Showing posts with label Corcoran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corcoran. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Prisoner At Corcoran Dies, Hunger Strike In ASU Continues

February 13, 2012 Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity

Oakland - Family members and advocates are seeking information
surrounding the February 2nd death of Christian Gomez, 27, a prisoner
at Corcoran State Prison. It remains unclear whether or not Gomez was
participating in an ongoing hunger strike in the prison's
Administrative Segregation Unit (ASU), or whether his death was
related to the strike. The California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation (CDCR) has not disclosed the cause of death saying
that they have not yet received an autopsy report.

"Conditions inside California prisons are atrocious, especially when
it comes to physical and mental health care," says Laura Magnani,
Interim Regional Director of the American Friends Service Committee
and an expert witness during an August 23rd hearing in Sacramento
regarding California's Security Housing Units (SHUs) , "Any time a
prisoner dies inside one of their institutions, the CDCR must be held
responsible." California's prison healthcare system has been under
federal receivership since 2006 due to inhumane and deadly conditions
caused by severe overcrowding. Federal Judge Thelton Henderson
recently announced an imminent end to the oversight.

Prisoners in the Corcoran ASU have been on hunger strike for periods
of time since late December of 2011. Their 11 demands include
adequate access to the law library and legal assistance and an end to
the practice of holding prisoners in ASU after they have served their
sentences in the unit. "ASUs are similar to California's SHUs in that
they are often used to punish prisoners who are jail house lawyers or
who have organized with their fellow prisoners to make political
demands," says Molly Porzig, an organizer with Prisoner Hunger Strike
Solidarity Coalition, "Some prisoners are confined in solitary,
without privileges afforded in general population such as radios and
phone calls for years at a time and without any means to challenge
their cases." A 2009 review by the Office of the State Inspector
General of the CDCR's policies in ASUs found that prisoners in
several units had been held for inappropriate lengths of time,
violating their due process rights and costing the department of
millions of dollars.

It is unknown how long prisoners at Corcoran will keep up their
hunger strike, but letters from participants indicate that they
continue until the CDCR meets their demands. One prisoner recently
wrote, "The struggle that is being fought in this ASU at Corcoran
State Prison is only a small part of a bigger struggle that is being
fought, and that will be continuously fought, against the oppression
that is evident in all parts of the world today." Two hunger strikes
took place in prisons across California last year, at one point
involving at least 12,000 prisoners. Last year's strikes, as well as
the Corcoran strike, are unprecedented in the history of the CDCR and
have seen unity amongst prisoners across racial and geographic lines.


For more information and updates, please visit
http://www.prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Prisoners in Corcoran Ad-Seg Continue Hunger Strike: CDCR Lags On Gang Validation Revisions

Press Contact: Isaac Ontiveros Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity

Oakland – Although media coverage of the event has been scarce, prisoners in the Administrative Segregation Unit (ASU) at Corcoran State Prison continue a hunger strike that has lasted over a month. In a statement released in late December, representatives of the strikers listed 11 demands that include access to educational and rehabilitative programming, adequate and timely medical care, and timely hearings on their cases and petitions. As of February 9, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), disclosed that 30 men were still striking and a representative in the office said that prisoners had been intermittently striking for the last month. Unlike the California prisoner hunger strikes of July and September, little attention has been given to the ongoing strike at Corcoran.

Family members and advocates fear strikers may be experiencing serious medical issues and even death. A prisoner at Corcoran, who remains unnamed due to fear of reprisal, stated in a letter received on February 5th, “On or about February 2nd or 3rd, 2012, an inmate has passed away due to not eating that has been going on over here in Corcoran ASU. Inmates are passing out and having other medical problems and it seems that this is not being taken seriously. There will be more casualties if this isn’t addressed or brought to light.”

While this death is unconfirmed, it raises concerns that the CDCR is failing to deal with this hunger strike in an appropriate manner. “The prisoners are making very reasonable and legitimate demands regarding basic human rights,” says Carol Strickman, a lawyer working on behalf of some hunger strikers in California, “For those of us on the outside, the slow pace of reform is frustrating. For those people enduring barbarous conditions, the lack of meaningful improvement is unbearable.”

The demands of the Corcoran strikers are somewhat different than those of the strikes sparked in Pelican Bay State Prison’s Security Housing Unit (SHU) this past summer and fall, which at one point included 12,000 prisoners in 13 prisons across California. Administrative Segregation Units are often used as holding places for prisoners in route to SHU facilities, or who are waiting release back into general population. Many prisoners in the various ASUs in California have been validated as gang members by CDCR and languish, sometimes for years, awaiting transfer to facilities such as Pelican Bay, where some prisoners have spent more than 20 years in solitary confinement.

Following the September hunger strike and significant pressure from the public and legislators in Sacramento, the CDCR announced that it would make changes to its gang validation procedure and would release a draft for review by stakeholders sometime in January. “The CDCR is clearly behind on their timeline. Meanwhile, prisoners continue to be validated largely due to association and baseless allegations effectively dooming them to indefinite SHU sentences without any means of challenging their cases,” says Azadeh Zohrabi, of the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity coalition . The stakeholders’ review will reportedly involve the California Correctional and Peace Officers Association (CCPOA), state legislators and prison advocates.

Lawyers, families, and advocates will continue to monitor the situation at Corcoran. For updates and further information please visit www.prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Ripple effects of Corcoran ASU hunger strike

January 30, 2012 SF Bay View

by William E. Brown Jr.

William E. Brown Jr. and his family

Written Jan. 16, 2012 – We here at Corcoran State Prison, prisoners in ASU (Administrative Segregation Unit), went on a united hunger strike, aimed straight at the beast: injustice and negligence. As a named petitioner, I was targeted for being a litigant and a spokesman for myself and the other Afrikans who are seeking justice and equal protection.

While we are going through the “due process” of Corcoran’s imperial domination, here are the ripple effects of our strike. The first slap in the face arose when they made the biased and discriminatory decision to send the ASU1 sergeant to move me and my young KAGE brother [another Black prisoner] away from our ASU cell F169 to a mental health building that’s used only for CCCMS (Correctional Clinical Case Management System) mentally ill inmates.

Since our protest was presented peacefully, we refused to partake in any violent resistance after being threatened with possible cell extraction, then an additional 115 citation for rule violations. As an older brother wise to CDC(R)’s trickery, I felt more than responsible not to lose control of the incident, which could have aggravated me and my young Black brotha’s present circumstances.

After allowing others alike involved to know that we will carry on strong and keep the revolt lit in honor of our united front, we agreed to move straight ahead.

The next slap in the face arose when an email came on Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, 6:42 p.m., to [prison officials] Arnold Cruz and Vincent Marmolejo in hopes to use this coercion to end our civil rights to a peaceful protest. The email read:

“Can you speak to inmates Ryoo and Brown [the Corcoran ASU hunger strike petition was signed by Pyung Hwa Ryoo, Juan Jaimes and William E. Brown]? Please let them know the hunger strike is over and resolutions to some of the issues they presented (in the petition) are forthcoming, as I had discussed with Ryoo last week. The inmates in ASU-1 ate tonight and declared hunger strike over. Let me know what happens. Thanks.”

On Dec. 31, 2011, the prison officials came and pulled us from our cell and took our personal property based on illegal grounds. We continued our peaceful protest! After threats and more coercion, we both pondered our wellbeing and the odds were stacked against us, meaning harsher retaliation. We came to an adult understanding with Lt. Rush, who in exchange personally walked an emergency copy of our 602 inmate appeal (complaint) to the warden’s office.

The third slap in the face came when I was served an additional CDC 115 (Rules Violation Report) charging a violation of CCR Sec. 3005(a) and citing the specific act of “inciting and leading a hunger strike.” I’m like “Wow!” Under “Circumstances,” the 115 reads:


“On Friday, December 30, 2011, the Southern Hispanic, Black, and Other inmates in ASU1 participated in a mass hunger strike to address grievances in ASU1. Due to the ‘Hunger Strike,’ there was a disruption in the ASU1 program. A list of demands was sent to staff, and you inmate BROWN T-58106 (ASU1-169) were listed as one of the instigators of the Hunger Strike. Your actions caused a disruption to the normal operations of ASU1, and possible health concerns for the inmates involved. Your actions created additional work for staff, and time delays in which it was necessary for staff to address your issues. Attached is a list of demands with inmate RYOO F-88924, inmate JAIMES V-08644 (ASU1-165), and inmate BROWN T-58106 (ASU1-169), listed as the signers for the inmate grievance. Based on this information you are deemed as leading the Hunger Strike and causing the disruption in ASU1.”

Prior to this whole incident, all we had done was submit a peaceful civil rights/human rights group petition reflecting the colorful complaints of all races, and all we got is retaliation. CDC(R) fails and refuses to comply with our demands, which are protected by case law as well as federal and state law, California Code of Regulations Title 15 and CDC(R) Department Operations Manual (DOM).

For many years, we’ve been dirt under the rug, left for dead by those in society who turn a blind eye, only to be cast as outlaws and black, brown, yellow and white trash. Even now as I humbly await my next 115 hearing to be conducted, I’m preparing a civil suit.

For many years, we’ve been dirt under the rug, left for dead by those in society who turn a blind eye, only to be cast as outlaws and black, brown, yellow and white trash.

Those same biased prison officials continue to violate many more inmates’ due process by failing or refusing to allow certain evidence or documents or even answer relevant questions pertaining to our defense. Many times we are refused access to witnesses who could possibly assist with our defense in hopes of a much greater outcome than the guilty verdict.

Just because the official has the power, there’s never a preponderance of the evidence standard considered when a hearing officer is labeled as being unlisted as having gone “through the procedure of the State Bar.” How could it not be determined that a hearing officer hadn’t made an impartial decision in his or her fact finding when he has not been through the training of the State Bar to legally enforce an order without a predetermined belief system.

These underground rules are being used as a gateway to target certain inmates who CDC(R) considers too active, or to later validate them as alleged gang members for inciting or leading certain racial groups. This is to discourage further litigation, advocacy – standing against the very injustice that Martin Luther King and others alike marched for. As King stood against genocidal environments, me and my brothers will continue to rattle the KAGE.

These underground rules are being used as a gateway to target certain inmates who CDC(R) considers too active, or to later validate them as alleged gang members for inciting or leading certain racial groups.

