Pursuits of justice for religious rights are maliciously being hampered
and restricted within the Lovelock Correction Center (LCC) in Lovelock,
Nevada. Prisoners fighting religious repression are becoming victims of
retaliatory transfers to the maximum security High Desert State Prison;
a facility reputed for physical abuse, assaults, and beatings by its
staff. High Desert State Prison has been and continues to be a deterrent
to and punishment for filing grievances and lawsuits against the
misconduct and constitutional violations being perpetrated and committed
by LCC staff.
In 2009 six prisoners housed at the LCC were transferred to High Desert
State Prison after filing grievances against Lovelock staff for
destroying the worship place of their earth-based religious practices.
In 2011 a single individual was also transferred to HDSP for his
pursuits against the Nevada Department of Corrections in relation to his
Jewish practices and the LCC law library conditions.
Most recently, on March 6 2012 SAMAEL lost a member after he was
transferred to HDSP. This prisoner had recently filed suit against
several Lovelock CC staff in response to religious discrimination and
abuse. Threats of retaliation and actual events of retaliation are an
ongoing and increasingly recurring tool of intimidation and abuse used
by the Lovelock staff as well as at other Nevada institutions.
Toleration of such actions must be eliminated and opposition must arise
from the ranks of all voices willing to scream justice! Justice!
Justice!
SAMAEL speaks out and calls for aid against retaliation. One’s voice may
be heard, but many will cause revolution! Let your voice join in.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This is another good example of the
failure of the grievance systems in Amerikan prisons, which pretend to
offer prisoners a way to fight for their legal rights and hold prison
administrators to their own rules. In reality the grievance process
often only serves to identify the “troublemakers” who expect prisons to
follow their own policies and are willing to speak out when this is not
done. Then grievances can be ignored and prisoners filing them punished
for their efforts.
Even though this is how filing grievances plays out in many
circumstances, we also know from our own experience that “playing by the
rules” occasionally leads to significant improvements, although often
temporary, in our ability to organize for our ultimate goals.
While our movement is too weak to take on the oppressors in armed
struggle to overthrow the underlying causes of the corrupt grievance
systems, we must continue to use legal means of redress to make and keep
space for our movement to grow. This is why we have supported a
grievance
campaign to demand our grievances be addressed. We have petitions
for the following states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Missouri, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, Texas and Virginia. Write to us for a copy, or if
you are in a state without a petition volunteer to modify a generic
petition to meet the legal requirements of your state. To get involved,
see USW campaign info
here.