Showing posts with label Audio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Audio. Show all posts

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Mumia Abu-Jamal Speaks from Prison on Life After Death Row and His Quest for Freedom

April 25, 2012 Democracy Now!
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Mumia1

In a Democracy Now! exclusive, Mumia Abu-Jamal phones in from the SCI Mahanoy prison in Frackville, Pennsylvania, where he is being held in general population after nearly 30 years on death row. Although he now lives in a bigger cell than what he calls the "small dog cage" of the last three decades, Mumia says his life sentence is akin to "a slow death row. It’s bigger in terms of the time differential, but it’s slow death row, to be sure." After having his death sentence overturned in late 2011, Abu-Jamal says he is determined to win his release from prison over allegations of racial bias and judicial misconduct in his conviction. "We want freedom," he says of the movement calling for his release. Supporters have long argued racism by the trial judge and prosecutors led to Abu-Jamal’s conviction. He notes that during his trial a court reporter overheard the judge in his case, Judge Albert F. Sabo, say in his chambers, "I’m going to help them fry the nigger." "This was heard by a court reporter—a member of the court staff, a court employee, and a person that is perhaps the best listener you could ever have for any conversation, because that’s her job," Abu-Jamal says. "We didn’t know about it until years later, but when we put this into our papers, our filings, it has been essentially ignored by every court it’s come in front of. How is that possible? And so, I mean, that’s certainly one indication, as you can see, one example of an unfair system." [includes rush transcript]
Filed under  Mumia Abu-Jamal
Guest:
Mumia Abu-Jamal, former death row prisoner. For decades, Abu-Jamal has argued racism by the trial judge and prosecutors led to his conviction for the killing of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. Last year, the Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals set aside his death sentence after finding jurors were given confusing instructions that encouraged them to choose the death penalty rather than a life sentence.

Friday, September 23, 2011

California Prisons Hunger Strikes to Renew

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

Many of the Pelican Bay inmates are in a weakened state of health.”

Inmates at the infamous Security Housing Unit of California’s Pelican Bay state prison say they will go back on hunger strike on September 26 [7], convinced that prison officials have no intention of making a meaningful response to their five core demands [8]. Pelican Bay was the nexus of 21 days of protest in July that, at one point, involved 6,500 inmates at 13 prisons. The protest draw national attention to the routine practice of torture behind prison walls in California and throughout the vast American Prison Gulag.

On July 20, inmate representatives voted to temporarily suspend their strike in order to give prison officials “a couple of weeks” to make good on their promise to give serious attention to the inmates five “core demands,” including clean, adequate and wholesome food, an end to group punishment, and a chance to get out of long-term isolation from human contact, in which inmates are held in solitary for 23 hours a day. But the weeks went by, and inmates finally concluded that prison officials were not about to meet any of the core demands. On September 1, Pelican Bay inmate representative Mutope Duguma told the San Francisco Bay View newspaper that the hunger strike would resume. There are indications that inmates at Calipatria State Prison will also be involved.

Supporters on the outside caution that this round of protest will be different than the first, both because many of the Pelican Bay inmates are in a weakened state of health, and because California authorities are anxious to keep the lid on the protest and avoid embarrassment for the state. On some levels, the authorities have gone on the offensive, claiming their practices are not torture, but meet constitutional standards, and that it is necessary to use the harshest methods to control what they claim are 3,000 gang “generals” – not captains or majors, but “generals” – who would otherwise kill guards and other prisoners on sight.

Prison officials claim it is necessary to use the harshest methods to control what they claim are 3,000 gang ‘generals.’”

Rather than subjecting their policies to an honest review, prison officials seem prepared to turn up the heat. In a meeting of the California State Assembly’s Public Safety Committee, prison official Scott Kernan said the system planned to expand its solitary confinement regime to include all inmates categorized as being part of any “disruptive group.” That’s a code word for gangs, but in reality can mean anything the authorities want it to mean, including politically-inspired inmates or any of the tens of thousands of prisoners who are arbitrarily labeled as gang-affiliated.

Faced with such state intransigence, the inmates at Pelican Bay see no alternative but to resist. Prison officials justify their torture regime, describing the Securing Housing Unit, or SHU, inmates as the “worst of the worst.” These officials preside over a system that is in the business of dehumanizing men, on an industrial, military scale.

Pelican Bay and the other torture chambers of the American Prison Gulag are among the theaters of war waged against Black and brown people in the U.S., a war that has plunged millions into captivity – including lots of whites as collateral damage. Those confined to the SHU are the treated as the equivalent of enemy combatants, with no rights, and no protection. Human dignity cannot survive in a nation that tolerates the existence of Pelican Bay.