There are three possible aims of punishment: restraint, revenge or reform. Capitalism only seems to succeed at the first two. As we the prisoner advocates for justice know, the retributive and vengeful “justice” of the present system has been a total and utter failure.

Attempting to reform people through coercion and force can never succeed. Arguments based on fear and terror are never convincing. The institutionalized murder – the death penalty – has never had the slightest effect on violent crime figures. It amounts to no more than revenge.

If prison achieves anything, it tends to perpetuate crime with minor offenders who often go on to commit greater crimes. The motto then goes, Why not re-offend if nothing has changed?

Capitalism cannot solve the problem. It creates the very conditions which lead to most crimes. The supposed system of justice amounts to a closed cast of judges and legal professionals who are initiated into a tangled web of complex rules and regulations, where any concept of justice or fair play intrudes purely at random.

Because the beast is on its knees, because the moment is ripe, I’m approaching the oppressor’s gates with unity like the ants, the heart of a lion and the rage of a bull to liberate my people. I won’t lose ambition so long as I’m still breathing. Mandela stayed strong for 28 years. Huey P. told us we bear rights. “Wait” sounds too much like never.

GLJ [George Lester Jackson] was a Soledad brother who made the jailhouse rock, saying, “You’ve got to find a way to make people know you’re there.” That’s crucial, whether in terms of making career gains, letting our families know we care or, like Malcolm, sending a message to our elected officials. I recommend that everyone read “Stride Toward Freedom,” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s first published book.

Send our brother some love and light: William E. Brown Jr., T-58106, P.O. Box 8800, Corcoran CA 93212. See his FriendsWithPens.com page.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Feeling death at our heels: An update from the frontlines of the struggle

January 25, 2012 SF BayView

from the NCTT Corcoran SHU

“Death is impossible for us to fathom; it is so immense, so frightening that we will do almost anything to keep from thinking about it. Society is organized to make death invisible, to keep it several steps removed. That distance may seem necessary for our comfort, but it comes with a terrible price: the illusion of limitless time, and a consequent lack of seriousness about daily life. As a warrior in life, you must turn this dynamic around: Make the thought of death something not to escape but to embrace. Your days are numbered. Will you pass them halfhearted or will you live with a sense of urgency? Cruel theaters staged by a czar are unnecessary; death will come to you without them. Imagine it pressing in on you, leaving you no escape, for there is no escape. Feeling death at your heels will make all your actions more certain, more forceful. This could be your last throw of the dice: Make it count.” – Robert Greene, bestselling author of “The 48 Laws of Power

“This photo was taken a few days after the first hunger strike ended. I was about 178 pounds; I’d lost 42 pounds,” Heshima Denham wrote on the back. He added these wise words: “Progress requires sacrifice; give up your life for the people.”
Written Jan. 8, postmarked Jan. 18, 2012 – Greetings, brothers and sisters: A firm, warm and solid embrace of revolutionary love and solidarity is extended to each of you from each of us.

Since the last hunger strike ended, we have weathered wave after wave of retaliation from the state’s prison administrators that continues unabated to this day. But before I catalog these manifestations of weakness on the part of state prison administrators, we feel it’s necessary to recount why this struggle began and the nature of our resolve to see the five core demands realized.

We have been consigned to ever more aggressive sensory deprivation torture units for 10, 20, 30 and in some cases 40 years, based on an administrative determination that we are members or associates of a “gang” – a term that encompasses leftist ideologies, political and politicized prisoners, jailhouse lawyers and most anyone who in the opinion of Institutional Gang Investigations (IGI) is not passively accepting his role as a commodity in the prison industrial complex.

“Gang” is a term that encompasses leftist ideologies, political and politicized prisoners, jailhouse lawyers and most anyone who in the opinion of Institutional Gang Investigations (IGI) is not passively accepting his role as a commodity in the prison industrial complex.

These administrative determinations are not due to some overt act of misconduct or pattern of rules violations. No, these “validations” are based most often on the reforms, words or accounts of debriefers, rats, informants and other broken men who will say and do ‘most anything their IGI and ISU (Investigative Services Unit) handlers instruct them to, to avoid confinement in the SHU (Security Housing Unit) or carry some other favor from their masters.

After decades of fruitless legal challenges, after years of suffering the deprivations of conditions so inherently evil, inhumane and psychologically torturous that most of you simply cannot comprehend the reality behind these words, most of us came to realize an immutable truth: that the state’s mantra of “the only way out of the SHU is to parole, debrief or die” was something that they not only meant, but was in fact a key feature in developing a subservient and passive pool of prisoner commodities upon which the orderly fleecing of taxpayer dollars could be based.

Thirty years of successful propaganda, of dehumanizing underclass communities and the imprisoned, of lobbying that’s led to the dominance of the CCPOA (California Correctional Peace Officers Association) in judicial and political elections and appointments – all to mislead an ill-informed public into submitting greater control of their lives and society to an industrial interest that runs counter to the public safety concerns they were vested to protect. Many of us watched this state of affairs progress unchallenged as our protestations fell on deaf ears, year after year, decade after decade, until advanced age and the decimation of our communities forced us onto “death ground,” where you may survive if you can resist, but you will most surely perish if you do not.

We took up a strategy which would pull back the curtain on the state’s practice of domestic torture which has been so well hidden from the people for so long, a strategy in which some of us may yet die: THE HUNGER STRIKE. We would rather starve ourselves, to risk inevitable death, than to be indefinitely subjected to the deprivations of the torture unit.

We took up a strategy which would pull back the curtain on the state’s practice of domestic torture which has been so well hidden from the people for so long, a strategy in which some of us may yet die: THE HUNGER STRIKE.

What must be understood is that existence here is, in many ways, a fate worse than death; and when advancing age brings that mortality into stark focus, the words of Napoleon Bonaparte, “Death is nothing, but to live defeated is to die every day,” resonate. This simple observation defines our resolve in realizing our five core demands.

To say this is a protracted struggle is an understatement; this is a struggle in which we will win or we will die in the effort. Our actions thus far, and the awareness of this international community of their inherent righteousness, has made this adamantine resolve clear, so why then would CDCR (California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation) officials resort to petty retaliatory actions? The answer lies in the very nature of the tyranny and authoritarian power they represent.

Aggression is deceptive; it inherently hides weakness. Aggressors possess poor emotional control and little patience for challenges to their interests. The first waves of retaliation from these types of aggressors may seem strong to some; this is why so many non-SHU general population prisoners dropped out of the second hunger strike as those waves struck them. But, of course, we were unmoved; and the longer such attacks go on, the clearer their underlying weaknesses and insecurity become. It is an act of irrational desperation, but one they pursue out of sheer rote.

Since the second hunger strike ended, we experienced perpetual retaliation – some overt, some carefully disguised – all designed to erode the minds and wills of those committed to resist. We were denied any medical treatment for our starvation and when we filed emergency 602s to receive renutrition treatment and hunger strike-related injuries, they were not responded to until some 40 days later.

For example, during the first hunger strike, I (Heshima) passed out due to malnutrition and dehydration; the account was detailed in a previous statement. But simply put, their own guilt and fear caused them to assemble some 26 officers before opening my cell and piling on top of my unconscious form in order to shackle my arms and legs in chains and put me in an ambulance.

Their own guilt and fear caused them to assemble some 26 officers before opening my cell and piling on top of my unconscious form in order to shackle my arms and legs in chains and put me in an ambulance.

Mind you, according to witnesses, they casually, even jokingly, left me lying on my cell floor for 35 minutes before jumping on my body. Since then I’ve had a sharp, constant pain in my right side at the base of my ribcage. Though I’ve filed two medical appeals, as of this writing I have still not been treated or even diagnosed for this.

Zaharibu’s cholesterol, blood oxygen levels and blood pressure are so far outside of normal range he is at chronic risk for stroke, heart attack and diabetes – the nurses routinely “forgetting” to bring or administer his insulin when indicated.

Shortly after the second hunger strike ended, we were told, “One of the two pumps that delivers hot water to the institution is broken and we should have the part to fix it in two days.” That was over 50 days ago and we’ve had hot water for a total of three of those 50-plus days. In that intervening time, “due to the lack of hot water” we’ve been fed on paper trays, which ensures all meals arrive cold and grossly under-portioned. Because all we have to wash or shower with in these freezing cells is cold or lukewarm water, 80 percent of us housed in this 4BIL-C-Section short corridor have contracted a cold, upper respiratory tract infection or flu.

Because all we have to wash or shower with in these freezing cells is cold or lukewarm water, 80 percent of us housed in this 4BIL-C-Section short corridor have contracted a cold, upper respiratory tract infection or flu.

Despite numerous appeals and motions to the court, they have not run law library for any of us since August, making it impossible to access legal research, copying service or verified legal mailing, thus jeopardizing the viability of numerous legal pleadings in the courts.

We have often expounded upon the fundamental unreliability of reforms as nothing more than temporary pacification measures that can be repealed at the whim of administrators, and this analysis was again proven only weeks after the second hunger strike ended. Former Undersecretary of Corrections Scott Kernan made a big to-do about the concessions being made to improve the material conditions in SHU, including giving us action at a single special purchase order to purchase newly approved cold weather items by Dec. 31 – or those items would have to be included in annual packages.

Things like watch caps, thermals, tennis shoes etc. were all “approved” for SHU. Memos trumpeting this and Operational Procedure (OP) update chronos were issued to us all, only to be followed by a memo stating the warden of CSP-Corcoran-SHU was effectively repealing the single special purchase order for cold weather items without explanation. This was soon followed by another memo stating tennis shoes orders to SHU would not be allowed until after “Sacramento” made changes to the property matrix, something that was done by Scott Kernan back in October via emergency memo.

The warden of CSP-Corcoran-SHU was effectively repealing the single special purchase order for cold weather items without explanation.

Rolling power outages have suddenly become routine here. The mailroom suddenly devised new regulations directing any phony orders to be directed to one post office box, while letters go to another, making it more difficult and confusing for those who care to see to the welfare of their loved ones here. Not to be left out, CDCR trust account officials have raised processing fees on electronic trust deposits called “J-Pays,” some 500 percent, from $1 to $5, increasing the financial burden on underclass families while maximizing their own profiteering.

