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.
I want to first send an encouraging word to the brother who exposed a
glimpse of
our
struggle here at Georgia State Prison. I can honestly say that the
author of the stand up article in the March/April 2014 Under Lock
& Key has inspired me to go harder.
As of this moment I am the head representative of the United Nation
Against The Machine (UNATM) movement. The UNATM promotes unity, peace,
and education amongst the various social groups within the system. The
goal is to cease fire against one another and unite in our struggle
against the oppressive pigs. We all have a common goal which should be
freedom and we all have a common enemy which is the oppressive injustice
system. There is no excuse for us to continue laying down when the bully
approaches. We still have rights and we still are human beings who
deserve better.
I want those in the segregation unit to know that you are not alone and
as a fellow comrade/soulja in this struggle I pledge loyalty. I pledge
to educate and decrease the illiteracy rate that confines our fellow
brothers in an enslaved mind. I pledge to challenge the unchallenged. I
pledge to finally put the pig head on the platter for all its wrong
doing. We are our own machine that will stop at nothing to obtain true
justice. I encourage all the souljas in this struggle to remain strong
for we will see better days.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We are encouraged to see the growing
activism in Georgia and in particular the conscious comrades building
unity and peace in that state. We have reached out to this comrade to
suggest that UNATM consider joining the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons (UFPP) as their goals line up with this effort.
Specifically, the first three
UFPP
principles are peace, unity and growth. Through this United Front we
can bring together different groups and individuals to fight our common
enemy in the criminal injustice system.
Comrades here at Special Management Unit (SMU - long-term isolation) are
doing what they can to protest and fight against the illegal housing
that they are being subjected to. Prisoners here are going on hunger
strikes and are suffering due to the lack of outside support. Further,
the DOC has taken actions to keep outside inquiries from being made
public and the news media is refusing to expose the inhumane treatment
of prisoners in Georgia’s SMU unit.
Prisoners are being transferred to SMU for refusing to participate in
the so-called tier step down programs they’ve started in Georgia. The
DOC is trying to force lumpen groups to be housed two men in a 24-hour
lockdown cell, thus placing prisoners in physical jeopardy, in order to
start a war. Just another attempt to enact the Willie Lynch mentality
amongst these prisoners. Before, the prisoners enacted peace and
brotherhood policies amongst and between the lumpen groups, and there
was no tier step down program. So this program is to create strife
amongst the brotherhood by building enough stress and confusion to
destroy peace that prisoners worked hard to establish.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We have received a lot of
reports
about the hunger strike in Georgia, and the struggles against
SMU
classification. The unity and awareness being built in Georgia
prisons is definitely frightening the prison administrators. This is an
important lesson for organizers: when we build for peace among the
lumpen organizations our enemies will take this as a call to war. The
United Front
for Peace in Prisons is bringing together organizations and
individuals in this important battle. Get involved today in building
peace in your prison.
I am writing to you on behalf of myself and the prisoners of the Georgia
Diagnostic and Classification Prison - Special Management Unit (SMU). I
was beaten brutally by SMU’s cert team. My ribs were fractured and I was
denied any medical treatment. This happened in June 2012. In January of
this year I was assaulted (while in cuffs and shackles) by Lt. Micheal J
Kyle, he punched me in my face 5 times with a closed fist. This was
retaliation because I reported him for sexual harassment after he showed
me his fully exposed penis and told me to “suck it.”
Right now there are about 9 prisoners on a
hunger
strike because of the hardships being placed upon us. We are being
deprived of our property without proper due process. We face daily
ongoing hardships and abuse such as those described above. Our right to
religion is also being violated due to our windows being completely
covered, so Muslims cannot determine when to pray and prisoners like me
who study all religions cannot receive any religious material for
certain religions for reasons they will not share with us.
We are in desperate need of a change!
MIM(Prisons) adds: We are getting a lot of mail from Georgia
describing the conditions and the need for struggle and change in prison
there, especially from the Diagnostic and Classification prison. This
unity among the prisoners, and their outreach work to inform media and
work with prison activists are all good signs for this struggle. We look
forward to working with these new comrades to build the level of
political education and organizing in Georgia so that our fight against
the criminal injustice system will win both short term and long term
battles.
