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.
Missouri now has the strictest paper literature policy ever
implemented in a state prison system. People can ONLY obtain paper
literature by purchasing it themselves, in consultation with their
prison caseworker, with money drawn from their own commissary account
from a small selection of “approved vendors.” We’re finding that many of
our subscribers in Missouri cannot receive Under Lock & Key
because they have not paid for it.
Missouri is now contracting with Securus to serve all mail digitally
on tablets. Their contract includes a 1% administrative fee on “all
payments received by the contractor for all products and services
provided under the contract.” However, not all prisoners have tablets,
and some are anxious to get the privilege of paying $0.25 to send emails
to family.
Below are reports from Missouri prisoners in August 2024.
Censorship is real here at Crossroads Correctional Center. They are
trying to find ways to stop Under Lock & Key newspapers
from coming to Crossroads any way they can. Most of the time they have
no real reason to stop it. It’s hit or miss. And me and the brothers
really really need the info and good news that you bring knowing that
the fight is still on.
They stop our catalogs, they stop our books. It’s hard with this K2
taking our young minds and no one really there to push the fight. Most
of us find our fight to be few in numbers.
Here in the hole, they keep our tablets from us. Every prison except
for Crossroads Correctional Center has tablets. They charge us $0.79 a
stamp and really force us to buy them knowing that’s the only way to
reach our families seeing that they won’t give us our tablets in Ad-Seg.
Emails only cost $0.25 on tablets.
They won’t let us order reading books or magazines in Ad-Seg either,
saying we have to be on the yard to order books/magazines.
MIM(Prisons) adds: It is criminally absurd that people
being tortured in isolation are deprived of some of the few things that
can keep them sane in such conditions like reading material.
A comrade at Jefferson City Correctional Center wrote:
I’ve ordered books with donation checks to free services. At first they
denied them in May due to “No free books.” I fought that and paid a
donation. Then their excuse was “wrong order month.” They proceeded to
deny (in March, July, November) the free book services with donation
payments. Then I sent $400 to a bona fide vendor on the precise month of
orders. Now they’re saying we can’t have books in Ad-Seg and that I have
to send them home and my people won’t be able to send them back to me
once I’m out of seg (if I ever get out).
They’re making up arbitrary rules on the premise of punishment and
denying educational and recreational books to long-term segregation
people.
I had the check approved per the Functioning Unit Manager, and
approved with Business Office. Now I’m unable to get them cuz property
denied them.
I’m on hunger strike now at 7 days, 21 meals. No medical has
attempted to assess me, they’re denying legal access (property
paperwork) and staff don’t do rounds. If possible, I need assistance
with legal. I’m filing on medical for neglect/deliberate indifference.
I’m working on the §1983 in the mail but if ya’ll can help or put me
into contact or on a list of pro bono/after win lawyers it would be much
appreciated.
Another Jefferson City prisoner wrote: This prison
policy infringes on my right to receive free religious material, which
is considered “special mail, and can never be censored.” Prison
officials took the regular mail, now books, magazines, and newspapers
that were free, saying that drugs are coming in through the mail! That
is the worst lie I have ever heard. It is a fact that drugs are being
brought in by the prison staff themselves, not the other way around. I
am here to help fight this injustice, let me know what you need me to
do.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Unfortunately, now that this new
policy is already in place we will need a concerted campaign and likely
a lawsuit to reverse course. As the comrade above says, if any lawyers
want to get involved, we can help facilitate. It’s hard to give Missouri
a grade until we get a clearer picture of how this new policy plays out,
but we might have to give them an F.
I am a prisoner at Crossroads Correctional Center in Cameron, Missouri.
I’m currently being held in solitary confinement for our May 12 uprising
against the oppression and abuse inflicted on us by the administration
and guards.
For months, the administration had been keeping us locked in our cells
for 23 hours a day, in population! Using excuses of “short on staff,” we
are only allowed to either shower or call our loved ones for one
30-minute session per day. Our one-hour recs are cut to 45 and 30
minutes consistently. The inmate barber shop is closed. Visits are
canceled. Guards are verbally and physically abusive.
Until, on May 12th at dinner chow (2 hours late) at 7:30 pm, 288
prisoners participated in a mass sit-in, in peaceful protest to all of
the injustices. Instead of answering requests for talks with
white-shirts, all officers fled both chow halls and kitchen, leaving us
locked in, and grouped outside the windows and taunted us. The sit-in
quickly escalated into the largest “riot” in Missouri history,
consisting of a reported $4 million in damages, with the complex being
taken over and held for over 7 hours. Inside, only 2 people were
attacked before leadership and unity were established.
