It’s been rough these past couple months at Gulf Correctional
Institution Annex, that is ever since prisoners attempted to have a
non-violent sit down. On 8 September 2016 Administration walked around
to every dorm stating “We going to treat a non-violent sit down just
like a violent one.” When it came to awaken A.M. food service workers to
report to work, all prisoners sat on their bunk in silence. At
approximately 2:05AM administration gave a final call in L-Dorm for food
service workers to report to their assigned post for work. Every
prisoner refused to leave the dorm and sat on their bunk.
Once the sun began to rise prisoners became aware of the large number of
heavily armed Rapid Response Team (RRT) officers in full body armor
marching towards L-Dorm. A sledgehammer came crashing through two open
bay windows. Once an opening was cleared, officers armed with 12 gauge
shot guns started aiming on those prisoners sitting on their bunks in
L-Dorm. Warden Blackwood ordered all prisoners to lay on their bellies
with their hands on head. The warden ordered officers to switch to live
rounds, safeties off, any prisoner gets off his bunk shoot to kill.
Once the prisoners in K-Dorm and Q-Dorm witnessed how Administration and
RRT members was mistreating prisoners in L-Dorm they started standing up
against our oppressors. RRT members smashed out a window in K-Dorm and
deployed Pepperball Launching System (PLS). RRT members began extracting
K-Dorm prisoners, zip tieing them, and emergency shipping those
prisoners. While in Q-Dorm prisoners were ordered to go into their cells
and close the doors, RRT entered Q-Dorm using Pepperball Launching
System (PLS), noise flash distraction devices, and stinger rubberball
grenades.
One prisoner was disabled and confined to a wheelchair due to having
only one leg. This Muslim disabled prisoner had a stinger rubberball
grenade explode under the wheelchair. Officers days later was heard
bragging how it launched the prisoner out of his wheelchair and into a
cell! While in L-Dorm hours went by laying on bellies, prisoners were
denied restroom privileges and forced to urinate into empty powerade
bottles or on the floor next to their bunk. Only times prisoners had
permission to sit up was when bag lunches arrived during breakfast,
lunch and dinner. No drink was provided at any meal to prevent
dehydration. Prisoners began to beg for water around evening. Captain
Shwarz followed by armed RRT members entered L-2. Captain Schwarz had a
9mm handgun in his hand, walked up to the prisoner who had been
requesting water out the window, leveled the handgun on the inmate and
threatened to blow his head off if he did not cease his actions.
Prisoner was then zip tied and escorted to confinement.
The following day inmates was rounded up and placed in Q-Dorm which
became Emergency Confinement. Administration rounded up the majority of
prisoners who had ties to one affiliation or another. This was
administration’s excuse for their excessive force used. The gangs didn’t
force prisoners to participate in the sitdown but as far as the warden
was concern that’s who the blame was going to fall on. Prisoners in
Emergency Confinement were placed under investigation, given falsified
disciplinary reports, unjustly use of force in the form of CS gas,
placed in scalding hot showers for decontamination, escorted back to the
same cell that had not been decontaminated, forced to sleep on steel +
concrete for 63.5 hours, and had suffered a beating from the hands of
officers.
All prisoners in Q-Dorm have been shipped after 60 days. Only 18
prisoners remain now, and have been escorted to P-Dorm regular
confinement. I am the prisoner who suffered beating from Sergeant Kirk
who was escorting me to rec. Captain Schwarz told Sergeant Kirk to “take
care that little bitch for me.” Once outside and out the view the camera
Sergeant Kirk struck me in the back of the head with a closed fist,
slammed me viciously to the ground, elbowed me to the back the head,
while trying to force my hands above my head in handcuffs. I don’t know
why out of the hundred some prisoners in Emergency Confinement that I
was left behind and not transferred. As of now I’ve been sentenced to
150 days disciplinary confinement, my DR’s consist of “Refuse to Work,”
“Participating in Minor Disturbance,” “Gang Related Activity,” and
“Disorderly Conduct.” My grievances are being trashed and I expect more
hands-on retaliation upon my release from confinement. This is all
results of September 9th at Gulf Correctional Institution Annex.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We’ve printed a lot of
reports about the protests on September 9, both as part of the
United Front for Peace in Prisons Day of Peace and Solidarity, and part
of the broader work strike. It is good to hear more details about the
unity and struggle put into action on that day. We also want to publicly
document that brutal, terroristic and illegal behavior of Florida DOC
staff towards the peaceful protesters at Gulf CI Annex. Humyn rights in
action in the United $tates of Amerikkka.
It is not surprising that the prison administrators blame lumpen
organizations (LOs) for the action. Although LOs in some prisons serve a
negative role by pitting prisoners against each other, in many places
they have taken a positive role and stepped up to push unity and
struggle against the criminal injustice system. The potential for these
organizations of oppressed nations, which already have a strong cadre
and the ability to quickly mobilize many, is correctly identified as a
threat by the administration. And it is our job as revolutionaries to
help members push these organizations towards progressive action.