Monday, January 22, 2007

Political Prisoner Video and Newsletter

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
http://www.ProLibertadWeb.com
ProLibertad@hotmail.com and ProLibertad.Campaign@gmail.com
ProLibertad Hotline: 718-601-4751
_______________________________________________________________________________

DOWNLOAD THE JANUARY 2007 EDITION OF THE PROLIBERTAD NEWSLETTER EL
COQUI LIBRE:
http://www.prolibertadweb.com/eclJanuary2007.pdf

Also,

View this amazing 7 minute video prodcued by by Greg Bozell and the
National Boricua Human Rights Network on the Puerto Rican Political
prisoners:


_______________________________________________________________________________

¡¡FELIZ AñO NUEVO!! HAPPY NEW YEAR!!

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign wishes everyone a wonderful, just
and powerful New Year!! In these times of war, repression and
RESISITANCE, we in the ProLibertad Freedom Campaign are calling on
all our allies, supporters and friends to remember our brothers and
sisters behind the walls!! Those amazing and inspiration compañer@s
that were incarcerated by the US government for their brave actions
and commitment to the liberation of Puerto Rico; a colony of the
United States for 108 years!

As the year 2007 begins, we are urging all of you to join
ProLibertad's newest campaign:

ADOPT-A-PRISONER 2007

This is an easy project. There are only 5 easy steps to support this endeavor:

Step 1: Go to http://www.prolibertadweb.com/page4.html and read
about one of our prisoners.

Step 2: Choose one of them or all of them and make the commitment to
write to him/her/them once or twice a month.

Step 3: If you can, send them a commissary donation (small financial
donation $5-whatever; every little bit counts)!! These small
donations allow them to pay for phone calls to family/LEGAL
COUNSEL/friends and also for over priced materials behind the walls.
To learn more about how to donate go to:
http://www.prolibertadweb.com/page5.html

Step 4: Email us Prolibertad@hotmail.com and let us know who you've
adopted. We want to keep track of this campaign and see how many of
you are able to commit to supporting our prisoners.

Step 5: Motivate all of your friends to ADOPT-TO-A-PRISONER!! Be
creative!! Invite ProLibertad to speak to your friends or organize a
card/letter writing party. Let us know how we can support!

TOGETHER WE CAN MAKE FREEDOM HAPPEN!! TOGETHER WE CAN SUPPORT OUR HEROES

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Bashir Hameed Harassed Again


Sat, 20 Jan 2007
Political Prisoner News
ppnews@freedomarchives.org

Bashir Hameed/York
#82-A-6313
Great Meadow Correctional Facility
Box 51
Comstock, New York 12821

I received a call from a friend of Bashir Hameed early this a.m. 1/20/7. He
said that "last night (1/19/07) when Bashir was at prayer his cell was turned
out and his papers were confiscated and when he returned he was locked down
in his cell and notified that the guards had found and taken
"political contraband" from his cell."

This is the third time since Bashir has been in Comstock prison that the
prison administration ordered a raid on his cell and charged him with having
"Polical Contraband" -papers- in his cell.

We are asking that you call the prison and ask what is meant by "political
contraband" and if they have the time to raid his cell why don't they have
the time to give him his monthly checkup's and blood work since his open
heart surgery?

Great Meadow Correctional Facility
11739 State Route 22, P.O. Box 51
Comstock, New York 12821-0051
(518) 639-5516 (Washington County)

For more information call NYC Jericho at
718-853-0893

-- Free All Political Prisoners!
nycjericho@riseup.net • www.jerichony.org

Claude Marks
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
(415) 863-9977

Questions and comments may be sent to
claude@freedomarchives.org

Updates from Supporters of Joyanna and Nathan

From: "Supporters of J. & N." <supportersofnathanandjoyanna@gmail.com>
Date: January 20, 2007

Warm Greetings to All in this Time of No Light,

We wanted to send an update to let folks know that Nathan and Joyanna
are doing well, remaining strong and resolute in the face of a prison
sentence that would keep them incarcerated until 2012 or beyond. As
always, we marvel at their integrity and steadfastness, and endeavor
to allow their imprisonment to be as comfortable as possible.

With that in mind, we want to let you know that this coming Thursday,
JANUARY 25th, will be Joyanna's 29th birthday. It will undoubtedly be
a very difficult one despite the incredible support she feels.
Joyanna continues to demonstrate courage and tremendous strength
nearly a year after her arrest, and receiving mail from those near and
dear has been a critical piece in sustaining that attitude. Please
help mark this day with your cards and letters. Even though we know
how appreciative she would be of the gift of books, at this point, she
has all that she is allowed, so please hold off.

Guidelines for what is and is not appropriate to mail can be found at:
http://www.ecoprisoners.org/howtohelp2.htm

We are imagining her day filled with images and words sending incredible love.