All of those things are designed to fuse with the daily mental struggles of the reality of indefinite sensory deprivation confinement to have the cumulative effect of eroding the psychology of resistance, and if this were a situation where there was some psychological threshold to breach, they may well have found some here who capitulate. But that simply is not the reality.

This is not a situation where multi-spectrum retaliation – or coercive force of any kind – will somehow diminish the resolve of those of us committed to ending the perpetual torture inherent in these indeterminate SHU units. In fact, quite the opposite is true; such actions only serve to crystallize in our minds the simple fact that we cannot lose. The alternative is simply more unpleasant than the relatively quick sacrifice of death by starvation. They can ratchet up the intensity on these petulant retaliation moves a hundredfold and it will have no other effect than increasing our resolve a thousandfold.

This is not a situation where multi-spectrum retaliation – or coercive force of any kind – will somehow diminish the resolve of those of us committed to ending the perpetual torture inherent in these indeterminate SHU units. In fact, quite the opposite is true; such actions only serve to crystallize in our minds the simple fact that we cannot lose.

We must win this struggle not simply because it is morally correct, upholds international standards of humanity, opposes governmental collusion in corporate exploitation of underclass people, and serves the interests – social, political and economic – of society as a whole, but also because it’s necessarily our survival. We are men in earnest; consequences have little meaning in the face of such conditions.

Some of you reading these words are no doubt grappling with the reality behind them, attempting to find some point of relatability, some common experience from which to draw a correlation. Unless you’ve experienced this firsthand, such an attempt is an effort in futility. But for the sake of this discussion, I challenge you to run an experiment: Go to your bathroom and close the door. Imagine that you will never leave that room. Your tub and shower, that’s your bed. Yes, your toilet is only a step or two away from where you lay your head. Your food will be brought to you here twice a day.

Stay there as long as you can. How long do you last? Twenty minutes? An hour? Six hours? Imagine you sit in that bathroom for a year, 10 years, 24 years, 40 years. You will never leave that bathroom unless you are released from prison, agree to be an agent for the same people who stuck you in that bathroom, or you die of old age and infirmity. How long would you last? How strong is your will?

Would you submit to snitchery, kowtow to your torturers and become a tool to condemn others to that same fate? Or would you fight, resist to the bitter end, give your life to expose such evil, greedy, draconian hypocrites for what they really are? Hold the mirror of social reality up to the face of every man and woman in U.S. society and force them to confront the human misery being carried to sicker and more depraved depths every day in their names? What would you do?

Would you submit to snitchery, kowtow to your torturers and become a tool to condemn others to that same fate? Or would you fight, resist to the bitter end, give your life to expose such evil, greedy, draconian hypocrites for what they really are?

Some would characterize our effort as insane, as crazy. In “Hagakure: The door of the Samurai,” Yamamoto Tsunetomo quotes Lord Naoshige as saying the way of the warrior (samurai) is in desperateness. Ten or more cannot kill such a man. Common sense will not accomplish great things. Simply become insane and desperate.

None of us want to die, but all of us are prepared to do so to realize these five core demands. History dictates no less.

So we wait. We have been told the revisions and changes to the status quo in these torture units will be done this month or by February, but the relentless retaliatory blows we are absorbing as the sobering reminder of what we are dealing with: An entrenched labor aristocracy and political patronage of corporate speculators, who’ve grown rich and powerful off extorting billions from hapless taxpayers and criminalizing underclass people and communities, will resist any effort to curtail their wealth, privilege and socio-political status quo.

These vile and greedy people are extracting more of your tax dollars for their exclusive use than many nations’ gross national product by using us as scapegoats to frighten the people – when in fact many of us are servants of the people, political progressives who would willingly lay down our lives to advance the cause of freedom, social justice and economic equality in the nation.

In the case of the NCTT and those of like mind, ironically that’s why we were validated and consigned to these torture units in the first place. A common practice of corrupt political interests is to criminalize dissent and criticism. Who will care? We are prisoners; who will know these truths? They have already succeeded in lobbying to have media access to prisoners banned unless they consent to who will be interviewed. Again, who will care, who will know?

A common practice of corrupt political interests is to criminalize dissent and criticism. Who will care? We are prisoners; who will know these truths?

If you’re reading these words, you now know the only question that remains is: Do you care? Do you care that the very people who you’ve entrusted with ensuring public safety are in fact intentionally working against that interest to maintain a bloated prison industrial complex on your tax dollars and our souls? Do you care that the U.S., which is so vocally condemning other nations, is ignoring its U.N. treaty obligations and maintaining its own expansive domestic torture program in U.S. Supermax SHU prisons across this nation? Do you care that these evils, this blatant hypocrisy is being carried out in your name? Do you care? And if you don’t, exactly what type of society is this we’ve allowed to emerge?

If you are reading these words, you can no longer claim ignorance; to stand idly by now would be complicity. A wise man once said, “All that is necessary for evil men to prevail is for good men to do nothing.” We are under no illusions. The ultimate arbiter of our fate – and this society’s fate – is the people. YOU. YOU must rise up against this injustice and inhumanity. YOU must let the state know that substantive change at every level of society is something the people demand.

The ultimate arbiter of our fate – and this society’s fate – is the people. YOU.

We have supported, and will continue to support, progressive people’s movements, from the Dream Act to the Occupy Movement, because we recognize the inherent unity of purpose in this single political motive force, the reality that we do not represent disparate social interests but a single determined democratic imperative to put an end to the stranglehold that this greedy elite and its tools currently have on every area of people’s activity in the U.S., to put an end to these exploitive relationships that diminish and impoverish the many for the aggrandizement of the few.

To treat us this way is wrong, evil and unsustainable socially. Stand with us. Lend your voices, your labor, and your ideas to this historical work. We can win, but only with you all by our sides. In the final analysis, this is a struggle to determine the nature of humanity itself. We are on the right side of history; we encourage you all to stand on this same side with us. Our love, loyalty and solidarity to all those who cherish freedom, justice and human rights and fear only failure. Until we win or don’t lose.

For more information on the California prison hunger strikes or the NCTT, contact:

• Zaharibu Dorrough, D-83611, CSP-COR-SHU, 4BIL-53, P.O. Box 3481, Corcoran, CA 93212

• J. Heshima Denham, J-38283, CSP-COR-SHU, 4BIL-46, P.O. Box 3481, Corcoran, CA 93212

• Kambui Robinson, C-82830, CSP-COR-SHU, 4BIL-49, P.O. Box 3481, Corcoran, CA 93212.

Read these brothers’ previous stories: “California prison hunger strikers propose ‘10 core demands’ for the national Occupy Wall Street Movement,” “A brief hunger strike update from the front lines of the struggle: Corcoran-SHU 4B 1L C-section Isolation Unit” (second story in that post), “From the front lines of the struggle,”and “We dare to win: The reality and impact of SHU torture units.” This story was typed by Adrian McKinney.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Corcoran prisoner about changing public attitudes on prisoners & torture

Exerpted Letter from Zaharibu Dorrough (Corcoran)

Dec. 8, 2011

I honestly believe that there will not be a
better time to challenge the legality of
warehousing people in isolation than now.

As a result of the hunger strike and the
efforts "the magnificent efforts" of people like
you, the public is now aware of how their tax
dollars are being wasted. ...That has to be the
context in which it is framed to the larger
public. How their tax dollars are being wasted is
the one thing that every citizen out there has in
common with one another. Regardless of how they
might feel about humanity of citizens in
prison/isolation. Strategically that has to be
the starting point for progressives to build around.

Historically, injustice has had a tremendous
headstart....we are always playing catch-up, we
must work that much harder to not let citizens
forget. To constantly strengthen our relationships with one another.

Forging coalitions with like-minded
progressives. Putting faces to the stories of torture and abuse.

There are human beings dying "being driven to
suicide" as a result of the isolation that they
are being subjected to. That people are being
housed under such conditions would be shameful
under any circumstance. That it happens in what
is referred to as the world's greatest
democracy...is appalling. Conditions that are
responsible for literally driving people crazy
and to suicide is what isolation is intended to accomplish.

...there is still a lot of work to be done in the
nation educating itself in a way that will allow
us to develop the kind of strategies and tactics
that will make it possible to effectively and
permanently deal with the abuses and
disrespecting of humanity that is an all too
common part of this nation's history. Hate and
indifference (and it goes by many names: racism,
sexism, homophobia, poverty, religious bigotry,
classism) are the tools that are used by those in
positions of authority to maintain power....

Hate and indifference is so entrenched in our
cultural psyche that we actually believe that,
personally and institutionally, [we can still be]
fair and just. We believe this because we have
never been taught or encouraged to consider that
our growth and development, individually,
collectively, and institutionally, has occurred
within the same racist, sexist, homophobic,
classist... hateful and indifferent circumstance
n which we have lived. It is who and what many of us are.

... we are taught that the beauty of the free
market economy is that everyone is given equal
access to the market to compete for jobs and
economic prosperity. But...we compete against one
another for the smallest portion of the economic
pie. Hate and indifference is responsible for
the fierce and extreme competition...

Torture is a form of violence that has always
been used by totalitarian governments to
subordinate the larger society to its will.

...In order for this to succeed, it is necessary
for th larger society to be convinced that their
interest and the interest of those who are in
positions of power are one and the same.

Hate and indifference has robbed us of our
ability to look at each other and see a
reflection of ourselves. We see slave, homeless,
whore, faggot, red or blue, inmate,
prisoner...alien! These are a few of the objects
that we designate for one another. Our silence
sends a clear message of our acceptance of this.

The protests (of which the hunger strike is a
part) that are taking place throughout the
country and world is a demonstration that many of
us are determined to not only hold onto our own
humanity, but to reclaim it collectively.

We are on a course in which hate and indifference
will not define who we are. ...There is a
renewed sense of hope. And after more than 23
years in isolation, hope is what has kept me amongst the living.

There are things that have to do with simple
human honor. To resist and not surrender!

Blessings.

Michael (Zaharibu) Dorrough

Via -
Marilyn McMahon
Executive Director
California Prison Focus
www.prisons.org

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Prisoners at Corcoran Administrative Segregation Unit Challenge the CDCR & Advance Prisoners’ Struggle

Prisoners in the Administrative Segregation Unit (ASU) at Corcoran State Prison issued a petition listing 11 demands for reform to the CA Department of Corrections & Rehabilitation (CDCR). The prisoners explained to CDCR officials on December 19th that the petition serves as a notice of a peaceful protest if these demands are not met in a timely manner. CA hunger strike supporters, prisoner advocates and family members were informed today that prisoners at Corcoran began refusing meals on Dec. 28th. Supporters are currently trying to get more information, and will send out another update as soon as possible.

