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.
We in facility “A” Ad-Seg Unit A1 will be following suit with a hunger
strike July 8 2011, one week after the Secure Housing Unit (SHU) strike
begins here at Pelican Bay State Prison (PBSP). Your support would be
highly appreciated.
I am requesting to be provided the PBSP SHU strike campaign update with
flier. Any information that you could assist in this endeavor would be
greatly appreciated.
Letters or phone calls made in support of the abolishment of these foul,
inhumane and unsanitary living conditions would be highly appreciated.
Thank you. Could you please forward most recent Under Lock &
Key.
Thank you.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We have received news from other A units in
Pelican Bay that they are going to be participating in the hunger strike
as well. Isolation is so severe in Pelican Bay that many had not heard
of the strike until receiving our notice, but word is spreading through
many avenues and supporters on the outside and support is strong and
growing.
On June 21 I received the [Hunger Strike] campaign update and I do truly
admire your organization attempting to liberate not only confined
prisoners but all oppressed people within the nation. Thank you!
Tomorrow, on July 1, I will most definitely be participating in the mass
hunger strike here in Pelican Bay State Prison. I’m under lock and key
isolated in administrative segregation awaiting transfer to Corcoran SHU
for over 17 months now, and this inhumane, dehumanizing and repressive
treatment of these control unit prisoners must come to an end. I am
tired of being targeted and psychologically tortured in solitary
confinement, which causes severe mental harm to the point of having
conversations with myself. This is a form of sensory deprivation and
must stop immediately.
Another reason why I will be protesting along with the SHU prisoners is
because here in CDCR there are no simple programs such as tattoo removal
programs. Some prisoners like myself were incarcerated as juveniles and
tried as adults, and we made mistakes by putting tattoos on our bodies.
So by attempting to truly rehabilitate myself I want all my tattoos
removed. As a prisoner I should have access to programs like this. It
makes me question, does California Department of Corrections deserve the
title of “rehabilitation?”
MIM(Prisons) responds: There’s no question about it, they do not
deserve the title “Rehabilitation” which was added years ago without any
change in their practice or policies to justify the term. Former
prisoners who spent years in these isolation cells can attest to that.
The lucky ones have family or find organizations with the resources to
support them. But too many are stuck in destructive cycles. Meanwhile,
there is a criminal mentality that penetrates the whole populace in the
United $tates based in capitalist individualism. It is up to
revolutionaries to develop independent institutions that can truly
address the rehabilitation needs of the oppressed lumpen who have more
interest in revolutionary change than most Amerikans who sit idly by
while hundreds of thousands of people are tortured in their country.
I am writing this letter to you to express my concern for the prisoners
held in Pelican Bay State Prison’s short-corridor Group D. It is my
understanding that these people have no disciplinary charges, but are
being held in extreme isolation, unable to send photographs to their
families or speak to them on the phone, which clearly is in violation of
the First Amendment. You must meet the “important” and “necessary” test
before you can restrict or censor inmates’ outgoing mail. ( Bressman
v. Farrier, 825 F. Supp. 231(N.D. Iowa 1993); Altizer v.
Deeds, 191 F. 3d 540 (4th Cir. 1999); Stow v. Grimaldi,
993 F. 2d 1002 (1st Cir. 1993). For telephones see: McMaster v.
Pung, 984 F.2d 948, 953 (8th Cir. 1993) ).
I am concerned that these prisoners, who are under your responsibility,
are being denied their Constitutional right to due process, equal
protection rights, and cruel and unusual punishment. Not only do these
inmates not have any disciplinary charges, but IGI is intimidating and
harassing them into fabricating information to avoid false gang
validations. This is illegal and upsetting, and meets the “significant
and atypical” standard. See: Ayers v. Ryan, 152 F.3d 77 (2d
Cir. 1998); Taylor v. Rodriguez, 238 F.3d 188 (2d Cir. 2001);
and Hatch v. District of Columbia, 184 F.3d 846 (D.C. Circ.
1999). This is a violation of legal ethics, and as a citizen of the
state of California, I expect fair treatment of prisoners from a state
employee rather than allowing these gross violations of the Constitution
to happen right under your nose.