On 9 February 2014, prisoners at the Georgia Diagnostic and
Classification State Prison Special Management Unit (SMU) lockdown began
another hunger strike to protest conditions. The hunger strike is to
address abusive conditions, bugs being served in food repeatedly, sexual
harassment, sexual assaults, beatings by officers while in handcuffs,
being thrown on strip cells without food, feeding prisoners only 1500
calories daily when we are supposed to be given 2800 daily, refusing
E-Wing yard call, refusing access to law library, and staff trying to
poison prisoners. We are facing threats by staff that if prisoners
remain on hunger strike they will die under their watch and it will be
covered up.
Prisoners in the Georgia State Prison SMU have had enough of the
oppression and decided to take a true stand to fight for our rights.
Prisoners in the strike include many of the same prisoners from the 9
December 2010 and
11
June 2012 hunger strikes, and these prisoners are refusing to eat
until conditions change.
On 25 January 2014, prisoners received trays at the SMU lockdown with
bugs in the food. And after the bugs were pointed out by the prisoners
to staff, they were told that either they eat the food or don’t eat at
all. Then when the prisoners tried to keep the trays to show the proof
to the warden they were threatened by the daytime Officer in Charge,
that if they didn’t give up the trays he was going to suit up with his
Correctional Officers and gang rape the prisoners. The prisoners still
refused to give up their trays and were threatened again the next day:
if they didn’t give up the trays they were going to be refused their
tray meals for that day. The prisoners had to go two days without eating
just to show the warden the bugs in their food. And when the prisoners
finally got a chance to show the bugs in the food, the warden only
replied that it’s nothing but a little bit more meat to add in their
chili. This is not the first time that bugs had been served in food, but
nothing has been done about this issue. Even though we file grievances,
nothing but denials.
These prisoners have even been beaten by staff while in handcuffs.
Nothing has been done about these employees’ abusive actions. There is a
coverup by Warden Bruce Chatman, Deputy Warden June Bishop, Warden of
care and treatment William Poinel, Cpt. Micheal Nopen, Lt. Michael J.
Kyles, aand even down to medical staff Mary Tsore and mental health
staff Mr. Whitmoore.
Georgia prisoners are being denied access to the law library as
guaranteed by the Georgia and U.S. law. Prisoners are only allowed two
court cases per week to be delivered at their door on a piece of paper,
and no books.
Medical staff are refusing to take notice of the hunger strike even
though SOP VH47-0002 guarantees strikers health service.
The legal system refuses to respond, grievances are ignored or
destroyed, and there is very little that Georgia prisoners can do to
fight for their rights. Our only choice is to put our lives in danger by
refusing to eat, and plead for some outside support.
MIM(Prisons) adds: The past few years have seen a sharp increase
in prisoners using food refusal as a tactic to demand some improvements
in conditions. Considering the powerlessness of prisoners, and the
complete failure that is the grievance system in many states, it is not
a surprise that people feel their only option to demand basic rights is
to starve themselves.
We print many reports on these strikes in the pages of Under Lock
& Key, and we know this inspires others to learn of similar
struggles across the country. But we also encourage everyone to study
these actions and learn from their mistakes. In
Illinois,
prisoners were manipulated by the pigs to end their strike prematurely.
In
South
Carolina lockdown coordination problems ended their strike. In
Nebraska
prisoners failed to make clear demands and gained nothing after a two
day protest. Even in
California
where prisoner unity is remarkably high, the response to the massive
hunger strikes has been little more than lip service and program name
changes. We must be prepared for such lack of response from the state
with a long view of how to make change.
The underlying lesson in all of these struggles is the need for stronger
education and organization before taking action. Greater unity will be
achieved through education, and organization will build a solid system
of communication and a strong and winnable list of demands. One quick
lesson for all: when sending information to the media about your strike
include something clear that people on the outside can do to support
you. It can be a number to call or place to write to register their
support.
Prisoners here in Georgia are being harassed by the wardens and their
administration. Georgia Department of Corrections (GDC) has a new
program it calls the Tier Program, and many prisoners are being thrown
into the Tier 2 program for 9 months for petty disciplinary, reports,
which is against the U.S. Constitution’s 8th Amendment banning cruel and
unusual punishment.
