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.
Sitting back and just observing everyone who I have encountered while in
prison, I would say one man comes to mind because he truly inspired me.
Deauce is a true socialist and freedom fighter. Within the Arkansas
Department of Corrections at the East Arkansas Regional Unit, we are
housed in open barracks with about 75 prisoners to a barrack. Deuce
looks out for everyone and helps anyone that he can assist. Regardless
of your race he’ll help you out. Whether it’s help with writing a
grievance, or you just need a radio to listen to the news or a movie,
he’ll make sure you even have food or coffee if you don’t have money to
buy commissary. Others call him hustle-man because he’s always hustling
up stuff for new prisoners or others in general. In my eyes he has
demonstrated the true meaning of a freedom fighter. Watching him in
action has encouraged me and allowed me to see how others react to a
socialist in action.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This essay came in response to our call
for people to write about the freedom fighters who have inspired them.
And this is a good reminder that our actions every day have a big impact
on others. Revolutionaries should strive to serve the people and
demonstrate the principles of our ideology in practice. We can take
people like Deuce as a good example of our starting point, but we need
to go further and tie our work serving the people to our work educating
the people about why we do this work, and why they should get involved
too. Otherwise we can get bogged down by the charity aspect, leaving the
revolutionary purpose behind.
A good example of this is the Black Panther Party’s Serve the People
Breakfast for Schoolchildren program. The BPP fed many children who
otherwise were going to school hungry, a problem that interfered with
their ability to learn. And while they were providing this food, the BPP
also provided revolutionary education, turning these kids on to a way of
thinking they weren’t exposed to in public schools. Freedom fighters are
found all around us, and we commend this comrade for calling out the
value of the everyday work done by Deauce in serving the people.
This is just an attachment to give you a slightly more detailed update
of some of the conditions we experience here on Telford Unit in Ad-Seg.
Lack of access to the law library. We are able to request material 3
days a week but during any lockdown and the duration thereof, all access
is suspended and non-existent.
The indigent mail program. Not only are we now limited to 5 letters
a month but our mailroom here has taken these limitations even further
at various times. Example: If a prisoner only uses 4 of his indigent
letters in a month, then he is denied the full 5 envelopes the following
month. Prisoners are required to “justify” all requests of carbon paper,
which must also be returned upon receiving new ones. All of these mail
restrictions are clear attempts at silencing prisoners and limiting
their socialization with the outside world.
We have a major rat infestation. Literally, so many rats running
around that they are visible at almost any given time. They leave trails
of feces and this includes inside our cells if the bottom of our cell
doors are not blocked. They are also known to cause damage to personal
property. Rats are carriers of various organisms and disease that cause
health problems. This is clearly an indication of unsanitary and
inhumane conditions.
Many of our cells are less than fully functioning. Water buttons not
fully functional, and even sometimes not at all for long periods of
time. Cell lights are not fully functional, causing eyesight problems
and not being able to read and write at night time.
Serving us spoiled food on a regular basis with no attempt
whatsoever to rectify the situation. This is undeserved and unjust
deprivation.
We also experience the “torturous methods” used as described by the
brother at Pelican Bay in California in ULK 47. All movement is
supposed to stop at 10 p.m. But they do their
“security
checks” by entering the pod through crash gates, crossover doors,
shining flashlights in on us, and asking us to move around to “show we
are alive.”
Upon reading ULK 46 I was once again reminded of the difficulties
that us prisoners face trying to have our grievances heard. I would like
to share with ULK readers a remedy for this issue that I have
discovered.
Pursuant to Powe v. Ennis, 177 F.3d 393 (5th Circuit 1999); and
Lewis v. Washington, 300 F.3d 829 (7th Cir. 2002), if prison
officials refuse to hear your grievance, your administrative remedies
are exhausted. You do not need a response to your grievance to pursue
your issue in the courts. You need only prove that you filed the
respective grievance.
This can easily be done. First, after you have written your grievance
fill out a Proof of Service form stating that on such-and-such date you
sent so-and-so a grievance regarding such-and-such issue. After you have
filled out the Proof of Service form get it notarized at your facility’s
law library. Secondly make sure to make copies of both your grievance
and the Proof of Service form to keep in your files. Finally, repeat
this process at every level of your state’s grievance system.
For example: In Illinois there is a three-step grievance system. I have
personally used this method in the past (successfully). First, I filed
my grievance with my counselor; next I filed it with my institution’s
grievance office; then I filed it with the Administrative Review Board.