Countless abuses and injustices followed our return to custody,
including: remaining zip-tied for 7-9.5 hours, forced to urinate
ourselves, beatings, double-celling prisoners in single-man cells for a
week with no mattress or bedding, less than 1000-calorie daily diet
instituted for the entire camp for over 70 days, etc.
Through all this, the administration kept up its tricks of sowing hate
and dissension amongst prisoners in population by blaming the 3-month
lockdown on us by actually naming us to other prisoners in hopes of
retaliation). Visits were canceled, no canteen, etc.
However, those of us in confinement know the truth: in 2017, we had a
mass race-riot of Browns & Whites vs Blacks, and less than 12 months
later those same races, true those same prisoners, come together to
fight in unity against oppression! Me and about 20 other comrades came
together again in September 2018.
It is coming up on 6 months since our placement in seg and we are likely
to receive another 90 days just for good measure, but we are still
standing. There are 78 of us from the uprising in seg, and many of us
belong to one organization or another. When we are released we will
continue to spread and build on this unity that was formed under great
oppression. We will carry this momentum to bring all prisoners together
to face the true enemy!
We have seen and heard praise for our battle and victory in the struggle
throughout other max securities in Missouri. There have been other
uprisings that have followed ours at a couple mediums, (one was a
race-riot, but with guidance and support those aggressions can be
properly re-directed), and the administration is taking notice. The
five
principles of the United Front are taking hold in Missouri. We will
do our part to learn, share, teach and uphold them as we struggle
together in our war against oppression. I will do my part in not only
spreading the message to mi raza, but others as well. Unity is the key!
Viva la gente!
MIM(Prisons) responds: We printed
some
good discussion about these Missouri protests in ULK 65. This
writer highlights what is most important about these sorts of actions:
the learning by participants and observers about what prisoners can
accomplish with unity. By building the United Front for Peace in
Prisons, comrades in Missouri are building strength and unity, setting
up the conditions for stronger actions in the future.
13 May 2018 – 208 prisoners of every race, background, group,
organization, etc. said enough is enough! We came together and sat down
in a peaceful protest. During dinner (chow hall) as usual the pigs not
only violated our constitutional rights (First Amendment freedom of
speech) but they also attempted to bully us by flex’n and threatening
us. That’s when our peaceful protest turned uprising. I wish y’all could
have seen the way all the guards (C.O.s, Sergeants, Lieutenants, etc.)
ran out the kitchen and chow halls. You would have thought they ran
track! Who the cowards now?
For the first time in Missouri history we united. The pigs see the end
of their control within our unity. In a matter of seconds we gained
control of the kitchen, both dining halls, property room, canteen
storage, the factory, forklifts, weapons, keys, phones, computers, etc.
Well after a few hours the phones start to ring. Guess who’s calling?
The warden and highway patrol. For the first time they listened to our
demands. They respected us. They feared our unity. They was at our
mercy.
On our own terms we surrendered 8-9 hours later. After we got our point
across.
Note: 90% of guys in our peaceful protest turned uprising have outdates
ranging between a few weeks and 15 years. So only imagine if the outcome
was the other way around. 90% of us could have been locked to the board
(life without?).
Due to us striving so fast and hard we left administration not only
confused but also emotionally off balance. Being that this never
happened before in Missouri history they acted off impulse and violated
every constitutional right you can think of. Which led to KC Freedom
Project lawyers starting a class action lawsuit on our behalf against
Missouri DOC. The media has been on fire regarding this.
Update? We still on lockdown! We still receiving brown bags (sack
lunches). They say it was $3 million worth of damage. They making us do
1 year. We damn near 6 months in.
Administration is still up to their tricky ways. They have attempted to
divide and conquer us by destroying all the guys’ property that was in
the hole and told them we did it. Also telling all the guys in GP it’s
our fault they are locked down still. So yeah the struggle continues.
By the way, there have been two other uprisings of this kind since we
kicked it off. If we can unite here in Missouri where unity has never
existed then any state can.
Another Missouri prisoner wrote:
It has been 13 months since the prisoners bonded together, Black, White,
Native and brown (Chicano) and kicked off a riot at Crossroads
Correctional Center in Cameron, Missouri, causing over a million dollars
in damage. What did it accomplish?
Prison property got damaged that your families who are tax payers
(and you too cause you pay taxes on your canteen items) are going to
have to pay for the damages.
You injured one another with violent acts and all it accomplished is
enemies, and lockdown of the prison.