Prison officials are also using food as a tool of cruel and unusual
punishment towards prisoners. Only half of the population here in prison
can afford to go to the store commissary. The prisoners who can’t afford
store goods are robbing those who go to the store. This creates violent
conditions because 90% of the prisoners here are gang-related. And when
the gangs go to war it goes down at every prison in Georgia. And some
prisoners die in the gang wars. GDC created this problem so they can
have a reason to lock all the prisoners down.
I put a 1983 civil suit on Valdosta State Prison here in GA and as a
result Deputy Warden Orr tried to have me killed numerous times. On 7
December 2013 I was beaten badly with weapons by 15 prisoners, and I was
sent to the free world hospital for 2 days. When I returned to the
prison I was placed in lockup where all my property was stolen and the
prison officials refused to replace my property. The Warden place me on
Tier 2 program with 9 months in lockup as punishment for being attacked
and seriously injured while my attackers went unpunished.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We are seeing a lot of reports of
repression and resistance coming from Georgia recently. This comrade
underscores the need for unity among both individuals and lumpen
organizations. It is easy for the prison administration to pit prisoners
against each other when they are focused on the fights between their
organizations. But the real enemy, the one that is keeping everyone in
prisons, denying adequate food, and throwing people in lockup, is the
criminal injustice system. This is why we urge prisoners in Georgia to
focus on building the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons. The UFPP’s first principle is Peace: “We
organize to end the needless conflicts and violence within the U.$.
prison environment. The oppressors use divide and conquer strategies so
that we fight each other instead of them. We will stand together and
defend ourselves from oppression.” This is critical to every prison, but
in Georgia the recent reports suggest even more urgency to this point.
I have been to three prison camps this year alone. This month makes it
18 months that I’ve been incarcerated. Riverbend was the first prison I
went to. After an incident happened between and officer and I, I wrote a
grievance on him and there was an ongoing investigation. But before it
could get anywhere they transferred me to Jenkins. I was at Jenkins for
three weeks before I got transferred. While I was there I had a verbal
altercation with an officer and he wrote me up but he exaggerated the
incident, so to defend my character I asked his supervisors to review
the cameras, but they refused. Then while I was on administrative
separation I kept getting written up (about three times) for things that
they didn’t know who did them. I had a roommate with me at the time and
when something went down they wrote us both up instead of finding out
who did what.
Now my issue is that all those disciplinary reports (DR) that I got were
not investigated, furthermore I didn’t get a chance to go to DR court to
defend myself. I don’t know if you’re familiar with the DR process but
when you get one, a DR investigator is supposed to meet with you and
discuss the incident. Afterwards you can take a plea or go to DR court
where you’re either found guilty or innocent, and that’s the official DR
process. These steps were not taken on any of the DRs I got.
After I was transferred from Jenkins I was sent to Jackson State Prison,
to a program called Special Management Unit (SMU). When I got here they
told me it was a program for prisoners who have a record of assaulting
officers and behavior problems. I only have two DRs on my record that
were concluded. The disposition for the first was dismissed and I was
found not guilty on the second. So with that being said, I feel it was
injustice to place me in this program.
Anyways, the most current issue is that I have been here since 23
January 2014 and I have not received any of my property. Recently I’ve
been asking for my mail and writing materials, (i.e. paper, pen, etc) so
I can contact my family and my attorney. I’ve spoke to the unit manager,
the Lieutenant, the counselor, and the property manager about this at
least twice and not one of them will tell me where my property is or why
I haven’t gotten them yet. There are several others with the same
problem. If anything can be done to get this problem resolved please
help.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This trick with the false disciplinary
reports, especially on prisoners who write grievances for guard abuses,
is common across the criminal injustice system. The campaign demanding
that our
grievances
be addressed needs to be expanded into Georgia so that prisoner’s
there can take up this organized struggle. We are looking for a prisoner
in Georgia who can modify a general grievance petition to the
state-specific rules and situation in Georgia. Let us know if you can
volunteer and we will send the information.
This is just one example of the system of oppression in this country
that puts bad marks on the permanent records of oppressed nation youth
starting in grade school. From there they are put into gang databases,
given sentences, parole, plea bargains and in prison they receive
disciplinary reports, STG status, etc. This is the state-sponsored
burueacracy that keep the First World lumpen in its place. They are
excluded from the economic system and many other benefits of imperialist
society, and these discriminatory and often baseless labels help make it
acceptable to the Amerikan public.