Click here to read the prisoners’ petition.

New hunger strike: Petition for improved conditions in Administrative Segregation Unit at Corcoran State Prison

December 30, 2011 SF Bay View

by Pyung Hwa Ryoo, Juan Jaimes and William E. Brown

(Written Dec. 19, 2011) To: California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Director Matthew Cate, P.O. Box 942883, Sacramento, CA 94283-0001, and Chief Deputy Warden C. Gipson, Corcoran State Prison, P.O. Box 8800, Corcoran, CA 93212

Mr. Cate and Mrs. Gipson:

This drawing by Rashid Johnson, a prisoner in solitary confinement in Red Onion Prison in Virginia, was created to symbolize the California hunger strikes that started July 1, 2011, resumed Sept. 26 and now have resumed again on Dec. 28 at Corcoran State Prison. It has become the icon of this prisoners’ rights movement.

We, inmates currently housed in Administrative Segregation Unit (ASU) of CSP (California State Prison) Corcoran, hereby petition California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Director Matthew Cate and Corcoran State Prison Chief Deputy Warden C. Gipson for the redress and reform of current inhumane conditions we are subjected to which violate our constitutional rights.

Furthermore, this petition will serve as a constructive notice for the peaceful protest which will be carried out as an alternative means of petition in the event that our conditions and demands are not met in a timely manner. [A notation on the cover letter to this petition says the hunger strike started Dec. 28, 2011.]

Petitioners have attempted to address the issues brought up in this petition by filing numerous inmate appeals and grievances and requests for interviews to no avail. Our constitutional rights under the First, Fifth and 14th Amendments are being violated by CDCR and CSP Corcoran officials and therefore we demand the following:

Demand No. 1: THAT INMATES HERE IN ASU BE ALLOWED TO POSSESS TVs AND/OR RADIOS

We are daily being subjected to sensory deprivation which imposes a substantial risk of serious harm to our mental health. As established in numerous scientific studies, prolonged subjection to sensory deprivation has serious adverse effects to one’s mental health. We are subjected to these conditions for months and even years. Our numerous attempts to address this problem by filing 602s are being shut down. The officials are acting with deliberate indifference to our health and well-being, and our Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment is being violated.

Although mandated by a court order to allow inmates in ASUs to possess an entertainment appliance, CSP Corcoran officials refuse to do so citing a memorandum dated Dec. 15, 2008, that permanently exempts a number of prisons, including CSP Corcoran, from having to comply with the court’s mandates due to their “current fiscal situation and costs to retrofit housing units.” This policy is illegal, for our constitutional rights must be protected regardless of CSP Corcoran’s financial problems or the costs to make necessary installations to protect those rights.

Also, the aforementioned exemption memo states that CSP Corcoran is permanently exempt from allowing the use of entertainment appliances in the ASU. The only explanation provided on how and why this prison is exempt is a brief mention of the current fiscal situation of the prison. There is no mention of any follow-ups in a set period of time – e.g., every six months – in which the prison’s budget will be reviewed by the Division of Adult Institutions to see whether the prison still qualifies for the category that justifies exemption.

In other words, once a prison “passes the test” by showing that they currently cannot afford the costs to retrofit the housing units and get accepted in the “exemption list,” that prison is permanently exempt regardless of their financial situation in the future. This exemption policy is clearly unreasonable, and we assert that this policy is merely used as a loophole to get around the court’s mandates to allow us our entertainment appliances.

Furthermore, the exemption memo cannot apply to us because there is no extensive retrofitting required for giving us our radios. The electric outlets are in place and the radios merely need to be distributed and plugged in to work.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) CSP Corcoran officials immediately allow us to possess and/or stipulate to allow us to possess our TVs within two months.

B) CSP Corcoran officials make the necessary installations and/or stipulations needed to allow us to possess our TVs within two months.

Demand No. 2: THAT WE ARE PROVIDED ACCESS TO AN ADEQUATE LAW LIBRARY AND/OR LEGAL ASSISTANCE

The ASU law library is inadequate. Its contents do not comply with CCR (California Code of Regulations) Title 15 §3121 and DOM (Department Operations Manual) §53060.11. There is only one computer that contains the only essential law books in the law library, which is supposed to be shared by 200 inmates. This results in unreasonable delays with inmates not being able to sufficiently access the law library.

There is only one computer that contains the only essential law books in the law library, which is supposed to be shared by 200 inmates.

Furthermore, there is no copy machine in the ASU law library. All our legal copies are therefore forwarded to the 4A facility law library for copying. This results in delays of days or even weeks for us to receive our copies back. Also, there have been instances where our copies have been lost resulting from this unreliable practice.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) CSP Corcoran officials allow us access to an adequate law library and reasonable amount of time to use such law library by: 1) Ordering and replacing all current law books listed in CCR Title 15 §3121 and DOM §53060.11 which are missing from the ASU law libraries contents, or 2) Installing three more computers that contain essential law books for inmate use, or 3) Providing us with adequate legal assistance from persons trained in the law.

B) CSP Corcoran officials install a copy machine in the ASU law library for its use for legal copies and all essential legal supplies be kept in stock.

Demand No. 3: THAT INMATES NOT BE FURTHER PUNISHED UPON COMPLETION OF THEIR SHU TERMS

Inmates are being placed in the ASU after the completion of their SHU terms supposedly “pending transfer.” These inmates are then stuck here for four, five months, in many instances even longer, before finally being transferred to general population. This practice of illegally placing inmates in ASU upon the completion of their SHU terms for long periods of time without proper procedure and with excessive delays on their transfers is resulting in unjustified punishment for these inmates.

Furthermore, inmates undergoing the DRB (Departmental Review Board) process after the completion of their SHU terms are being held in ASU for months and even years while the counselors and committee ignore their repeated requests for a timely hearing on their case. This is in blatant violation of their procedural due process rights.

Inmates undergoing the DRB (Departmental Review Board) process after the completion of their SHU terms are being held in ASU for months and even years while the counselors and committee ignore their repeated requests for a timely hearing on their case.

The inmates submit numerous inmate requests to ASU counselors regarding the delays on their transfers and/or DRB process, but those inmate requests are not being responded to and are being ignored. The counselors are not doing their jobs because of their incompetence and/or negligence; we are suffering these undue delays explained above.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) The counselors here in ASU do not unreasonably delay inmates’ transfers and DRB process and respond to inmate requests in a timely manner.

B) Inmates who are placed in ASU after the completition of their SHU terms be afforded the same privileges as those inmates who are classified as A2-B inmates, which includes but is not limited to quarterly packages, one phone call per month and $120 monthly canteen draws.

Demand No.4: THAT WE BE AFFORDED ADEQUATE AND TIMELY MEDICAL CARE

Medical staff here in ASU unjustifiably delays medical attention and denies proper medical treatment for inmates. Although required by the court’s order in Coleman/Plata v. Schwarzenegger to provide us with adequate medical care, which the CDCR has failed to provide before, CSP Corcoran’s medical department is not in compliance with the court’s mandates. We are suffering violations to our Eighth Amendment rights daily for lack of adequate medical care, and our health and well-being are severely jeopardized.

Furthermore, we are having difficulties pursuing timely medical appeals and grievances. The medical appeals coordinators do not follow time requirements set forth in CCR Title 15 §3084.6 and there are substantial delays on getting responses for our appeals.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) Inmates be provided with timely medical attention upon request and provided with adequate medical care as mandated by the court in Coleman/Plata v. Schwarzenegger.

B) Medical appeals be promptly responded to pursuant to CCR Title 15 §3084.6.

Demand No. 5: THAT WE BE AFFORDED DUE PROCESS IN OUR 115 HEARINGS

We are being placed in ASU and sentenced to SHU terms without being afforded due process of law. The hearing officers automatically find inmates guilty regardless of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the evidence, and their biased perspectives and opinions go unchallenged.

Although the hearing officers are acting as lawyers and/or triers of fact in 115 hearings on the question of guilt, clearly under the guidelines of established case law concerning due process, they are not required to be trained in the law nor registered with the State Bar.

Resulting from their lack of knowledge and competence in this matter, frivolous and false charges not supported by any reliable evidence, which would be thrown out in a court of law, are being upheld and imposed on us. This violates our 14th Amendment rights to due process.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) Hearing officers be required to follow guidelines established by the courts concerning due process, burden of proof and sufficiency of evidence when conducting 115 hearings.

B) Hearing officers be trained in the law so they may be deemed competent to carry out the duty of a trier of fact in 115 hearings.

Demand No. 6: THAT WE BE ALLOWED PHONE ACCESS

Inmates placed in ASU are not allowed access to phones. The only way we are allowed to maintain family and community ties are by writing letters and receiving visits. Not all of us are literate, and not all of us get visits. So the denial of phone access is depriving many of us of the only way to keep in contact with our families and loved ones.

The denial of phone access is depriving many of us of the only way to keep in contact with our families and loved ones.

Furthermore, those of us currently litigating cases who need access to the phone to contact witnesses, private investigators, attorneys, courtroom clerks etc. are not allowed phone access. This results in an impingement on our First Amendment rights to access to the courts.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) Inmates in ASU be allowed one phone call a month on an inmate telephone pursuant to CCR Title 15 §3282(a)(3).

B) Inmates in ASU be allowed confidential calls pursuant to CCR Title 15 §3282(g).

Demand No. 7: THAT WE BE PROVIDED WITH ADEQUATE LAUNDRY EXCHANGE

We are being denied adequate laundry exchange. There are weeks where laundry exchange is not run; most of the time during laundry exchange they are short on pillow cases, sheets and towels; and we are only allowed to turn in one of each item for laundry exchange. This clearly is not in accordance with CCR Title 15 §3031(b).

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) We be provided with a weekly laundry exchange pursuant to CCR Title 15 §3031(b).

Demand No. 8: THAT OUR CANTEEN FOOD ITEMS BE GIVEN TO US IN THEIR PACKAGING

Our canteen is being opened and food items – such as rice, soups, cookies, chips, beans, etc. – are being placed in paper bags before they’re given to us. This attracts ants and insects that go into the bags containing food and thereby pose a serious health risk. Furthermore, the food becomes stale and inedible after a few days due to the food being placed in paper bags.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) Inmates be allowed to keep their canteen items in the plastic bags they come in and/or be allowed to purchase zip lock plastic bags from the canteen to place the food in.