Also, we are encouraging contributions to their commissary funds which
dipped low this last month. Commissary allows inmates to purchase
toiletries and other helpful items, as well as augmenting the
notoriously poor food situation by providing snacks and other foods
for sale. This weekly trip to the "store" is a big highlight in the
life of someone behind bars, and if you have anything to give, it
would be much appreciated. You can donate in one of two ways:
1) Donations can always be sent to Nathan and Joyanna's support fund.
This fund is maintained by Nathan's mother, Maureen, and is used at
the discretion of Joyanna and Nathan. Checks and money orders can be
sent to:

S.N.J.
c/o Maureen Block
881 Oak Hill Rd.
Swanville, ME 04915

2) Money can also be sent directly to them for their commissary fund.
To do this, simply enclose a check or money order in an envelope and
mail it directly to them. The jail will collect your money and provide
N. or J. with a receipt letting them know about your gift. If your
envelope included a letter or a card, this will be provided with the
receipt.

Here are their addresses:

Joyanna Zacher #1663550
Lane County Adult Corrections
101 W. 5th Ave.
Eugene, OR 96740

Nathan Block #1663667
Lane County Adult Corrections
101 W. 5th Ave.
Eugene, OR 96740

From: "Supporters of J. & N." <supportersofnathanandjoyanna@gmail.com>
Date: January 20, 2007

Dear Friends and Supporters,

Nathan and Joyanna are in need of people who are willing to write
letters to the court on their behalf. As you likely know, they have
pled guilty and are both scheduled to go before Judge Ann Aiken on
April 25th for sentencing, though this date will most likely be
postponed. There will likely be pre-sentencing legal wrangling
regarding the government's stated desire to use a "terrorism
enhancement" to obtain a more severe sentence.

Prior to sentencing, their lawyers will submit detailed briefs to the
court. These briefs will hopefully include letters from family
members, friends, and other supporters, and these letters will factor
into Judge Aiken's decision.

Many of you wrote excellent letters last spring to support their
attempt at a bail release, and although we did not prevail, that
effort was critical. We are now asking you to PLEASE WRITE AGAIN.

Perhaps you have saved your letter and only have to make minor
adjustments. Perhaps now you have more clarity about what you may want
to say and how you can say it. Regardless, please don't feel
intimidated by this request but simply write honestly from experience
and from your heart.

Writing with respect to Nathan and Joyanna's character and your
relationships, their place in the community, and your thoughts on the
sentencing are all APPROPRIATE. You may wish to write to the Judge
about how their case compares to other crimes and incidents that you
are personally aware of that either have or have not been treated as
"terrorist" incidents. INAPPROPRIATE would be any comments that try
to justify or rationalize the incidents. Also, we ask that you not
compare Nathan and Joyanna to others who have entered pleas and who
are also facing sentencing, or to those who have not been arrested or
are fugitives.

Judge Aiken will likely take into consideration such things as whether
Nathan and Joyanna are apt to commit another crime; if they had been
living largely different lives since the time of their admitted
offenses; whether they have family and friends ready and willing to
help them reintegrate after incarceration; and specifically, what
kinds of support and opportunities might await them.

If you have known Nathan and Joy we suggest you simply try to write
about any personal experiences you have had with them that illustrate
those important aspects of their character; what you know about their
relationship with family and close friends – the people who will be
their personal support while they are in prison and when they are
released. You might want to write about how you see their lives have
changed since 2001 or consider sharing how you might be able to help
them reestablish a normal life when they are released from prison,
whether it is through helping them pursue their education, gain
employment, or establishing a home.

Above all else, you should know that your support has been key to
maintaining the solidarity that has strengthened and sustained Nathan
and Joy throughout. We want to thank you in advance for continuing
that effort with a letter in response to this appeal.

It is important that your letters reach their lawyers by FEBRUARY
15th, 2007 in order to to be included in their pre-sentencing
memorandum. Please write in a polite, respectful manner to the Judge.

The top of the letter itself should be addressed to:

Honorable Ann Aiken
United States District Court
Eugene, Oregon

Please be sure your letter includes your address and that you DATE and
SIGN it. And please, do NOT mail your letter to Judge Aiken. After
you have signed the letter, mail it to the respective lawyer's office.

Letters for Nathan should be sent to:

John E. Storkel
1415 Liberty Street, S.E.
Salem, Oregon 97302

Letters for Joyanna should be sent to:

Bill Sharp
1342 High Street, 2nd Floor
Eugene, Oregon 97401

If you should have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Thanks and be well.

Revolutionary Film Festival: Civil liberties in a time of crisis

February 16-17, 2007
University of Oregon Law School Room 175
Friday, February 16, 6 pm to 10 pm
Saturday, February 17, 10 am to 11 pm

The Civil Liberties Defense Center; American Constitution Society (U of Oregon chapter); and the National Lawyers Guild (Eugene chapter) are co-sponsoring a civil liberties film festival the evening of Friday, February 16 and all day Saturday, February 17. Each film will have a short introduction, some by local civil rights attorneys and others by film-makers and subjects of the films who have been invited to attend.

Admission - suggested donation $2 to $5 per film; or get a great one-time deal on an annual membership in the Civil Liberties Defense Center for $25, with film admission for both days included. Popcorn and other refreshments will be served.


FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16
6:00 - We Interrupt This Empire - Collaborative work by San Francisco Bay Area independent video activists, documenting the shutdown of the San Francisco financial district following the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
7:30 - The Torture Question - Frontline documentary about Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib.
9:20 - Mumia: A Case for Reasonable Doubt - Convicted in 1981 of killing a white Philadephia police officer, Mumia Abu-Jamal was imprisoned in 1981. His conviction contains irregularities in both the evidence and the conduct of his trial.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17
10:00 - This Is My Home - Documentary about New Orleans residents who remain displaced 16 months after Hurricane Katrina. Thousands of families are still shut out of their homes and remain displaced across the country.
11:00 - Prisoners of Katrina - Documentary about the people in jail when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, who were abandoned by the jail staff.
12:05 - Doing Justice: The Life and Trials of Arthur Kinoy - Award-winning documentary about a NLG attorney who represented the Rosenbergs and continued to take on controversial civil rights cases through the Watergate era.
1:15 - Norfolk Four - Four veterans of the U.S. Navy were convicted of crimes they did not commit. This film is a review of the case by leading experts in the fields of pathology, DNA analysis, crime reconstruction, and confessions.
2:00 - Civil Liberties Since 9/11 - Informative and shocking panel discussion with Lynne Stewart, Clark Kissinger, Len Weinglass, Michael Ratner, Abdeen Jabara, chaired by Michael Smith.
3:50 - Forest For the Trees - Inside look at a team of young activists and old lefties battling the U.S. government in Judi Bari vs. the FBI. Bari was an Earth First! leader severely injured when her car was bombed, and she was arrested as a terrorist - charges later dropped. Suspecting a ploy by the FBI to discredit her and Earth First!, Judi sued and won!
5:10 - Juvies - Compelling documentary about 12 juveniles tried as adults. Includes commentary from academics, doctors, a former D.A., and others who discuss the trend in recent years across the United States to try juveniles as adults.
6:30 - Education of Shelby Knox - A 15-year-old girl's transformation from conservative Southern Baptist to liberal Christian and ardent feminist parallels her fight for sex education and gay rights in Lubbock, Texas.
7:00 - Fighting for Justice: The Coram Nobis Cases - Documentary about Japanese-Americans who made the choice to get arrested instead of go to the internment camps, and were prosecuted.
7:30 - Blacklist: Recovering the Life of Canada Lee - The life of African American actor Canada Lee, who was persecuted for his interracial marriage and blacklisted for refusing to cooperate with the McCarthy commission.
8:15 - Legacy of Torture: The War Against The Black Liberation Movement - Video about five former Black Panther Party members. (One of the Panthers has been invited to attend)
9:20 - Hearne, Texas: Scenes from the Drug War - The story of a community engaged in a struggle to clear the names of those swept up in a corrupt drug raid; produced in association with the ACLU of Texas.
10:00 - Thelton Henderson's American Journey - The challenges the first black attorney in the Civil Rights Division of JFK's Justice Dept. confronted being a black man in authority within the all-white world of the American legal system.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Tony Serra's Letter from Prison