Supposedly two housing units are to be cleared out for the creation of
SHU units. They are supposed to lock up all the gang leaders and violent
soldiers.
As of now, this is all just rumor, but every time Missouri prisoners
show acts of violence via riots, the prison gets stricter. For example,
the 1985 riot in the old Missouri State Penitentiary caused them to
build a supermax housing unit.
When are we gonna learn that we are hurting ourselves more ways than one
by these acts of violence? When I was advocating peaceful protests with
demonstrations of how to shut the prison system down, nobody in Missouri
wanted to participate. But you go off on your own and committed this no
nonsense act of violence against your brother, your friends, your
families, and jeopardized everyone.
It costs $85 million a year to keep the U.S. prisons up and running. The
government is not producing this money to keep the prisons going. So
where is the money coming from? Let’s see now, in Missouri it’s coming
from Missouri Vocational Enterprise (MVE), the sign shop, the printing
shop, the license plate plant (tag plant), the furniture factory, the
chemical plant, information technology (IBM program), the braille
program, the laundry, the cooled-chill plant (cold food storage), the
shoe factory, the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDot work
release) and the newly implemented paneling factory.
The above-mentioned factories are multi-million-dollar industries per
year. They are paying you pennies. So what a couple of these jobs pay
between $150 and $300 per month. If you peacefully protest by refusing
to go to work in these factories, either they are going to pay you at
least minimum wage where you will be making at least $340 a week, or
they are gonna bring in civilians to do the work, in which case the
factories are going to have to be uprooted and moved because most
civilians are not coming inside the prisons to work. So to shut down a
beast like the U.S. prison system is to shut down their economy – that
is, the very thing that’s bringing them money to keep the prisons open
is the very thing that can shut it down.
This just doesn’t begin and end with the prisoners. The prisoner has to
survive. He has to eat. So the people in the free world are going to
have to support the prisoner financially. Family, friends, advocate
organizations are all going to have to pitch in and support the prisoner
financially. That means to stop working we have to buy food to eat. To
stop using the phones and tablets, we need stamps, envelopes, paper and
pens to write letters that cost money. So the free world must understand
that for us to make these sacrifices, then society is going to have to
make sacrifices to assist us.
So Missouri prisoners, society (family, friends, organizations,
advocates, etc.), stop going about things the wrong way and do them like
they should be done in order to get results.
I go home next year on parole, but I do not leave my fight behind. There
is a bigger world out there, which means a lot more opportunities to
fight. I am going to find resources and seek out that they join me in my
quest to do away with this beast. I will need their support mentally,
physically, spiritually and above all, financially. With this, Comrades,
I hope to see you on the other side, working with me and supporting me
from the inside and outside.
In struggle–In solidarity Arm raised–clenched black fist
MIM(Prisons) responds: A lot of folks talk about how hard it is
to get people to unite behind bars. The prison controls everything from
day-to-day comfort to release dates. And that’s powerful incentive to
conform. Then they introduce drugs and other distractions to pacify the
population. They pay off snitches to keep an eye on activists. And they
lock organizers down in solitary confinement. Still, faced with all
these barriers, prisoners can and do come together to protest.
Conditions at Crossroads CC were bad enough to inspire this action. And
while the outcome wasn’t all positive, the class action lawsuit and
attention of the public has forced the Missouri DOC to admit that
prisoners are suffering significant restrictions due to short staffing.
The comrade criticizing this action for its lack of focus and random
acts of violence and destruction is right that often these sorts of
actions lead to more repression. Though peaceful protests are also often
met with increased repression. This debate over tactics in prison
protests is one that should be happening within all prisons across the
country. We hope the comrades at Crossroads will learn from this action
and move forward in greater unity towards future actions that will be
even more effective.
Focusing on the economics of prisons reveals the ridiculous scale of the
criminal injustice system. As the writer above notes, it would be a
significant financial loss to the state if they were forced to hire
non-prisoners for all the jobs prisoners are doing. And this is
financial leverage that prisoner workers can use to their advantage.
But to debate the value of this tactic we need to first be clear about
the scope of prisoner labor. The state of Missouri 2018 budget allocated
the Department of Corrections over $725 million. About the same as the
previous year, which was up $50 million from 2016.(1) The state would
have to allocate even more money if no prisoner labor could be used to
help run the prisons, or produce products that are sold to generate
revenue. But that prisoner labor is still a small part of the total cost
of running prisons.
As we showed from
data
collected from prisons across the United $tates, in general, losing
prisoner labor would add about 10% to the cost of running prisons.