Each time I filed my grievance I also filed a Proof of Service form. By
doing so I was able to show the Court that I had attempted to resolve my
claims through the grievance process. This resulted in the court siding
with me and denying the State’s Motion for Summary Judgement. I am
enclosing proof of this method’s success for MIM(Prisons) to verify.
Although this is not the ideal solution it is one that will allow
prisoners to pursue their legal matters without being obstructed by the
Capitalist swine.
Example Proof Of Service
Hereby comes [your name] to swear under penalty of perjury that on the
date signed below I sent the [prison name] Grievance Officer a grievance
dated [date] concerning the misplacement of my TV and Norelco Razor by
prison authorities through the institutional level mail service.
Executed this ___ day of _____ [month] ________ [year]
_________________________________ [signature]
[get this stamped and signed by a notary public.]
MIM(Prisons) adds: This is a helpful update to the country-wide
grievance campaign and likely is a tactic that can be used in states
other than Illinois. How “easily” this tactic can be employed depends on
the conditions of one’s confinement. As some prisoners are held in
24-hour lockdown, with no access to a law library, and the only receipt
offered for filing a grievance is another beating from prison guards,
they might not be able to easily employ this tactic. But for many
prisoners, this might be a stepping stone from having one’s grievances
altogether ignored, to getting one’s foot in the door in the courts.
Many people have requested copies of our state-specific petitions to
demand grievances be addressed after running into problems with the
grievance system. From all the petitions we have sent out, we’ve heard
few updates about the progress on this campaign. It’s important that we
sum up our political practice and learn from it. And through this
summing up we can determine how to best modify our practice to improve
it. We call this ongoing summing up and improving of our practice
“dialectical materialism.” This is a scientific approach to our
political work that enables us to learn from doing, and when we do this
summing up publicly, through a newspaper like Under Lock &
Key, we can apply these lessons across a broad base of organizers
and be far more effective in the work that we are all doing.
So if you use, or have used, the above tactic, be sure to tell
ULK if it helped you, or what you did to improve it. That way we
can all learn from each others’ practice to improve our own.
by a North Carolina prisoner December 2015 permalink
I’m a prisoner serving time in Rivers Correctional Institution(RCI),
which is a GEO, Inc. prison. It’s supposed to be low, but looks like a
level five penitentiary.
I’m writing to inform my comrades in Pelican Bay that us comrades on
this side of the country in North Carolina RCI are suffering from the
same torture tactics in the Restricted Housing Unit(RHU). Yeah, that’s
the new name of the SHU in here. The difference between our torture
tactics is the RHU staff walks by the prisoner cells to press the button
on the cell doors every 15 to 20 minutes, 24/7, so 80 times a day.
In 2010 a comrade in California initiated a campaign to demand that
grievances be addressed by the California prison system. This comrade
created a petition that anyone behind bars could use. The campaign
quickly took off in California and spread to other places where
customized petitions were created for use in 14 different states.
We have reports from some states that are still actively fighting the
corrupt and broken grievance systems using the petitions developed to
demand grievances be addressed. But we also have a number of states for
which we have petitions, but we haven’t gotten an update in a long time.
We still get requests for copies of these grievance petitions, but we’re
not sure if they are being put to use, or if the petition is entirely
ineffective.
The goals of the grievance petition campaign are first to build unity
amongst prisoners around a common goal, and second to try to resolve
grievance problems, in order to help address some brutalities and
injustices of the prison environment. An individual sending out one
petition won’t bring relief, but building with others in your facility
around this campaign will help address at least one of these goals.
Here is the list of states for which we need updates on grievance
campaign work: Arizona Colorado Kansas Montana North
Carolina Nevada Oklahoma Oregon South Carolina
If you are in one of these states, let us know what you did with the
grievance petition. Help us update the campaign, even if it’s just to
say that your work so far hasn’t produced success. Tell us what
grievances you are trying to fight, how you used the petition, and the
participation of your fellow captives.
It is a critical part of the work of any political organization that we
learn from our practice, and continue to improve our work. By reporting
on your grievance campaign work, you are contributing to the dialectical
materialist method of revolutionary struggle. Together we can improve
our practice to be even more effective over time.
I would like to let you know of a situation that occurred on 1 December
2015, at Ely State Prison in Nevada. A white corrections officer (CO)
was taking a Black prisoner to yard in handcuffs. CO Edwards is a known
racist pig, and while taking this prisoner to yard he slammed his face
against the sally port door. When the prisoner went to his knees, CO
Edwards then slammed his face on the ground. The reason given was that
the prisoner “turned his head too fast.”
