The Powers-That-Be in this country have made an art form out of using the 13th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution to turn humans (a disproportionate number of them Black) into slaves so that corrupt prison administrators, corporations, and their stockholders can enjoy ever expanding financial gains. It occurs to me as I write this that, while the 13th Amendment does make this practice legal (as immoral as it is), what it does not make legal is the multiple forms of prisoner degradation, humiliation, violation, and abuse that most U.S. prisons have made a standard operating procedure in the way they treat millions of incarcerated men, women, and even children.
It is not only the prisoners who suffer. It is their loved ones, as well, who must agonizingly observe the brutality against and sometimes death of their missing family member or friend while enduring the separation they fight to overcome.
In the early 1970s, when I first became aware of what was going on in the prisons and jails across this land, I was instantly and horrifically aghast. What kind of monsters would so relish tormenting other humans, I wondered. I became ballistic in my rage, working tirelessly to raise consciousness about the matter as often as possible. One ex-prisoner, trying to help me really get my brain around the situation, reminded me that people in this country lock up animals in cages who haven't done anything to anybody. "As long as they do that," he pointed out, "they're not going to care about people they think of as criminals." But I refused to listen.
Still, here we are nearly fifty years later and it appears he was right.
So the prisoners are left no recourse but to riot or to strike -- which in most prisons would be seen as the same thing and treated the same way. This is why Florida prisoners announced recently that they intend to meet the brutality and exploitation with resistance starting today. My heart is with them.
I know that many in the U.S. have no sympathy. They think the prisoners deserve whatever they get, that organizing to rise up in any way that attempts to claim their human rights "proves" their recalcitrant nature. But the article I am re-posting today (with permission of the author) is about why that's the only option prisoners have left.
as a Path Toward Better Prison Conditions
by Lisa Drapkin, National Lawyers Guild Membership Director
[This essay was originally published on the NLG blog.]
[This essay was originally published on the NLG blog.]
It
seems there could never be enough legal support to help the millions of
prisoners who would benefit from having a lawyer at arms’ length. Whether it is
lack of medical care, abhorrent nutrition, exposure to extreme temperatures,
lack of clean water, or brutality by prison guards, there are endless inhumane
conditions prisoners are forced to live through on a daily basis. The National
Lawyers Guild’s National Office receives letter after letter from prisoners,
mainly requesting a copy of the Jailhouse Lawyers Handbook (a resource for
prisoners who wish to file a federal lawsuit addressing poor conditions in
prison or abuse by prison staff), but many also hope that they can obtain help
from a lawyer to stand up against the prison administration on their behalf.
One of the reasons why there are not more lawyers to help prisoners with civil
suits is because of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA).
The
PLRA is a federal law that was enacted in 1996 under President Clinton.
Congress enacted the law in response to a significant increase in prisoner
litigation in the federal courts. A misconstrued case was supposedly the
impetus for the PLRA coming about, one in which a prisoner filed suit over
receiving crunchy peanut butter instead of creamy. However the facts of this
case were incorrect, and instead it was about a prisoner not receiving a refund
for a jar of peanut butter he returned. This is extremely legitimate because
the majority of prisoners have little to no funds to their name. As the
Jailhouse Lawyers Handbook states, “Many people say Congress believed a story
that was told to them by states tired of spending money to defend themselves
against prisoner lawsuits. In this story, prisoners file mountains of
unimportant lawsuits because they have time on their hands, and enjoy harassing
the government. The obvious truth – that prisoners file a lot of lawsuits
because they are subjected to a lot of unjust treatment – was ignored.”
According
to the PLRA, before prisoners are allowed to challenge a condition of their
confinement in federal court, they must first exhaust available administrative
remedies by pursuing to completion whichever grievance or appeal procedures the
prison administration provides. Even a lawyer cannot do anything until the
individual goes through several bureaucratic layers. This can be very
difficult. The author of an article titled Another Clinton-Era Law That Needs to
be Repealed, puts it well: “Imagine a prisoner who is in pain and in need of
medical treatment, but ignored by prison staff: She must not only file her
complaint with the same staff that is denying her treatment, but wait for a
refusal, appeal that decision, and only after a judgment on that appeal can she
then file a legal case beyond prison walls.” To further this sentiment, a New
Yorker article from May 2016 called, Why It’s Nearly Impossible for Prisoners
to Sue Prisons states, “Around half of all prisoners in the United States have
some sort of mental illness, and a similar proportion has only basic literacy
skills (at best), but courts have frequently ruled that neither mental illness
nor illiteracy excuses an inmate from the exhaustion requirement of the PLRA.
