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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

California lockdown

Los Angeles—The Criminal Justice Consortium of Southern California held a forum in January called "Seeking Justice for the Imprisoned '02." More than 250 people attended, including some ex-prisoners and activists representing various organizations.

California prisons today are increasingly institutions of dehumanizing, tortuous punishment rather than rehabilitation. SHUs (Security Housing Units) or "Lockdowns" is a program of inmate isolation (23 1/2 hours a day in their cells) and sensory deprivation, meant to destroy inmates' basic personality, all of which contributes to feelings of anger, rage and violence in the inmates. According to Corey Weinstein, M.D., the SHUs and prison yards are rife with fighting, gang activities, prisoner on prisoner assault, as well as assault on staff.

The continued existence of the SHUs is justified as an anti-gang measure. Many "gang  members" are targeted for SHUs regardless of what crimes they were convicted of, just because they were labelled gang members. Those that don't "snitch-out" on their former "gang" associates (people they grew up with) are often put in SHUs as "serious rules violators." To be released from SHUs, they must also "snitch-out."

In July, 2001, 1,000 prisoners housed in SHUs at Pelican Bay and Corcoran state prisons, self-organized and went on a hunger strike to voice their grievances, including excessively long sentences in SHUs. The inmates stopped their hunger strike when requested to do so by a progressive California assemblyman along with non-prisoner prison reform activists. Meetings were held by officials in Sacramento after the hunger strike ceased. It is not clear what reforms have resulted from those activities.

In the workshop on women prisoners, serious illnesses like HIV/AIDS and hepatitis and lack of health care are major issues. A "suicide watch" in one prison consists of her being strapped down naked on a cold metal table with no sheets for 24-48 hours. There was testimony by a mother whose daughter (Gina Muniz) died of cancer because prison officials continually ignored her plea for medical attention.

One woman ex-prisoner stated "inmates trying to look after other inmates were threatened with lock-up." Still another said: "We are the people that pay taxes for the system to go on. This forum is a first step in a mile long struggle. We're the heart of the community, we're the mothers." Too often, prisoners, both male and female, are moved to a facility far from family members to discourage visitation.

A consensus of the forum was that prisoners need contact with and support from the outside in the form of letters and visitation (especially children of mothers) as a means to reestablish humane relationships which the prisons destroy.

—Activist

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