Letter From Lompoc
By J. Tony Serra
PRISONER NUMBER 99943-011
Exactly 30 years ago, I was released from Lompoc Federal Prison Camp. Today I have returned, inmate once again: each time upheaved from an obsessively active criminal law practice; each time the consequence of my own volitional federal income tax resistance. At prison camp in 1976, I was a zealot of fiery political causes; at present, at age 71, I remain of similar persuasion. In essence, both the Camp, in its physical components, and I, in my ideological components, remain the same.
However, much water has flowed under the bridge in the past 30 years, and radical changes have occurred with respect to camp incarceration since I last tread on these grounds, built over an ancient Indian village near Lompoc. This part of central California is historically the gestation area of the state's outdoor-grown flower industry, and Lompoc is surrounded still by a checkerboard of brilliant flower beds. Situated close to the sea between San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara, the fragrance of saline-laden breezes is pervasive.
I author this letter to inform the conscience of the legal community about the ruinous collapse of prisoner attitude since I was last here incarcerated. The attitude has gone from appreciation for being placed in a "camp" to disdain and hostility toward it. I share the present mood of antipathy for this penal colony. I am silently disturbed and at times outraged.
I am seven months finished with a ten-month misdemeanor sentence. For decades I have failed to pay my federal income taxes, at first on principle and later by indifference. I object strenuously to prison camp because we inmates are not treated humanely. I do not object to my sentence.
The present site is different from the prison camp in the 1970s, but its topographical features remain the same. There is a cruel, arresting beauty: multiple acres, situated on a bluff overlooking lush valleys, ringed by eucalyptus trees, the hub of camp life encased in green lawns and gardens of fecund plant and flower growth. Crows screech, blackbirds flit, cranes glide, and hawks circle the enclosure. Raccoons, ground squirrels, and deer abound freely; morning fog purrs listlessly, and sunsets are fireballs. Thus also was the esthetic of the Camp in 1976.
Outside the perimeter of the central hub of the sleeping barracks, eating hall, library, chapel, and administrative offices lies a softball diamond, basketball court, soccer field, sandy volleyball space, and areas for horseshoes, Ping-Pong, and bocce ball. And beyond the sports areas are the Camp's work facilities: the dairy, the cow pastures, the fields of corn, machine shops, vehicle transportation center, carpentry facility, warehouse, and the giant Federal Prison Industries cable-manufacturing industry complex. The old Lompoc prison camp was similar, but without the inmate industry and with larger grounds and a smaller prisoner population.
At first blush, who would say that such an environment is penal? Who could know that the purpose of the camp is punishment and retribution? It turns out that the administrative guards are harassing technocrats, that involuntary inmate servitude is oppressive, that the forced routine and tedious repetition is mentally toxic, and that prisoners are reduced to automatons. No one who merely looks at the Camp can feel the enmity of the prisoners toward it, their calculated disdain and apathy toward job assignments, their ultimate unified rejection of Bureau of Prison policy and procedure. In 1976 inmates, as a generality, felt graced and privileged by their placement in the Camp; in 2006 inmates stolidly persevere in quiet dereliction.
Why the great difference in prisoner attitude between then and now? In general, our society has largely devolved in its perspective toward crime and outlawed behavior. In the '60s and '70s, we looked for the economic and social factors that produced aberrant behavior; we sought to identify the causative factors of crime and reform those conditions that produced it. For prisoners, it meant rehabilitation-education and job training as in-custody objectives. Today, the sole and articulated prison objective is punishment. In the '60s and '70s, sentences were fashioned to the particular needs and backgrounds of the accused; individualized and particularized "justice" was meted out. Now Draconian, frequently mandatory, and universalized sentences are the norm.
The bar dictates that I cannot practice law for about the first six months of my sentence, but I talk to many inmates as a father to a son about their legal, domestic, and psychological issues. In prison I am still 95 percent "counselor," but not "lawyer" per se. I still collect the secrets of their conscience and their suffering. I still carry their albatross.
Not one prisoner whom I have talked to-and I have talked to hundreds-believes he has been treated fairly by the judicial system. Many young men, who in a past generation would have received probation, have had their youth taken from them-10, 15, 20 years of incarceration, with no parole, no conjugals, no furloughs, no real job training or education. They are harsh and bitter. Their attitude is contagious in prison subculture. Prisoners nowadays uniformly hate the U.S. government. And we sit around and ask why recidivism is on the rise!
The barracks-like dorm where about 175 of us sleep is a cacophony 18 hours per day. Five toilets and three washing machines serve us all. There is activity day and night. We cluster, we talk, we compare our daily events; we share complaints, ideas, discuss news events, and exchange the highs and lows of our mental lives. Most knowledge is derived from the shadows of rumor and hearsay cast in the dormitory of Plato's cave.
I am lucky. I am old, I am a lawyer, I am trusted. I am allowed to move from ethnic group to ethnic group, from youth to aged, from blue collar to white collar. At times I am a guide, at times a confessor, at times the articulator of inmates' concerns. These intimacies have stoked the fires of antigovernment sentiment within me. I will never retire from criminal law practice. I will die fighting for the vanquished.
Lompoc Camp itself supplies further reasons for inmate withdrawal and indifference. The minimum-security facility is described as a "working camp," distinguished from a federal prison by the absence of barbed-wire fences, gun towers, and barred cells. The government contracts with the federal Bureau of Prisons for industrial cable assemblage at Lompoc. The Bureau of Prisons profits hugely from this contract because prisoners are paid pennies per hour.
Prisoners realize that they are a part of a "slave labor" program. They have too much self-respect to be willingly exploited by the government. They hate their job assignments. Further, because presently there is effectively no parole for federal prisoners, no domestic furloughs, no early release, no "good time" credits, there is utterly no incentive to perform exemplarily. Why work hard, conform behavior, obey, and submit for nothing? In prison, there is only the stick, no carrot. Prisoner morale, contrasted to the '60s and '70s, is at a nadir. A wave of prisoner negativity is the prison's most infectious disease.
Thirty years ago my job assignment was garbage disposal-running alongside a huge garbage truck and hauling the cans to it-dumping garbage containers, in essence. Today, I am the camp waterman-a "river," a "rainmaker." I stand five hours per day in a green, janitor-type uniform with an orange hose in hand, nourishing lawns, gardens, and flowers. I blur into a surreal, introspective mental state where time passes timelessly. I receive $19.20 per month as wages for a five-day week of camp watering. In my free periods, I read incessantly and write bad poetry and prose. But, mostly, my still-undiluted legal mind looks and listens to the inequities of prison-camp existence.