The prisoner was taken to the hole. But it caused us to unite. Nevada
has become a highly individualized state. No one wants to get involved
with any struggle. But yesterday a comrade and I pushed the issue, and
we got a large number of prisoners to file grievances. We filed them as
AR340 misconduct complaints against the pig Edwards, which are supposed
to be sent to the Inspector General’s office.
It was nice to see us united. I will keep you updated on this issue.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade is doing the hard work
necessary to build an anti-imperialist movement: repeatedly trying to
inspire others to come together to fight injustices. Even if the action
is small at first, the unity around this one incident helps to build
unity around bigger issues. People learn through action, even if that
lesson is that the oppressors are far more powerful than us right now.
We still have to take the opportunity to offer information about the
criminal injustice system, why we take on these battles, and how they
fit in to our longer term goal of putting an end to the oppressive
system of imperialism.
December 7, 2015 was the first time in 29 years down a prison weapon was
used on me, and I’m supposed to be angry at the “inmate(s).” Instead I
believe questionable prison officials using prisoners affiliated with
Security Threat Groups and Disruptive Groups at this unnamed institution
told them it was “open season” on me because of my “dirty paper work”
that brought prisoner to prison. And since prison officials can’t shut
me up because of my first amendment, freedom of speech, they turned to
prisoners to do their dirty work by intentionally setting me up to be
attacked by other prisoners.
I was being brought to a hospital while prison officials were
dismantling my property as well evidence I was going to use against
prison officials.
The last paragraph of the court order reads: “if the Plaintiff prevails
in this action, the court shall enter an order pursuant to WRS 12.015
requiring the opposing party to pay into the court, within five (5)
days, the costs which would have been incurred by the prevailing party,
and those costs must then be paid as provided by law.”
Then on the fifth day a prisoner who, in 29 years has never had a weapon
used on him, never been a security problem, all of a sudden is being
brought to a hospital!
It is time to hold state actors accountable for the mistreatment they do
to all prisoners of any race no matter what they’re in prison for today.
I have never been a snitch even though prison officials are spreading a
rumor that I was. Nevada inmates have to come together to not allow the
prison officials to get the prison population fighting each other
instead of seeing the truth. To all Nevada prisoners of any race, let us
break this chain of hatred going into 2016 and fight with the pen
against those who keep us chained up, use the First Amendment. Do not
allow the adverse actions taken by prison officials to be the prisoners’
downfall.
Mail the petition to your loved ones and comrades inside who are
experiencing issues with their grievance procedure. Send them extra
copies to share! For more info on this campaign, click
here. If
there is a state-wide petition developed, that one should be used
instead of the country-wide petition, because it is more detailed. For a
list of state-wide petitions that have already been developed, click
here.
Prisoners should send a copy of the signed petition to each of the
addresses listed on the petition, and to the MIM(Prisons) address below.
Supporters should send letters on behalf of prisoners.
United States Department of Justice - Civil Rights Division Special
Litigation Section 950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, PHB Washington,
D.C. 20530
Office of Inspector General HOTLINE P.O. Box 9778 Arlington,
Virginia 22219
And send MIM(Prisons) copies of any responses you receive!
MIM(Prisons), USW PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140
In 2001, reporters at the Boston Globe newspaper exposed
widespread sexual abuse of children by priests in the Catholic Church
and the long-running coverup of this abuse by Church leadership. Priests
who were known to have molested children were moved to new parishes
where they repeated the abuse, with full knowledge of Church leadership.
The Globe printed a series of stories that led to the resignation
of Cardinal Law and great embarrassment for the Church. Spotlight
dramatizes the work done by the reporting team at the Globe to
uncover the facts in this case, and the resistance they faced in a city
dominated by the Catholic Church.
Overall Spotlight does a good job demonstrating the tremendous
harm that the institution of the Catholic Church did to thousands
(likely tens of thousands) of youth, and the pervasive influence and
power of the Church in the city of Boston, Massachusetts. No attempt is
made to justify the actions of the Church leadership who covered for the
abusive priests, nor does the movie suggest that anything was changed by
the newspaper stories, instead concluding with a list of hundreds of
cities around the world where similar abuse scandals were uncovered.
It is outrageous and enraging to see the stories of abused children, the
lucky ones who made it to adulthood, and hear about Church authorities
who, upon learning about these cases, moved to silence the abused,
promising it would never happen again, even while they knew the priests
had a history of exactly this same abuse against other children. It is
an interesting contrast that, while quick to believe that all Muslims
are terrorists when a small minority of them fight back against
imperialism, Amerikans presented with so much evidence would never
consider calling all Catholics child molesters. Even non-Catholics in
the United $tates are well indoctrinated to believe that the churches
are forces for good and Christianity is a religion of good people.
In the end the movie lets the Catholic Church off the hook. By focusing
on just this sex abuse scandal, Spotlight portrays the rest of
the Church activities as generally benevolent. Further, it implies that
the abusive priests are just psychologically impaired in some way, and
so this has allowed the Catholic Church to say they’ve solved the
problem by introducing psychological screening for those wanting to
enter priesthood. We believe it is the very institution of the Catholic
Church, along with the patriarchy that it so ardently supports, that
leads priests to be indoctrinated into eroticizing power over helpless
young kids. It’s not a flaw in the individual, but rather the system
itself that is flawed, and not in a way that can be fixed by
psychological screenings. Religion has a long history of supporting the
patriarchal dominance of male power and reinforcing gender inequality.
One problem with focusing on the serious harm the Catholic Church does
to Amerikkkans is the omission of the even greater harm the Church has
done globally. Consistently a force for reaction, the Church at best has
pretended neutrality while watching dictators murder, plunder, and
oppress entire nations of people. Just as Spotlight shows the
power and influence of the Catholic Church in all levels of Boston’s
city politics, in many cases there is documentation of this Church’s
support for and work with reactionary governments around the world.
As a strong centralized religious institution with a long history, the
Catholic Church is an easy target for people looking to document the
reactionary role of religious institutions. But they are just one
example of the harm religious institutions have on society. After
overthrowing the imperialists and putting a government in power that
serves the interests of the oppressed (a dictatorship of the
proletariat), the people will have the power to ban reactionary
institutions. When we see the tremendous harm that the Catholic Church
did to so many children over so many years, it should be obvious that
this institution should be outlawed. And those who perpetuated and
covered up the molestation should face the people’s courts. There is no
justification for allowing such dangerous institutions to continue.
Yet, we don’t need to outlaw religion as a belief under the dictatorship
of the proletariat. As Mao explained about their policy in China under
socialism:
“The Communist Party has adopted a policy of protecting religions.
Believers and non-believers, believers of one religion or another, are
all similarly protected, and their faiths are respected. Today, we have
adopted this policy of protecting religions, and in future we will still
maintain this policy of protection.” (Talk with Tibetan Delegates,
October 8, 1952)
It is not that we want to force people to change their beliefs. Rather
we think that once we eliminate reactionary culture and institutions and
teach all people how to reason with dialectical materialist methodology
they will give up old ideas and beliefs that are not based in science.
Just as Confucianism was discarded by most Chinese so too will other
religions be discarded by humynity as we advance towards a world without
the oppression of groups of people.
I want to report another way the system tortures people in the Security
Housing Units(SHU). Corcoran and Mule Creek State Prisons both throw
away your legal mail. They do this in your face and behind your back.
I’ve tried to report this to the Inspector General and other offices. I
filed a 602 grievance, but this don’t work if your 602 arrive at the
Office of the Appeal Coordinator. If you looking for help from the
Office of the Ombudsman, this never happens, because the officer in both
prisons tnrow away your mail in your face or they simply send back your
envelope. The mail room has some yellow stickers that say “returned” and
look just like those of the U.S. Postal Service, but it is easy to tell
the difference if you look closely. They do this even when you have the
correct address.
I lost my habeus corpus case because Mule Creek never sent out
my extension time motion on 19 February 2015. I seen the officer throw
it in the trash. At Mule Creek, officers Winkilend and Rechason do this
a lot. Both officers are the only Black officers in the segregation
building. Rechason likes to write “Refused signature”, when that was
never what happened.
The same thing happens at Corcoran. Here they often use the excuse that
my name is written in a different order than in their database, even
though they have the correct ID number. They don’t deliver mail,
magazines and even legal mail. Over here it is Officers Ponce, Lawrence
and Padstoff who do that regularly.
I write a lot, it’s true, but that is my problem. I’m working on my
case. Officer Ponce and Lawrence told me in my face “fuck you write a
lot” and they said I had a lot of mail and can’t continue like that.
Wow! What?! Like that in my face.