For Black Agenda Radio, I’m Glen Ford. On the web, go to www.BlackAgendaReport.com [9].

BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Deep Green Resistance, Death Threats and the Police

An interview with Derrick Jensen

by Vancouver Media Co-op August 24, 2011

» Download file 'derrick j.mp3' (14.3MB)

In this exclusive interview with the Vancouver Media Co-op, author Derrick
Jensen talks about a recent spate of death threats directed towards him.
He explains his decision to take his case to the FBI. He also expresses
his distaste for those who question his decision to go to the feds.

The interview was conducted by phone yesterday by Dawn Paley for the
Vancouver Media Co-op, and has been minimally edited for sound quality and
length.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Interview with Jay Donahue about the California Prisoner Hunger Strike

July 26, 2011 frolympia.org

Jay talks about the continuing struggle inside California State prisons

Download At:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/07/26/cal_hunger_strike072611.mp3

Audio 17 mins 12 seconds

Recorded at Free Radio Olympia on July 26, 2011 by dj questionmark

Monday, July 04, 2011

Interview with Paul Wright of Prison Legal News

May 31, 2011 Frolympia.org

Recorded May 30, 2011 by dj questionmark at Free Radio Olympia

Download at:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/05/31/paulwright053011.mp3 (31
minutes, 7mb mp3)

Paul talks about founding Prison Legal News while incarcerated in
Washington State as a resource for prisoners. Overcoming hurdles to
publishing and distribution, including the first three issues completely
banned in Washington State prisons, Prison Legal News emerged as a leading
nation-wide magazine in the United States with over 7,000 subscribers in
all 50 states. Possibly the most censored publication in the country,
Prison Legal News has successfully pressed lawsuits against prison mail
restrictions and to improve prison conditions for the last 21 years.

Paul also talks about the economics of prison slavery and how prisons
manage unemployment rates and poor people. Prison Legal News is currently
working on a campaign to end high prisoner phone call costs.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Interview with Michael Novick on Anti-Racism and Decolonializing

Saturday Jun 25th, 2011 indybay.org

recorded at Free Radio Olympia by dj questionmark June 20, 2011



Download at:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/06/25/michael_novick_062011.mp3 (7.9
mb 34 minutes)

Michael Novick of Anti-Racist Action LA and People Against Racist Terror
(ARA-LA/PART) talks about anti-racist work and dismantling colonialism.
Novick connects different social justice issues and how everyone has a
stake in the struggle for human liberation. He also lays out the
historical progression of settler colonialism in the western United States
and how important it is today for people to be self-critical of an
internal colonization that misleads people into identifying with their own
oppressor. Novick’s approach to community organizing recognizes a common
humanity that includes building alliances, self-determination and
developing a “total politics” that include all oppressed people and
groups.

Visit http://www.antiracist.org for more info about Anti-Racist Action

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Audio from the 2011 Tacoma Leonard Peltier Clemency Rally

May 26, 2011 frolympia.org

Download at:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/05/26/peltier_march_2011.mp3 (1 hour
and 3 minutes long, 46.8 mb mp3)

Listen to Native elders talk about the struggle to free Leonard Peltier.
Chauncey Peltier, Leonard's son, speaks about his dad. More speeches by
Leonard's supporters were recorded at the rally held in front of the
Federal Courthouse in downtown Tacoma.

Recorded by dj questionmark May 21, 2011 in Tacoma WA

Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Olympia Peace Activist talks about Challenging Abusive Conditions in the Olympia City Jail

Interview recorded at Free Radio Olympia by dj Questionmark on May 2, 2011

Download at:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/05/03/patty050211.mp3

(27.8 mb mp3 30 minutes and 56 seconds)

Olympia peace activist Patty talks about her participation in a federal
lawsuit to change conditions in the Olympia City Jail. She was arrested in
November 2007 during anti-war protests that shut down military transport
through the Port of Olympia. Patty was one of 40 women who held a sit in
at the port gate. The lawsuit came from their treatment in Olympia City
Jail where they were held for hours in their underwear and subjected to
other humiliating treatment. Patty talks about options people may have
when abused in jail.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Radio Interview with Sac Prisoner Support about Eric McDavid

April 26, 2011 by dj Questionmark frolympia.org

Interview recorded at Free Radio Olympia by dj Questionmark on April 25, 2011

Download at:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/04/26/ericmcdavid042511.mp3 (24 mb) 27
minutes

Interview with Jenny of Sacramento Prisoner Support about the case of Eric
McDavid. Eric was entrapped by government agent "Anna" in early 2006 in a
fake plot to blow up a dam. Anna used FBI money to recruit, house and
transport her fake eco-cell. After the arrests, Eric's co-defendants took
cooperating plea-deals and testified against him. Eric was then tried and
convicted of conspiracy and sentenced to 20 years.