Studies prove time and time again that prisoners who have contact with
their family are able to rehabilitate much better than those who are
isolated. They are better able to adjust to society when they are
released, and avoid being sent back to prison. It is completely
irresponsible that you would permit IGI to cause this potential
psychological damage to a person, when they are supposed to be allowed
these privileges.
Since you are the Warden of Pelican Bay State Prison, I am asking that
you intervene in these illegal and irresponsible practices going on in
short-corridor Group D. Please allow the prisoners held there their full
privileges according to CDCR policies, and end the harassment and
intimidation of prisoners, especially ones who have no information, and
no disciplinary actions.
Thank you for taking the time to read this letter. I also thank you for
your future efforts to resolve this problem.
It is always my pleasure to reach out and re-establish lines of
communication. I hope that you all are in the best of God’s care. One
can never be too sure in this line of work. I’m well, as i get ready for
this July 1 2011 hunger strike for the cruel & unusual treatment we
prisoners held in solitary confinement have endured. All the same it is
an enduring struggle that we must fight in order to change our reality.
I am writing because i need you all to forward me that issue dated in
the month of June 2011 called Under Lock & Key, because I
did not receive it. So if it’s possible that I can get a back issue I
would sincerely appreciate it.
Now, I look forward to re-opening the lines of communications because
although it’s not been my thought that they were cut off we are
beginning to track it better, so it’s all good sometimes.
Sincerely, a California prisoner
MIM(Prisons) adds: This writer hadn’t heard from us in over two
years due to censorship in California. But as the hunger strike
approached, the staff at Pelican Bay State Prison were on their best
behavior. While the strike organizers were already having sit-downs with
the Warden’s office before the strike began, censorship has eased for
the many organizations that struggle to get their mail to those being
held there. A month ago, staff claimed to not even know their own
policies in attempts to censor our mail. But the prisoners’ struggle has
already had an impact of loosening their attempts to isolate us from
each other.
This is a call for all prisoners in Security Housing Units (SHUs),
Administrative Segregation (Ad-Seg), and General Populations (GP), as
well as the free oppressed and non-oppressed people to support the
indefinite July 1st 2011 peaceful Hunger Strike in protest of the
violation of our civil/human rights, here at Pelican Bay State Prison
Security Housing Unit (PBSP-SHU), short corridor D1 through D4 and its
overflow D5 through D10. It should be clear to everyone that none of
the hunger strike participants want to die, but due to our
circumstances, whereas that state of California has sentenced all of us
on Indeterminate SHU program to a “civil death” merely on the word of a
prison informer (snitch).
The purpose of the Hunger Strike is to combat both the Ad-Seg/SHU
psychological and physical torture, as well as the justifications used
of support treatment of the type that lends to prisoners being subjected
to a civil death. Those subjected to indeterminate SHU programs are
neglected and deprived of the basic human necessities while withering
away in a very isolated and hostile environment.
Prison officials have utilized the assassination of prisoners’ character
to each other as well as the general public in order to justify their
inhumane treatment of prisoners. The “code of silence” used by guards
allows them the freedom to use everything at their disposal in order to
break those prisoners who prison officials and correctional officers
(C/O) believe cannot be broken.
It is this mentality that set in motion the establishing of the short
corridor, D1 through D4 and its D5 though D10 overflow. This mentality
has created the current atmosphere in which C/Os and prison officials
agreed upon plan to break indeterminate SHU prisoners. This protracted
attack on SHU prisoners cuts across every aspect of the prison’s
function: Food, mail, visiting, medical, yard, hot/cold temperatures,
privileges (canteen, packages, property, etc.), isolation, cell
searches, family/friends, and socio-culture, economic, and political
deprivation. This is nothing short of the psychological/physical torture
of SHU/Ad-Seg prisoners. It takes place day in and day out, without a
break or rest.
The prison’s gang intelligence unit was extremely angered at the fact
that prisoners who had been held in SHU under inhuman conditions for
anywhere from ten (10) to forty (40) years had not been broken. So the
gang intelligence unit created the “short corridor” and intensified the
pressure of their attacks on the prisoners housed there. The object was
to use blanket pressure to encourage these particular isolated prisoners
to debrief (i.e. snitch on order to be released from SHU).
