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NEWS & LETTERS, November 2002

VOICES FROM THE INSIDE OUT

In search of Jill Coit

by Robert Taliaferro

When the State of Colorado decided to transfer Jill Coit to a women's supermax facility outside of Denver, her only sin was to support the cause of women who were getting abused in her former prison.

For several years Jill had been involved in a one-person battle against the warden and staff of the co-ed prison in Canon City, Col., that questioned their treatment of weaker women in the facility. Like other women at the facility, she was serving time for a crime, and attempted to use the means available to her in order to seek justice.

In viewing how she and other women around her were treated, however, she often put her personal safety and limited freedoms in jeopardy to take up the banner for justice in support of those who could not. Her efforts effected quite a bit of change in Canon City, but made quite a few enemies as well. The result was her trying to reach out to the community for help, and resulting in more abuse at the hands of Colorado authorities.

During her stay in Canon City she had been threatened repeatedly by staff and feared for her safety due to other women working in concert with staff who instigated incidents with her. When that did not work, she would be harassed continuously, or spend days and weeks in a cell with a thin blanket to ward off Colorado winters, with little light, and restricted medical attention for problems that she had.

Family visits were often denied or restricted; her mail arrived late, mangled, or not at all; her friends were stricken from visiting lists and her visits or phone calls finally had to be approved by the warden of the facility.

To keep her out of court, she would have to suffer numerous cell searches that would destroy or misplace necessary legal documents, or specifically be designed to punish her by destroying the beautiful beadwork that she would create as small gifts for women prisoners to give to their families during the holidays.

FORCED TO ACT AS SLAVES

Jill Coit is an example of the plight of women prisoners in this country. In women's facilities in Texas, women are often forced to act as slaves to others who have the financial resources (since Texas prisoners do not get prison wages) to share, or to get something as simple as an aspirin.

In Jill's facility, women were often forced to dance naked for staff at the facility, to have sex, or to succumb to incidents of rape if they did not voluntarily agree to sex. Even after investigating the incidents--often raised by Jill--the result was generally a simple slap on the wrist for staff, and more harassment for Jill.

Finally she was transferred to the state supermax facility, and she seems to have disappeared from the face of the planet. Friends that she has kept in contact with for years, and who have written to her diligently, find their letters being returned or disappearing as completely as Jill.

What letters do get through from her show a woman who is at the limits of her tolerance: scared, nearly broken, afraid for her life, and her mind. She asked one time of a friend, "Can they punish me for helping others? Can they punish me for simply trying to help others?" In Colorado, the answer seems to be...Yes!

As a rule of thumb, women prisoners have little external contacts with families or friends. One of the unfortunate aspects of our society is that a woman who commits a crime is often treated as a pariah in a fashion that extends well beyond the treatment of men.

One of the ironies that Jill and others like her have made so plain is that they are often in prison due to some sort of abusive relationship with men, only to be further abused on the inside by other males charged with enforcing the mandates of the law. This enforcement often comes in the form of threats, and a level of treatment that can be equally as brutal--and more often more so--than the abuse that they suffered while in the community.

ABUSE OF WOMEN PRISONERS

Women prisons with male staff are the last bastions of society that seem to allow women to be abused, stripped of dignity, and treated as classless beings with no rights that need to be honored.

Jill Coit, and women like her around this country and around the world, need our help. Letters and e-mails to the Department of Corrections in the State of Colorado, to the governor of Colorado, and to Colorado representatives are starting points that remind those authorities that, as we call upon the world to take the moral high road in such things, the battle begins at home.

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