MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
www.prisoncensorship.info is a media institution run by the Maoist Internationalist Ministry of Prisons. Here we collect and publicize reports of conditions behind the bars in U.$. prisons. Information about these incidents rarely makes it out of the prison, and when it does it is extremely rare that the reports are taken seriously and published. This historical record is important for documenting patterns of abuse, and also for informing people on the streets about what goes on behind the bars.
There is an ongoing issue here at Tehachapi SHU over treatment - or
mistreatment - for medical and dental services. These medical/dental
staff want to get paid and not uphold a minimum level of care. I am (and
have been since March 1, 2011) fighting this injustice. I feel since the
K-9 caused my issue, the prison medical/dental staff need to treat my
medical/dental issue.
It’s like this: I was unwilling to allow another man to place his hands
on my person and body. So I put up a fight. Of course, being a “convict”
I’m out numbered. Now, I’m not saying we should be using force on “the
man” but I feel you should protect yourself when need be. In the course
of this fight I was slammed by officers, then they did their thang,
breaking my jaw. Of course, I got charged, being a convict.
Now herein lies the issue: Tehachapi SHU medical/dental staff have
engaged in a pattern and practice of routine deliberate indifference.
Care/treatment is routinely refused. Even when deemed medically
necessary.
I’ve all but ran out of gas. The tank is on E, but the fight for justice
shall go on. I’ve reached out to the Prison Law Office seeking
assistance. These people make their rules only to change them again. All
the money spent, and it seems to be ensuring the inmate appeals process
becomes harder. Services and care are not given.
In this issue on release (ULK24), we are featuring United Playaz in San
Francisco, California, to give our comrades inside an idea of what some
formerly-imprisoned people are doing to contribute to the struggle for
peace since they’ve been out. Many staff members and volunteers with
United Playaz (UP) have spent time in the prison system. MIM(Prisons)
got the opportunity to interview one such staff-persyn, Rico, who spent
25 years in the California prison system. Rico is a
former-gangbanger-turned-peace-advocate; a lifestyle change that many
readers of Under Lock & Key can relate to.
United Playaz provides services to youth, including after-school
programs and tours inside prisons, in an attempt to pull them out of the
school-to-prison pipeline and (the potential for) violent activity,
helping them refocus on their education. UP’s mission statement reads,
United Playaz is a violence prevention and youth leadership organization
that works with San Francisco’s hardest to reach youth through case
management, street outreach, in-school services, recreational activities
at community centers, and support to incarcerated youth. United Playaz
is committed to improving the lives of young people surviving in
vulnerable environments, [who] show high incidence of truancy and low
academic performance, or have been involved in the juvenile justice
system through direct service and community collaboration. United Playaz
believes that “it takes the hood to save the hood”.
Rico explains how he first got involved with United Playaz,
In 1994 I was incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison. And at the time
Rudy [UP’s Executive Director] was bringing a bunch of troubled youth
and youth that are involved in the juvenile system and kind of just
showed them a glimpse of what’s the result of making a bad decision. And
that’s where I met Rudy. And Rudy saw me work with the kids, and then he
found out that I lived in the neighborhood that he was serving the youth
and he asked me, “When you get released I want you to check out our
program and see if you want to work with United Playaz.” So like in 2005
I finally got out after 25 years of incarceration and first I
volunteered. And then once there was an opening, a job opening, Rudy
hired me as a CRN, a community response network. It’s a job that at
night we go and do outreach, and drive around the city and just talk to
the kids that are hanging out on the street.
MIM(Prisons) asked Rico about the importance of building a United Front
for Peace in Prisons, and the challenges faced by such an endeavor.
Back in 1982 we formed a protest while I was in San Quentin. You know,
prisoners used to have rights. We had the rights to see our family when
they come see us. We had the right to get an education. We had a lot of
rights. But slowly they took that away and now they have no rights. If
you wanna get a visit, you have to work. If you don’t work, you don’t
get a visit.
So anyway the Asian, Latino, the African American, the Caucasian, we all
got together and say, “You know what? Let’s all sit down. Nobody goes to
work, nobody go to school, nothing.” And prison really depends on
prisoners. Cuz you have jobs there, that requires like maybe $35,000 a
year job, they let the prisoner do that job and get paid like $18 a
month. So they’re saving a lot of money using prisoners to run the
prison system, right? So when we sit down, when we shut down, man, they
gave us what we want and everything like back to normal and everything
smooth.
There’s always incident in the pen, like prisoners hurting each other,
but that’s a good example that when, how do you say - together we stand,
divided we fall. So you know if we are united man a lot of violence in
here will probably diminish tremendously, right? Cuz the people inside,
they’ll preach peace out here. And a lot of kids that are doing bad
behavior out here, they’re influenced by a lot of prisoners inside the
pen. But right now there’s no peace. There’s no peace. …
Well, there is [organizing for peace and unity inside prisons] but you
have to do it on the under because one thing administration, prison
administration don’t want you to do is to organize and try to bring
peace. In prison they want us to be divided. You know what I mean? So
there’s ways that we can organize but it has to be on the under.