The C/Os and administrative officials are all in agreement and all do
their part in depriving short corridor prisoners and its overflow of
their basic civil/human rights. None of the deliberate attacks are a
figment of anyone’s imagination. These continuous attacks are carried
out against prisoners to a science by all of them. They are deliberate
and conscious acts against essentially defenseless prisoners.
It is these ongoing attacks that have led to the short corridor and
overflow SHU prisoners to organize ourselves themselves around an
indefinite Hunger Strike in an effort to combat the dehumanizing
treatment we prisoners of all races are subjected to on a daily basis.
Therefore, on July 1, 2011, we ask that all prisoners throughout the
State of California who have been suffering injustices in General
Population, Administrative Segregation and solitary confinement, etc. to
join in our peaceful strike to put a stop to the blatant violations of
prisoners’ civil/human rights. As you know, prison gang investigators
have used threats of validation and other means to get prisoners to
engage in a protracted war against each other in order to serve their
narrow interests. If you cannot participate in the Hunger Strike then
support it in principle by not eating for the first 24 hours of the
strike.
I say that those of you who carry yourselves as principled human beings,
no matter you’re housing status, must fight to right this and other
egregious wrongs. Although it is “us” today (united New Afrikans,
Whites, Northern and Southern Mexicans, and others) it will be you all
tomorrow. It is in your interests to peacefully support us in this
protest today, and to beware of agitators, provocateurs, and
obstructionists, because they are the ones who put ninety percent of us
back here because they could not remain principled even within
themselves.
The
following
demands are all similar to what is allowed in other super max
prisons (e.g. federal Florence, Colorado, Ohio and Indiana State
Penitentiaries). The claim by CDCR and PBSP that implementing the
practices of the federal prison system or that of other states would be
a threat to safety and security are exaggerations.
The names of representatives of all major races listed as co-signers.
The prisoners say they are “All races Whites; New Afrikans; Southern
Mexs., and Northern Mexs.”
Attention: beginning July 1, 2011, several inmates housed indefinitely
in PBSP-SHU D-Facility, Corridor Isolation, will begin an indefinite
hunger strike in order to draw attention to, and to peacefully protest,
25 years of torture via CDCR’s arbitrary, illegal, and progressively
more punitive policies and practices, as summarized in the accompanying
Formal
Complaint. PBSP-SHU, D-Facility Corridor inmates’ hunger strike
protest is to continue indefinitely until the following changes are
made:
OUR FIVE CORE DEMANDS:
Individual Accountability - This is in response to PBSP’s application of
“group punishment” as a means to address individual inmates rule
violations. This includes the administration’s abusive, pretextual use
of “safety and concern” to justify what are unnecessary punitive acts.
This policy has been applied in the context of justifying indefinite SHU
status, and progressively restricting our programming and
privileges.
Abolish the Debriefing Policy, and Modify Active/Inactive Gang Status
Criteria - the debriefing policy is illegal and redundant, as pointed
out in the Formal Complaint [IV-A, p. 7]. The Active/Inactive gang
status criteria must be modified in order to comply with state law and
applicable CDCR rule and regulations [eg, see Formal Complaint, p. 7,
IV-B] as follows:
Cease the use of innocuous association to deny inactive status,
Cease the use of informant/debriefer allegations of illegal gang
activity to deny inactive status, unless such allegations are also
supported by factual corroborating evidence, in which case CDCR-PBSP
staff shall and must follow the regulations by issuing a rule violation
report and affording the inmate his due process required by law.
Comply with US Commission 2006 Recommendations Regarding an End to
Long-Term Solitary Confinement - CDCR shall implement the findings and
recommendations of the US commission on safety and abuse in America’s
prisons final 2006 report regarding CDCR SHU facilities as follows:
End Conditions of Isolation (p. 14) Ensure that prisoners in SHU and
Ad-Seg (Administrative Segregation) have regular meaningful contact and
freedom from extreme physical deprivations that are known to cause
lasting harm. (pp. 52-57)
Make Segregation a Last Resort (p. 14). Create a more productive form of
confinement in the areas of allowing inmates in SHU and Ad-Seg
[Administrative Segregation] the opportunity to engage in meaningful
self-help treatment, work, education, religious, and other productive
activities relating to having a sense of being a part of the
community.