Prisons are mostly subsidized by states’ budgets. The labor from
prisoners just doesn’t come close to covering that cost. So while there
is definitely economic power in those jobs, shutting down prison
industries won’t shut down prisons.
We don’t aim to just improve conditions. In the end we know the criminal
injustice system keeps taking away rights, doing what it can to make
prisons a place of suffering and complacency. But this protest showed
the people involved that they have the power to take collective action.
As the original writer notes, the prison can see their downfall in the
unity of the prisoners. This lesson of the importance and power of unity
is what will hopefully fuel ongoing organizing.
I’m a politikal prisoner warehoused at the State of Missouri’s most
repressive slave plantations (Crossroads Correctional Center). It’s name
(Crossroads) alone sounds like a cemetery and it does literally feel
like one.
The institution is still on lock-down from a riot that took place 5, 6
months ago where no one was injured but millions of dollars in property
damage occurred.
The conditions that led up to the rioting still exist today and are even
worse today. Basically, we are locked down in our cells all day and none
of our daily needs are met. For example, they transferred me here last
week as a punishment from another camp and placed me in ad seg despite
me not having any conduct violations (write-up). They refused to bring
me my ad seg allowable soap, toothbrush, and toothpaste for six (6)
days, but gave the other transfers theirs the same day.
So, I sent my case worker numerous kites requesting grievance forms,
which she denied me. I’m on high blood pressure medication, which I
should have received the first day I arrived, yet medical staff
continues to ignore my request. When I arrived here, they gave me
another prisoner’s used and dirty underclothes and bedding when everyone
knows that you’re supposed to be issued new underclothes and can be
issued used outer garments. Again, I sent my caseworker a kite for a
grievance complaint and a legal request form to order prison policies
and legal case law to challenge these conditions and was again denied.
I’m on a certified religious diet meal plan, yet they refuse to
recognize it at this camp despite having documentation proving that I’m
on the diet plan. (Please note: A white prisoner next door to me
receives his CRD-meal 3 times a day).
We are dealing with gangsters here. Gangsters who have been allowed to
do whatever they feel like doing and outside of what prison regulations
mandate without being challenged or corrected. And if you bring
attention to this abuse of authority, they calculatingly and
systematically isolate you and target you with more abuse.
Please send me something to read, i.e. newsletter, prisoner resource
guide, anything that will keep my spirit and mind up.
In 2010, the Black Order Revolutionary Organization (BORO), with the
assistance of MIM(Prisons), initiated a campaign to fight censorship.
BORO last provided an update on this campaign in
ULK
17. Since that time there has been censorship of some issues of
ULK and IRRs (appeals) and grievances were filed. Issue 28 was
censored in October 2012 and we fought it. On 19 December 2012, we won
the grievance and were issued the ULK on the same day.
Prison activism can be very discouraging at times, but we must hold firm
to our commitment to struggle. Whenever an issue of ULK, or any
other material, is censored, our advice is to not sign the censorship
notification and covenant not to sue forms. Although signing these forms
will allow you to send the material to whomever you want, you
effectively give up your right to grieve the issue or file a legal
complaint in the courts.
Another new development is that the mailrooms now have to notify
publishers when they censor any of their mail sent to prisoners. This is
a strategic win for us and should be further encouragement for those of
you who complain “we can’t beat these people”.
MIM(Prisons) adds: To the comrade who wrote in
asking
for more news on Missouri in ULK 27, this is a good example
of how to make news by carrying out work over the long term and
reporting on it. We got another response to that letter from a comrade
in Missouri who reported being on a solo hunger strike going on fifteen
days on 1 January 2013. S/he wrote, “I’m hoping some other prisoners in
Missouri will read this article and start to ride on some shit. The way
they run prisons in Missouri is screwed up and it’s time to stick
together and change some stuff.” We warn our readers that hunger strikes
without support and planning can be dangerous and reckless. But make no
mistake, not all prisoners in Missouri will accept abuse.
I have been incarcerated in the Missouri Department of Corruption since
1997. Over these many years I have been confined to seven different
“camps” within the state of “Missery.”
I have seen prisoners maced and beat severely at Potosi Correctional
Center in the late 90s. Officers there would routinely chain prisoners
up “hog tied” like and leave them lying in their cells. Rather than move
prisoners that didn’t get along or otherwise weren’t compatible they
would make them fight and in two instances I know of, prisoners were
murdered by their cellmates.
