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NEWS & LETTERS, JULY 2003

Voices From the Inside Out

Cruel and unusual punishment as usual

by Robert Taliaferro

Early morning screams, lasting an hour, chilled the cavern-like hallways that acted as echo chambers, startled everyone out of their hard-found sleep. The 20-year-old Black male screamed that someone was looking at him, which was impossible under the circumstances. He finally stopped, and spent the rest of the morning attempting to find someone to talk to him through the air vent. Another 20-year-old Black male, began shaking and twitching like those subjected to sensory deprivation in immersion tanks. The guards were keeping him like an addict in a strip cell. His eyes darted to the vent as this offers the only contact with one's peers. Two other “cellies” in the strangely designed segregation cells, are finally split up after they were caught displaying “body parts" to each other.

THE SYSTEM OF AMERICA'S HELL

Welcome to the world of a $90 million supermax prison. In this particular Midwestern state’s monument to abuse, considered to be the worst such facility in the country due to its windowless vacuum-like environment and psychologically challenging conditions. Mostly young, under-educated and marginally emotionally- or psychologically-impaired non-white prisoners are subjected to a degree of sensory deprivation that was previously only found in the cells of Lefortovo prison in the former Soviet Union.

Such deprivation is normally used in modern interrogation techniques to break the will of the prisoners, effectively disassociating them from both the free world and prison communities from which they have come.  Such techniques are only employed for several weeks in such an interrogation.  At this facility, these techniques are employed for up to a year or more.

The 6-by-12 foot “segregation” cells are dominated by a 3-by-7 foot slab of concrete and steel, which acts as a bed; toilet, sink, and shower is also incorporated into this room where the walls are painted an off-white, and a light stays on 24 hours a day--also a feature in interrogation cells.

For only five or six hours per week prisoners are allowed recreation in a concrete room whose only feature is a 12-by-8 inch vent mounted high in the room so they can receive their only fresh air in the otherwise enclosed facility. Few take the option to leave the cell; perhaps because the recreation pens are more depressing than the cells themselves, or perhaps a small view of the sky is not enough to placate the hours of state-imposed solitude. Prisoners may not see the sun or sky for the entire time they "serve."  Add the lack of newspapers, magazines, even family photographs and you have a vacuum that allows no social growth, even within the prison environment.

From the very first day, the same psychological problems seen at California's infamous Pelican Bay have been present at this facility. These young prisoners will, after their short sentences, go from a supermax facility that experts consider worse than Pelican Bay directly back to the street community.

TORTURE RETURNS TO ITS ROOTS

In the late 1800s, prisoners were led into Pennsylvania's "eastern Penitentiary" with black sacks over their heads to disorient them. Now the prison system has come full circle to the stark, windowless environment of the newest--and most expensive--supermaxes in the U.S. Once abandoned as cruel and unusual, the high-tech version of the black hood has returned.

And with nothing to do and very little experience in such total isolation, prisoners begin to degrade emotionally and psychologically. Often this process is exacerbated in the younger prisoners who are used to high volumes of external stimulation, who now, lacking that, begin to turn on themselves and others.

Prisoners are not allowed to retain cups and utensils. Even bags must be returned to guards to avoid their use in such “entertainment” (as some supermax prisoners call it) of throwing feces or urine at guards.

The isolation affects guards as well since their traditional role has been reduced to that of servants.  Recently that lackluster performance resulted in a prisoner in an observation cell being dead for several hours before he was finally checked.

The existence of these high-tech cathedrals of cruelty defines, exactly, the degree of a society’s civilization, verifying the wisdom of Dostoyevsky--particularly in this country which attempts to define the "moral high road." What’s so very compelling is that only a few scant years ago we--as a nation--were showing our disdain for such places and practices in other countries, all the while secretly creating our own.

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