Showing posts with label Tough on Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tough on Crime. Show all posts

Friday, August 17, 2012

Prisoner Speaks Out on the "Club Fed" Myth: Live From the House of the Dead: Lounging in hell

Live From the House of the Dead: Lounging in hell

 By I.M GreNada, Special to The Province July 28, 2012

Live from the House of the Dead.
Finally, after a double decade of drag-racing dust mites on the window sill, I’m feeling a bit of breeze blow through the Big House. Like most breezes, this one has as much to do with hot air as cold. Nary has a week passed in the last 20 where some government minion hasn’t graced the audience with a blustering assurance of “inmate accountability.” And while it’s true that most of us in the clink don’t do so well with the six-syllable nouns, general consensus is that this new buzzword has something to do with a change in prison management. Bye-bye, Dr. Phil — hello, Dr. Mengele.
When the Canadian government recently sank spades on the biggest prison-building campaign since the days of Diefenbaker, the press carped loudly. Crime is lower than it’s been in 30 years, they howled. What no one took note of, though, was the role that Canadian correctional policies played in that. Especially since 1992, Canada has been a world leader in results-driven correctional programs, parole practices that reduce incidents of criminal re-offending, and lower rates of prison violence than any of its G8 partners. Whenever a developing nation needed help implementing a prison system focused on public safety, Canada was the first name in the Rolodex. How the correctional service realized this was by adopting one simple principle: Look south. Whatever the U.S. is doing, do the opposite.
While Americans were embracing “three strikes” legislation and mandatory minimum prison sentences, Canada was curbing its bad puppies with conditional sentencing, specialized aboriginal courts and electronic monitoring bracelets. When American jails were bursting at the seams with overcrowding, drugs and gang-related violence, Corrections Canada eliminated double-bunking, implemented successful methadone treatment and urinalysis programs, and redirected the energies of First Nations gang members (the largest piece of the prison-gang pie in Canada) into specialized programs that addressed aboriginal realities. While American prisons teemed with HIV and hepatitis C, Canadian prisons brought in condoms, syringe-bleaching stations and a prison tattoo program regulated by community health professionals. The result? Tens of thousand of ex-cons (the largest demographic of violent criminal offenders in any western society) coming out of prison healthy, drug-free, educated, supported, monitored and enlightened by correctional programs. Ninety per cent of those did not return to criminal activity — or at least not within five years. If all that seems good, then you’ve probably spotted the problem. It was too good.
Compared with some of Canada’s other human rights partners — like Brazil, Russia, India or China — our prisons are pretty plush. Cable TV, basketball courts and an inmate canteen are just the high notes. We also get fed three times a day. There are hot showers, mail and the ever-contentious practice of inmate pay; until recently, we even had library services and access to a daily newspaper. No armed insurrection. No mass prison rapes. If you’ve never slept a night in the crowbar hotel, it might sound like too much hotel and not enough crowbar. Until you sleep here.
A few years back, a con I knew named Mike was struggling with heroin addiction. He would do OK for a few weeks, and then fall. One time, after he’d been on a two-day bender, I went looking for him — just in case. With addiction, you just never know when a guy is ready to say “uncle.”
I found Mike barricaded in his cage — his 18-inch-wide cell window covered with cardboard. His stereo screeched out something called Cannibal Corpse while, like a hunting hyena, his eyes burned at me from the depths of hell. The only thing missing was the smell of rotting meat. I laughed.
“Are you happy, Mikey?”
The answer, while slow in coming, was sure and deliberate. “Nope,” my dope-sick friend said. “But I am f---in’ comfortable.”
For the first 100 years, Canadian prison was just like every other dungeon in the world. Convicts were whipped, worked to death, hung, starved as punishment, segregated in solitary confinement for years on end, and generally treated worse than animals. And why not? Acting like animals is what brought them here. Did they deserve any better? But in the 1970s, after an unprecedented decade of prison violence, Canadians began asking questions. Why so many murdered prison staff, hostage takings, multimillion-dollar riots? What seems to be the problem?
“There is a great deal of irony in the fact that imprisonment — the ultimate product of our system of justice — itself epitomizes injustice.” This was the salient finding of the 1977 Parliamentary Sub-Committee on the Penitentiary System in Canada. It was that committee’s call for reform — a call supported by all political parties — that changed the Canadian penitentiary from a torture chamber into a place where you just might get your act together; a place where you could start to think about how to live life with accountability. It’s a truth that, in their quasi-religious zeal to reintroduce suffering to the house of detention, Canadians have all but forgotten. So I guess it’s time to get comfortable.
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I.M GreNada is the pen name of a Canadian prisoner who has been serving life for murder since 1994. The people he writes about are real, but their names have been changed. You can read more about him at theincarceratedinkwell.org.

August 18 Update: Prison News - Canada

I've been thinking about doing a regular post on current news in our prison system for awhile.  But havn't done so because I figured much of it would be coming from the mainstream media and I didn't want to take part in spreading the neo-liberal judgment based, hate mongering, propaganda machine any further than it sadly already gets spread!  Because I don't have time to give each of these issues the full analysis they deserve in order to counter the mainstream's take on them, I have decided to use the following strategy.  I will go ahead and include links to some mainstream news sources, but will balance those with progressive links to organisations providing a human rights based analysis of the issues.