Medical attention is a large concern here at Camp. The staff nurse can do little; doctors visit irregularly. Treatment for all variety of ailments is postponed or avoided. Our incantation to each other is, "don't get sick," "don't get injured"; "it will be the end of you." A fellow inmate from Nevada came in about the same time I did, and he developed a foot infection early. He repeatedly went to Medical Service; he repeatedly complained. He wanted to see a doctor. He was obviously limping and in pain. Nothing meaningful was done for about two and a half months. His condition deteriorated-we all saw it. He was finally "rushed" to the hospital to have a portion of his toe amputated. I talk to him every day. He is still limping around. I wish I could sue the whole damn bunch of them.
The mark of a dysfunctional society is the magnitude of its prison population. It is well documented that the U.S. prison system is burgeoning with excess occupants, that allotted resources are shrinking, medical attention is deficient, and prison as a deterrent to crime is a failure. But the final criterion of a dysfunctional prison system is prisoners' attitude toward the resurrection of societal norms. By this measure, we have abjectly been remiss.
In 2006 federal prisoners are treated as discarded cultural rejects. They are banned from the collective gene pool by forced celibacy. [Unlike California state prisons, federal prisons prohibit conjugal visits.] They are eliminated from the evolutionary process. Inmates are plucked weeds, warehoused to wither and perish. It is the action of the creeping, totalitarianism-embracing American government, the "KGB-ing" of the United States.
When I was an inmate at Lompoc in 1976, inmates were younger, the English language was the dominant tongue, and the majority of the prison population was white. There were no "rewarded" government informants at the Camp, furloughs were frequent, visiting was allowed three days a week, skinheads and tattooed weight lifters were few, buses took inmates to off-camp colleges, inmate mail was not read, nor were phone calls recorded. We felt freedom breezes in the incarcerated state. Big Brother was not sadistic and evil.
But now, because of protracted sentences, "gray power" is a visible component of the aging prison population. And self-segregation of the various ethnicities is blatant. Hispanics are the largest segment of the prison occupants; Spanish is the most-heard language. Middle Eastern and Asian languages are also prevalent. Tattooed skinheads of all races represent the preferred appearance. In 1976 we slept in cubicles. We now sleep in foul-odored, overcrowded, double-tiered bunks in military-like barracks. Our mail, our phone calls, our every move is scrutinized; each visitor or telephone-call recipient must be cleared. Visiting is only on weekends. Half the camp inmates have been informants. "Roll ups" to isolation for minor infractions is the rule, not the exception. A poisonous drear smothers the consciousness of the Camp inmate. We are treated like robots, not humans.
It is well known that I am a legal medical user of marijuana. I haven't "medicated" for months! Has such deprivation affected my mental health, my sleep, my esthetics, my philosophic visions? Absolutely. It's like a rare flower has been rudely plucked from my imagination. But I am a "short-timer" and I will survive. What inmates cannot survive is celibacy: no touch of a woman, no softness in their lives, no love on the physical plane, no offspring. I will never relinquish my despise of government for such depravity.
Obviously, these patent transitions from the benign to the primitive have modified my personal prison ideology. Whereas 30 years ago I read Hesse and Castaneda, I now read Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Pasternak, and Upton Sinclair. I've gone from religious mysticism to political-oppression realism. Whereas then I was-even while in custody-a hippiefied marijuana smoker, I am now a politicized Socratic gadfly. Then I allowed the process to zenfully flow; now I am resentful and outraged. Then I preached forbearance; now I espouse activism. Being locked in a prison camp for me is like being a doctor locked up in a hospital. I cure rather than facilitate. My mind paces like a caged tiger, and when I am released I promise that I will attack!
Tony Serra's Manifesto for Prison Reform
Based on my stay here, I have strong beliefs about prison reform. I would:
1. ELIMINATE all prison-camp facilities. Send the prisoners home with bracelet monitoring. Camp inmates are nonviolent and no flight risk. Prison camps exist only to furnish involuntary labor for Bureau of Prisons industries.
2. ELIMINATE mandatory minimum sentences and sentencing guidelines; they are excessively cruel and inhumane. Return sentencing discretion to the courts. Reestablish the balance of power in government.
3. MANDATE probation for first-time offenders. Many of the prisoners here are first-time convicts. Their long sentences make them needless martyrs. Long sentences definitely contribute to recidivism. The option of probation will promote resurrection of lawful lifestyles.
4. RETURN parole to the federal prison system. Parole rewards good behavior, provides motivation for reform, allows prison populations to decline, and tests early the ability of the convict to rejoin society. There is no pragmatic rationale for eliminating the parole system.
5. ELIMINATE involuntary servitude. This historical remnant should be severed. Slave-labor camps cannot morally be society's answer to punishing criminals. If prison industry is to continue, pay the inmates the minimum wage; the industry will still flourish.
6. RESTORE conjugal furloughs. The cruelest, most dehumanizing aspect of federal prison life is the forced celibacy entailed within it. The sublimations are horrific. The inmate's essential character is twisted and deformed. Let your imagination smolder on the gruesome substitutes created by prison life. There is no psychological recovery from this privation.
7. ELIMINATE informants from our system of justice. They are singularly responsible for more miscarriages of justice than any other component. The "Judas," the "rat," is universally scorned and isolated at prison camp. The inmate sanction imposed ranges from urination on the informant's bed to assault.
8. RESTORE education and job training. Bring back rehabilitation efforts. The puny efforts at education and job skills are laughable. Most prisoners really care about future success. A prisoner who becomes educated and secures a good-paying job is far less likely to re-offend.
9. IMPROVE library facilities. The so-called law library is a sick joke at Lompoc Prison Camp; it consists of a small collection of outdated codes and cases and a few form books. The remainder of the library is a random scattering of paperback books and old public library discards. Prisoners do seek to further their mental awareness through reading. Why deny us books?
J. Tony Serra is a San Francisco-based criminal defense attorney who was sentenced to ten months in federal prison for tax evasion and ordered to pay $100,000 in restitution. His incarceration, which began May 15, was delayed to accommodate his trial schedule.
Originally published in the December 2006 issue of California Lawyer.

