Statewide Prisoner Hunger Strike to Stop Torture, Long-Term Isolation & Indefinite Solitary Confinement in Prisons [link]
Letter composed by Carole Travis, Attorney, activist, former president of United Auto Workers Local 719
[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/carole-travis/california-prison-hunger-strike_b_3670210.html]:
Monday,
July 29, 2013. Today marks the first day of the 4th week of the
California Prison Hunger Strike. On July 8 when the prisoners began
their hunger strike to call attention to this torture, 30,000 inmates
across California stopped eating. Saturday morning we learned that Billy
Michael Sell housed in the Corcoran SHU (Solitary Housing Unit) died
last Monday. Today over 600 men have only had water for 22 days. They
protest their long-term torture. California is one of 19 states that use
long term, often indefinite, solitary confinement and by far and away
has the largest numbers of prisoners in solitary -- over 10,000.
Prisoners
are not sentenced to solitary for their street crime. Prison officials
assign them to this crushing isolation without due process, without
review of the evidence against them, without legal representation or an
impartial hearing. The deciding agency is made up of prison guards who
have risen in the ranks through time. At Pelican Bay, California's super
max, the men who decide the fate of the prisoners are white and have
lived their lives in Crescent City with a population of around 9,000
people 15 miles south of the Oregon border. They believe they understand
the culture of the prisoners, largely from major urban areas and
communities of color because they have studied them in their cages for
years. As a result of the July 2011 hunger strike there has been an
impartial review panel deciding if those in solitary belong there. The
panel found 68% of the prisoners they reviewed should be immediately
transferred out of solitary into the General Prison Population.
The
August (2013) issue of Scientific American highlights the
ineffectiveness of solitary confinement to reduce crime in prison. It
does have the capacity to induce or exacerbate mental illness. The
practice is deemed cruel, inhumane, and ineffective. As the editors
point out, "new research suggests that solitary confinement creates more
violence both inside and outside prison walls." (p.10). Mr. Juan
Mendez, Special Rapporteur on torture defines 15 days in solitary
confinement as torture.
We are compelled to write this Open
Letter to Governor Brown to step in and stop the torture. We ask you to
join us and sign our letter.
No comments:
Post a Comment