Demand No. 9: THAT WE BE AFFORDED EDUCATIONAL AND REHABILITATIVE PROGRAMS AND/OR OPPORTUNITIES

Inmates in ASU are not allowed any educational and/or rehabilitative programs and/or opportunities. There is no school; we are not allowed to receive any form of correspondence course for lack of proctors, those of us who wish to learn a trade are not able to and those of us who wish to better ourselves to be better individuals of benefit to our society and other citizens are not given that chance.

Inmates in ASU are not allowed any educational and/or rehabilitative programs and/or opportunities.

Furthermore, we are currently not allowed TVs, so we are not able to partake in educational opportunities by watching educational channels or programs or participating in educational programs that are provided by the institution on the institutional channels.

This contradicts what CDCR supposedly stands for, which is to make the communities safer and rehabilitate our prisoners. We wish to better ourselves by participating in educational and/or rehabilitative programs, but we are denied this right.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) We are afforded educational programs such as correspondence courses, proctored exams, vocational courses etc.

B) We are afforded rehabilitative programs in self-help, Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous etc.

C) We be allowed to possess our TVs for educational purposes such as to partake in educational opportunities provided by the institutional as well as educational channels.

Demand No. 10: THAT WE RECEIVE THE SAME PRIVILEGES AS SHU INMATES

The inmates housed in the SHU are allowed certain privileges and items from canteen and packages that we are not allowed. These privileges include but are not limited to TVs; educational courses; beanies, sweats and shoes from package; photo ducats; and art supplies from canteen such as colored pens, pastels and sketch pads. Furthermore, SHU inmates are allowed exercise equipment in the yard cages, such as pull-up and dip bars.

Inmates housed here in ASU are D1/D assigned, same as the SHU inmates. Most of us are stuck in this ASU for months and even years. The fact that we currently are not afforded the same rights and privileges as SHU inmates violates our equal protection rights.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) We be afforded the same rights, privileges, items and programs as are afforded to inmates in the SHU

Demand No. 11: THAT NO REPRISALS BE TAKEN FOR THE EMPLOYMENT OF OUR RIGHT TO PETITION

We are exercising our legal right to petition in participating in a peaceful protest. This right is protected by the United States Constitution and thereby any sanctions and/or reprisals placed on us for the reason stated above is illegal and a violation of our rights.

THEREFORE, WE DEMAND THAT:

A) No reprisals be taken on petitioners in any form or manner for the exercise of our right to petition.

Conclusion

We petitioners are not deprived of our constitutional rights simply because we are incarcerated behind these prison walls. We are bound by the Constitution of the United States, and therefore its protection extends to us as well. These rights have been violated and disregarded by CDCR and CSP Corcoran officials and therefore petitioners, with the support of members of their class, hereby come together to demand the redress and remedies that have been long overdue.

We are bound by the Constitution of the United States, and therefore its protection extends to us as well.

Petitioners pray that this petition and the issues addressed herein are remedied and the relief sought in each demand granted.

Pyung Hwa Ryoo, F-88924, Corcoran State Prison, ASU 1-167, P.O. Box 3456, Corcoran, CA 93212

Juan Jaimes, V-08644, Corcoran State Prison, ASU 1-165, P.O. Box 3456, Corcoran, CA 93212

William E. Brown, T-58106, Corcoran State Prison, ASU 1-169, P.O. Box 3456, Corcoran, CA 93212

This petition was sent to S. Vargas to be forwarded to the Bay View. It was typed by Kendra Castaneda. Readers are urged to write to these brothers on hunger strike.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Suicided


by Chad Landrum*

The CDC’s shameless attempt to suppress the tragic loss of life of three recent hunger strikers has inevitably failed in the whole, despite the fact that it still refuses to knowledge its own complicity with regards to the particular details surrounding these deaths. The essential facts are widely known among the prison masses.

This comes as no surprise for those of us familiar with the practices of the CDC. Yet for those naïve to the CDC’s duplicity, there are valuable lesson to be learned from all of this. With respect to the three men who needlessly lost their lives, it is significant that we not pass judgment on them prematurely.

The taking of one’s own life is a conscious decision, and such a decision is as relevant as the surrounding conditions that gave rise to the decision itself. This inseparability between our consciousness and our environmental conditions is summed up well in Karl Marx’s simple, yet revealing, statement:

“…the ‘ideal’ is nothing more that the material world reflected in the human brain and translated into forms of thought….”

To speak of these avoidable deaths in the context of “suicides” is to legitimize the state’s role in creating the oppressive conditions that resulted in these deaths, and thus, exonerates it of responsibility.

To judge the suicides based solely upon the “possible” decisions of these three individuals alone is to allow ourselves to be divided and conquered. We should not pass judgment upon the alleged decisions alone, but also upon the state and the conditions that gave rise to such contemplations.

The state apparatus of various governments, including the US government, have a long history of eliminating opposition to the status quo, and in particular, “suiciding” that opposition when they are confined. We must ask, did these three human beings commit suicide? Or were they “suicided” by inconspicuous means? All three of these deaths have been quite conveniently classified as suicides. Yet by all indications these classifications do not correspond with the actual circumstances.

How do we know that these men intended suicide? We don’t. But of greater significance, we do know that there were repeated attempts to call “Man Down”, kicking on cell doors, etc., which was willfully ignored and neglected by guards. In parallel circumstances, were not state employees involved, anyone else would be charged with either murder or at the very least manslaughter.

If this concept comes across as unorthodox, this is only a demonstration of how effectively we have been conditioned to think, but the objective reality is, these three men were “suicide” even though it was by inconspicuous means—intentional neglect. It requires no great feat of intellect to understand that the state will rarely prosecute its own. But to ensure that the deaths of the three men were for naught, we must do all that we can to publicize and transform this tragedy into an educational opportunity.

We call on Amnesty International to assist us and demand a United Nations investigation into these deaths and the deplorable conditions of solitary confinement throughout the US penal system. We likewise call upon the UN to appoint an independent and unbiased autopsy of these men and any others who may be subjected to a similar fate.

There is no such thing as prisoner rights, only power struggles.

*Chad Landrum has consistently and courageously written about the hunger strikes and shared his analysis condemning the CDCR’s torturous use of isolation, which you can find along with other writing and statements from prisoners on our Voices from Inside page. Chad is currently locked up at Corcoran State Prison.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

A Brief Discussion on the Reality and Impact of SHU Torture Units-- Letter from Corcoran SHU

A Brief Discussion on the Reality and Impact of
SHU Torture Units in the Wake of the August 23rd
Legislative Hearings, From the N.C.T.T. - COR-SHU

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere...We know through painful experience
that freedom is never voluntarily given by the
oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed."

-Letter from Birmingham Jail, 4/16/63
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

These sage words by Dr. King are both appropriate
to the discussion we'd like to have with you on
indefinite SHU confinement, and cautionary as to
who we are as a society in these troubled times.
This 2nd point is very relevant to this
discussion and we hope you'll stick with us as we
explore subject matter that is both broad and
disturbing which requires us to share some inconvenient truths.

Security Housing Units, SHUs, like those in
Pelican Bay, Tehachapi, and this one here in
Corcoran are torture units. They are used to
indefinitely house human beings in solitary
confinement, under constant illumination, based
on an administrative determination that they are
"gang" members or associates, with an impetus
towards breaking their minds in hopes of
eliciting information, coercing them into
becoming informants or active agents of the
state. The torture units are the living tombs of
not only alleged "gang" members or associates,
but political and politicized prisoners, human
rights activists, critics of the prison industry,
jailhouse lawyers and most anyone who in the sole
determination of Institutional Gang Investigators
(I.G.I.) and administrators, are not content to
accept and submit passively to their role as
commodities in the prison industrial complex. The
United States, and many of it's media outlets
such as the "New York Times" and "San Diego Union
Tribune", prior to the U.S. "War on Terror"
routinely criticized China, Turkey, Burma, Syria,
and other nations for holding prisoners in
indefinite solitary confinement, under conditions
of constant illumination and/or sensory
deprivation, etc. for expressing contrary
political views. They universally condemned the
practice as torture, citing the United Nations
Human Rights Commission Treaty. Their hypocrisy
was of course revealed soon after the policy of
U.S. sponsored torture at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo
Bay, and numerous secret C.I.A. blacksite prisons
was exposed. Yet America's dirty little secret
is, state sponsored torture in the U.S. is
neither new or exclusive to it's "War on Terror".
Years before Abu Ghraib and "Gitmo" they were
murdering prisoners in San Quentin's Adjustment
Center, boiling men alive at Pelican Bay-SHU, and
holding murderous bloodsport style bouts in
Corcoran-SHU all along holding alleged "gang"
members and left wing political ideologues for
decades in sensory deprivation torture units at
Pelican Bay, Corcoran, and Tehachapi SHUs. Yes,
indefinite solitary confinement and constant
illumination is being used right now in
California SHU units, in conjunction with a
program of systematic isolation and experimental
behavior modification to torture prisoners
everyday ... with no end in sight. The California
Supreme and 9th Circuit courts, in blatant
indifference to constitutional and international
law, have repeatedly refused to intervene on
behalf of prisoners at Pelican Bay and Corcoran
SHU who've lived under these psychologically
torturous conditions for 10, 20, 30, and even 40
years straight, This is unadulterated hypocrisy,
wherein your public officials are torturing
fellow citizens in your name. The United Nations
Convention Against Torture and other cruel and
degrading treatment or punishment defines
"torture" as: "any state-sanctioned action by
which severe pain or suffering, mental or
physical, is intentionally inflicted for
obtaining information, punishment, info,
intimidation, or discrimination." This virtually
defines the validation, indeterminate-SHU, and
debriefing processes, which are all
interconnected. We are told, quite frankly at ICC
hearings, "You'll only get out of SHU if you
parole, debrief, or die." The parole board is no
different for those of us in SHU with determinate
life sentences where we are told, "If you want a
parole date, you may want to think about
debriefing." To debrief one must become an
informant, an active agent of the state, and
decades of such torture and withholding of
freedom are powerful state sanctions to break
men's minds, compel them to lie, make something
up, or simply parrot what they are told to say by
state handlers to support a law enforcement
agenda in order to escape the SHU. In at least 2
recent online articles, one by the notoriously
pro-prison industry "Sacramento Bee", we see
debriefers doing just this: actually advocating
the merits of the very SHU torture units that
broke their minds and made them thralls of prison
industrialists, the C.C.P.O.A. and all those with
an economic and political interest in maintaining
the symbolism of these torture units as the abode
of "predatory gang leaders and organized
criminals" and other exaggerations. The U. N.
Human Rights Commission has stated prolonged
solitary confinement, especially for purposes of
extracting information, is prohibited as torture.
SHUs are, by definition, torture units; and
specialty ultra-supermax isolation units like
Pelican Bay's D-Short Corridor and Corcoran SHUs
for 4BIL-C-section, are specifically engineered
to warp reality for purposes of breaking men's
minds. Such torture, no matter the supposed
justification, is never an acceptable practice
for a humane society. The UN Convention Against
Torture states, "no exceptional circumstances
whatsoever, whether state or threat of war or
political emergency" may be invoked as a reason
for torture. As it stands, your correctional
department and courts, some of your elected
officials and all law enforcement agencies do
feel torture is justified as long as it's applied
to those they deem "gang members". But there is a
much more insidious, socioeconomic and political
motivation for the maintenance and expansion of
SHU torture units and indeterminate SHU
confinement based on "gang" validation. It is
sustained by manipulating your perception of
truth and humanity; by controlling your
perception of these things the prison industrial
complex dictates your actions, reactions, and
inaction to their impact on lives and communities
yours included.