Sac Prisoner Support has supported Eric throughout this experience and is
developing long term strategies. An international day of action is called
this June 11th, 2011 in solidarity with Eric and eco-defender Marie Mason.
For more information about the day of action visit: http://june11.org

For more information on Eric McDavid and ways to support him visit:
http://supporteric.org

http://frolympia.org

Radio Interview with Tre Arrow

April 26, 2011 by dj Questionmark frolympia.org

Download at:

http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2011/04/26/trearrow042511.mp3 (50 mb) 56
minutes

Interview with environmental activist and former international political
prisoner Tre Arrow. Tre talks about his current activities in Portland and
his past efforts to preserve forest eco-systems. He recounts his
participation in the Eagle Creek and Tillimook forest campaigns. Tre
became well known for standing on the ledge of the US forest Service
building in downtown Portland for 11 days. He then ran for congress for
the Green Party and got over 15,000 votes.

Tre became a suspect for the Ross Island Sand and Gravel arson after his
co-defendant bragged to his girlfriend, who told her dad, who told the
FBI. While a fugitive on the FBI's most wanted list, Tre crossed Canada
and was arrested in Vancouver. Tre fought his extradition and lack of raw
vegan food in jail with a series of hunger strikes. His weight dropped to
around 80 pounds at one point.

Tre served his prison time and is currently on parole. He remains
committed to social and ecological justice.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

PA Prison Report- Monday April 25, 2011- Special Unity and Courage edition

download mp3 download full 25-page .pdf file

Special Unity and Courage edition

Today the Human Rights Coalition released a report detailing the findings of a year-long investigation into human rights abuses in the solitary confinement unit at SCI Huntingdon state prison in Huntingdon, PA. The report, entitled Unity and Courage, outlines the underlying conditions of abuse and torture within Pennsylvania's isolation units that have led to widespread acts of resistance by prisoners, and describes the efforts of one group of men confined in Huntingdon's Restricted Housing Unit to oppose and bring public attention to constant depredations by guards as well as the willful indifference of prison administrators.

A Culture of Terror

Unity and Courage draws upon more than a thousand pages of letters, prison documents and legal paperwork, and conversations with prisoners' family members. The report depicts a culture of terror fostered by prison guards, who enforce a rule of absolute power through threats and use of force, along with deprivations of basic necessities such as food, water, hygienic items and cleaning supplies, clothing, and bedding. This campaign of brutality is undertaken with the tacit consent and encouragement of prison administrators and top officials of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, who have adopted an informal though strictly enforced policy of turning a blind eye to reports of torture and abuse.

Within this structure of officially sanctioned fear and punishment, solitary confinement units such as Huntingdon's Restricted Housing Unit are one of the most cruel and extreme measures used by prison staff to silence and intimidate prisoners who show too keen an interest in insist on standing up for their human rights.

Fear Tactics

Among the methods employed by prison staff to assert dominance over prisoners is the use of violence as a standard technique for enforcing obedience, as well as the threat of indefinite solitary confinement for any prisoner who dares to challenge abuses of authority on the part of prison staff.

These and other elements are present in the case study of Vincent Hallman detailed in Unity and Courage, who in January 2010 was abruptly sentenced to isolation after a guard instigated a violent confrontation over a perceived challenge to his authority. Hallman's subsequent targeting for retaliation and virtually permanent placement in solitary confinement provides an example of a common cycle of abuse, protest, and retaliation that exists throughout the PA DOC.

Upon being placed in solitary, Hallman was confined in a cell without heat or bedding in the middle of winter, and was deprived of food and denied medical attention for his injuries. Nearby solitary confinement prisoners who spoke out regarding Hallman's mistreatment were sentenced to further time in isolation, had their sheets, blankets, and towels confiscated, and were stripped of the one hour a day they were allowed outside of their cramped cells to exercise. One prisoner who witnessed guards physically abusing Hallman was told by a guard to "keep your mouth shut, the same thing can happen to you. You're going to die in this hole anyway so you're the least of my concerns."

Acts of Resistance

A key focus of Unity and Courage is the events surrounding a series of non-violent protests organized by solitary confinement prisoners in late September 2010, and subsequent retaliatory attacks by guards.