It is ridiculous that prisoners have to discuss how to go about not
killing each other in secret, so as to not upset the prison
administrators’ paychecks! But this is not the only anti-people
development to come from the evolution of the criminal injustice system,
which is designed solely to protect capitalism and its beloved profit
motive. Rico explains some of the consequences of deciding who stays in
and who gets out in a capitalist society,
The more you treat a prisoner like an animal, when they come out they
act like animal out here. I mean one time I was in segregation unit, in
the hole. This guy he was so violent that he can’t be out in the
mainline, right? Anyway it was time for him to go. So when they let him
out, he was handcuffed out the building, across the yard, in a van,
right? And they drop him off outside. When they drop him off they just
uncuffed him, “You’re free.” How can we help someone like that, to be
out here? If he’s so violent inside that he needs to be segregated, how
can they let someone out like that? So if he commit a crime out here,
that’s gonna look bad on a lot of prisoners. And they have more power to
say, “See what happens when we release these guys out?”
But there’s guys in there that are doing better than I do - that they
can do better than what I do out here, and yet they still locked up in
the pen, because of politics. There’s a lot of em, a lot of em man. I
know some of em personally that should have been out you know and giving
back. And they can do a lot of contribution out here to bring peace. How
can we get those guys out?
Our answer to Rico’s question is that the only way to get all those guys
out, for good, is to organize for socialism and then communism. Any
reforms we make to the prison system as it is now may let some people
out, but as long as capitalism exists people will be exploited and
oppressed. This leads to resistance, both direct and indirect, and
prison is for those who don’t play by the rules. In socialism, everyone
has a role to play in society and state oppression is only used against
those who try to oppress others.
When the economic system changes to value people over profit, prisons
will also change. In China under Mao, Allyn and Adele Rickett were two
Amerikan spies in China who wrote a book titled “Prisoners of
Liberation” about their experience as prisoners of the Communist Party
of China. Their experience taught them that when prisoners have
completed self-criticism and are ready to contribute to society, they
will be released. On the other side, when prisoners are doing harm to
society (such as organizing to reinstitute a capitalist economic system)
they are not allowed to be released just because their term is up.
Instead they are encouraged to study, read, discuss, and do
self-criticism until they become productive members of society.
Anyone with a sympathetic bone in their body can tell what was going on
in China under Mao is a much more useful mode of imprisonment than what
we have at present. The difference between the liberal and MIM(Prisons)
is we know the only way to get there is through socialist revolution so
that the prison system is in the hands of those currently oppressed by
it.
Another present day challenge we discussed with UP was its goal to be
financially self-sufficient in the future. Rico explains the current
limitations that come with getting state funding,
If it’s up to us, we’re gonna go hard, and really fight for peace. But
because we’re fund[ed] by DCYF [San Francisco’s Department of Children,
Youth, & Their Families], they limit our movement. We can’t even
participate, or like rally. If there’s a Occupy rally right now, we
can’t go, cuz our organization are prevented from doing things like
that. And I think that’s important, that we’re out there with the rest
of the people that are trying to fight for change. Every year we do a
Silence the Violence Peace March. That’s okay, you know, Martin Luther
King, marches like that, we’re okay to do that. But when it’s like
budgets, and crime, and about prison, you know, rally to try to bring
those those things down, we can’t really participate. …
What’s going on outside the youth can affect them in the future if
things don’t change. And why wait til those kids get old and take em to
expose them to march and fight for your rights? You know I love to take
these young adults to a movement like that, cuz that gives em knowledge
of life, that there’s more than just hanging out on the street. But
unfortunately we’re not allowed to participate in that kind of movement.
We have learned from history that these limitations aren’t unique to
UP’s financial situation. For the non-profit in the United $tates,
similar to “aid” given to Third World countries, capitalists always
ensure their money is working in favor of their interests. This is why
one of the points of unity of the United Front for Peace in Prisons is
“Independence.” Money is too easy to come by in this country, while good
revolutionaries are too hard to find. Liberation has always been powered
by people. So we agree with Rico on the importance for striving for
autonomy.
Until then, positive steps can certainly be made within these
limitations. There are many levels to our movement and many roles to
play in building peace and unity among the lumpen. And without groups
like UP reaching the youth on the streets, efforts like the United Front
for Peace in Prisons will be too one-sided to succeed.
To close, Rico shares these words with comrades preparing for release,
The only thing I can say is that as long as you’re alive there’s hope.
And if they really want to go home, then do the right thing, regardless.
And they gotta stand up for their rights man. And they have to just try
to get along with each other and think about peace, because they are
needed out here. The experience they have in the pen, they can save a
lot of lives out here, with their younger brothers and sisters that look
for real guidance from someone who’s been there and done that. Good
luck, I hope they get out and be out here and help our system change to
a better place.