Juveniles are not exempt, either.” The article cites an example in which a
teenager filed a lawsuit stating that he was repeatedly raped and beaten by
other prisoners who were following what guards told them to do. The suit was
dismissed because the teen didn’t file a formal grievance first, even though
his mother contacted prison officials.
It
is extremely common for a prisoner to experience retaliation by guards for even
filing a grievance or helping others to do so. When asking NLG jailhouse lawyer
members what their experiences are like doing legal work behind bars, responses
ranges from Correctional Officers throwing out completed grievance forms in
front of prisoners, to being thrown in solitary confinement or being
transferred to another prison. Another problem is that even if staff were
following the rules, there wouldn’t be enough of them to handle all the
complaints. As one prisoner in Michigan wrote, “The sad truth is that prisoners
often have a difficult time obtaining adequate administrative remedies through
the grievance system. Largely because staff within our institutions responsible
for investigating grievances are often overwhelmed with grievances.” What’s
more, prisoners cannot file a lawsuit for mental or emotional injury without
also showing physical injury, which can lead to abuse to occur without any
accountability. At least in 2013, with the Violence Against Women Act, the PLRA
was amended to include sexual assault as well even if physical injury is not
medically apparent. In addition to all of this, the PLRA limits the court’s
ability to make prison officials pay for attorneys’ fees if a case against them
is won – which means there is no monetary incentive for lawyers to take these
cases.
If
the PLRA were repealed, it would be an important step towards allowing
prisoners to hold prison administrations accountable for their collective
actions or neglect. There would perhaps be a more level playing field, and
prisoners might gain a greater sense of dignity having a legal method of
recourse be more attainable. There also might be more lawyers willing to
represent prisoners in civil suits if they could expect to be compensated for
their work. Currently though, jailhouse lawyers face a steep uphill battle when
it comes to fighting for the rights of themselves and other prisoners.
Despite
the many hurdles they face, the jailhouse lawyer members of the National
Lawyers Guild take their efforts very seriously and are proud of the skills
they have gained, especially when it comes to being able to help others. To
give some examples, here are just a few of the sentiments that jailhouse
lawyers in various states across the country have shared with us:
“I’ve
been helping a paraplegic in a lawsuit for nearly 3 years now. When he came to
this unit, they were not up to code to house a paraplegic in a wheelchair. So
grievances were filed under the ADA. After it was filed, he injured himself
trying to take a shower. He fell out of a regular plastic chair. Now, the unit
has added accommodations for wheelchairs and installed chair seats in the
shower for them, but a little too late in his case. We’ve forced them to
remodel the recreation yard’s restroom facility so that inmates with
wheelchairs can use it. I am expecting good things from a related case that
will help other inmates in the future while here.”
“From
the moment I first helped someone with the most minor appeals process, and I
saw the hope come alive in their face, I knew I would be a Jailhouse Lawyer. We
have to fight. We have to hold those accountable who hold us captive. We must
speak out at every opportunity, and demand every single right. We must remember
that practically every single right we have in prison is because some JL filed
on it. So next time you get free soap, or help from a law library, or an extra
hour on the b-ball court, spare a thought for the unsung hero who made that
happen for you, and every other inmate.”
“It
is extremely stressful at times considering the limited and outdated materials
we have, but once all the facts and other necessary information is gathered
together it is satisfying to prepare the motions, writs, etc. and I feel an
immense joy when something positive happens for the person I’ve helped. Helping
people here in this prison gives me a sense of pride and a rewarding feeling.
Two sensations I have not felt in many years. I now have a sense of fulfillment
and joy from partaking in something that I had always thought was difficult and
boring.”
When
we move from the individual to creating change on a larger scale, making
noticeable improvements in prison conditions requires not only legal recourse
but also an organized resistance. As the Jailhouse Lawyers Handbook states,
“Only a strong prison movement can win and enforce significant legal victories.
But the prison movement can also use court action to help build its political
strength.” A good example of this is the California Hunger Strike of 2013.
The
initial coordinated CA hunger strike was in 2011, when over 12,000 prisoners
and their family/community members participated in statewide hunger strikes
protesting the inhumane conditions in the SHU (Segregated Housing Unit).
Following the strike, their demands for reform had not been met, and so another
coordinated hunger strike was held in 2013, involving 30,000 CA prisoners. The
strike even spread to prisoners in other states and in other countries. There
were many outside calls for solidarity, and news of the largest hunger strike
in history brought a large amount of attention to mainstream media and
therefore also the public at large.
