaut Mark Kelly, along with the families whose loved ones were injured or killed in a rampage, who supported this legal resolution. Had Loughner received the treatment for schizophrenia that he desperately needed, the tragedy in Arizona probably would never have happened.

It seems so few understand the great need to reform the criminal justice system to reflect current knowledge of mental illnesses, including addictions. We urge all citizens to become familiar with legislation (S306) that will establish the National Criminal Justice Commission Act of 2011, and urge their congressional representatives to support this bill.

We appreciate your dedication and courage in presenting another view of the criminal justice system, which many people do not understand, given the scare tactics of "protecting the public" and the unrelenting punishment-only views of most prosecutors and many judges. Hopefully, your efforts will get greater attention and support as a consequence of the intelligent actions taken by those involved in the Arizona rampage.
Robert and Emilie Baker

Bay City
Whenever there are rampage killing such as we have seen so recently in Colorado and Wisconsin, there is an outcry of: "How do we prevent these tragedies?" At the Treatment Advocacy Center, our entire focus is on treatment issues involving the severe mental illnesses that are often involved in these events. Among our answers is that states with progressive civil commitment laws need to use those laws to intervene, and the public needs to be aware that intervention before mayhem is possible. Michigan is one of the states with useful laws, including the assisted outpatient treatment law Jeff Gerritt described in his Sunday column ("Families need stronger help when loved ones need mental care"). In most cases of mental illness-involved violence, there are red flags before tragedy occurs. We applaud the Free Press for letting readers know about the role of court-ordered treatment when red flags go up. Treatment Advocacy Center Arlington, Va.


**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, August 20, 2012

Teen Dies in Solitary in Georgia Jail After Alleged Medical Neglect

From Solitary Watch:  http://solitarywatch.com/2012/08/17/teen-dies-in-solitary-in-georgia-jail-after-alleged-medical-neglect/

August 17, 2012

In a particularly horrendous story out of Georgia, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports today on the death of a 17-year-old in solitary confinement in a small-town jail last year. The teen’s mother is has now named the town, it’s police department, the jail’s nurse and doctor, and four correctional officers in a federal lawsuit claiming wrongful death and civil right violation’s, based on allegations that her son’s serious medical condition was ignored.
Fabian Avery III weighed 153 pounds when he was transferred from the Fulton County jail in late February 2011 to alleviate overcrowding. The 17-year-old was found dead nearly a month later in an isolation cell at the Mize Street Municipal jail in the south Georgia town of Pelham, his 6-foot-1-inch frame shriveled to 108 pounds, according to reports…

Avery died of appendicitis and complications from a bowel obstruction, according to investigative documents compiled by the GBI [Georgia Bureau of Investigation].
He had been arrested in December 2010 on armed robbery charges and was transferred to Pelham on Feb. 15, 2011.

The complaint claims that Avery first reported being ill on Feb. 24, 2011 and was given minimal attention. While he complained of nausea, stomach pains, vomiting and lower back pains, as well as frequently vomiting and defecating on himself, the lawsuit claims jail staff did little to help get Avery the necessary care…
Avery was found dead on the morning of March 18, on a mattress on the floor of his 6-by-10-foot isolation cell.

According to the AJC, the GBI’s invesigation found that the teenager had been placed in “the hole” after he first reported being sick, ”because he began frequently soiling himself and not cleaning up or showering.” The jail’s nurse reportedly “suggested that Avery might have been faking some of his symptoms,” despite his apparent extreme weight loss.

The defendents’ attorney told the AJC: “This is an unfortunate case…If [the jail staff] had any indication that he needed any more medication, it would have been provided.”

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

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