 
Issues such as the increasing calamity of prison overcrowding.  This has always been a problem in Canada, but of late with the elimination in 2010 of 2 for 1 credit for time served in pre-trial prison, we have seen an explosion in the numbers of people held in prison for longer periods, resulting in severe overcrowding, and directly related to overcrowding, has been an increase in staff and prisoner violence.

Treatment of Prisoners in Crowded Facilities

Barton Street jail still in lockdown
By cbc.ca
Published: 08/16/2012


Toronto, ON, Canada -- The Barton Street jail is still in lockdown and corrections officer are off the job Thursday morning. The officers are not working while they negotiate a health and safety concern.

The lockdown began Monday after it was discovered a piece of metal was missing from a light fixture. Management and officers were concerned it could be used as a weapon.

Dan Sidsworth, Ontario Public Service Employee Union (OPSEU) corrections division chair, said jail guards wanted to search the entire prison and wear protective vests but management wanted a smaller section of the prison searched without the vests.


"Our concern," Sidsworth said, "is that the weapon has migrated to another part of the institution." He added, officers "searched the immediate area and came up empty."

The Minstry of Labour was called to investigate the work stoppage Wednesday.

Matt Blajer, a spokesman for the ministry, told CBC Hamilton that the jail guards do not have the right to refuse work in this situation.
The corrections officers have since been ordered by the employer to return to work. The officers are members of the Ontario Public Service Employee Union (OPSEU). Sidsworth said the union is still in contact with the ministry and made a proposal Tuesday that could lead to an end of the lockdown.
As a result of the lockdown, inmates have reported they haven't had clean clothes or clean sheets for a week. OPSEU said its members will only return to work if allowed to complete a jail search wearing a protective safety vests.
"Our concerns," Sidsworth said, "are the same as those of the inmates. We want a safe working environment for the officers. And our working conditions are their living conditions. We don't want to see anyone get hurt."

Union boss says overcrowding at London, Ont., jail could lead to more unrest 

A photograph obtained by the London Free Press shows the aftermath of a recent melee at the Elgin Middlesex Detention Centre on Exeter Road in London. July 20, 2012

LONDON, ONT. — The head of the union representing guards at a southwestern Ontario jail says he’s concerned a near-riot could occur there again, and pressure is mounting on the province to make the facility safer for staff and inmates.
Ontario Public Service Employees Union president Warren Thomas toured the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre in London, Ont., on Tuesday morning.
Violence flared there last month, just before the start of the July 28 weekend, when inmates began to flood toilets, light fires and run amok.
Tactical squads quelled the unrest and a five-day lockdown was imposed.
“Five-hundred pound iron doors were bent ... It was a very, very dangerous situation,” said Thomas, whose union represents more than 260 correctional officers and staff at the provincial jail.
Complaints and lawsuits over treatment of inmates at the facility stretch back years, but are getting increased attention after numerous security incidents over the past several months.
Overcrowding at the jail needs to be addressed or there may be more violence, Thomas said, alleging jail cells meant for two people are holding three to five inmates in some cases.
The cheek-by-jowl living conditions were a catalyst in last month’s skirmish and increase the chances of inmate-on-inmate attacks, he said.
“If you’re an inmate in there and you’re in a cell of five people then you can get hurt quite badly” by violent cellmates, Thomas said.
Things are calm now, but that could change unless more inmates are transferred elsewhere and staffing numbers increased, he said.
“It’s like the eye of the hurricane. It’s not over. It could spark and blow,” he said, adding the facility is short 15 full-time employees.
The jail was initially designed for 200 beds but was retrofitted to hold its current load of more than 400 inmates, Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services spokesperson Brent Ross said.
Ross denied claims there are up to five inmates in a cell, saying the ministry does not house more than three people in a single cell.
Corrections Minister Madeleine Meilleur was set to discuss conditions at the jail on Tuesday night with local Progressive Conservative member Jeff Yurek and Bob Bailey, the party’s corrections critic.
Lawyer Kevin Egan says he has about 50 lawsuits in various stages from inmates who allege understaffing and safety gaps, such as a lack of security cameras that would let guards easily monitor inmates, have led to attacks.
Egan said he’s so busy he’s had to hire a new clerk to help handle new cases.
Egan alleges staffing shortages mean some prisoners are exercising control over their fellow inmates, such as demanding they hand over medications before receiving food from the delivery cart.
“There’s a culture where ... they allow the toughest, meanest inmates to set conditions inside the cellblock,” he alleged.
Egan said he is “very hopeful” the ministry will take steps such as hiring more staff and installing security cameras as called for last year by a pair of inquests, one of which found the April 2009 death of Kenneth Drysdale was a homicide.
“If they don’t, somebody else is going to die,” said Egan, who is representing Drysdale’s family in a suit against the province over his death.
Egan is also representing former inmate Robert Broley in a $1.25-million lawsuit stemming from an attack on Broley at the jail in 2004.
Broley says he received a 30-day sentence for fraudulently depositing a blank cheque envelope at an ATM.
He says that once inside the jail he was assaulted by five other inmates for refusing to give them the home address of a jail guard he knew through his home maintenance business, and suffered three cranial fractures when hit on the head with a plastic mug.
He claims the attack occurred in a section of the facility guards could not see directly or monitor, since there were no security cameras.
Now disabled for life and receiving disability payments, he hopes the mounting number of inmate lawsuits will force change at the facility.
“This is not a Third World country. This is Canada. When people break the law, yes they should pay, but they should not be shoved into cruel and unusual punishment,” Broley said.