Simultaneously,
Ashker v. Governor of California, brought about by the Center for
Constitutional Rights (CCR) starting in 2012, was a federal class action
lawsuit on behalf of prisoners held in the SHU at California’s Pelican Bay
State Prison who had spent a decade or more in solitary confinement. The focus
of the suit was that prolonged solitary violates the Eighth Amendment’s
prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. The suit also charged that
prisoners are denied any meaningful review of their SHU placement. California
imposed extremely prolonged solitary confinement based merely on a prisoner’s
alleged association with a prison gang. Gang “affiliation” was assessed without
considering whether a prisoner is – or ever was – actually involved in gang
activity. The named plaintiffs included several leaders and participants from
the hunger strikes.
In
2015, the plaintiffs and the State of California agreed on a landmark
settlement that ended the use of indeterminate solitary confinement in prisons
across CA as well as the use of “gang affiliation” as a basis for placing
people in isolation. Several other key reforms were made, all related to the
use of solitary. The weight of the resistance movement in conjunction with the
courtroom battle was necessary in order for such a meaningful result to occur.
As the plaintiffs stated, “This settlement represents a monumental victory for
prisoners and an important step toward our goal of ending solitary confinement
in California, and across the country.
California’s agreement to abandon indeterminate SHU confinement based on
gang affiliation demonstrates the power of unity and collective action. This victory was achieved by the efforts of
people in prison, their families and loved ones, lawyers, and outside
supporters.”
Unfortunately,
two years after the settlement, CCR found many violations taking place. As they
stated in November 2017, “Two years later, California has failed to make the
requisite reforms to bring their prisons into compliance with due process.“ The
violations included hundreds of prisoners formerly held in SHU being
transferred to Level IV prisons where conditions were very similar to SHU.
Because a legal settlement did not provide instant relief for all, coordinated
efforts to resist solitary confinement from the inside and the outside are
still needed. For example, groups like the Prisoner Advocacy Network (PAN) of
the National Lawyers Guild’s San Francisco Chapter seek to strengthen these
efforts by providing advocacy for activists on the inside. As their website
states, “Following California hunger strikes, loved ones of people suffering
from solitary confinement alerted the NLGSF to the need for individualized
advocacy. Though a recent settlement agreement in the Ashker v. Brown suit will
result in many transfers, we know CDCR will continue to deny appropriate care
and conditions, involuntarily segregate, mistreat, and retaliate against
people.”
Whether
on an individual or large-scale level, attempts to use legal recourse as a path
toward better prison conditions will face many obstacles. Of course, there are
other approaches that do not involve the law, as seen by recent prison riots
and uprisings, including the largest coordinated prison strike in US history in
September 2016, which included the Kinross Rebellion by Michigan prisoners.
There was also the Delaware Vaughn Rebellion in February 2017, and countless
other examples from last year alone. Members of the Prisoners Legal Advocacy
Network of the NLG New Jersey/Delaware Chapter gathered information about the
severe repression prisoners faced in the aftermath of some of these protests. A
planned strike in Florida prisons will begin starting on Martin Luther King Day
of 2018. Florida prisoners withstand brutally repressive conditions by guards
with no recourse, as prisoner and activist Kevin “Rashid” Johnson explained:
“On a literal daily basis prisoners are gassed, tortured and/or brutally beaten
by guards with the full complicity of medical and mental health staff. As part
of this culture of abuse, grievance officials routinely trash prisoners’ attempts
to grieve their mistreatment. This is to eliminate any records of the abuses
and to frustrate any potential attempts at litigation.” On top of this, demands
of the strikers include receiving actual payment for their labor and an end to
the price gouging that occurs because prisoners pay exorbitantly higher amounts
for items in the prison commissary than they would on the outside.
Legal
advocates should not lose site of chipping away at least the most unjust parts
of the PLRA as a goal. Although despite the barriers, it’s clear that prisoners
– from jailhouse lawyer to strike organizer – have found ways to fight for the
humanity they deserve. In turn, they will continue to need as many outside
supporters in solidarity as they can get.
________________________________________________
NOTE: The
NLG is the only bar association that admits jailhouse lawyers as members, and
does so at no cost to incarcerated members (dues are waived). To become a NLG
member, jailhouse lawyers may write to the NLG at NLG, 132 Nassau St., Rm. 922,
New York, NY 10038.
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