All over the state it is common practice to place completely
incompatible people in a cell together. Guys with life without parole
being celled with prisoners with only a matter of months left in their
sentence.
At Crossroads Correctional Center I saw a sergeant kick a “chuck-hole”
closed on one prisoner’s arm. Another sergeant grabbed a prisoner in a
reverse headlock and dropped said prisoner on his face using all his own
body weight. Prisoners with asthma or other health problems are sprayed
with pepper spray.
All over the state it is common for prisoners to be “free-cased” for
violations or crimes they had nothing to do with because a scape-goat
was needed in a hurry to save face or out of animosity issues between
staff and prisoners.
At South Central Correctional Center prisoners were “free-cased” for
another prisoner’s murder because the institution needed scape-goats to
cover up their own incompetency in running a safe and secure ‘camp’ and
insufficient security equipment.
All over the state there are prisoners on a status termed “long term
mandated
single-cell
confinement.” This security status has no set end, no guidelines and
no governing policies or any unit set aside for such a special security
status. There are men on this status who have been confined solidarity
for over ten years.
At South East Correctional Center things are to a point where at the
time of this writing there are prisoners eating foreign objects such as
ink pens, screws, and any item obtainable (in one case the ear stem of a
pair of eye glasses) to express the need to be transferred away from the
tyrannical oppression found in this backward run facility.
All over the state prisoners are housed in single-man cell units with
prisoners with severe mental illness so they are subjected to round the
clock beating on walls and sinks, yelling and screaming, smearing and
throwing feces, urine, etc. Lights are left on or shut off per the whim
of the officers.
Noble salutations comrades! I have been a recipient of your prison
newsletter for several months now. In January I was transferred from the
South Central Correctional Center in Licking Missouri to Crossroads
Correctional Center in Cameron Missouri. I have been in administrative
segregation (Ad-Seg) since November of 2007. In Feb of 2008 a
classification hearing was held (unscheduled) and it was then
recommended by the housing unit staff of one house at SCCC that I be
placed on “mandated single cell confinement,” a status with no end. This
hearing was held but twenty four hours after I filed paper work through
inmate grievance procedure of the functional unit manager of my unit for
staff familiarity and personal conflicts. The day following this
unscheduled hearing, I filed again on this DOC employee for retaliation
which is plain to see. All of my grievances and appeals were denied and
have now been exhausted, my situation remains the same although I am in
a different correctional center.
SOP 21-1.2 Administrative Segregation, page 2 states the following:
Assignment of an offender to a single cell within an administrative
segregation unit [is] for documented safety and security reasons,
i.e. offenders who are considered an immediate or long term danger to
other offenders that would be celled with that offender based on
extremely violent, aggressive, threatening actions towards others, which
may include murder/manslaughter, sexual assault/rape, assault with
serious physical injury, sexually active HIV positive offender. This
offender is not to be celled with other offenders.
Page 8 of the same SOP 21-1.2 states: Mandated single cell
assignment: 1. The administrative segregation committee will
evaluate offenders for single cell confinement at the time of the
hearing. All offenders who are considered an immediate/long-term danger
to harm a cellmate as explained in definition II.E of this procedure
should be assigned to a single cell in administrative segregation.
Offenders who have recently assaulted/harmed a cellmate or other
offenders who staff believe are a continuous threat to other offenders
if housed in a cell with them, should be submitted to the deputy
division director, who, in consultation with the division director will
approve/disapprove these actions. Offenders who have been approved for
mandated single cell assignment will require approval from the deputy
division director prior to removal from this status.
Upon my arrival to this institution I asked the classification staff if
I would now be removed from the mandated status. I was informed by the
head of the committee that no one gets removed from this status once
placed on it. All staff present for this made noises that I “have life
without in the hole,” as I’m serving two consecutive life sentences, one
of which is without parole.
I have been denied my right to due process. I have quoted their policies
and procedures in all my filings. Every action I have taken has been
within and following all guidelines. No justice has been given.
I have written several prisoner rights advocates and contacted numerous
attorneys offices, all futile.
This is not just a solitary issue concerning just one prisoner. Missouri
has prisoners that have been on this status up to ten years (that I know
of). Some have had no violations in several years yet remain caged 24/7
like some rabid, volatile beast.
Many of us have no one to reach out to for aid and assistance. More than
one is being held for past acts or political reasons while others
committing the same or worse acts are given a year with a cellmate in
ad-seg then released back to general population.
The South Central Correctional Center hands out this status as though it
were candy to any prisoner who staff seem to have personal issues with.
And it continues because we have no one to assist us.