Solidarity to the Prisoners on Hunger strike from Holland

from athens.indymedia.org

Banner in the Acu, Utrecht, Netherlands


Solidarity to the prisoners of the " May 6th" .The Greek-Freak Goverment is the only criminal in this case. The community of Utrecht is shocked by the fact that people are detained for 8th months "illegaly" for their so-called and never justified "illegal" actions. We try to forward the issue further, and do the maximum that we can afford, since the distance is big but are thoughts and actions may overcome this obstacle. Our compliments to all those people in Greece that with their nummerous actions have proved that for some people solidarity is not a 4-letter world! Tarasios, and Gerasimos we hope that these actions may give you more strength and ultimately Freedom. We are with you!

indymedia.nl/nl/2007/01/41906.shtml

Thursday, January 18, 2007

2 anarchists still on hunger strike (Tarasio Zadarozni & Gerasimos Kyriakopoulos)

Athens Indymedia
Athens Indymedia in English

In May 6th 2006, riots erupted during the European Social Forum march in Athens. For a period of three hours, following a 2km route, 2500 anarchists in smaller groups of 4-500 people, attacked banks, large department stores, police cars, government buildings, the police headquarters, riot police forces and buses as well as "Z-team" policemen (motorcycle team). They also attacked the US embassy, the Hilton hotel, the Italian embassy, and the riot police force guarding the parliament. 20 people were arrested, while 17 of them have been charged and await trial for multiple felony charges. 3 of them have been detained since May 2006.

Tarasios Zadorozni, one of those 3, an anarchist immigrant from Ukraine, began a hunger strike protest against his imprisonment on November 29th and therefore has been moved to the prison hospital since December 10th due to health problems.

Gerasimos Kyriakopoulos, the second prisoner, began a hunger strike protest against his imprisonment on December 15th. Having had kidney problems, he has been moved to the prison hospital since December 18th.

Letters from prison: Tarasios' Zadorozni [en], [el], Gerasimos Kyriakopoulos [en], [fr], [el]. Letter of hunger strikers from the General hospital of Nikaea

Solidarity actions
Since the first day of hunger strike there have been dozens of solidarity actions by anarchist comrades all over Greece from demos and taking over of radio stations to attacks on police stations, bank explosions, even a huge banner demanding their release attached to helium balloons that was set off in the air amongst hundreds of unsuspected cops during the new year’s eve Athens city center celebration at the fireworks display to the embarrassment of gathered politicians and tv crews that were broadcasting live the event. Also, in Salonica the baby of Jesus Christ was stolen from the city’s christmas crib while in its place a cd was left with propaganda material demanding the release of the prisoners.

Posters in solidarity demanding their release can be found at
[ 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12]


Some of the solidarity actions

1 January 2007 (Athens) - Banner released during New Years Eve celebrations
1 January 2007 (Athens) - Motorbike demo to Korydallos prison where they are being kept
The demo of approx. 100 motorbikes on new year’s eve was severely attacked by the police resulting to 12 arrested with charges of breaking the peace and that kind of silly legal crap.
31 December 2006 (Volos) – Solidarity demo
30 December 2006 (Patra) – Solidarity demo
29 December 2006 (Volos) – Invasion and taking over of the municipal radio station to broadcast solidarity messages and to inform the public
27 December 2006 (Athens) – Invasion and taking over of Flash FM radio station (nationwide coverage)
23 December 2006 (Patra) – Solidarity demo
23 December 2006 (Athens) Solidarity demo – Photos at
21 December 2006 (Athens) Solidarity demo at Pagkrati
21 December 2006 (Volos) – Solidarity demo
19 December 2006 (Athens) Solidarity demo at Zografou district
16 December 2006 (Heraclion, Crete) Solidarity demo
16 December 2006 (Salonica) Solidarity demo
16 December 2006 (Volos) Solidarity demo
15 December 2006 (Heraclion, Crete) Solidarity gathering
15 December 2006 (Athens) - Motorbike demo to Korydallos prison
8 December 2006 (Athens) - Motorbike demo outside the Ministry of Justice. One person was arrested
2 December 2006 (Athens) - Motorbike demo to Korydallos prison
1 December 2006 (Athens) Solidarity demo at Propylaea

Feature for Athens ESF, May 2006: [report from the demo | Photos: from the demo [1, 2, 3 from the forums: 1, 2

[ May 6 2006 | Letter of hunger strikers from the hospital of Korydallos Prison ]

Report from Kevin Tubbs Detention Hearing

Break The Chains Listserve

Today, January 17, at a hearing before Judge Ann Aiken in Eugene's federal court, arguments were heard on cooperating Operation Backfire defendant Kevin Tubbs' motion for release from custody. Tubb's lawyer, Marc Friedman, argued that Tubbs should be released from custody prior to his formal sentencing. Referring to the ruling in United States v. Garcia (9th Cir. 2003), Friedman argued that there were "exceptional reasons" warranting Tubbs' release. In particular, Friedman argued that Tubbs' cooperation as an informant was exceptional, that he began cooperating immediately upon his arrest, and that this probably played a substantial part in both new charges and defendants. Friedman also argued that Tubbs was not a flight risk, and that Tubbs had abandoned the "movement" many years ago. Unlike the last detention hearing for Tubbs, which occurred in February 2006 before Judge Coffin, Tubbs at this time had entered formal "guilty" pleas to nine arsons he participated in.

