December 20, 2012

Solitary without Hearing?

Massachusetts inmate Edmund LaChance lost his chance to live in the regular population when he threw a cup of pudding. He was kept there indefinitely, "awaiting action status." Ten months after being sanctioned for the original 14 days, he was released into the general population again. Don't throw pudding? Don't have a melt-down and threaten others when you learn of the punishment? Prison Legal Services in Boston took the pro se case to Massachusetts's top court--and won. Won! They determined he had a due process right to a hearing rather than a pro-forma review by officials. http://solitarywatch.com/2012/11/30/massachusetts-court-rules-against-solitary-confinement-without-due-process/
December 19, 2012

Texas leg to investigate uncorroborated snitching

Democratic Representative Harold Dutton has filed HB 189, hoping that this year the Texas legislature will ban uncorroborated testimony of jailhouse snitches. The snitching is a terrific tool for prosecutors, so it may be a difficult sell. In the past, Pete Gallejo was in charge of the committee overseeing criminal justice; he has ascended to national Congress. [disclaimer: Pete was not only my student at U.T. Law but was Teacher's Pet.] Let's hope Rep. Dutton can open a fruitful debate. http://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2012-12-07/will-texas-do-better-criminal-justice-cheaper-but-smarter/
December 17, 2012

Tamms Supermax: Report Reveals More Guards Than Prisoners, Soaring Costs

A southern Illinois, all-solitary confinement prison, is reported to have twice the number of guards for the number of prisoners. Since they are in lock-down cells, that work is something the rest of us might sign up for! "Tamms has 208 guards and supervisors in its maximum-security unit, or C-max, to handle 138 prisoners, for a security-staff-to-inmate ratio of 1.5-to-1. At Alcatraz in the 1940s, the ratio was 1-to-3, according to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons." Or you might want to sign on a chef/cook: "In addition, there are 16 food supervisors earning an average of $71,600 a year working at Tamms. That’s the same number of food supervisors as at the Pontiac Correctional Center, which houses around 1,700 maximum- and medium-security inmates." http://solitarywatch.com/2012/12/04/tamms-supermax-report-reveals-more-guards-than-prisoners-soaring-costs/#more-7358
December 16, 2012

Snitching! 1 in 8 fed inmates tattles for reduction

It's hard to get your mind around this statistic, but apparently 1 in 8 federal convicts get their sentences reduced for snitching on each other. If they don't have anything worth snitching about, obviously it's worth their while to dream something up. But what to do about it? Prosecutors insist they'd never make a case if we eliminate use of snitches. Activists insist on eliminating the use of snitches. Middle ground seems to be to insist on taped recordings of the private conversations if they're to be used--but that opens yet another can of worms. http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2012/12/14/jailhouse-informants-for-sale/1762013/
December 15, 2012

Prison Diets: Budget vs. Health

Should prisons be required to offer healthful options? How about vegetarian options for those who have lifetime commitments to meatless lives? A court in Missouri has recently turned down a vegetarian's request to have meatless servings at Buzz Westfall Justice Center. Diabetes and obesity and high blood pressure is creating a prison population that needs extra medical care; prisons need the money to upgrade food choices, period. http://molawyersmedia.com/blog/2012/12/07/vegetarian-inmate-loses-battle-over-meals-in-jail/?goback=%2Egde_106893_member_195162948
December 8, 2012

Word Play over Solitary: Bradley Manning

James Averhart, Chief Warrant Officer IV, who as commander of the Quantico brig determined conditions of confinement, kept Pvt. Bradley Manning naked for 7 days, and in solitary confinement despite recomendations from doctors to release him He insists that the regulation gives him to authority to decide whether to relax confinement standards--even though the regulation says a prisoner "shall" be released if the medicos say so. Averhart argued that the word "shall" did not introduce a specific timeline for ending the confinement. "[T]he order is vague - it does say 'shall,' it does not say 'right now' or 'immediately,' sir - it still gives me the opportunity to evaluate," he said. http://peoplesworld.org/hearing-highlights-controversy-over-bradley-manning-jail-conditions/
December 6, 2012

780 days solitary–no threat, violence

Leroy Peoples is suing the state of New York. He was left in solitary confinement for 780 days--for misbehaving: no violence, no security threat. The New York Civil Liberties is helping with the suit: http://www.nyclu.org/news/nyclu-lawsuit-challenges-new-york-states-use-of-solitary-confinement
December 5, 2012

Tx. Senator and Union boss agree: close some prisons

I'm not sure how often in Texas politics that we've had this confluence: Sen. Whitmire and Lance Lowry, president of Texas chapter of the union with prison staff, agree that we need to close 2 more prisons. Doing so will help ensure the safety and security of not only inmates but the guards. Texas prison staffing is down 2700 officers this year. http://www.texastribune.org/texas-dept-criminal-justice/texas-department-of-criminal-justice/whitmire-employee-union-urge-prison-closures/
December 5, 2012

The Atlantic Joins Wash Post: Phone Rates!

Two major journalistic inquiries into the exorbitant prison phone rates has uncovered that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has sat on the problem for 3500 days. That's some sitting, because a judge sent them the problem to resolve. http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/12/stupid-and-unjust-the-highway-robbery-of-prison-phone-rates/265859/?goback=%2Egde_65622_member_192474479
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