Prisoners Push Back

Prison hunger strike: inmates say they’re mistreated, locked up all day
PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. – Inmates on a hunger strike at a northern Saskatchewan prison say they’re being mistreated and locked up all day.
The hunger strikers, believed to be as many as 16, say they won’t eat until things change at the medium-security Prince Albert correctional facility.
They say they’re supposed to be out six hours a day and they’re not allowed to go outside at all.
A spokeswoman for Corrections, Public Safety and Policing says the inmates are unhappy with a lockdown after a serious incident last Friday.
Judy Orthner says prisoners on the unit are being confined during the investigation into what happened, but it is not considered a lockdown.
She says the current situation should end Thursday.
Corrections will look at the concerns and decide what steps might be appropriate in the future, Orthner says.
“These inmates who are on a hunger strike are saying, ‘It’s not fair that we should be kept in our cells with no routine and no programming going on while this investigation is going on.”’

Left of Road (Politically); Response to Tough on Crime Agenda

Crime and punishment by Leo Singer

Interviews with prisoner advocates in Canada to talk about the history of the prisoner human rights movement in the context of the current conservative "crime" agenda.

Prison farm supporters continue action

I had no idea some of these supporters had been holding a weekly vigil at Collins Bay Institution since August 2010!  Read on
Posted Aug 16, 2012 

http://www.emcfrontenac.ca/20120816/news/Prison+farm+supporters+continue+action
Click to Enlarge
 Supporters of the now defunct federal prison farms held a special vigil at the entrance of Frontenac Institution on Bath Road last week to mark the second anniversary of their closure.

Kenneth Jackson, Frontenac EMC
Supporters of the now defunct federal prison farms held a special vigil at the entrance of Frontenac Institution on Bath Road last week to mark the second anniversary of their closure.
EMC News - It's been just over two years since the federal government shut down the prison farm at Frontenac Institution.

Those who tried, in vain, to save the farm returned to the entrance of the prison to hold an evening vigil last Thursday.

"We just want to remind the federal government...we think it was a mistake to close the prison farms. It provided rehabilitation. It provided job training and provided food for the system," said Dianne Dowling, a member of the Save Our Prison Farms (SOPF) committee.

Even as Dowling was speaking, honks from cars going by nearly drowned her out.

Dowling said members of SOPF, along with hundreds of people, campaigned for 18 months asking Prime Minister Stephen Harper to reconsider the decision to close the farms.

She said people came to rallies, meetings and signed petitions. They also wrote letters to the government.

This all lead to a quasi-blockade at the entrance of the prison by some of the most adamant supporters. It also led to some of their eventual arrests. A few were convicted earlier this year of mischief.

"We believed we were right. We still believe we are right. The program should have been saved and the decision was wrong," said Dowling. "We feel we need to keep repeating that comment. It was very frustrating to the people in the campaign. It made no sense to close the prison farms."

Canada had six prison farms before their closure.

About 250 cattle at Frontenac were sold by auction in Waterloo.

Dowling said removing the cattle was the death of the farm.

Twenty-four people, aged 14 to 87, in total were arrested and charged with mischief two years ago in hopes of stopping cattle trucks.

Supporter Daniel Beals was at the vigil.

"I am here to mourn and pay tribute to what we went through a couple years ago. I have a lot of good friends here that I made specifically through the Save Our Prison Farms campaign," said Beals.

He feels the prison farms could return one day.

"I believe if we had a different government there's a possibly it could come back. I wouldn't go out making promises but I think that certainly if there is an NDP government we would look at something like that again," said Beals, who has been a federal NDP candidate in the area since 2009.

He claimed rehabilitation is not the No. 1 concern for the Conservative government.

Supporters will continue to fight for prison farms. In fact, every Monday night since Aug. 9, 2010, SOPF supporters have been holding a vigil at the entrance to Frontenac.



Corrections Canada to push ahead with electronic anklets for parolees 

 The below article by Anna Mehler Paperny at the Globe talks about ankle bracelet monitoring for people out of prison on passes or parole.  It also mentions that the government's own pilot study of ankle monitoring effectiveness showed the devices to be unreliable, and more expensive than traditional monitoring.  So if the devices are such crap what other reason could the CSC have for "pushing ahead" with use of them?  See this post from 2011:  