Kirk Engdall of the US Attorneys' Office countered that Tubb's cooperation was significant, but that it was not "exceptional," in that people facing charges offer statements against each other all the time. Engdall attempted to maximize Tubb's role in over a dozen incidents of sabotage, and quoted tapes made by informant Jake Ferguson containing hyperbole. Engdall also suggested that two friends of Tubbs were offering their house as bail for Tubbs due to their alleged indirect involvement in a 1995 animal liberation action. Engdall dramatized Tubbs as a flight risk, citing false identification discovered at the time of Tubbs' arrest, as well as Tubbs allegedly having knowledge of how to secretly enter Canada.
Friedman, for Tubbs, countered that Tubbs had little support in any activist community since becoming an informant, and that his client had neither the desire nor the means to flee. He stated that Tubbs had cooperated without limits for the authorities, and that Aiken should exercise her broad discretion and release Tubbs.
Tubbs then spoke on his own behalf, stating that Engdall was exaggerating his involvement in several crimes, and also that he was not a terrorist. Tubbs stated that he was truly sorry for his past acts, that he was "young and idealistic and caught up in the movement," and that the only reason he did not come forward earlier regarding the crimes was that he feared losing his family. Tubbs then pleaded to be allowed to see his fiancée, friends and family on the outside before he goes for formal sentencing, when he will receive appropriately 14 years.
Engdall made a brief response to Tubbs and Friedman while inappropriately glaring at Tubbs, stating that Tubbs had been linked to sixteen arsons, and that he still had not realized the "full gravity" of what he had done. Engdall argued that there were no exceptional reasons that would justify Tubbs' release, and that he should therefore be held in detention for the remainder of time until sentencing, approximately 14 years.
Aiken, upon hearing all these arguments, noted that the law states that a defendant facing ten or more years “shall” be detained unless exceptional circumstances are proven. She ruled that the exceptional circumstances cited by Friedman had not been proved sufficiently, and that both individually and collectively they would not suffice. Therefore, Aiken denied Tubbs' motion, returning him to detention as he awaits sentencing.

Journalist Detained Denounces Torture

Break The Chains Listserve and Jericho NYC
January 10, 2007

2 representatives of the Jericho Movement from New York City traveled to
the Basque Country (Euskal Herria) last weekend at the invitation of our
Basque comrades. We were invited as part of an international delegation to
attend a presentation to the Basque people of a “New Initiative” to move
the ceasefire forward. This meeting was banned by the Spanish State on
Saturday 1/06/07 and the organizers of the meeting called for a
demonstration that evening.

While on the way to the demonstration in Donostia on January 6 with our
international comrades, the bus was detained by the Spanish Civil Guard.
We were taken off the bus and our passports were pulled. One of our
French comrades, Parisian radio journalist Sebastién Bedouret, was
detained and subsequently arrested. He has been remanded to a prison in
Madrid, apparently based on a false confession he signed following three
days of torture. Below are some articles translated from the Basque
newspaper “Gara” and from the internet relating to Sebastién’s
imprisonment.

There is a call out on the internet from the French Basque Solidarity
movement to send telegrams and postcards to the imprisoned journalist as a
gesture of international solidarity. They explain that letters can be held
for up to two weeks, but postcards are supposed to be given to prisoners
immediately. We urge everyone to send cards to:

Sebastien Bédouret
C.P. Madrid V
Ctra. Comarcal 611, km 37,6
26770 – Soto del Real
Madrid, España

Journalist Detained on Saturday Denounces Torture

The Civil Guard detained a bus on its way to Donostia and, after making
everyone get off the bus, they said to Bedouret, currently in prison, that
they had found a Zutabe (a magazine) in his backpack. He denied that it
was his, but they detained him anyway.

Paris Radio Txalaparta journalist Sebastien Bedouret, detained last
Saturday as he traveled by bus to the demonstration called by the
pro-amnesty movement in the Anoeta Velodrome in Donostia (San Sebastián),
has denounced that he was the victim of torture during his detention.

According to today’s edition of Gara, the Civil Guard detained him after
stopping the bus on its way to Donostia. According to what the journalist
told his lawyer, they made everyone get off the bus. After collecting
everyone’s identification, they searched the bus, and when the passengers
returned to the bus, they asked Bedouret if the backpack that had been on
his seat belonged to him.

He replied that it was, and the Civil Guard made him get off the bus
again. Bedouret affirms that the civil guards told him they had found a
copy of Zutabe magazine and some CDs on top of his pack. He assured them
that they did not belong to him, but they detained him anyway and took him
to Intxaurrondo.

Bedouret has stated that he suffered torture during the three days he was
incomunicado. He says that he was insulted, threatened and beaten until he
signed a false declaration. He also denounced that he suffered from
extreme cold and was not allowed to sleep.

Bedouret appeared before a judge on Tuesday and denounced that the
declaration he made to the Civil Guard was made under torture. Judge
Ismael Moreno decreed his imprisonment under the accusation of
“collaborating with ETA” and he is currently in the Soto de Real prison in
Madrid.

In addition to the torture, he and Askatasuna have denounced that the
detention was “police entrapment.”