End Long-Term Solitary Confinement. Release inmates to general prison
population who have been warehoused indefinitely in SHU for the last 10
to 40 years (and counting). Provide SHU Inmates Immediate Meaningful
Access to:
Adequate natural sunlight
Quality health care and treatment, including the mandate of transferring
all PBSP-SHU inmates with chronic health care problems to the New Folsom
Medical SHU facility.
Provide Adequate Food - cease the practice of denying adequate food, and
provide wholesome nutritional meals including special diet meals, and
allow inmates to purchase additional vitamin supplements.
PBSP staff must cease their use of food as a tool to punish SHU
inmates.
Provide a sergeant/lieutenant to independently observe the serving of
each meal, and ensure each tray has the complete issue of food on
it.
Feed the inmates whose job it is to serve SHU meals with meals that are
separate from the pans of food sent from kitchen for SHU meals.
Expand and Provide Constructive Programming and Privileges for
Indefinite SHU Status Inmates. Examples include:
Expand visiting regarding amount of time and adding one day per
week.
Allow one photo per year.
Allow a weekly phone call.
Allow Two (2) annual packages per year. A 30 lb. package based on “item”
weight and not packaging and box weight.
Expand canteen and package items allowed. Allow us to have the items in
their original packaging [the cost for cosmetics, stationary, envelopes,
should not count towards the max draw limit]
More TV channels.
Allow TV/Radio combinations, or TV and small battery operated radio
Allow Hobby Craft Items - art paper, colored pens, small pieces of
colored pencils, watercolors, chalk, etc.
Allow sweat suits and watch caps.
Allow wall calendars.
Install pull-up/dip bars on SHU yards.
Allow correspondence courses that require proctored exams.
This flyer can be used as a whole-sheet flyer, or print it double-sided,
cut it in half, and it becomes a half-sheet flyer. Use it to spread the
word about the
striking
prisoners in Pelican Bay State Prison.
On the flyer there is an example of a support letter to send to
administrators about this issue. It is reprinted below for your
convenience.
Dear Warden Lewis,
I am writing this letter to you to express my concern for the prisoners
held in Pelican Bay State Prison’s short-corridor Group D. It is my
understanding that these people have no disciplinary charges, but are
being held in extreme isolation, unable to send photographs to their
families or speak to them on the phone.
I am concerned that these prisoners, who are under your responsibility,
are being denied their Constitutional right to due process. Not only do
these prisoners not have any disciplinary charges, but IGI is
intimidating and harassing them into fabricating information to avoid
false gang validations. This is illegal and upsetting. As a citizen of
the state of California, I fund your paycheck, and I expect more from a
state employee than to allow these gross violations of the Constitution
to happen right under your nose.
Studies prove time and time again that prisoners who have contact with
their family are able to rehabilitate much better than those who are
isolated. They are better able to adjust to society when they are
released, and avoid being sent back to prison. It is completely
irresponsible that you would permit IGI to cause this potential damage
in a person’s life, when they are supposed to be allowed these
privileges.
Since you are the Warden of Pelican Bay State Prison, I am asking that
you intervene in these illegal and irresponsible practices going on in
short-corridor Group D. Please allow the prisoners held there their full
privileges according to CDCR policies, and end the harassment and
intimidation of prisoners, especially ones who have no information, and
no disciplinary actions.
Thank you for taking the time to read this letter. I also thank you for
your future efforts to resolve this problem.
I’m writing to enlighten you of the new millennium oppression going on
in Pelican Bay short-corridor. Since 2006 over 210 prisoners are being
housed here unjustly by IGI (the gang task force) AKA “Green Wall” which
is known to utilize prisoners who will debrief against other prisoners.
Their inhuman treatment towards prisoners who will not lie and become
false informers for IGI “Green Wall” helps keep the short-corridor
program of oppression functioning.