http://prisonstatecanada.blogspot.ca/search/label/Tim%20Hudak


Correctional Service Canada plans to roll out electronic anklets to monitor parolees – even though its own pilot project found the devices did not work as hoped.
The idea is to ensure that offenders follow the conditions of their release. A tiny proportion of parolees breach those conditions or reoffend, although the number has been getting smaller for four years.
A Correctional Service Canada study found the GPS anklets do not change offenders’ behaviour, create more work for parole officers and have numerous technical problems – including false alarms and a tendency to show people to be somewhere they are not.
“You’re doing more intervention unnecessarily, catching people in the corrections net who perhaps don’t require it,” James Bonta, director of Public Safety’s research unit, told Parliament’s Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security earlier this year.
Proponents say monitoring keeps the public safe by ensuring convicts toe the line. Others say that while the anklets are effective in some circumstances for high-risk offenders, they don’t alter a parolee’s behaviour; also, by the time officers are notified of a violation, it may be too late to apprehend the person in the act.
“We sometimes think of technology as being perfect. It is not perfect,” Mr. Bonta said. “Overall, if I look at the whole body of evidence, I don’t think” the anklets make communities safer.
The federal Conservatives’ Safe Streets and Communities Act, Bill C-10, allows Correctional Service Canada to impose electronic monitoring on an offender with geographic restrictions on temporary absence, work release, parole, statutory release or long-term supervision. Correctional Service Canada intends to begin the program in the fall of 2013.
Electronic monitoring for offenders has been around since the mid-1960s. Seven provinces use anklets for offenders on probation. Studies so far are inconclusive on whether and when they’re worth it.
Monitoring methods vary. Some programs are actively watched from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with activity logged overnight. In Saskatchewan, radio frequencies are sent to a server, and notices of violations or alerts go to officers’ cellphones or a community correctional centre.
In a choice between electronic monitoring or a stint behind bars, studies suggest the former saves money and keeps the offender out of an environment that often contributes to recidivism. The benefits of putting a parolee on a monitoring device during a conditional release are murkier: There’s no demonstrated effect on recidivism and, especially in the case of low-risk offenders, a GPS anklet can actually make reintegration harder.
Between 2008 and 2009, Correctional Service Canada conducted an $856,096 pilot project of anklets for parolees. An evaluation found basic technological challenges: Batteries drained quickly; false tamper alerts were frequent; the GPS system had a tendency to “drift” – to show a person in the wrong location.
While the system “may benefit some offenders,” the report states, “the benefits could not be demonstrated in the current evaluation.”
In 2010-11, 88 per cent of those on day parole and 76.5 per cent of those on full parole completed the program with no problems. Only 2.4 per cent of day parolees and 6.7 per cent of full parolees reoffended. Both breaches and reoffences have dropped steadily since 2007.
The anklets provide “an opportunity to verify compliance with release conditions and provide additional information for the ongoing assessment of risk to enhance public safety,” Correctional Service Canada said in an e-mailed statement this week. “CSC’s procurement of new technology will address some of the limitations noted in the first pilot (for example battery life).”
The cost of the anklets and software is $15 per offender per day, although they can be cheaper. Training and staffing can get pricey. Almost all U.S. agencies that use electronic monitoring increased staff faster than those that did not, said Marc Renzema, a criminal justice professor at Kutztown University in Pennsylvania.
Correctional Service Canada Commissioner Don Head and Public Safety Minister Vic Toews declined to be interviewed. Addressing the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security in February, Mr. Head argued the anklets’ benefits outweighed their drawbacks.
“This will ultimately contribute to strengthening public safety,” he said. “The report indicated that there were some deficiencies, but that through amendments to practices and procedures we could address these deficiencies.”

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Updated Aug 18: Prisoner Justice Day Higlights Prison/Jail Overcrowding

Please scroll down to read and view videos of the events for Prisoner Justice Day.  And let me know if you would like to add anything here. 
See Ottawa for Aug 17 update

Sudbury, ON
Remembering those who die behind bars

Prisoners' Justice Day ceremony held outside jail
By: Heidi Ulrichsen - Sudbury Northern Life Staff


 
As the chaplain at the Sudbury Jail, Rev. Genny Rollins has a better idea than most what life behind bars is really like.

The local Anglican priest does her best to comfort prisoners, holding several church services at the jail on Sundays, and counselling prisoners on several other days throughout the week.

“To tell you the truth, God called me to it, or I wouldn't be here,” she said. “That's all I know. I have compassion for them, I have understanding for them and I will try to help them in any way I can.”

On two occasions, though, Rollins has done something which she said was “very difficult.” She accompanied jail officials as they broke the news to family members of prisoners who have committed suicide behind bars.

“I feel it's a privilege to be there to sort of give them a hug, because maybe I've talked to that inmate a few days before,” she said.

“Maybe they've shared things with me, and so I'm in a place where I can say 'I know they loved you and they just thrived so much on your being able to visit them.' It's good to be able to bring that comfort to the family.”

Rollins was in front of the Sudbury Jail with about 20 other people Aug. 9 as part of a ceremony in honour of Prisoners' Justice Day, which commemorates the men and women who have died from unnatural deaths inside prisons and penitentiaries.

The priest led the participants in prayer, a group of musicians played hymns, and a drumming group from the N'Swakamok Native Friendship Centre played an honour song.

Paper lanterns decorated by female prisoners participating in an Elizabeth Fry Society – Sudbury chapter's arts and crafts program were also placed on the steps outside the jail.
Kelly Henry (above), ongoing support and volunteer services co-ordinator at the Elizabeth Fry Society- Sudbury chapter, and Julie Gravelle, bail supervisor with the Elizabeth Fry Society- Sudbury chapter, show off some of the paper lanterns created by women in an arts and crafts program run by their organization at the Sudbury Jail. Photo by Heidi Ulrichsen.
Kelly Henry (above), ongoing support and volunteer services co-ordinator at the Elizabeth Fry Society- Sudbury chapter, and Julie Gravelle, bail supervisor with the Elizabeth Fry Society- Sudbury chapter, show off some of the paper lanterns created by women in an arts and crafts program run by their organization at the Sudbury Jail. Photo by Heidi Ulrichsen.

“We spoke with the women about Prisoners' Justice Day and what it means to them,” Kelly Henry, ongoing support and volunteer services co-ordinator at the Elizabeth Fry Society- Sudbury chapter, said.

“The women created these bags, and they will be out here in front of the jail from now until late tomorrow evening, and they will be all lit up.”