Protest to Demand His Freedom

The pro-amnesty movement has denounced the torture suffered by journalist
Sebas Bedouret and will protest today to the Delegation of the Spanish
Government in Bilbo at 7 p.m. under the slogan: “No to the Criminalization
of Solidarity. Freedom for Journalist Sebast!” The movement stated that
“it is lamentable that the same people who asked for the closing of the
National Audience against torture a few weeks ago remain silent about this
case.” According to the movement, “It is evident that this attitude is a
way of washing their hands.” The protest will also demand an end to
“political repression and the continuous violation of political and civil
rights.”

Radio Pays, of which the detained man is president, has maintained its
support of the journalist in a communique. In addition to pointing out his
open character and his solidarity, they have questioned the situation in
which the young man fell into the hands of Spanish Civil Guard. The
communique adds that Bedouret was in charge of information about the
political situation in Euskal Herria, as well as that of other nations
such as Corsica. They denounce the fact that Bedouret “has to pay in this
manner for his work in favor of free and pluralistic information.”

Judge Moreno Incarcerates Sebas Bedouret in Soto del Real

Bilbo

After spending three days detained and incomunicado by the Civil Guard in
Intxaurrondo, French journalist Sebas Bedouret was sent yesterday to the
Soto del Real prison in Madrid after appearing before National Audience
Judge Ismael Moreno, who accused him of “collaboration with ETA.”

Bedouret, journalist with Radio Txalaparta of Paris, was detained on
Saturday in Hernani by the Civil Guard, who intercepted the bus with the
international delegation when it was on its way to the pro-amnesty
movement event scheduled for the Anoeta Velodrome. The delegation was
composed, among others, for people from Asturias, Cerdeña, Occitania,
United States, the French State and Scotland.

Bedouret is a member of the Paris Committee in Support of Basque Political
Prisoners.

Askapena pointed out in a press release that “The internationalists who
arrived to participate in the aborted initiative of the pro-amnesty
movement in favor of the democratic basis that all processes need felt
directly the lack of democracy that Euskal Herria suffers.”

At the same time, Askapena “profoundly thanks the effort of this
solidarity delegation” and denounced “the attempt to criminalize
solidarity with Euskal Herria that this detention demonstrates.”

After hearing the decision of Ismael Moreno to incarcerate Sebas Bedouret,
the pro-amnesty movement and Askapena called for a mobilization. The two
organizations will bring the demand for Bedouret’s freedom to the doors of
the Spanish government delegation in Bilbo this Thursday at 7 p.m.

There is a call out on the internet from the French Basque Solidarity
movement to send telegrams and postcards to the imprisoned journalist:

Sebastien Bédouret
C.P. Madrid V
Ctra. Comarcal 611, km 37,6
26770 – Soto del Real
Madrid, España

This action will let the Spanish government know that Sebastien has
international support.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Jeffrey “Free” Luers January 7, 2007 Prison Dispatch


For the last several years I have been writing about the causes and signs of global warming. I scour newspapers and science journals for the latest studies. It’s no real surprise that the guy in prison for trying to call attention to global warming is writing about it.
When I first came to prison global warming was a myth. I had to argue the facts in numerous interviews. Some journalists were convinced by my passion and knowledge and others dismissed me as crazy.
Now more and more attention is being given to climate change and its inherent dangers. Major media outlets are reporting on climate change on a regular basis. Just the other day the Register Guard reported that a 41 square mile chunk of Canada’s arctic ice shelf had broken off due to climate change. Reporting that the remaining ice shelves are 90% smaller than when they were discovered in 1906 (“Ice shelf break blamed on climate change” 12-30-06). Even the US government has now acknowledged the plight of polar bears that are threatened by climate change.
However, I was shocked when the Oregon Department of Corrections recently put an article in the prison bulletin about the dangers of global warming! The article went so far as to break down the types of green house gases. It concluded by asking the inmate population to do its part in fighting global warming by recycling paper to avoid creating methane gas (by letting it rot in a land fill).
I am glad that these issues are finally being acknowledged. It is great that steps are finally being taken to halt climate change. My own captors now agree climate change is a threat. The Bush administration is beginning to acknowledge it. Several states, including Oregon, are fighting legal battles in an effort to reduce green house gas emissions. It is great news. Even though it is going to take much more effort it is at least a start.
However, it leaves me asking the question: If I’m right and climate change is this huge threat, why am I still in prison?
I have served more than six years for a property crime that hurt nobody. My codefendant was released more than a year ago. Whatever debt I owe to society is paid in full.
We all know – you and me and the state - that I was punished for my politics. I was made to be an example. Well, my politics turn out to be right. No one is arguing with me about that anymore.
It is time for my punishment to reflect my crime not my politics. It is time for me to go home.
Depending on the outcome of my appeal, I will be asking the governor to commute my sentence. I can’t legally request that until my appeal process has ended. But when that time comes I will be asking for your help with letters, petitions, demonstrations, and media outreach. I believe that you have the power and influence to bring me home. I hope that you will answer, if I call.
- Jeffrey “Free” Luers

Write to:
Jeff Luers
#13797671
Oregon State Prison
2605 State Street
Salem, Oregon 97310
USA
For more information: www.freefreenow.org