We have been placed in short-corridor Group D, falsely labeled as gang
members and housed here isolated for non-disciplinary actions. We are
not allowed Group D privileges; the short-corridor has its own set of
rules structured by IGI. They have no oversight and are allowed to be
inhuman towards prisoners who don’t believe in their devilish
propaganda! We understand we are in prison, we are serving our time
disciplinary-free, all we are asking for is fairness. Below are just a
few of many reasons why on July 1 2011 the short-corridor and SHU will
go on a food strike to protest our inhuman isolation.
If we must be placed in this short-corridor let it be for disciplinary
actions we have done.
IGI must stop the abuse of their power to manipulate/intimidate
prisoners to falsely accuse other prisoners of being so-called gang
members to justify their inhuman objective.
We must be allowed to receive all of Group D privileges, especially us
in the short-corridor who have not done anything to warrant inhuman
isolation.
We must be allowed to at least send our family members a picture. It’s
been over 18 years since I have sent my family a picture, and other
prisoners go even longer!
We must be able to talk to family on the phone. It is important that we
have family support and help on personal rehabilitation.
I would like to ask if you can help us spread the word and on July 1
2011 have a candlelight vigil in support of us and to show solidarity in
our struggle, or any other such act that may be able to help bring
attention to our conditions.
I just completed my fourth reading of a pamphlet I received from you
titled “Shut Down Control Units in Prison,” and I found it in step with
my own thoughts on the subject.
Your interpretation on how prisoners are validated is right on point and
I’m living proof of it, my validation was based on my being in
possession of written materials and an image of a dragon. But the inept
way in which I was validated isn’t what made me go into a state of
frenzy, it was the fact that after being in the prison system for 12
years, prior to my being validated, I had no idea of what the validation
process was. As one who spent a great deal of his time studying the
rules and regulations of the prison system, I can only guess that the
reason I overlooked the validation process is because I became too busy
fighting to make a difference in other areas of the prison system, but
now that I’m in the grasp of the demon I’m going to alter the hell he
has pulled so many into.
After spending about a year in the SHU trying to figure out how the hell
I was validated, I rolled up my sleeves and started working on how to
not only get myself out of the SHU, but the multitude of others around
me. But I soon found out that a large number of prisoners in the SHU
feel so defeated that they have given up hope and become content with
being in the SHU. Some have even become proud of being validated and
don’t want to hear anything from me about what we can do to get out of
the SHU.
One of the first cases that I started studying about the validation
process is a case you wrote about in the pamphlet you sent to me which
is the Castillo case. Now don’t get me wrong the case knocked on the
door of change, but it should have kicked down the door. An example of
what I’m referring to is the rule change requiring that a prisoner has
to be in possession of items such as written materials or symbols on
their body before they are placed in the SHU. But what the attorneys who
represented Castillo didn’t ask the court to make a requirement of is
that the CDCR must list the names of which written materials, tattoos
and symbols are “gang related,” because as we now know the CDCR can say
anything that they want is a gang related item.
I’ve written to the attorneys who represented Castillo, and one told me
that they no longer work on prison cases and the other one who you wrote
about in the article told me that he wanted $5000 to answer my questions
about the Castillo ruling. So I filed a 602-appeal, and to make a long
story short my appeal was shot down due to my filing it too late, and
although that door was closed another one has opened and I’ll keep you
updated on the outcome.
Another thing you wrote about prisoners being in the SHU that I agree
with is how atrocious it is that a prisoner can be put in the SHU for a
determinate term for committing a violent act, but a prisoner who has a
tattoo, symbol or certain written materials in their possession will be
put in the SHU without committing any violent action for an
indeterminate term for a minimum of 6 years (this also is a stipulation
that the attorneys for Castillo could have changed). In conversations
that I’ve had with some Institutional Gang Investigators (IGI), they
have agreed with me about the flaws in the validation process, but also
said that it isn’t their responsibility to correct it. I can understand
why they would say it, so myself and other prisoners must pick up the
baton and run with it towards the finish line of change. It’s time for
me to step down from my podium speaking about subjects you already have
a full understanding of, so in closing I thank you for all that you are
doing for those of us behind prison walls and I look forward to hearing
from you again.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Check out our campaign against
control
units for more information on the fight against these torture
chambers filled with people on false gang validations.