John Rimore, executive director of the John Howard Society of Sudbury, said the official date for Prisoners' Justice Day is actually Aug. 10.

“We're commemorating it today because men and women behind bars have asked us to reserve Aug. 10 for them,” he said. “It's a day where inmates fast, refuse to leave their cells and pray. So it is a prisoners- and inmates-led initiative, and we adhere to their wishes.”

Prisoners' Justice Day was started after a prisoner named Eddie Nalon committed suicide in 1974 by slashing his inner elbow, severing all the veins and arteries, while in the segregation unit of the Millhaven Maximum Security Prison.

On the one-year anniversary of Nalon's death, prisoners at Millhaven refused to work, went on a one-day hunger strike and held a memorial service, even though it meant a stint in solitary confinement.

One the second anniversary of his death, a one-day hunger strike was held in prisons across Canada. Prisoners' Justice Day is now commemorated around the world.

Rimore said the rate of violence in jails — including suicide and homicide — is much higher than in the general population.

“Our community should be very concerned about these situations and issues, because most people who are incarcerated do leave the institution,” he said.

“They serve their time and are released. If they live in a situation where there is violence, they bring that violence with them. It's very difficult to leave that violence when you come back to the community to reintegrate, to become a positive member of our society.”
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TORONTO, ON
 
 


I attended the service at Church of the Holy Trinity for Prisoner Justice Day.  I was also privileged to help organize the event. I was really touched by the speeches made yesterday, particularly those made by former prisoners.  This years theme was female prisoners and I was really heartened to see quite a few women getting up and speaking out.  One Native Canadian woman talked about her time inside.  She talked about segregation and "special" treatment for Native folks, mentioning how she had been tossed in there naked, without bed or blanket and believed that to be what segregation was until she began noticing that she was the only Native woman among the women in seg at that time, and also the only naked woman with literally nothing in her cell.
We heard from 2 other women who work in the GTA as harm reduction workers, women with lived experience and one of whom was speaking at a public venue for the first time.  Their words, the stories they shared, their way of telling about the work they do, the loving and empowering, non-judgmental environments they are striving to provide for other women....I felt really touched.  It was really impactful.
 Awakening CD Cover
Spirit Wind, a women's hand drum group which performs regularly at the Native Canadian Centre were also incredibly inspiring.  The deep crescendo booming throughout the church conjured images of women throughout the ages, drumming similar drums, mourning their lost... accompanied by beautiful, strong, and powerful female voices (some of whom are survivors of the system) was overwhelmingly touching.  One could feel the solidarity.
 Toronto Prisoner Justice Day Events - Video by Occupy Toronto

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LONDON, ON  PJD 2012

Many of the supporters which the media chose to quote had reformist ideas to share calling for improved and humane treatment of prisoners at Elgin Middlesex Detention Centre.  While its extremely important to gain public voice through media regarding the treatment of prisoners - particularly with the ongoing 24/7 lockdown at Elgin, I prefer to hear calls for abolition. (my two cents)

Jail rally brings out decent crowd, inmates feel support

  

Rally rumbles at troubled detention centre
By Paul Everest/London Community News/Twitter: @PaulEverest1

Any time the cacophony of whistles, bells and chants died down a little, it was possible to hear the inmates of the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre (EMDC) banging on the prison’s walls in response to the rally taking part outside.
Bearing signs with slogans such as “Inmates are still human beings” and “Treat prisoners properly,” nearly 50 people gathered outside the prison Friday evening (Aug. 10) to show their support for those incarcerated inside.
In recent weeks, an almost relentless stream of complaints and concerns regarding conditions at the EMDC, such as overcrowding, poor sanitation and violence, have saturated the media and the people involved in the rally made it clear they want those concerns addressed.