As a “free citizen” you have much greater freedom to organize on the
outside compared to in prison, even on probation or parole. Your
activism shouldn’t end with your prison term!
United Playaz 1038 Howard
Street San Francisco, CA 94103
I never got to read the piece on
“strategic
retreat” by Loco1 due to heavy censorship here, but wish to respond
to the discussion in ULK24 titled
Advance
the California Hunger Strike through Strategic Unity and Criticism.
First, the struggle spear-headed by SHU prisoners is not exclusive to
SHU prisoners. This struggle includes all prisoners, not just in
California but more broadly throughout Amerikkka. The dehumanizing
treatment of prisoners is experienced by all prisoners at some point
just as sure as Brown and Black people out in society are both hunted
and rounded up, stopped and frisked by the thousands daily and shot and
killed unarmed by the imperialist’s first line of defense on a regular
basis. Prisoners in Amerika are abused, oppressed, repressed, exploited
and murdered either outright or by other means, i.e. denying medical
treatment, etc. Of course some prisons are more brutal to its prisoners
than others but make no mistake about it - we are all brutalized! SHUs
by their very nature are torture kamps period.
This environment would thus produce more resistance just as one will
find more resistance to imperialism in a Third World country than in say
Amerika or England. The oppressed nations are still oppressed regardless
if they are in this country or that country even if it is at a different
level. So too are all prisoners oppressed whether in SHU or mainline.
And I do agree that in the 2011 strike efforts SHU prisoners have been
the vanguard in propelling and boldly arousing the thousands of
prisoners to the call of action, our efforts were international as
prisoners in other countries such as Canada and Australia even joined
the strike in solidarity with Pelican Bay prisoners and thus with all
prisoners in Amerika. Activists in Canada dropped a banner on the jail
proclaiming its prisoners were hunger striking with Pelican Bay and so
the banner read ‘from Pelican Bay to Collins Bay’. So yes SHU prisoners
spearheaded this mass effort but it should not become common for
prisoners to rely on the “Pelican Bay vanguard” as this is dangerous.
When a movement is focused on a leader or a certain group… if these
leaders are imprisoned, neutralized or corrupted the movement crumbles.
One of the strengths of the current
‘Occupy
Wall Street Movement’ is that it is a united front with no ‘leader’
or cadre group leading the pack. The state hates this and unleashes its
propaganda machine to smut the OWS movement up as ‘not being sure what
they want’ or ‘not having leaders’. The state wants public ‘leaders’ to
neutralize and take down as they have done for the past hundred years
whenever a group rises up in Amerika.
Of course there is a role for leaders as vanguard whether they be in
prison or out in society, but it’s a dangerous road for the movement
when people begin to rely on the “Pelican Bay vanguard” and take on the
attitude of “I’m not going to strike or protest this or that because
Pelican Bay isn’t doing it right now” or if an injustice comes up in a
prison in say North Dakota etc, and the prisoners say “well I’ll wait
until Pelican Bay rises up again.” Some may even go so far as beginning
to think that say prisoners in Hawaii are striking and they are in
Alaska and they may say “well it’s not the Pelican Bay prisoners I’m not
partaking.” This happens even here in California where if an action is
not including Pelican Bay prisoners its looked at half-heartedly and
many lose interest in ‘rising up.’ This is a real problem, one that I
hope to combat in its infancy as I see the damage this brings to future
struggles and it really retards the political development of prisoners
into participants rather than individual leaders themselves.
What we must keep in mind is prisons today are much different than what
prisons were in the days of Attica or Santa Fe, etc. Today prisoners are
more controlled; prison activists are quickly targeted, separated and
isolated from the prison mass. More and more control units are designed
to house the revolutionary prisoners. Even on a “mainline” of level four
prisons in California you only go out to yard with the roughly 200
prisoners in your block, with the other 800 or so in their cells waiting
their turn. Some places only half a block goes out so 100 or less are
out at a time. The state has begun to implement these methods past
Attica and past Santa Fe to tighten their control on the prison
population and attempt to smother any future embers of resistance. So as
the state attempts to divide and conquer the prison population,
prisoners often find themselves alone or with only a handful of
conscious prisoners engaged in activism. It is these conscious prisoners
that should be as matter - in constant motion constantly doing your
thing to push the momentum.
And so although SHU prisoners have been the vanguard thus far I disagree
with the writer when s/he says “The SHU prisoners are the vanguard in
the struggle and it is up to them if the movement moves forward or dies
a humiliating death.” I believe this type of thinking is an error and
incorrect. SHU prisoners, nor any prisoners who form the united front,
consist as a centralized party, nor was this strike movement built with
any hierarchy. And although I largely agree that the prison vanguard can
be found in SHU, to say whether the movement “moves forward or dies” is
up to SHU prisoners kind of reduces the larger prison masses (general
population) to bystanders or frees them from responsibility should the
movement die “a humiliating death” as the writer put it. SHU prisoners
are extremely limited in their ability to operate, we are deprived to
the point of it being torture. In some cases no mail period is allowed
to or from a prisoner. In other cases any time one leaves a cell in
shackles a team of guards with camcorder walk recording ones every step!