I want to send a fraternal embrace to everyone. I am writing from the
Pelican Bay Security Housing Unit (SHU). I write this letter in response
to some stepped up repression that seems to have increased here starting
last year in 2009. It is important to understand when these restrictions
occur so as to see more broadly if such occurrences are random or a
wider campaign. I have within the last year had “returned to sender”
eight pieces of mail from MIM(Prisons). I was never notified from the
prison, and I had no idea of these returns or rejections until
MIM(Prisons) notified me of these refusals. I reach out to highlight
this situation, this tragedy that is occurring to me so that these
lessons may be used by a receptive ear, worked with in some way, and
possibly overcome in the future.
Censorship exists, not censorship of some technological weapons or some
type of recipe for a plague of sorts but censorship of ideas, banning of
political theory that is not compliant with the state norm. I have
always taken on legal battles, jailhouse lawyer activities, anything to
right a wrong and resist an injustice system that was built on the land
of my ancestors. For this prison resistance I am rewarded by the state
with an aggressive push to keep excellent political theory from reaching
me, from comrades being able to send a letter of encouragement or
perhaps a book on political science.
I was receiving literature and Maoist books from MIM for several years
while on the “mainline” general population and I delved into those works
so many times that even though I am currently subjected to censorship of
political correspondence from MIM(Prisons) I have a strong understanding
of the society we live in and the need for political power. It is
situations like what I am currently undergoing that really drive home
the need to liberate oppressed nations. Here in the SHU, Raza cannot
even learn or read about their ancient pre-Columbian languages as the
state says this is gang related. Now political science, the ability to
theorize and have ideas of a society outside of what currently exists,
is denied us.
Occupation is done on many levels all over the world. In some countries
occupation may be more subtle but if you look close enough the
similarities are there. When the Japanese occupied Korea after the war
the Korean language was banned; the Korean people could only speak
Japanese. All Korean history and political literature outside Japanese
imperialism was censored. We must learn from history; not just our
specific history of our particular country of origin. A study of all
histories will show that what is occurring here has occurred many times.
The situation in California prisons in particular should be noted and
learned from; the censorship we are experiencing has been employed in
years past. This targeting of political organizations has been seen and
felt on many levels, but today’s censorship comes at historic times. It
is because contemporary ideas and revolutionary theory in general and
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism in particular is essential for future struggles
and because of the current “awakening” of oppressed nations people in
prisons that CDCR has begun a program of censorship particularly in its
control units, i.e. SHUs where it is no coincidence that the most
politically advanced are held captive. Getting the independent press,
such as ULK, in the hands of the imprisoned masses is of
extreme importance.
The people are fighting to educate the political prisoners, uplift the
consciousness of prisoners, and bring politics to the prison houses
nationwide, and build the prison base for revolution. At the same time
the ruling class sees the 2+ million potentially revolutionary prisoners
behind bars and knows that every prisoner who takes up the struggle for
a better society is another addition to resist their program. They
understand that prisoners in general are becoming radicalized yet they
know they can’t shut down all so called “freedom of the press,” so they
spend their time and resources on what they feel are their prime target
group or persons of influence which are what they label the people held
in control units. By doing so they are basically isolating these
comrades from correspondence, political literature or study material of
any sort, even of basic contact with comrades on the outside.
This is being done to dull or attempt to dull the revolutionary edge in
the prison population, starting in SHUs and expecting this dullness to
permeate the rest of the population. The need for people who still have
the ability to receive any papers, newsletters or literature from
MIM(Prisons) to do so is of utmost importance, with vigor and hunger as
if you will never get the chance again because once in a SHU you will be
censored. The need to support independent press like ULK is on
top of the priority list and should be done financially or any other
way. It is times like now that I appreciate a crisp uncut publication
like ULK; when only watered-down periodicals are allowed to
reach me I see how precious ULK is.
I am embarking on another legal battle for the censorship here in
Pelican Bay and i encourage others to do the same. United we will
overcome this battle.