Crystal Day, who joined the rally since she has a boyfriend and friends incarcerated at the facility, said she receives almost daily reports from inmates she knows about cases of guards ripping up prisoners’ mail or family photos, tear gas being used on inmates and frequent assaults.
“People need to hear about it. They need to know what’s going on in there,” she said. “People need to step up and say ‘Hey, we’re not a third-world country.’ We treat our pets better than this.
“Yes, these are criminals, but why not rehabilitate instead of making the situation worse, making it so that when they come out, they can function even worse in society than before they went in.”
Photos by Paul Everest/London Community News
With the prison often on the verge of riot and numerous lockdowns taking place, Day said she constantly worries about those people she cares about who are behind bars.
“It rips me apart. I never know from one day to the next if I’m going to get my phone calls tomorrow telling me that, yes, everything’s OK, that they made it through another night without being beat up or anything happening.”
As for a solution to the EMDC’s problems, she suggested the province should, instead of closing down older jails, keep correctional facilities open until new, larger prisons in other parts of Ontario are completed.
“That way there’s not the overcrowding, and if there’s not the overcrowding, the guards don’t have to deal with as much, the inmates don’t have to deal with as much and there’s going to be less friction,” Day said.
Anthony Verberckmoes, a rally organizer and a member of the Occupy London movement, said the point of the gathering was to tell the inmates inside the EMDC that some members of the community stand in solidarity with them.
He added rally attendees also wanted to try to lift the inmates’ spirits.
“It’s pretty frequent to feel that nobody cares in the world when you’re sitting in a jail cell. Even if you have some support, it’s a lonely, lonely feeling.”
Verberckmoes said the province needs to fix the situation inside the EMDC soon, but also needs to answer questions on how conditions became so poor in the first place.
“I would personally ask, how did it ever get to this point?” he said. “Before we’re even dealing with it, how does it get to the point where you have even three times the number of people in the facility that there’s supposed to be?”
When asked if he was concerned that the rally might incite actions within the facility that could cause the inmates to be punished, Verberckmoes said if such a situation were to happen, the group would organize further rallies to address such punishments.
Rally attendee Ed Betterley said any punishments against inmates due to the rally would show just how much Ontario’s correctional system has deteriorated.
“It would be a sad commentary about the system if there’s repercussions for them. Unfortunately, if there is, that’s one of the things were fighting,” he said. “They’re citizens in jail and we all have the chance of, at some time, going to jail and I don’t want my rights suspended if I go there.”
With between 20 and 25 clients at the EMDC at any time, defence lawyer Keli Mersereau said she has seen deplorable conditions inside the facility first-hand and agreed that the prison has it backwards when it comes to dealing with inmates.
“Jails are made to punish, not be punishing, and this facility is very punishing.”
She added she attended the rally “to add some legitimacy” to the concerns being raised and said the public needs to know most people incarcerated at the EMDC are awaiting trial and many have not been convicted of a crime.
“I think the public often forgets that people are innocent until found guilty. We should not be treating people in such an inhumane fashion simply because they’re accused of something,” Mersereau said. “And even for persons who have been convicted, it’s not acceptable to house them in conditions like this.”
Teresa Armstrong, the NDP’s MPP for London-Fanshawe, also made an appearance at the rally and said she was planning to meet with the minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services (CSCS), who is responsible for the prison, to address concerns about the facility and look for solutions.
Last week, CSCS’s assistant deputy minister said the province is working to improve conditions at the facility for inmates and guards.
Earlier this week, the ministry announced it was installing 350 cameras within the EMDC at a cost of $5 million to address concerns about inmates not being properly monitored throughout the facility.
“While I cannot get into specifics on how we manage our security systems, I can assure you that staff will have the ability to constantly monitor all cameras at all times,” a ministry spokesman wrote in an email. “No additional staff will be required to monitor the cameras.”

 Escalating inmate tensions put corrections officers at risk: OPSEU
Since the inmate unrest started five days ago, the detention centre has called in tactical units known as Institutional Crisis Intervention teams to bring order and control to the situation.
London (1 Aug. 2012) – Five days of escalating inmate tensions inside the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre is putting the health and safety of corrections officers at risk, says the union that represents staff at the facility.
For full press release, click here

Star exclusive: Violent assaults in federal prisons on the rise

Story on Ongoing Issue of Increasing Violence - Partially Related to Overcrowding

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KINGSTON

See the below link for the Collins Bay Protest
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FB9nQ-9mZ4&feature=em-subs_digest 
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OTTAWA
 August 15, 2012

Raising Justice, Reducing Harm

Ottawa Prisoners' Justice Day raises awareness on the impact of prisons on drug use

Prisoners' Justice Day in Ottawa focused on harm reduction this year. Above: a collaborative art project dedicated to those living in incarceration and those who lost their lives in prison was part of the day's activities. Photo: CSCS
"Whether it's the Alberta tar sands or our role in Haiti, The Dominion has the guts to look at Canada without the fairytales about our national virtue that comfort and blind us... Only readers like you can keep this crucial voice alive and growing louder. Please, pitch in!" --Naomi Klein
OTTAWA—The issue of harm reduction in prisons dominated the presentations at the Prisoners’ Justice Day event held in Ottawa, at the Jack Purcell Community Centre on August 10. The event included a table fair, a prisoners’ book drive and presentations from organizers and former inmates.
“Prisoners’ Justice Day is a day of solidarity, to honour and remember all prisoners who have died unnatural deaths while incarcerated, and to cast light on the on-going human rights issues present in prisons,” said Jennifer Rae, a member of Campaign for Safer Consumption Sites in Ottawa (CSCS), in a speech. “This year, [the] day will also focus on the need for harm reduction policies in Canadian prisons to reduce the spread of infectious diseases and save lives.”
CSCS, an organization that promotes dignity and respect for all drug users, was one of the many community groups organizing this event. According to her speech, estimates of HIV and Hepatitis C prevalence in Canadian prisons are respectively 10 times and 20 times the estimated prevalence in the rest of Canada, and are especially high among drug users. Additionally, suicide rates in prisons are seven times higher than the general Canadian population, and between 2005 and 2010 there were over 33,000 formal complaints from prisoners, mostly regarding lack of health care in federal prisons.
Caleb Chepesiuk is the Harm Reduction Program Coordinator at AIDS Committee of Ottawa, another group organizing the event. The group provides support and promotes the wellbeing of people affected by HIV/AIDS. Chepesiuk said that the prison policies do not provide a space for safe drug use, encouraging the spread of infections such as HIV and Hepatitis C.
“The policies create more harm for people who use drugs than the drugs themselves,” he said. “There has been a call for a needle distribution system in prisons for years now…and this is being actively ignored by our politicians and bureaucrats.”
Chepesiuk added that even people who are on trial or spending shorter periods of time in prisons are also at a risk of facing many problems.
“Whether it is a couple of weeks or a couple of months, [those policies] disrupt any efforts of getting employment, or housing, all those different pieces that really help build a healthy community,” he said.
On August 10, inmates in Canada and in prisons around the world went on a hunger strike in memory of Eddy Nolan who bled to death in Millhaven Penitentiary in Ontario on August 10, 1974. That incident along with a four day riot that resulted in the death of two inmates at the Kingston Penitentiary in 1971 led to major improvements in the Canadian prison system.
Inmates also released a statement on Prisoners’ Justice Day, written by Alex Hundert, and Mandy Hiscocks, both community organizers who are currently imprisoned on charges related to activist organizing around the G20 Summit, in Toronto in 2010. The statement was written with input from more than a dozen inmates inside the Central North Correctional Complex in Penetanguishene Ontario.
Similar events were held in other Canadian cities such as Toronto, Halifax and Vancouver, Montreal and Sudbury.
Crystel Hajjar is an Ottawa-based writer, organizer and climate justice activist.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Mainstream Media Mindlessly Regurgitating Mis-information with no Investigation to Speak of....as usual