The initial protest occurred on September 29, 2010, when eight prisoners refused to return to their cells from the exercise cages where they are provided one hour outside of their cells five days a week. Anthony Allen, Theodore Byard, Vincent Hallman, Rhonshawn Jackson, Kyle Klein, Eric Mackie, Gary Wallace, and Jeremiah Weems staged a "peaceful demonstration" in protest of the "abuse, racism, retaliation and witness intimidation" they were being subjected to.

On the 29th, rather than returning to their cells, prisoners refused to leave the exercise yard and peacefully requested to speak to prison authorities. This was met with stiff opposition from guards, who refused to address grievances or permit prisoners to speak with higher officials in Huntingdon's administration. This response had been anticipated by the protesters, who in fact sought to "compel the staff to (follow DOC policy and) bring a video camera so that we can document the starvation, water deprivation, threats of murder and beatings, and racial slurs, and have central office informed."

The prison responded with violence. Writes Gary Wallace, "We were all sprayed with a chemical agent and forcibly removed from the exercise yard. We were then brought into our cells with the spray all over our skin which continues to burn until it is properly washed away. Approximately four hours later I was burning so bad and my breathing was so hampered that I had to cover my cell door to force a cell removal so that I could receive medical attention. I was again sprayed with (pepper spray)." Other protesters received similar treatment at the hands of guards, and over the next several days they experienced further cell extractions and attacks by guards armed with pepper spray.

The next month saw two more group protests on October 15 and 18th, in which prisoners again came together to demand an end to abusive conditions in the unit. In all, prisoners reported that fourteen men in the solitary confinement unit at SCI Huntingdon were subjected to attacks with pepper spray and cell extracted over the course of one month. Despite the absolute refusal of prison administrators to meet with the protesters or address their grievances, many of the men who took part later described their actions as both necessary and worthwhile. Writes Kyle Klein, "Their goal is to stop us from speaking out against them, but it will never work, not a chance in hell, or the hell we are in. Even when winning is impossible, quitting is far from optional."

The Way Forward

Unity and Courage outlines several ways that different sectors of society can take part in exposing and bringing an end to torture and human rights violations in Pennsylvania prisons, including the investigation and prosecution of abusive prison staff by law enforcement agencies, increased assistance from the legal community, the creation by the PA state legislature of an independent commission to investigate abuse, and continued organizing by prisoners and their family members.

Copies of Unity and Courage were sent last week to PA Department of Corrections administration and members of state and federal law enforcement agencies. A complete listing of these public officials, along with contact information, can be found online on HRC's website, www.hrcoalition.org. HRC is calling upon the general public to contact officials on the list, ask their position regarding the human rights violations described in Unity and Courage, and demand that they adopt recommendations made in the report.

* * *

We end this special edition of the PA Prison Report with the words of Huntingdon solitary confinement protester Gary Wallace: "The men participating in this struggle are simply individuals who have been suffering for an extended period of time and have collectively decided 'something must be done'. (We) are all doing what every person on this planet has an obligation to do when you are maliciously being deprived of food and drinking water, showers, exercise, being threatened with physical harm and belittled and dehumanized simply because you are placed under the authority of another group of individuals. What should move advocates to want to intervene is that we collectively understand the most important concept of these times, which is that before one is deserving of a great reward, one must first be willing to offer and endure an even greater sacrifice."

Announcements

Philly area: Wednesdays are Write On! Prison Letter Writing Night at the LAVA space at 4134 Lancaster, 6-9pm. Come help us stay connected with the many prisoners who write to us with news from inside, learn to document crimes committed by prison staff, and help bring an end to the abuse and torture of our brothers and sisters behind bars.

If you'd like to know more about the Human Rights Coalition or would like to get involved, call us at 215-921-3491, email info@hrcoalition.org, or visit our website at http://www.hrcoalition.org./

Pittsburgh area: Write On! – letter writing to prisoners and HRC work night every Wednesday at 5129 Penn Avenue from 7 -10pm. To get involved with HRC/Fed Up! in Pittsburgh,email hrcfedup@gmail.com or call 412-654-9070.

You've been listening to the Human Rights Coalition's PA Prison Report, Special Unity and Courage edition.

Keep up the fight!

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Radio Interview With Susan Morales on the Struggle to Free Leonard Peltier

by dj Questionmark Apr 12th, 2011 Indybay.org
Interview with long time indigenous activist Susan Morales on the struggle to free Leonard Peltier.



Download audio:
Download audio
peltier041111.mp3 31.9MB


A NW regional march and rally for Leonard Peltier will take place May 21, 2011 in Tacoma WA.

This interview was recorded at Free Radio Olympia on April 11, 2011 by dj Questionmark

Susan talks about the days of the Seattle AIM House and what Leonard was like before he was a political prisoner.

The audio is rough in the first 4 minutes.