As you may be aware we embarked on a historic 21
day hunger strike in July in solidarity with the
Pelican Bay SHU-D-Corridor Collective and the 5
core demands recognizing our basic human rights.
We were joined by some 6,600 other prisoners
across the state, countless others across the
nation, and garnered the support of principled
people all over the world. On August 23rd, 2011 a
hearing was held by the legislative Committee on
Public Safety in response to these issues. I want
to take this time to highlight some of the
distortions, misrepresentations of fact, and
outright lies by CDCR Undersecretary Scott Kernan
[a key prison industrialist], to illustrate just
what we're talking about here. There is an
articulable economic basis upon which state
sanctioned torture units are maintained in
California and throughout the U.S. Before we get
into Mr. Kernan's comments it's necessary for you
to have a clear understanding of what they are
to understand why he would contradict himself
and openly lie to a legislative oversight committee.

A central purpose of SHU torture units (and
"gang" validations resulting in indeterminate SHU
confinement) is to ensure your financial and
political support for the expansion and
maintenance of the prison industrial complex, by
maximizing your fear and capitalizing on your
ignorance of these issues. The foundational
cornerstones of their success is convincing you
that "gang" members (or at least those they've
labeled as such) are these depraved, inhuman
monsters hell bent on rape, murder and predation
of innocent people; and only they, the "gang
experts" know who these monsters are and how best
to "protect" you from them. These allegedly
malevolent, irrationally violent, and predatory
organized gangs are the source of all societies
ills and the very origin of crime in our
communities. By maintaining these torture units
and proclaiming they are the abodes of the "worst
of the worst", they have a symbolic manifestation
of the validity of their claims. No one can
refute their accounts or characterizations
because transparency is non-existent in CDCR
Prisoners have no public voices. The C.C.P.O.A.
successfully lobbied to ban media interviews with
prisoners so the public is left to a unilateral,
one-sided view of prison conditions and their
discontents. This allows them free reign to
perpetuate the myth of the "inhuman gang member",
and with tacit media support, dehumanize an ever
growing segment of the underclass community. Have
you not noticed when your local news reports on a
suspected offender, parolee, or even a victim of
police brutality the first thing said as he or
she is paraded across the screen is they are a "
validated gang member" of this or that 'gang', as
though this designation somehow diminishes their
human worth. When incidents occur in or around
our schools, the school is put on "lockdown", a
term derived from the California prisons to
denote a prison yard being "locked down" after a
riot or other incident. These terms, consistently
employed by authority and media figures,
inevitably lead to the formation of a particular
social psychology. When you hear the term "gang"
or "gang member" it automatically conjures images
of innocent drive-by shooting victims and prison
rapes inspired by shows like "Oz" and other
cinematic visions, divorcing these men and women
from the human condition, dehumanizing them.
These people, more often than not, were saddled
with these characterizations because of the
communities they come from, and may well have
never committed a violent or predatory act in
their lives. But you don't know that. All you
know is what you've been told by the anchorman,
police, or CDC spokesman. They know that, because
they've used millions of your tax dollars to
engineer it what way. The truth of the matter is,
there are no malevolent, irrationally violent,
predatory gangs roving the streets of your cities
or the prison yards of CDCR; only desperate men
and women forced to the bottom rung of society
through institutional disparities in economic and
race based distribution of educational,
employment, and employment opportunities at
virtually every level of human activity in the
U.S. Do gangs exist? Of course. That's not the
issue here. The issue is why do they exist and
where are they prevalent? "Gangs", and more
centrally gang violence and high crime, are
prevalent primarily in underclass communities.
Crime and the formation of gang violence
conditions are like water they flow to areas of
least resistance and emptiness in this case
economic "emptiness" (poverty). The national
unemployment rate (not counting the
under-employed or those who've stop looking)
stands at 9.1%; yet in the New Afrikan (Black)
community it's 17% and in the Latino community is
14.5%; those without a high school diploma stand
at 16% unemployed, while those with a bachelors
degree a mere 4%. New Afrikans (Blacks) and
Latinos make up 90% of the prison population but
a scant 26% of the national population. The
origin of crime is not "gangs" , "gangs" are a
social symptom of that origin. The origin of all
crime is the disproportionate distribution of
wealth, privilege, and opportunity in our
society. This is not by chance or happenstance,
it is by design. Wage based employment and
entrepreneurship are the only ways to "legally"
create wealth in this society when social
conditions are such that a community contains a
large population of surplus labor (either
unemployable due to their lack of education or
marketable skills or the market simply can not
sustain that population of workers) the only
alternative to survive is the underground economy
(be that illicit services such as narcotics, the
sex trade, or gambling, or predatory crimes such
as extortion, robbery and identity theft). There
is a corresponding sense of socio-political
impotence which accompanies the innate insecurity
of poverty. Young men and women who have no
power, no hope, no impact on their world and
little to no love in their lives, form community
based, lumpen organizations to fill that
socio-political void in their existence. These
the state calls "gangs" and has declared war on
them. One of the reasons so few people vote in
underclass communities is these disparities are
institutional and systemic to U.S. capitalist
economics no matter who is in office, their
plight doesn't change. Because these communities
are a marginal constituency, public officials
extend a corresponding indifference to their
plight and instead of "protecting and serving"
these communities, law enforcement, judicial,
correctional and some legislative officials all
too commonly have a containment, suppression, and
adversarial relationship with these communities
and those who come from them. Yet the Bell Curve
theorists' rhetoric and notions that young men
and women want to stand on a street corner
selling crack or want to risk their lives and
freedom by engaging in unprovoked gang violence
are simply untrue. You pick any prisoner in these
SHU units validated as a "gang member" and offer
him a job making $20.00 an hour, I can guarantee
you he won't break the law. But the environment
in these communities, and most assuredly the
environment in CDCR prisons, are not structured
to produce such success or opportunity. Which
brings me to my next point: The California
correctional system is an environment designed
and maintained by its administrators. CDCR
effectively retards rehabilitation, especially
among SHU prisoners (those, who by the state's
own admission, most need rehabilitation), by
withholding the vital tech-based vocational
training and higher education opportunities
needed to compete in today's high-tech world. It
was primarily through the successful efforts of
the CCPOA that funding through Pell grants for
higher education was taken from prisoners.
Predictably, what followed this repeal of the
inmate Bill of Rights was an unprecedented boom
in prison building and expansion of the prison
population by 800% in the last 20 years. Racial
antagonisms are encouraged to preclude broad
class cooperation amongst prisoners, like the
unprecedented unity shown in the recent hunger
strike. Underdevelopment while in prison, coupled
with an emphasis on seeking most any impetus for
violation by parole officers once out of prison,
is designed to preclude successful reintegration
into society, maximize recidivism rates, and
undermine the underclass communities from which
these x-offenders hail. All to maintain the
steady social dysfunction and economic
desperation in these family units so a consistent
flow of bodies is exiting these communities and
entering jails and prisons, court systems and
probation departments, ensuring a recession-proof
industry of profit and expansion for the prison
market and those who depend on your tax dollars
to sustain their privilege. The very structure of
CDCR regulations is designed to promote
dependency, destroy ingenuity and
self-determination, and deter unity. They
actually have rules which bar prisoners from
creating or running a business, which always
boggled our minds in an economically depressed
capitalist economy. If there are prisoners with
the insight, talent, innovative ideas, and
entrepreneurial acumen to make a meaningful
contribution to this state's economy and job
market men and women who the courts have
determined owe some debt to society, why would
you codify a basis for them not doing so, outside
of the same "potential for impropriety" rhetoric
they use to justify accepting unsubstantiated
confidential information and mere suspicion as a
basis for SHU confinement, there exists no
justification for such a regulation. The only
basis that follows reason is to prevent
independence and promote dependency on the state,
thus perpetuating institutionalization. If you
combine all of this with the psycho-social
decimation of men's minds resulting from
prolonged, in some cases endless, isolation in
conditions such as these, is it any wonder
psychiatrists + psychologists universally agree
that this type of torture effectively destroys
ones ability to function in society? Which is the
point. As we've stated before, the modern
criminal justice system in the U.S., and
California in particular (where the CDCR is
concerned especially), is the biggest conflict of
interest in U.S. history: those entrusted with
reducing the number of criminal offenders and
protecting public safety have their potential
profit margin directly attached to maximizing the
number of offenders under their control at any
given time. This is why the CCPOA fought so had
to stop out of state transfers to comply with the
medical receivers orders. The more prisoners
under their control the larger their budget, the
greater their salaries and benefits, and the more
overtime hours they can bill to your tax dollars.
Most vitally, however, is the more prisoners
held, and for ever greater durations, the more
assured they are of their long term job security;
no matter the fragility of the economy in the
current crisis. To be sure, an economic downturn
to the rest of U.S. is an economic upturn for
those in the prison industry. It means an
inevitable increase in human commodities:
prisoners. According to CDCR they spend an
average of 78 thousand dollars to house us in
these SHU cells each year perhaps a little more
due to the added isolation features in the
Pelican Bay-SHU D-Short Corridor and Corcoran SHU
4BlL-C-section torture units. We assure you it
does not cost 78K to feed us the 2 small trays
and 1 sack lunch we receive each day, or to keep
this light burning 24 hours, or to power our
small 13" TVs. Besides being escorted to the K-9
dog cages for "yard" 3 times a week in chains,
and 5 minutes in the shower 3 times a week we
never leave these cells. So I assure you that
money is not being spent on prisoners housed in
these torture units no it's spent on guards.
It's spent on their salaries, benefits,
equipment, training, guns and bullets not us.
Of fiscal interest they (the I.G.I/I.S.U.) took
$5,000 from the inmate welfare fund to erect a
giant green wall. (Yes, the irony did not escape
us.) To cut 4BIL off from the rest of the yard
this was prisoner money used to expand the
isolation environmental of same. The guard
working the SHU makes more money and with the
overtime they can get, can in essence write their
own checks on your buck and at expense of our
minds, our bodies, and sometimes it feels our very souls.