I sent the below email in frustration to the author of the article linked just below.  It seems to me that many "journalists" are simply repeating info that has been mis-reported on elsewhere in the media without checking facts or interviewing other viewpoints.
 
Hi A. Mayeda

Good article in Bloomberg
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-10/canada-studying-private-firms-for-prisons-as-budgets-fall.html

I have wondered though why reporters never seem to counter or even investigate a couple of claims raised repeatedly in the media recently by Toews.


  1. The claim that the Feds have not built even one new prison (skirting the issue since additions/expansions to current prisons are happening all across Canada at both provincial and federal levels to accommodate pre-trial and sentenced prisoners over the next few years as Bill C10 kicks in)


See links On Current/ongoing Prison Expansion

  • http://tpcp-canada.blogspot.ca/2011/09/are-provinces-and-territories-ready-for.html
  • http://tpcp-canada.blogspot.ca/2011/02/running-federal-punishment-tab.html

and more currently;
  • http://endthepic.wordpress.com/profiteers/


2.   Taking credit where none is due - crime rate dropping cause tough on crime is working?  Ignores 2

      facts.  Crime rate has been dropping year after year since the late 70's, and that much of Bill C10 has 

     yet to even be enacted on the ground - so how could it have had any effect yet one way or the other. 

     Do they really think Canadians are that stupid?


3.   That the services Toews is considering contracting out to private prison profiteers (cleaning, cooking)

      are right now being provided by the prisoners for next to nothing dollar wise.  Further proving the

      profit motive behind the "tough on crime" agenda.  Contracts awarded to conservative cronies.  Not

     one reporter has mentioned that these services are right now being provided at as low a cost to the

     system as we are likely to see.  The profiteers are not going to provide the service at the equivalent of

    $3-4/hr are they?


Friday, July 13, 2012

Updates on Bill C10 and Prison Privatisation - Multiple Sources

From oldest to newest;

http://www.cannabisculture.com/content/2012/03/13/Why-Crime-Bill-Should-be-Concern-Business

Cannibis culture, Marc Emery's online resource has been following the C10 saga from the beginning and have a dozen or more articles on the topic.

http://www.canadianprogressiveworld.com/2012/04/11/coming-to-canada-prison-industrial-complex-
punishment-and-profits/

http://wp.stu.ca/occupypapers/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/sauvageau_jean.pdf
"The Harper Government and the Criminal Law Agenda: When being “tough on crime” has nothing to do
with crime, justice nor public safety"
Author provides an interesting analysis from the perspective of a lawyer and criminologist.  He locates public safety squarely in the context of economic equality and makes his case through comparrisons of Canada, the US, and Scandenavian countries.

 http://www.canadianprogressiveworld.com/2012/07/05/enbridge-executives-company-awarded-first-bill-c-10-38-5-million-prison-project/

 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-10/canada-studying-private-firms-for-prisons-as-budgets-fall.html

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-10/canada-studying-private-firms-for-prisons-as-budgets-fall.html

http://www.straight.com/article-732016/vancouver/spigot-circumcision-decision-germany-private-jails-canada

This last link is a humourous blog in response to some of the last articles.  Be sure to see the reader comments!


ast summer Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservatives demonstrated their tough stance on foreigners suspected of war crimes abroad. The suspects were rounded up, detained and deported. The sweep was the beginning of a crackdown on immigrants that also deliberately links immigration and criminality. It laid the foundation for a future powerful private prison industry in Canada.
A few weeks ago, Harper and his Conservative majority government passed a universally-condemned, ideologically-driven new crime law, deceptively christened “Safe Streets and Communities Act”. Harper used his acquiescing majorities in the House of Commons and Senator to pass the bill without any substantial debate. Indeed, the GEO Group, a major player in the private correctional services in the US, UK, Australia and South Africa, lobbied for the new law. In the video below, Al Jazeera’s Fault Lines travels to Texas and Florida to investigate the business of immigration detention in the US and to find out how a handful of companies have managed to shape US immigration laws.