What we need to do is emphasize the responsibility of those on the
general populations (mainlines) to learn from the international effort
that was unleashed and begin to boldly arouse the imprisoned masses to
get used to demanding human decency where it does not exist, to become
familiar with refusing to be dehumanized, refusing to be exploited and
refusing to be abused out on the mainlines. Small efforts and strikes,
even when domestic (confined to one’s prison) whether victorious or not,
work to condition the imprisoned masses to the beautiful concept of
resistance. A rally around lockdowns, food or educational/vocational
opportunities quickly forages a footprint on the psyche and
revolutionary spirit of those who participate in a grievance of some
sort and teaches the priceless lesson of practice. Theory goes only so
far in any struggle, at some point the baby must stand and take its own
steps and this is a truly liberating and transforming experience that
works to build on future efforts concerning a united front.
Every gulag in every state of Amerika is capable of injecting the
movement with a second wind. It is up to every prisoner to begin to
think of themselves as having the potential to move the movement forward
or letting it die a humiliating death regardless of what prison or what
state you dwell in! What holds any movement back is the will of the
people to overcome what seems in our way. Mao said
“a
single spark can start a prairie fire” which has proven true time
and again.
The fact that this effort included all LOs already shows that LOs
comprehend the need to come together in a common effort; that hurdle has
been completed. It is important that the imprisoned masses understand
the concept of protracted struggle: it is a long drawn out effort in
which, while practice is performed, the people are constantly studying
and sharpening our ideologies. In this way we are wearing out the
oppressor while building up the people politically.
I disagree with the proposal of the writer that we should focus on the
debriefing process as our primary focus. I think this will work to
divide the people. The problem is not all prisoners in SHU are validated
for “debriefing” information, as many people’s validation did not even
use information from debriefing. Besides that we need to come high and
see what unfolds. I do believe debriefing should be one of the demands
but not the sole focus. In dealing with prison strikes and grievances I
have found it more effective to make a list of demands and after its all
over you may get one or two granted. I believe the demand to close the
SHU needs to be at the forefront and I’m surprised it was not included
in the five demands of the strikes.
Whether the state will actually comply or not should never affect our
choice in a strike, but the demand to close the SHU should be at the
front of our rallying cry as it generates a broader support system, it
is a uniting force like no other for prisoners. Every state has a
control unit whether it’s called a SHU, SMU, etc. Of course we will
always have other demands depending on the prison or oppressive
circumstances of each facility but the primary demand, the most
important should always be “Close down the control units!” Control units
equal torture, this has been agreed by even the United Nations. The U.$.
Supreme Court recently ruled California prisons in general amount to
cruel and unusual punishment so it is a fact, let us now raise public
opinion to this fact and in the process we will win “winnable” battles
on meals, debriefing etc, and along the way the people will be energized
by these winnable battles.
These small victories help keeping our eye, as well as the public’s, on
the most important aspect of our movement and that is to close the
torture chambers known as SHU, SMU, etc. Whether we are victorious in
this main demand in one year or twenty years is not what we should gauge
our ‘victory’ with. Rather we should recognize conscious lifting and
prison mass that is brought deeper into the struggle in the process -
this is a true victory for the people.
It is true that we need to develop a strategic vision and understanding
to move the movement forward and build what has already been laid down.
This strategy should stem from a court analysis not only of the SHU
environment but of the entire Amerikan prison system as this is what
kind of movement we should be shooting for. ULK reaches many prisoners
who can and will take these nutrients and flourish not just with the
theory put for them in ULK but build on this and adapt it to each
persyn’s specific environment.
In California I see abolishing the 3 strikes law as worthy of a demand.
The right to medical care is another. Contact visits for all. Access to
direct sunlight. Nutritious food and access to all vitamin supplements,
protein powders and other means to stay healthy. The abolishment of the
use of solitary confinement. Abolish the debriefing system. Abolish
censorship. Get parole dates and stop this denial for subjective
reasons. The use of control units in Amerika is frowned upon by many
people in society, from religious, activist, even some bourgeois
liberals and actors oppose control units. The 2.4 million prisoners and
their friends who oppose control units, some may not know they exist but
all in all this is where we gain our most traction and support, it is
precisely where we should start. I believe it is prison activists best
organizing tool given to us complements of imperialism, we should not
allow this opportunity to wither away.
There are crucial points that should be addressed in future efforts
whether these efforts manifest in Pelican Bay or in a prison in North
Dakota. The five demands were good, but as I pointed out above there are
certainly more pressing issues that need to surface. The thing is to
constantly improve on any effort one is involved in; move forward, not
simply reproduce what occurred in Pelican Bay’s torture chambers, but
produce a stronger and more spectacular effort the next round. The
Cultural Revolution was launched to unleash the people and have them not
simply follow Mao’s lead. It was to have the people themselves lead
society to struggle in all different spheres, to push the “vanguard”
forward, move society with all the creative energy of the masses and
transform society and the vanguard.
This is what the 2011 strike movement should do to prisoners across
Amerika, it should unleash the people’s will to resist, uncork the
desire to cast off oppression in every dungeon and every prison cell
across Amerika and to teach not to just do like we do or say what we say
but allow your dignity as men and wimmin to rise above your oppression
and create two, three Pelican Bay movements for your humanity and become
a force that awakens prison activism wherever you are no matter how many
stand with you. A single street vendor in Tunisia sparked revolution in
different countries! Realize your abilities, they are powerful in a
concrete tomb. So take my shackled hand and I’ll take yours and let’s
pull our way to freedom!
MIM(Prisons) responds: As we’ve expressed elsewhere,
we
do not abdicate leadership in the prison movement. We have much
unity with what cipactli writes here in regards to
organizing
strategies that are decentralized and that protect their leaders.
However, we do recognize the need for political leadership that s/he
hints at. We recognize that the scientific endeavor that is
revolutionary struggle produces scientific knowledge. And certain
individuals and groups will possess and understand this knowledge before
others. The Occupy movement is a mass movement that attempts to prevent
any small group from taking control of it and defining it’s politics.
Such an approach can be a great learning experience in a budding mass
movement. But such a movement will be very limited in what it can
achieve, and just as has happened with the Occupy movement, a leadership
will quickly come forth despite the claims to the contrary. That is why
the scientific approach is to recognize and utilize leadership,
utilizing real accountability and real democracy.
I’m writing to enlighten you of the new developments here within this
oppressed segregated unit [Corcoran Ad-Seg]. For many years we have been
denied our constitutional rights: our appeals process is wrongfully
exercised, our appeals being lost or trashed or never making it to the
appeals coordinators office. Our time constraints are being violated and
surpass the time limitations they impose. But if we pass, even by a day,
this administration gets very legalistic and denies our appeals on the
sole basis of “time constraints.”
By court order, we are allowed to possess TVs or radios, but this unit
is depriving us of that right, telling us that due to “budget cuts” we
cannot get our appliances. This doesn’t make any sense at all, because
there are so many other activities that are taking place and money being
wasted on unnecessary things, but yet they claim “budget cuts.”
The health care in this unit is poor, we lack the basic necessities and
it takes up to two months to see the doctor and when we see him/her we
get denied the rightful care. They continue to defy the court’s order!
We are living under extreme conditions. It is real cold over here and
yet they have the AC blowing. Our cells are super cold. We have gotten
at numerous officers and the sergeant of this unit but to no avail, our
environment continues to be cold.
This is just the beginning of the many violations and the torture we
must endure, especially psychological. I’ve been filing grievances upon
grievances challenging our conditions, but they just say, “we’re working
on it.”
The rest of the comrades and I are in protest. We have begun a hunger
strike. December 28, 2011 was the beginning of this peaceful protest,
and we will continue this struggle till our needs are met.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We just hit the two year anniversary of
the beginning of a United Struggle from Within
campaign in
California demanding that prisoner grievances be addressed. It
continues to be a popular campaign, though many recognize its inherent
limits in a system that is not interested in our grievances.
Z-Unit in
High Desert did utilize the campaign to achieve some temporary
victories in their conditions. But it is little surprise comrades have
stepped it up a notch beyond the petitions we were circulating.
“We’re working on it” is the refrain the comrades in Pelican Bay have
been getting in response to previous
hunger
strikes launched in the past year, while
nothing
has changed in the SHU.
While there is much to
consider
in strategizing and moving forward in the face of this repression,
there is no doubt that conditions in California prisons continue to lead
prisoners to make greater sacrifices in struggling for their common
cause.
I’m doing okay here just maintaining and trying to stay positive
throughout this madness that they call the SHU. Things are pretty much
the same around here as they were before the hunger strikes. Basically
all that’s changed is the fact that we have beanies and can buy sweats
and sweaters in our packages now. And also if you have a year clean then
you can take a picture and buy art supplies, and we can get calendars in
the mail.
So I don’t know what’s going on with all of the rest of the promises
that were made as a result of the hunger strikes. The CDCR
administration basically is keeping us in the dark and trying to shut
down any and all communication that they feel is a threat.
CDCR stopped an eight-page double sided publication that was printed off
of the computer back around the end of October. I appealed it and just
received a response with them denying my appeal, so now I have to send
it to the final level in Sacramento which I am doing tonight.
They say that since it talks about the hunger strikes and the organizers
of the hunger strikers here in the SHU that it promotes gang activity.
Also since there are other prisoners’ letters that are reporting on what
is going on in these prisons then that is prisoner correspondence and
third party mail. And finally they claim that it promotes a conspiracy
to disrupt prison security and that if we are allowed to receive said
publication then it would be promoting the conspiracy to cause others
mass disruptions of prison programs. Like I said I’m sending it to the
final level of appeal and once I get it back I’ll send it to you for you
to see.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This report of only very small gains in
response to the recent California prison food strike is consistent with
what we have heard from others. The
Five
Core Demands of the strikers have been basically ignored with the
exception of the really minor examples they provided for the fifth
demand “Expand and Provide Constructive Programming and Privileges for
Indefinite SHU Status Inmates”: this is where the art supplies,
calendars and sweat suits were mentioned.
This is typical of the CDCR and in fact of all branches of imperialism:
they give nothing to the oppressed without being forced to, and they
give the minimum possible. The imperialists will concede nothing without
a fight, and as we can see from the California hunger strike, even a
widespread protest is not enough to accomplish significant change. This
protest helped raise awareness of the struggle, and brought many people
into activism. Now we must
build
on that experience.
I’ve never heard of MIM(Prisons) but enjoyed reading your newsletter and
could relate to most of it. I will pass it on to others (already have!)
and get more to add to your mailing list.
Please, if it’s possible, beg off a little on the
SNY
stuff! It really turns a lot of our stomachs, to be sure. When I
came into the system in the 80s there was no such thing as SNY. Everyone
held their mud, even those who got hit (because if they talked, they
knew they wouldn’t live through the next one.) If you “locked up” you
went to the hole, period! No yard, no packages, no programming of any
kind, nothing! Now, they make it too easy for guys to be weak and run
off to the child molesters, rapists yard!
If you really feel you absolutely must print their filth, please get all
the facts correct. Such as ULK 23, p. 13,
Hunger
Strike First Step in Building a United Front, second paragraph “and
Pleasant Valley State Prison is SNY.” I know more than a few guys who’re
going to be none too pleased about this news, as they are still there. I
got my case (SHU) off of C yard, then got sent to Tehachapi SHU 4B,
which is mostly GP, same for 4A Ad-Seg.
FYI, Pleasant Valley A yard is Level IV SNY, B yard is Level III GP, C
yard is Level III GP, D yard is Level III SNY, and Level I is GP! Call
CDCR and verify these facts if you will. It’s your newsletter, but I
would seriously consider (re-consider) who and what you print.
MIM(Prisons) responds: First we want to commend this comrade for
recognizing that a few disagreements should not stop us from working
together and spreading the revolutionary United Front. In that spirit we
want to struggle for greater unity here.
The writer is responding to an ongoing debate in Under Lock &
Key about prisoners who escape the mainline for Special Needs Yards
(SNY) where they are pushed to “debrief” or snitch on fellow prisoners
in return for better treatment (in particular in the context of
California prisons, but there are parallel situations everywhere). Many
prisoners have already testified that not all SNY prisoners must
debrief, a fact that this comrade is not disputing. So the gist of his
argument is that it’s “too easy” for prisoners who run off to SNY. But
prison is never easy, and as long as a comrade is engaging in solid and
consistent political work, and not selling out his fellow prisoners, we
don’t care that s/he got moved to SNY to avoid persynal danger.
Prisoners are constantly fighting legal battles to get moved away from
dangerous prisons to places they hope will be better. Conditions are so
bad in all prisons that this is rarely a significant change, but we
won’t tell anyone they have to stay in a situation that’s dangerous to
them if they have an alternative that doesn’t involve endangering
others.
As for the criticism of the facts in the Hunger Strike article, we take
this very seriously. We rely on our comrades behind bars to report the
facts about the prisons where they reside, but we do try to check facts
wherever we can. In this case we should have caught this error about
PVSP. It does not change the point made in that article calling for
unity, but it’s important we get facts correct.
Excerpted from a longer article by this prisoner: Who Am I
As is the case with just about every young Black male/female of the
inner city ghettos of the world today, I first came to prison at a very
young age, via several previous stints in juvenile hall, the California
Youth Authority (CYA), etc. While in prison, I began to become
politically and socially conscious through my individual studies and
political education classes that I was fortunate enough to be involved
with while housed in the adjustment center at San Quentin State Prison,
with other like-minded brothers.
Due to my various political positions that became manifest in my active
participation in speaking out against, and my refusal to accept, the
many social injustices/abuses that were being perpetrated by our
kaptors, against the prisoner class, I became the latest target of these
gestapo agents’ neo-fascist scheme of COINTELPRO [government counter
intelligence program aimed at political activists such as the
Black
Panther Party]. In 1994, as a brotha was commemorating the
historical significance of my New Afrikan Black ancestors’ legacy of
struggle, that entails the elaboration of, and the redemption of all New
Afrikan Black people from the subjugation of U.$. colonial slavery, I
was removed from the general population mainline of New Folsom State
Prison, under the spurious premise of me planning a physical assault for
a prisoner that I have never met, or been around, in my entire life!
A prisoner supposedly sent me a letter through the regular U.$. mail
system, and ordered me to do this physical assault. It was later proven
that no such letter ever existed, and I was never found guilty of
anything. But nonetheless, I was still given an indeterminate Security
Housing Unit (SHU) term, based on this one source of information. A room
full of informants collaborated this information to prison officials,
along with the fact that I was supposedly a prison gang member. This
collaborated information was coerced from these prisoners via the
arbitrary threat of them being removed from the general population
mainline. It has been proven that some prisoners, as some civilians of
the free world, would sell you their soul to keep from being locked up,
or as in this case, from being placed in the SHU indefinitely.
My validation as a prison gang member, on this one source of
information, violates the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation’s (CDCR) own rules and regulations. In particular, CDCR
Title 15 Section 3378, that states that for a prisoner to be validated
as a prison gang member, there must be three independent sources of
information that are proven to be reliable. My case is a concrete
example of the fruit of the poisonous tree phenomena, because as the
years passed on, with me now being housed in the SHU indefinitely, more
and more informants have been forth to accuse me of being a prison gang
member. This makes it impossible for me to be released from the SHU to a
general population mainline.
But in addition to these material factors, Pelican Bay State Prison’s
(PBSP) Institution Gang Investigation officers have instituted a new
phase of fascism, for purposes of implicating the indeterminate SHU
class of captive New Afrikan Black prisoners as allegedly being involved
in gang activities, by way of the political and social commentary that
we send out through the mail to people of the free communities. This
practice amounts to state-sponsored persecution for our political
beliefs. This phase of fascism is continuing in spite of the court
having ruled that:
“PBSP - CDCR Institution Gang Investigation unit officers, have been
utilizing a race-based (e.g. ‘racism’) approach to say that our
political and social commentary is gang activity.”
The courts even went on to say:
“That PBSP - CDCR Institution Gang Investigation unit officers have not
produced any evidence that said political and social commentary is gang
related.”
Make no mistake about it, 17 years later, and the struggle still
continues as a New Afrikan Black political prisoner of war!
Comrades, here is a CDCR regulation that we can use against censorship.
Essentially there are no ban lists. Straight from the California Code of
Regulations:
15 CCR § 3190(i)(2) “Legal Material, including legal reference
material, books, and legal pads not available in the institution
canteen, pursuant to section 3161. There shall be no ‘Approved Vendor
Lists’ for any legal publications. Inmates may receive legal
publications from any publisher, book store or book distributor that
does mail order business.”
15 CCR § 3190(i)(7) “All publications, including books and subscriptions
to periodicals, subject to section 3006. There shall be no”Approved
Vendor Lists” for any publications. Inmates may receive publications
from any publisher, book store or book distributor that does mail order
business.”
MIM(Prisons) responds: This has been official policy since 2008,
yet CDCR staff continue to cite the 2006 ban memo years after a lawsuit
put an
end
to the
ban
on MIM Distributors’s mail in the state of California. Therefore we
find it useful to reprint these rules, for comrades to use in their own
appeals. Remember to forward us any documentation of censorship and
appeals. Many of these facilities have been citing the overturned 2006
memo for years, yet claim it is a mistake when we write them for an
explanation. Establishing these patterns is important in building our
cases. While they’ll never follow the rules all the time, using the law
against them is one tactic for organizing resistance and creating more
space for education to occur. We have put together a supplement to our
Censorship Guide which focuses on the California ban, so write in to get
it if you’re being given this reason for censorship.
They like to label us the “worst of the worst” and “California’s most
dangerous” but in fact most of us are doing time for drugs or property
crimes, and through CDCR’s blatant disrespect for the constitution and
their failure to supply adequate appeals process, we are now forced to
do all of our prison sentence. I’m fully aware that in San Quentin alone
most validated SHU prisoners are first timers, have never been past the
reception phase of intake, and are either here for drug related cases,
vehicle theft, or burglary. These are not hardened convicts these are
young males age 19-25 of all races, but the majority are Latino and
Black.
Along with the mistakes that have brought them to this place, many here
have made the mistake of freedom of expression by tattooing themselves
with cultural pride. Those tattoos combined with their nationality get
these prisoners validated as gang members when they first walk through
the prison doors. Validated prisoners are not entitled to any good time
credits, which means they serve longer prison terms than those not
validated (more often white prisoners). So those of us validated
straight from the reception center, in here for non-violent crimes
(drugs or property theft), are not entitled to any good time credits. I
was sentenced to 8 years, I must do all 8 years, but a convicted sex
offender who is sentenced to the same amount of time is out in less than
6 years.
Due to an administration policy, most if not all of us who have been
validated have never received a rule violation report for the alleged
gang participation for which we are validated. What happens when the
people who are in a position to assist in fixing the system only loosen
the nuts more, so the pipes will break, because their family are
plumbers!
This new realignment (in the name of reducing the prison populations) is
hilarious. Now prisoners will stay in county jail, which means CDCR will
have more room to house SHU prisoners, currently in San Quentin, Carson
section. Right now we’re forced to stay in reception centers for up to
2.5 years before being transferred to a SHU.
I can 100% agree with the demands of Pelican Bay, and I really wish that
those in San Quentin would look to them as an example to follow. The
prisoners here in San Quentin participated in the hunger strike for one
meal on the very first day of the strike in July.
All validated prisoners are part of the same struggle. Stop opposing
each other because of separate beliefs, and start to truly unite as
humans in the same fight for true justice!
MIM(Prisons) adds: This is a great addition to our recent
review
of The New Jim Crow, which discusses how the criminal injustice
system targets oppressed nations for social control. However, we do not
have statistics to support the author’s scapegoating of sex offenders.
We have seen sex offenders do their full time and then be sent to a
“hospital” where they will spend the rest of their lives locked up
without being charged with a new crime!
I have much unity with Loco1’s
piece
concerning a strategic retreat and after reading his essay I now
have some things I’d like to speak on concerning the strike. However, as
I myself am not currently housed in the SHU my words should be taken
merely as food for thought, as it is up to those participating directly
in the movement to analyze their own conditions.
Firstly, I believe that the SHU prisoners are currently in a crucial
period. They have successfully completed the first stage of their
struggle but if they are to successfully complete the next stage then
they must enter into a period of criticism, self-criticism as it is the
best way to avoid any left-deviations or rightist errors. The SHU
prisoners are the vanguard in this struggle and it is up to them if the
movement moves forward or dies a humiliating death. By moving forward I
in no way am implying that the struggle must continue full steam ahead
regardless of their present conditions.
Loco1
is correct to point out the fact that this is a protracted struggle,
and the SHU prisoners aren’t going to go anywhere anytime soon, except
to another SHU. This is especially true for the ones that are
“validated;” they have all the time in the world to sit and hammer shit
out. Or as the Afghans like to say of invading oppressor armies: “you
have the clocks, but we’ve got the time.”
Thus, here are some points of attention:
The life and death of the struggle depends on the willingness of the
prisoners to remain united. It is essential that contradictions between
the oppressed and the oppressors do not become contradictions between
the oppressed themselves.
The main force of the movement are the SHU prisoners. The immediate
reserves are the general population prisoners. Loco1 is correct to call
out specific LOs as they have the ability and influence to organize the
vast majority of the prison population. Therefore they should exert all
their power and energy into catapulting the masses to complete victory.
It is integral to the struggle that a correct political line should be
developed so that the masses may gather round it to find guidance in the
movement.
Indeed, practice is principal but this is also the time for studying
theoretical knowledge and to concentrate on concrete study, criticism
and self-criticism. Weakness in the ideological level will turn into
errors in the political field, which will ultimately manifest themselves
into mistakes in the organizational level.
“Over a long period we have developed this concept for this struggle
against the enemy: strategically we should despise all our enemies but
tactically we should take them all seriously. This also means we must
despise the enemy with respect to the whole but that we must take him
seriously with respect to each and every concrete question. If we do not
despise the enemy with respect to the whole, we shall be committing the
error of opportunism. But in dealing with concrete problems and
particular enemies we shall be committing the error of adventurism
unless we take them seriously. In war, battles can only be fought one by
one and the enemy forces can only be destroyed one by one. The same is
even true of eating a meal. Strategically, we take the eating of a meal
lightly - we know we can finish it. But actually we eat it mouthful by
mouthful. It is impossible to swallow an entire banquet in one gulp.
This is known as piecemeal solution. In military parlance, it is called
wiping out the enemy forces one by one.” -
Mao
Zedong
Knowing that the prisoncrats hate to lose ground to the prisoner
population, whether it be an inch or a mile, it then becomes the duty of
the strikers to focus all of their efforts into wiping out the most
debilitating aspects of their oppression one-by-one. One way of doing
this is to de-fang their paper tiger (SHU), thereby rendering it next to
useless.
Some might argue that the most debilitating aspect of the SHU is the
long-term isolation. We must keep in mind that the oppressors will never
give up this method of torture and oppression; it’s too effective.
Instead We must focus on winnable battles and while We can’t at this
time shut down the SHUs, We can fight going there.
It is the debriefing process that keeps people sent to the SHUs and
locked in the SHUs past their kick-out dates, and it is the debriefing
process that turns people into snitches and ensures that more people
enter the SHUs rather than leave it.
If and when the debriefing process is finally defeated then the strikers
can move on to a secondary and less crucial aspect of the
5
Core Demands which should then be able to gain primary importance,
and so on and so forth. It is in this way that the piecemeal solution is
applied.