During the August 23rd legislative hearing the
CDCR panel representative, Undersecretary of
Operations Scott Kernan made some of the most
baseless overly simplistic and outright false
statements concerning prison existence related to
SHU and so-called "gangs" that they must be
debunked. He stated "gangs" were "responsible for
ordering rapes..." in prison and are the "primary
threat" for such heinous acts. This is not simply
an outright lie, but in fact quite the opposite
is true for the vast majority of men housed in
these indeterminate SHU torture units. Taking
liberties, or the forced sexual subjugation of
anyone, especially another human under these
conditions, is not simply prohibited by most SHU
prisoners, but forcefully opposed. Mr. Kernan's
assertion that men housed here would even condone
such sickness is a testament to the fear and
dehumanization based rhetoric which has become
the staple of prison industrialist propaganda
over the past 20 years, and is an insult to our
humanity. The N.C.T.T.-COR-SHU, collectively have
over 100 years of experience living in the most
dysfunctional and violent prisons in California
and can state with definitive confidence that the
vast majority of the "8000 assaults or stabbings
the department has each year" has little to do
with "gangs", as Mr. Kernan said, and everything
to do with overcrowded facilities, limited access
to jobs, viable vocational training, and
effective educational programs on yards
throughout the system. Most of these altercations
are the result of idleness related frustrations,
limited space, and how CDCR administrators have
structured these prisons historically; be it a
dispute on the basketball or handball court, an
unpaid gambling debt, a cross word said in
frustration at overcrowded conditions taken as
"disrespect", or a race based rumor started by
some guard these things have little to do with
"gangs". Those instances where a "gang" member
may be involved in a personal dispute (and
according to CDCR, everyone in CDCR "runs with
some gang'), the staff report it as "gang
related" when the "gang" in fact had nothing to
do with the initial incident. He went on to state
millions of tax dollars were "wasted" each year,
"and gangs would be identified as the primary
problem". Mr. Kernan has no factual basis for
this statement and we can't even conceive of the
rubic by which he would venture this opinion when
targeted educational and economic development
programs in underclass communities and in prisons
have been proven effective means by which to
reduce both predatory and market based crime
rates, and reduce recidivism amongst prisoners.
Yet funding from such initiatives, due primarily
to lobbying efforts of the C.C.P.O.A. and their
political cabal, has been repeatedly diverted to
prison custody budgets under the auspices of
"public safety" an oxymoronic application of
the term if ever there was one. Mr. Kernan went
on to state, it's "only 3000" validated SHU
prisoners in a population of 165,000, "that's a
very small number." It's this type of thinking
that led to the use of C.I.A. black sites in
Uzbekistan, Egypt, Pakistan, and yes Libya to
imprison under extraordinary interrogation
conditions terror suspects, and torture them for
years continuing still in the U.S. war on
terror. 3,000 torture victims in a population of
165,000 is 3,000 too many. Mr. Kernan went on
to state, "We won't allow media to talk to
individual inmates for fear of them
sensationalizing their crimes, like Charles
Manson or Scott Peterson", a patently absurd
notion he knew full well was untrue. No one here
wants to "sensationalize' their criminal
convictions or past lifestyles in truth there
is a significant segment of the indeterminate SHU
population, such as the N.C.T.T. and those of
like mind, who have dedicated their lives to not
only atoning for the damage done to our
communities as a result of our ignorance and lack
of consciousness in the past, but for the damage
putting forward meaningful programs and
initiatives to improve the lives of the people in
underclass communities as a whole. The only
prisoners in the SHU Mr Kernan allowed the media
to access, and the only ones such media outlets
like the "Sacramento Bee" seem to be interested
in quoting, are debriefers, informants, and
agents of the state. Mr. Kernan did not allow
media access to the Pelican Bay D-Short Corridor
collective or 4BIL-C-Section Collective because
he did not want socio-politically conscious
prisoners articulating the true basis and reasons
for the hunger strike and the inescapable
deteriorating psychological effects of SHU. This
is simply another example of state-controlled
media in a society that purports itself to be
free and open. Yet another manifestation of
CDCR's successful gambit to monopolize the
discussion. We found it ironic that Mr. Kernan
attempted to dismiss and re-direct the blatant
human rights violations which torture units
represent, by stating "the violence the gangs
perpetuate is the human rights violation", when
the vast majority of the "8000 assaults and
stabbings" occurring in the modern CDCR are
occurring on Sensitive Needs Yards (SNY) by the
very debriefers and protective custody prisoners
IGI has relied on, or broken, to manufacture
uncorroborated and unsubstantiated "confidential
information chronos" to put, and keep, other
prisoners in indefinite SHU confinement. To be
sure, the most violent "gang" in CDCR currently
is 2.5 (1/2 of 5.0), the prison gang made up of
debriefers and informants who directly work for
I.G.I., I.S.U., and law-enforcement agencies. Mr.
Kernan was adamant that "the courts have upheld
the validation process and though harsh the SHU
is not torture." That's not exactly true either.
That SHUs are torture units is uncontestable, yet
California courts, most of the judges being
elected with the backing of C.C.P.O.A. lobbying
dollars, rarely uphold the Constitution where
prisoners, and especially SHU prisoners, are
seeking human rights protection. Yet, in the Koch
v. Lewis case that the Supreme Court took
addressed the indeterminate confinement in the
equally harsh SMU-II Torture Unit in Florence,
Arizona, the court found that Koch's solitary
confinement violated his right to due process
under the 14th Amendment because there was no
evidence that Koch had committed any overt act to
warrant such torture. The claim that he was an
Aryan Brotherhood member was insufficient.
Substantive due process requires that evidence
used must bear a logical relation to the specific
deprivations. As Judge Moran stated, "the
labeling of Koch as a "gang member" does not
itself create legal concerns. Rather, it is the
placement in SMU-II as a result of this alleged
association that is constitutionally
significant." After hearing evidence of SMU-II
conditions (identical to Cal-SHU conditions) and
the psychological harm faced by prisoners, the
court not only found a significant liberty
deprivation but also that the very practice of
sending prisoners to supermax torture units based
on status alone with no charges or evidence of
misconduct violated due process. The court
concluded that there must be some evidence of
misconduct, some overt gang related act, to
justify placing Koch in SMU-II for an indefinite
term. Yet as Mr. Kernan stated, virtually
lifelong supermax detention for alleged "gang
members" in U.S. domestic prisons continues to be
judged constitutional here in California. It's
not that they, or he, does not know these torture
units violate basic tenets of humaneness they
simply have an overriding interest in their
maintenance: money and control. Your money, their
control. This assertion by Mr. Kernan that this
torture unit is not a torture unit is so
outrageous and insulting it recalls Bush era
admonitions that waterboarding, Abu Ghraib, and
CIA blacksites abroad weren't torture either. It
is an absurdity, and a dangerous one. Mr.
Kernan's dogged assertion that gangs, and more
centrally those of us housed in these SHU torture
units, are the source of perpetual violence in
CDCR ignores the inescapable reality of gross
overcrowding, intentional underdevelopment and
dependency, and the structural conditions they've
created in California prisons which is the actual
origin of prison violence. Until these structural
fallacies are addressed violence in California
prisons will continue no matter how many
prisoners are consigned to this gaol, and he
knows this. Mr. Kernan stated the process being
discussed by "all state law enforcement,
C.C.P.O.A., ( police) labor unions, (gang)
experts, and the legislature itself" would allow
prisoners "to earn a way out of the system by
behavior and require the department to document
when we feel not the case." There's 4 things wrong
with this approach:
* The determining body developing the policy
(outside of legislators) consists exclusively of
proponents of the prison industrial complex; thus
whatever policy developed will reflect the same
draconian, profit-driven, inhumanity that's
defined processes in these torture units thus far.
* Most of us have not had any rules
violations reports in decades. What do we need to
"earn" through our "behavior" that's not already
been earned through years long records of proven
disciplinary free behavior? Is it their
suggestion that we must subject ourselves to the
experimental behavior modification techniques
developed in the Marion Federal supermax torture unit?
* Indeterminate SHU confinement cannot be
allowed to continually be based on what CDCR
officials do or do not "feel is the case". The
primary issue here is the arbitrary nature of
"gang" validations and subsequent indeterminate
SHU confinement.
* What Mr. Kernan is suggesting here is no
different than the sham "6 year inactive review"
that's already in place.

Mr. Kernan stated the CDCR gang policy is
"intended to protect inmates we are charged with,
and staff". Yet anyone who's on this side of the
cell door knows that's a flat out lie. The CDCR
gang policy is intended to inflate and maintain
control of prison budgets, silence prisoner
critics, preclude prisoner unity, and continue to
scapegoat indeterminate SHU prisoners who've not
had a single instance of documented misconduct in
decades as a basis for extorting billions of
taxpayer dollars through overexaggerating the
"threat" posed by prisoners housed indefinitely
in SHU. As we've stated previously, if prisoner,
staff, and public safety were truly CDCR's motive
force they would have developed an environment
and programs geared towards true rehabilitation,
successful social reintegration and performance
in society upon release. Such an environment runs
contrary to their economic and political
interests and unfortunately it also runs against
a significant number of the peoples desire for
vengeance against perceived offenders. Now then,
a particularly disturbing lie Mr. Kernan relayed
was that "all evidence used to validate is
corroborated." Simply put, that was a flat out
lie. There is no independent corroboration of
confidential informants' statements or
confidential information chronos known as
"1030s". Why he would utter a lie that is so
easily debunked is truly beyond us. To give you
an example of what I.G.I. deems "corroboration",
they have little boxes on the 1030 chrono listed
a) through f) which states why they consider
such a source "reliable". In 2008, a "1030"
used to deny an indeterminate SHU prisoner
release on 'inactive' status, a debriefer who was
briefly in this individual's cell told I.G.I, the
individual spoke of the merits of socialism, the
history of political resistance to racism in
America, and the validity of the socio-economic
and political views of Frantz Fanon, Ho Chi Minh,
and George Lester Jackson. The I.G.I. told the
debriefer this was "B.G.F. education", to which
the debriefer quickly agreed, framed it in those
terms, and parroted what his I.G.I. handler told
him to. Now this same guy the debriefer was lying
on wrote an article in California Prison Focus in
2003 critical of CDC, its use of validation on
political + politicized prisoners and some
leftist political ideas. They considered this
"more than one source independently provide(ing)
the same information, and part of the
information provided by the source has already
proven to be true." They of course gave him a
"1030" for the article itself, 5 years old, at
that same time for "providing" BGF education in
a California Prison Focus." This expression of
his political views and social criticism of
CDCR's practice of arbitrarily targeting and
punishing left wing political ideologues in
prison, in violation of the 1st Amendment and
California Code of Regulations Title 15 §3004,
was sufficient to earn him an indefinite
continuation in SHU. Not only is political speech
and expression supposed to be protected by the
Constitution, but it boggles the mind how an
article in a publication CDCR not only allows
into institutions, but staff deliver to our cell
doors, can possibly be corroboration of some
impropriety that's not a violation of law and
in no way corroborative of a coerced informants
scripted lies. This is what passes for
"corroboration" in Mr. Kernan's CDCR. The fact is
there is no corroboration and no way to verify it
if there was I.G.I. is the only ones who get to
see the evidence used to consign us to these
torture units. Mr. Kernan went on to state,
"These offenders are in the SHU with mountains of
documentation of illegal criminal activities both
out on the streets and public and in prisons is
vast...", and it's just these types of
irresponsible, intentionally dishonest statements
which have cowed courts and legislatures alike
into turning a blind eye to wholesale
psychological torture for decades in California
prisons. The truth of the matter is most
validated SHU prisoners haven't had a single
documented instance of misconduct of any kind -
(RVR, DA referal) for a criminal act in decades.
I assure you if such a "mountain of illegal
activities" was documented, you'd have a
corresponding, equally high mountain of rules
violation reports, district attorney referrals
and indictments. This is a lie specifically
designed to put forward a non-existent
justification for that which according to the
"rule of law" is unjustifiable: indefinite
psychological torture to coerce men into becoming
informants, agent provocateurs, and advocates for
the same heinous practice which broke their minds
and subsumed their wills. To be sure, Mr. Kernan
contradicted himself in his next breath by
stating, in response to the statistical data
showing that violence has only increased as
Sensitive Needs Yards (inhabited exclusively by
the debriefers, informants, and other protective
custody designees Mr. Kernan is singing the
praises of) have expanded, "the state's gang
problem has even increased, but separating those
offenders we have in SHU has led to a decrease".
Upon hearing this absurdity, even the assemblyman
had to call him on the contradiction as the
hearing wore on and the objective evidence in
front of the legislative oversight committee
continued to contradict the lies and distortions
Mr. Kernan was offering as authority he stated,
"Let's not lose focus on the real public safety
threat perpetuated by gangs in our system." It is
this narrow and intentionally ill informed
perspective on public safety that has produced an
800% increase in the California prison
population, a dysfunctional correctional and
rehabilitation system and led to the use and
expansion of domestic human experimentation,
torture units on the victims of a socio-economic
arrangement that has forced them from the bottom
rung of society to the bowels of Pelican Bay and
Corcoran-SHUs. Mr. Kernan, and the rest of the
prison industrialists can lay the blame for
society's ills at the feet of "gangs" all they
like, and the vicious cycle will only continue
ebbing towards the inexorable decline of Western
civilization. Until such time as we all accept
the fact that gangs are the inevitable outgrowth
of educational and labor underdevelopment in
underclass communities, and your political and
economic leaders unwillingness or inability to
address the gross disparities between the haves
and have nots as the true origin of society's
ills, gang violence and systemic criminality will
continue to be a part of the U.S. social fabric.
CDCR can make some significant contributions to a
new approach; but as the continued intransigence
of the department shows true public safety is a
remote concern of those you've invested with that
responsibility. The actual public safety threat
lies in the underlying socio-economic
relationship between poor communities and the
prison industry, our society's indifference to
that conflict, and the apparent dogged pursuit of
law enforcement and correctional policies which
are both a dismal, inhumane failure and
economically unsustainable. The definition of
insanity is pursuing the same course of action
repeatedly and expecting a different result.
I'd like to address one final point Mr. Kernan
raised as I believe it's pertinent. He states "an
offender that wants to rehab himself, he can't,
because of an inmate telling him to go stab
someone or he will be killed..." This is both a
misrepresentation of the truth and a dangerous
exaggeration. There are numerous non-affiliates
in the general population of CDCR and Mr. Kernan
is well aware of it. Everyone in prison knows
lumpen organizations or "gangs" in prisons don't
force membership onto non-affiliates because
history has proven such prisoners always become
informants, agents, or easily compelled to lie on
those they formally ran with. But that's not the
core issue here, what is, is Mr. Kernan's
willingness to dispense such tripe as "facts" in
hopes of somehow convincing the people that the
perpetual torture of over 3000 human beings is
somehow legitimate. This type of thinking and
talk must be confronted and debunked. Indefinite
solitary confinement of humans in California,
across the U.S., and around the world must be opposed,
resisted, and abolished.

In the wake of the atrocities of World War II, a
document was drafted which stated "... the
protagonists of the practice of human
experimentation justify their views on the basis
that such experiments yield results for the good
of society that are unprocurable by other methods
or means of study. All agree however that certain
basic principles must be observed in order to
satisfy moral, ethical, and legal concepts."
that was an excerpt from the Nuremberg code. Have
we as a society descended so far into the miasma
of fear, hatred, and dehumanization that we would
condone the state sponsored torture of thousands
of humans from your own communities, in your
name? We began this discussion with a quote from
the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to illustrate
the slippery slope we are on as a society,
irregardless of class or colonial status. The one
consistent theme running through the accounts of
Holocaust, internment camp, and other mass
torture survivors or fellow citizens is they got
on the trains, or the trucks, or discounted the
rumors of torture and atrocities because they
simply didn't believe it could be happening there
(here) in a "civilized society". History has
proven in times of social, political, or economic
duress that civilization is a very thin veneer
and effective dehumanization always leads to
inhumane acts. The 100s of thousands of New
Afrikans (Blacks) that were butchered,
dismembered, lynched, imprisoned, or beaten
during chattel slavery, Jim Crow, and the civil
rights era by Americans were done that way
because those doling out the abuse didn't view
them as "humans'. The U.S. Army was able to
slaughter men, women, and children at Wounded
Knee, Black Canyon, and Amirrilo Texas because
they did not view Native Americans and Mexicans
as "humans". We are now comfortable turning a
blind eye to government agencies and departments
tossing human beings into indefinite solitary
confinement on whatever basis they see fit
subjecting them to constant illumination, sensory
deprivation, social isolation, political
repression and much, much worse because they
are suspected "terrorists" or "gang members".
Because far too many don't view "terrorists" or
gang members as humans. When we swat a fly or
step on a roach, we feel no moral outrage or
empathy because these things are not human. The
exact same psychological process is at play here
and billions of dollars have been spent over
decades to convince you that we are not humans,
so turning a blind eye to our perpetual torture
is no great Injustice ... But we are humans. We
are sons, fathers, brothers, uncles, cousins,
friends, and townsmen to people and communities
whom we love dearly and who love us. Injustice
and inhumanity anywhere Yes, even here in
Pelican Bay and Corcoran SHU, is a threat to
justice and humanity everywhere! The struggle is
just beginning. Don't stand with us and against
torture units because we ask it of you no do
so because it's the right thing to do and you
would be on the right side of history. Do so
because if you don't, someone you love or God
forbid you yourself may well be next. Do so
because you want a new, safer, and more humane
world in which to raise our children, share our
lives, and enrich one another. Let your voices be
heard! Call your legislators, join the coalition,
speak about this on your college campuses, at
your schools, and in your homes. Galvanize your
churches, mosques, synagogues, temples, and
community centers. Educate yourself about all the
companies, contractors, corporations, and
industries benefiting from the imprisonment of
your fellow citizens and explore the many
alternatives to youth and adult imprisonment.
Contact Amnesty International, the Center for
Human Rights, your local congressman and
senators, and voice your opposition to that which
must be opposed. We here of the N.C.T.T.-COR-SHU,
and those strong and determined men here with us,
are fully prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice
to bring an end to this man made perdition to
give our very lives, but even this we fear may
not be enough. But what will tip the scales in
favor of humanity and right is you. Despite all
their money and power, there is one force even
the prison industry must bow to: the power of the
people. Your voice is stronger than all the money
the prison industry lobby can bring to bear. It
is our sincerest hope that humanity and right
will prevail and you all will stand with us on
the right side of history. Our love and
solidarity to all those who love freedom,
justice, and equality and fear only failure.
In struggle N.C.T.T.- COR-SHU

For more information on the Cal-SHU Hunger
strike, the struggle to abolish torture units
or the N.C.T.T.-COR-SHU contact:

Zaharibu Dorrough D-83611
CSP-COR-SHU 4BIL #63
P.O.Box 3481
Corcoran, CA 93212

Heshima Denham J-38283
CSP-COR-SHU 4BIL #46
P.O.Box 3481
Corcoran, CA 93212

Kambui Robinson C-82830
CSP-COR-SHU 4BIL #49
P.O.Box 3481
Corcoran, CA 93212