I am a Georgia prisoner of war at Hancock State Plantation and just
recently on 13 November 2013 I was locked down with numerous others on a
Tier II program of “gang control” for long-term lock down. The
administration says we are a threat to the security and welfare of the
institution. We were stripped of all our property, including hygiene,
and given state issue everything.
They tell us that the program is for behavior modification, which is
crazy considering most of us haven’t been to Ad-Seg in years. But they
tell us the qualification for this program runs 5 years prior sanctions.
We are not allowed to receive mail, literature, or be involved in
programs for any type of reform even though certain inmates are required
by courts to take classes in order to be released.
We only get one 15-minute phone call a month on Tuesdays and Thursdays,
which are working days to the employed across the United $tates. The
phones turn on at 8am and are cut off at 4:30pm. On top of all this, our
visitations are on the same days as our phone calls and we are allowed
to have only 2 hours of non-contact visits with a 2-person max of
visitors. Most of our families travel more than 2 hours just to see us.
Due to the lack of professionalism, or to the abundance of corruption,
we do not receive our 5 hours of outside recreation, nor do we receive
cell clean up, which is a violation of our prisoner rights per Georgia
Department of Corrections Standard Operating Procedures. We are forced,
by coercion of disciplinary reports and gas accompanied by a strip cell,
to have a cellmate even though this is a long-term lock down unit and we
are considered a threat to the security of the institution and other
persons. I heard the warden tell the captain pig “to let us kill each
other.”
Nine months is the minimum time you can be held in this Tier II program,
but if you receive a Disciplinary Report (D.R.) 90 more days are added
to your stay. There are seven close security plantations in Georgia that
have this Tier II program and they can hold us up to 2 years in each
one, which is 14 years in isolation all together if they choose to hold
you that long.
The pigs tend to aggravate and irritate us to react out of frustration
so we can receive a D.R. They do everything intentionally in order to
trick us into longer stay in Ad-Seg. They know that if everyone was to
complete this program in 9 months they wouldn’t have any program.
What’s so fishy about this sudden occurrence of a Tier II program in
Georgia is that earlier this year the Crips, Bloods, and GDs came to a
peace treaty in order for us to unite against the pigs’ oppression. We
are not organized to the point of a name, but we are upholding the
principles
of the United Front. We are trying to educate our comrades in a more
revolutionary mentality. As of now, most of the leaders and the more
influential participants are locked down in Ad-Seg and I don’t find this
a coincidence. The pigs hate the idea of us uniting in peace and not
killing each other.
This is not a notice to riot. This is a non-violent protest petition
concerning the unconstitutional prison conditions and acts afflicted on
the close security prisoners at Georgia State Prison. The following
issues have been grieved on numerous occasions yet fail to be attended
to. These unjust acts are mainly being committed in the locked down
units of the prison, which is where the close security inmates are
housed. The issues are as follows:
1. Inhumane living quarters: We are being housed in the condemned
part of the facility. There are no sprinkler systems in the cell in case
of fire. Mold, rust and filth have accumulated in the tray box and
around the toilet. The vents and the window shield are filled with dust,
pollen, smut, mace powder and toxic gases from the leakage of the sewage
pipeline. The power has been taken which disables us from using our only
source of clean air. These issues are unhealthy and the ventilation in
these cells can vex or worsen those with medical problems. We rarely
receive cell sanitation, raising the risk of being infected with staph,
scabies, and various other skin diseases. The inhumane conditions
violate our 8th amendment.
2. Denial of access to courts: In Bounds v. Smith the
United State Supreme Court requires prison authorities to provide its
inmates with an adequate law library. Administration deprives us of this
right by failing to provide law library requests. And once we are
enlisted to a session the escort officer (CERT team) seldom shows up.
This is a violation of our 14th amendment, due process law to seek
post-conviction relief.
3. Guards abusing authority: The guards are using excessive force
while the prisoner(s) are in restraints and no longer resisting.
Frequently forcing prisoners in the cells with another inmate, knowing
one has hostile and violent intentions. Some of the inmates may try to
refuse housing with an opposition of their social group. The guards then
threaten to use physical force if he continues to resist. Reluctantly
they comply and suffer being physically assaulted by the aggressor.
Verbal harassment is a constant matter to those that grieve their
abuses. Officers are refusing to feed those that they have a personal
vendetta with. Inflicting punishment on both cellmates even though only
one is rebellious. The promotion of violence has resulted in multiple
stabbings and two deaths. This is a security issue for the prisoners and
the officers.
4. Phone lines out of service: The phone lines are out of service
and staff is refusing to fix them. Those that still have the privilege
to use the phone are being denied this right. This issue is disabling us
from communication with our family and having an alternative to grieve
our problems. This malfunction has been an unattended issue for the past
two months. The officer in charge and floor officers refuse to put a
work order in for the phone lines in lock down unit. This is a violation
of our 8th amendment.
5. Inadequate food portion and cold/spoiled meals: We receive
meals that sometimes do not meet the adequate calories quota for dietary
regulations. The meals are always cold and late due to the officer
leaving them in the hallway. The morning milk is spoiled because of the
long period of time it sits in the heat before being stored or served.
The meals that contain meat are sometimes hazardous because it often
causes stomach illness and food poisoning.
6. Officer carelessness with prisoner mail: Floor officer(s)
continue to place our mail in the wrong cell and give it to the wrong
inmate. Sometimes they blame it on the mailroom staff for putting the
wrong housing unit on the mail. This has resulted in inmates’ family
members, loved ones, and friends being harassed or written to by other
inmates.
7. Refusal of clothing and personal necessities: The prison
refuses to provide the obligated clothing for new arrivals as a sleeper
and/or permanent. The weather conditions require certain clothing and
bedding equipment, yet they are rarely given to close security.
8. Vice grievances and procedure: Copies of grievance forms are
not restocked weekly. Grievances are always denied and witness
statements are always misplaced, making it difficult to have our issues
resolved. These poor conditions and malicious acts have resulted in
several assaults, suicide attempts and is stagnating the rehabilitation
of its victims. This is physical, mental, psychological and emotional
torture that is causing many prisoners to commit demoralizing acts
seeking relief from this maltreatment.
Enclosed is a list of prisoners who are witnesses to the allegations and
are inquiring them to be abolished. We also ask that we receive no
reprisal from the Georgia State Prison administration because of our
choice to exercise our 1st Amendment.
As a member of the
Georgia
hunger strikers of 2012 and the focus of Georgia’s prison beating, I
strive to awaken these brothers here in Georgia. I have been spreading
ULK to all here and to a lot of associates at other prisons. As
of 16 September 2013 the
video
of me being beaten with a claw hammer by these pigs has gone viral.
A comrade and myself have filed charges on those pigs, and due to all
the exposure, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation is doing their best to
do damage control, but the damage is too great. Two state Senators are
calling for the whole ordeal to be investigated, including the Internal
Affairs and Georgia Bureau of Investigation. I’m still at the so-called
Special Management Unit.
To the brothers in California I salute you all! To all the fallen
comrades: your sacrifice will not be in vain!
MIM(Prisons) adds: This is a good example of the power of media
to expose injustice. Unfortunately, mainstream media has little interest
in exposing imperialism or the criminal injustice system, as that would
not sit well with their advertisers or their Amerikan readership. This
is why we need an alternative press. ULK fills this role for
prisons in particular. And we can best cover news when prisoners write
about what’s going on in their state. The 2012 Georgia hunger strike was
not written about extensively in ULK because we had to rely on
non-prisoner sources. Our ability to contribute to struggles like this
one is greatly enhanced with comrades like this writing in with news
about the struggle. Exposure does sometimes embarrass the pigs into
making changes, and even when it doesn’t, we must continue to educate
people about the abuse and injustice going on across the criminal
injustice system.
It was a good fast day for me on the most recent day of Peace and
Solidarity, a powerful underground movement. I am in the midst of a lot
of things right now and I may be getting transferred soon, I don’t want
to put the re-mailing cost on you, because I know that there are a lot
of people who look forward to your paper. I am also enclosing a few
stamps to help out with the financial element of the movement. I’ll get
in touch as soon as I move.