ast summer Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservatives demonstrated their tough stance on foreigners suspected of war crimes abroad. The suspects were rounded up, detained and deported. The sweep was the beginning of a crackdown on immigrants that also deliberately links immigration and criminality. It laid the foundation for a future powerful private prison industry in Canada.
A few weeks ago, Harper and his Conservative majority government passed a universally-condemned, ideologically-driven new crime law, deceptively christened “Safe Streets and Communities Act”. Harper used his acquiescing majorities in the House of Commons and Senator to pass the bill without any substantial debate. Indeed, the GEO Group, a major player in the private correctional services in the US, UK, Australia and South Africa, lobbied for the new law. In the video below, Al Jazeera’s Fault Lines travels to Texas and Florida to investigate the business of immigration detention in the US and to find out how a handful of companies have managed to shape US immigration laws.
ast summer Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservatives demonstrated their tough stance on foreigners suspected of war crimes abroad. The suspects were rounded up, detained and deported. The sweep was the beginning of a crackdown on immigrants that also deliberately links immigration and criminality. It laid the foundation for a future powerful private prison industry in Canada.
A few weeks ago, Harper and his Conservative majority government passed a universally-condemned, ideologically-driven new crime law, deceptively christened “Safe Streets and Communities Act”. Harper used his acquiescing majorities in the House of Commons and Senator to pass the bill without any substantial debate. Indeed, the GEO Group, a major player in the private correctional services in the US, UK, Australia and South Africa, lobbied for the new law. In the video below, Al Jazeera’s Fault Lines travels to Texas and Florida to investigate the business of immigration detention in the US and to find out how a handful of companies have managed to shape US immigration laws.

Friday, January 20, 2012

How Can We in Canada Support Canadian on Death Row


If ever there were a prisoner human rights issue for activists to do some advocacy around, the case of Ron Smith is it.  Ron has spent 30 years in an isolation cell in Montana and is now on death row awaiting his final appeal for clemency.  In a usual show of cruelty the Harper government has dug in its heals at every turn and made every effort to not support Mr. Smith!

If anyone knows of ongoing initiatives  ~ Canadian or American to support Ron, please post in the comments section so others can offer their support as well.

Likewise if anyone with experience or determination has ideas about how to begin some appropriate support for Ron....

Any initiatives should happen in conjunction with his defence counsel and perhaps someone has more skills than I do to track and contact them online.  Any supports need to be well thought out and planned for preferably with others who have experience with death row.

Please take a look at Wikipedia for links to articles on Ron's case.                           http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Allen_Smith

               

Application for clemency says death row Canadian Ronald Smith a ‘changed man’

Published On Wed Jan 18 2012
Bill Graveland The Canadian Press

CALGARY—Lawyers for the only Canadian on death row in the United States concede their client committed a “terrible offence” when he murdered two young Montana men 30 years ago, but say he doesn’t deserve to die.
Ronald Smith’s clemency application says he is a changed man who suffered through an abusive childhood.
Smith’s lawyers filed the necessary papers Wednesday with the Montana Board of Pardons and Parole in Deer Lodge, Mont.
Smith, 54, has exhausted all other appeals.
“In the face of the harsh circumstances of being locked down in virtual isolation for 28 years, he has nonetheless made a genuine attempt to live a life that exhibits remorse, rehabilitation, a changed heart and mind and a potential for good,” reads the document prepared by lawyers Greg Jackson and Don Vernay.
“We request that you consider and grant this application and commute Mr. Smith’s sentence from death to life without parole.”
The application is supported by a letter from the Canadian government.
“Mr. Smith is a Canadian citizen and is supported in his petition for executive clemency by the government of Canada, who have shown their support through the letter attached to this petition.”
The government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper initially balked at supporting Smith’s bid, saying he had been convicted in a democratic country. But the federal court forced the government to act on Smith’s behalf.
Smith, originally from Red Deer, Alta., pleaded guilty to two charges of deliberate homicide and two charges of aggravated kidnapping in February 1983 and requested the death penalty. He rejected a plea deal offered by prosecutors which would have given him life in prison.
He later changed his mind and asked the District Court to reconsider the death penalty. That has led to three decades of legal wrangling.
Smith was 24 and taking LSD and drinking when he and two friends met up with Thomas Running Rabbit and Harvey Mad Man Jr. near East Glacier, Mont. Smith and Rodney Munro marched the two men into the woods where Munro stabbed one of the victims and Smith shot both of them.
Munro accepted a plea deal, was eventually transferred to a Canadian prison and has completed his sentence.
Smith’s lawyers say his drug and alcohol use impaired his judgment. They also say he received poor advice from his lawyer at the time.
“As a result of the combination of his guilt over the offences, his virtual isolation in a foreign country without consular assistance, and the deplorable actions of his trial attorney, he instead chose to plead guilty and requested the death penalty,” argue Jackson and Vernay.
“Upon being placed in a less isolated environment, he immediately realized both the foolishness and impulsiveness of his actions and sought ... the original sentence offered by the state of Montana, but the state has adamantly refused to consider his request.”
The document says Smith began drinking as early as age 11 and was the eldest of four children who grew up in a violent and dysfunctional household. His father, an oilfield worker, was gone for long periods of time, which left Smith as the de facto man of the house. When his father would return, the violence would continue.
“Dolores Smith (mother) relates entering the room after Ron was abused by his father and seeing blood spatters on the walls from the beating Ron suffered at the hands of his father,” says the application.
“Ron’s sisters kept their suitcases packed, underneath their beds. They both relate that Ron was their ‘protector and confidant.’“
Smith’s lawyers also note that he had no prior history of violence before his arrest in Montana, has expressed remorse and accepted responsibility and had a long history of drug and alcohol abuse with no treatment.
The board of pardons and parole is likely to schedule a hearing on the application sometime this spring. It will make a recommendation either for or against clemency but the ultimate decision will fall into the hands of Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer.