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.
They don’t care. They’re not involved or don’t want to get involved,
but they are. Their involvement just masquerades as indifference
or inattention. It is the silent “acquiescence” of the millions that
supports the system, your silence becomes approval, for it does
nothing to interrupt the system. People use all sorts of excuses for
their indifference. They appeal to god as a shorthand route for
supporting the status quo. They talk about law and order, but
look at the present system, look at the present social order of
society. Do you see god? Do you see law and order? There’s
nothing but disorder, and instead of law and order there is only the
illusion of security. It’s an illusion because it is built upon a
long history of injustices; racism, criminality and enslavement and
genocide of millions. Many people say it is insane to resist the
system, but actually, it’s insane not to.
While news of online spying by the U.$. government is growing, a court
case may provide even broader access for government agencies. This case
involves
Lavabit,
the former email provider for MIM(Prisons). On January 28, the owner
of Lavabit went to court to appeal the contempt of court ruling against
the company for failing to hand over encryption keys to his email
service. The 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals has not yet rendered a
verdict, but it will have significant implications on what the
government can demand of email providers in the future. This case
revolves around the Lavabit SSL keys. These keys were used to decrypt
incoming traffic from Lavabit users accessing via an encrypted
connection. If Lavabit had given up the keys before shutting down their
operation, the government could capture every users password next time
they logged in and have full access to their email.
Last June Lavabit was ordered to give the government a live feed of
email activity for a specific account. People generally assume this was
Edward Snowden’s account based on court filing information that refers
to his violations of the Espionage Act and theft of government property.
Lavabit founder Lader Levison offered to transmit the information
requested after 60 days, claiming he needed time to reprogram his system
to collect the information. We can’t be sure what Levison would have
ultimately handed over, but this is further evidence that users can not
rely on their email providers for security. In fact, in court Lavabit’s
attorney claims that Levison had complied with at least one similar
court order in the past.(1)
In July, after Levison’s delay, the FBI served Levison with a search
warrant demanding the private SSL keys that would enable them to decrypt
all traffic to and from the site. The government promised to only use
the keys for the individual targeted and said they would not spy on the
other 410,000 Lavabit users.(2)
The FBI had already begun collecting encrypted data from Lavabit’s
upstream provider in anticipation of getting the key to decrypt it, and
they still have this data.(2) If the government has the SSL keys, all
emails for an unknown period of time for all users on the Lavabit email
system are in the hands of the government.
After an August 1 court order upholding the government’s demand for the
Lavabit SSL keys, Levison did turn them over, but as an 11 page printout
in 4-point type.(1) This was clearly an attempt to comply in form
without making the key usable, or at least delaying its usability. But
in spite of the paper form, the government now has the Lavabit SSL keys,
all they need to do is manually enter the 2,560 characters. While
tedious, this is certainly doable and we think it likely that they
quickly completed this work.
The government responded to the printout by demanding an electronic
format and on August 6 began fining Levison $5,000 per day until he
complied with the FBI’s order. Levison shut down Lavabit altogether on
August 8.(2)
Although the government and the appellate court Judge hearing the case
both claim the SSL keys could not be used for anything other than the
individual target in question, the search warrant and sanctions order
both place no restrictions on what can be done with the key.(2) Not that
we think the government complies with these sorts of formalities anyway.
8 March 2014, Jackson, MS – Today hundreds attended the funeral service
for Mayor Chokwe Lumumba who died after just eight months in office. His
son, Chokwe Antar Lumumba, eulogized his father. He has also announced
his plans to run in an April 8 election to replace his father as Mayor
of Jackson.
Days before his death Chokwe was sick with a cold. On 25 February, he
was pronounced dead of “natural causes,” with local officials claiming
it was heart failure. But family requests for an autopsy were denied.
His family is working with the National Caucus of Black Lawyers to fund
an independent autopsy. Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam has
offered to put up the money for the autopsy.(1)
Chokwe Lumumba was a leading figure in the struggle for the liberation
of New Afrika since the founding of the Provisional Government of the
Republic of New Afrika in 1968. He went on to launch and work with
organizations such as the New Afrikan Peoples’ Organization and the
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement. As a lawyer he fought many historic cases
for New Afrikan humyn rights in the United $tates. He represented Assata
Shakur, Tupac Shakur and the Scott sisters, to name a few.
Many close to Lumumba are questioning his sudden death, following his
election in a state with a long history of murdering New Afrikans. In
our report on his election, we questioned his ability to
build
dual power in Mississippi in line with the New Afrikan Liberation
Movement from within the city government. We pointed out that true dual
power must have an independent base of force from which to defend
itself. Only an independent autopsy can tell whether this was a case of
political assassination, brutally proving that very point. Whatever the
cause of death, it was quite untimely for such a leading national
liberation figure who just won a major election. We will continue to
watch the developments in Jackson where young New Afrikans must prove
themselves as determined as Lumumba and so many others of his generation
who fought for socialism and national independence for New Afrika.
In November 2013, the elected government of Ukraine caused a stir for
rejecting a deal with the European Union citing the overly burdensome
terms of the aid package offered by the U.$.-dominated International
Monetary Fund (IMF). Since
we
last reported on Ukraine (see ULK 36), opposition forces
with Western support have implemented a regime change, ousting president
Viktor Yanukovich from the country. This put a deal with the IMF back on
the table. Ukrainians once again face the prospect of more wealth being
sucked from their country via imperialist loans and imposed economic
policies.
While opposition to the oligarchy that has ruled Ukraine has united the
Western imperialists with Ukrainian fascist parties, austerity measures
imposed by the IMF will threaten this alliance shortly. The new offer
from the IMF will require hiking energy prices that have been subsidized
by the state, one of the deal breakers cited by Yanukovich in November.
The regime change was a loss for Russian economic interests. In
response, on 27 February 2014, Russian forces seized control of the
Crimean peninsula, a majority Russian region of the current Ukraine
state. On 6 March 2014 Crimea’s regional assembly voted to secede from
Ukraine and join the Russian Federation. The next day leaders of the
Russian Parliament said they would support this move. The decision calls
for a referendum for the people of Crimea to vote on this, scheduled for
16 March.(1)
The New York Times has made much of the battle over the right
to self-determination in recent strife between the United $tates and the
Russian Federation. Struggles in the Black Sea region in recent decades
have been primarily inter-imperialist battles, and there is no principle
behind the imperialists’ actions except for their economic interests to
have access to more markets, natural resources and people to exploit.
Meanwhile, the proletariat’s interest is defined by putting an end to
this exploitation. Therefore we support the side that most threatens the
control and penetration of the imperialists over the oppressed nations.
The Amerikans are saying the Russian invasion of Crimea is totally
different from their meddling in Libya, Venezuela, Syria, Iran… just to
name a few. But this is all posturing and a question of tactics, and the
United $tates often is able to use more subtle tactics because of its
greater power. In all cases it is the continuation of imperialist war to
maintain profits.
While the situation in Crimea is still unresolved and potentially
volatile as we write this, Russian officials have been quoted
recognizing Kiev has gone pro-West. At the same time, Russia is talking
with the IMF to get in on the Ukraine bail out.(2)
The IMF was part of the Bretton Woods project, which was organized by
the imperialist countries after World War II in an attempt to prevent
the protectionism and trade barriers that led to the economic crisis in
the capitalist core, and drove them to war in both WWI and WWII. Many
sanctions and trade barriers are being threatened in the current
conflict. But, if Russia is allowed to export some finance capital to
Ukraine as part of the imperialist plan for the country, and Russia gets
to keep Crimea under its sphere of influence, then a hot war between
Russia and the West will likely be averted.
The IMF is basically run by the United $tates, which has 16.75% of the
votes. Meanwhile the U.$.-led imperialist camp (U.$., Japan, Germany,
France, U.K., Italy and Canada) has 43.74% of votes. Russia has only
2.39%.(3) In addition to the IMF loans, the United $tates has talked of
unilateral aid, as long as Ukraine “takes the reforms it needs.”(4) So
Russia will see a significant loss in its economic interests in the
Ukraine overall, but will likely see a small piece of the pie as serving
its interests better than an all out war with the United $tates.
The framework developed at Bretton Woods has been a relatively effective
solution to one of the inherent contradictions of the imperialist
economic system. However, it does not eliminate inter-imperialist
rivalry, it just manages it. While a war on North Amerikan or Western
European soils is being avoided at all costs, it is not out of the
question. It will certainly come before socialism can reach those lands.
War is inherent to imperialism. And it is our position that World War
III has been an ongoing low-intensity war against the Third World by the
imperialists since the end of WWII.(5) In recent decades this war has
been primarily waged by the United $tates. While inter-imperialist war
has been secondary in this period, the struggle between different
imperialist interests is an antagonistic contradiction that cannot be
resolved without ending imperialism. As such conflicts heat up, those in
the imperialist countries will be reminded that imperialism does not
serve their interests when it comes to the threat of annhilation in war.
These conflicts also create breathing room for the oppressed nations to
develop their own political interests independent of imperialism. The
key to the survival of the humyn species is to develop such movements
before the imperialists kill us all.
In the William P. Clements Prison unit in Amarillo, the Texas Department
of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) is now selling us 50 sheets of low quality
paper on commissary for $1.80. Here in the extended cell block, High
Security A.K.A. Segregation, we have showers in our cells. They only
come on 15 minutes per day. We are only issued a clean towel 3 times per
week: Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. So we go Saturday, Sunday and Monday
on the same towel.
Here’s the problem. Once you are done with your shower the spray covers
at least 1/3 of your cell. If you use this towel to dry all this grey
water up you no longer have a towel suitable to dry your body off the
next day after a shower. If we get caught with a second towel for use in
this purpose we receive a disciplinary case for extra necessities. I
personally grieved this issue and it was denied because policy states
we’re only allowed one towel at a time. This is a sanitary issue.
These are just some of the injustices we see here in the Texas
department of Criminal Justice. On another level though Texas inmates
just won a small victory when the federal courts ruled TDCJ was
violating our religious rights by making prisoners of certain faiths
shave or cut their hair, like Rastafarians, Native Americans, Muslims,
Amish, and Jews. We are still waiting for the change in grooming policy
but we won.
MIM(Prisons) responds: Compared to some of the brutality,
long-term isolation, and medical neglect, lack of a clean towel may seem
like a minor issue facing Amerikan prisoners. But it is these minor
issues that really illustrate the irrationality of the prisons in this
country. Why would it be a disciplinary case for a prisoner to have a
second towel to keep his cell clean? How could this good hygiene
practice be dangerous or otherwise problematic? Prisons withold small
“privileges” like this as an arbitrary form of punishment. There is no
educational or reform purpose. There is just a long list of such actions
adding up to unsanitary, disrespectful, unstimulating, and counter
productive living conditions (when prisoners aren’t being beaten,
tortured, starved, or otherwise physically abused).
Prisoners will come together to fight for these minor issues, as we see
with this court victory for religious expression with haircuts in Texas.
It is our job as revolutionaries to take these small battles and use
them as educational opportunities to show others how these issues fit
into the broader system of imperialism where prisons are used as a tool
of social control.
My roommate is serving a life sentence. A few years ago he became
eligible for parole but each year he is denied with an admonition to
“obtain your GED before your next parole hearing.”
He has been in prison 20+ years so why hasn’t he obtained his GED? Is he
ignorant? Lazy? Stubborn? No, each year he submits a request to attend
school and each year his request is denied because “classes are reserved
for inmates with five years or less remaining on their sentences.”
Persyns with life sentences will always have more than five years
remaining.
The parole board Chairpersyn and the Education Director refuse to
compromise. Each states emphatically, “I am in charge and this is my
policy.”
The imperialist/capitalist mindset views power as a goal in and of
itself because imperialism is built upon domination, subjugation, and
starvation of “those other people.”
Socialism/communism views power as a means to a worthy goal. The view is
toward the community or collective, and power is used to help each
persyn find his or her place of function or service within the
collective. A communist who sees a worker on the roadside with a flat
tire will stop and show the worker how to change the tire. The
imperialist will stop and flatten the other three tires, then punish the
worker for being late to work by docking the pay.
In American life we see many selfish abuses of power. For example,
almost 100% of persyns released from prison are at the lower end of the
American socio-economic scale. Yet their criminal convictions will make
them ineligible for low income housing. And if they have a conviction
for a “sex offense,” they are pretty much prohibited from living
anywhere except landfills and moon craters.
Criminal convictions in American “society” restrict employment to
generally the most menial and lowest paying jobs. Yet imperialist judges
demand fines, court costs, and restitution payments begin immediately.
Usually there are additional monthly fees for parole and for
court-ordered treatment programs. Plus, the former prisoner’s drivers
license is suspended or revoked until these payments are made,
effectively hindering the mode of transportation to seek or maintain
employment.
Deification of the individual ego and crushing the down-trodden are
lauded achievements in imperialist nations. The only treatment for these
symptoms is decapitation and removal of the minds that develop and
implement politics designed to keep the impoverished in poverty.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This writer provides some excellent examples
of how the criminal injustice system (CIJ) works to keep the lumpen
class down. And as this article notes, the CIJ is an integral part of
the imperialist system, serving an effective role of social control. The
author outlines the ultimate solution to this problem: overthrowing
imperialism and implementing a socialist dictatorship of the
proletariat. But in the short term we can also fight these repressive
policies through independent institutions of the oppressed that build
the anti-imperialist movement. Two of these that are directly relevant
here are our educational study groups and
literature
for prisoners, and our
Re-lease
on Life program. Both work within the current legal system, the
first to provide educational materials and classes to prisoners
motivated to study, and the second to help prisoners stay out and
politically active once they are released. Write to us to get involved
in building these programs.
Lanesboro Correctional Institution, in Anson County, North Carolina, has
just enacted a gang program, which is nothing shy of draconian. Even for
a state that is draconian to begin with.
It started when these pigs separated all of the inmates who were not
listed as “STG” from the inmates who were considered part of the
“Security Threat Group.” Federal law allows violation of prisoners’
Constitutional rights during times of emergency, when there is a “threat
to the security of the institution.” By naming inmates a “security
threat,” they are basically saying that these inmates have no
Constitutional rights. They are being forced to shower in chains,
handcuffs and shackles, and are pretty much being denied any and all
rights.
The gang program is locked down 23 hours a day, and requires going 6
months infraction free to step down a single step. There are 3 steps in
all, and a class of “STG associate” after that. This could force
prisoners to go infraction free for 2 full years to get out of the
program. Along with this program came a whole new set of rules which
makes it nearly impossible to go infraction free without favoritism from
the police. Of course, the only way you get that is by snitching, which
in such an environment would get a prisoner killed. Being listed as an
associate could be justified by something as small as an officer’s claim
that you said something gang-related, or even my writing this article.
In response to this new policy, prisoners on 3 of the 8 STG blocks have
declared a hunger strike. More prisoners on the STG unit are doing the
same, in an attempt to break down this program in its infancy. The pigs
are responding by cutting off their communication so they cannot be
heard. I only learned of this by accident when a “Non-STG” prisoner was
moved into my block to make room for more STG blocks.
This policy is being carried out in many states as we speak. Gang
members are still human beings, and therefore entitled to the same
protections as everyone else. Prisoners need to stand together
everywhere and shut this down before it goes into full effect.
On 14 February 2014, I won a very small victory in my struggle against
the oppression of political beliefs in the North Carolina Department of
Adult Corrections.
On 10 February 2014, I received two notices from the mail room,
indicating that both the November/December
(#35) and the
January/February
(#36) issues of
Under Lock & Key were being rejected. The reasons given
were that these publications supported “disobedience and insurrection.”
Due to the fact that ULK #35 was already on the banned
publication list, I was not permitted to appeal this rejection, however,
I was permitted to appeal the ULK #36 because it had not yet
made the master list held by NCDAC.
I brought up a constitutional argument about how prisons cannot maintain
a list of banned materials, my right to my political beliefs, and the
fact that a prison can not ban a publication just because it does not
approve of the organization it comes from. This was decided in a court
case called Williams v. Brimeyer, 116 F. 3d 351, 354 (8th circuit
1997). I also argued that ULK does not promote
insurrection and disorder, yet uses prison issues to promote peaceful
change to both prisons and the outside world through education and the
study of politics.
Surprisingly, when mail came today, issue 36 of ULK had been
returned to me. Sometimes you just have to stand up for what you believe
in and not give up. For anybody who faces the rejection of the
ULK newsletter, I would like to make known, that ULK
does not contain a significant security risk to prisons, and therefore
is constitutionally protected. If your newsletter has been rejected, I
strongly recommend that you fight for it on this basis. Do not allow
anyone to silence the struggle.
It seems that change in our society is only brought about by those of
our populace who are considered to be radicals, so this piece is written
for those radicals who are compassionate enough to care and who will
take the necessary efforts to make a lasting difference for those of us
who are held and tortured in Security Housing Units (SHUs), which are
specifically dedicated for those prisoners who are supposed to be under
the care of an institution’s mental health system. These american gulags
are also known as “Psychiatric Services Units” (PSUs).
These specially dedicated SHUs are rarely, if ever, visited by outside
prisoner rights organizations, to my knowledge; and the prisoners housed
therein are simply forgotten. These prisoners have no representatives
and no means to voice their concerns and so the atrocities accumulate
unchecked.
Aggressive and sadistic prison guards have been known to pepper spray an
individual until they cannot breathe due to the accumulation of
micronized capsicum (pepper essence) absorbed into their lungs after the
guard empties onto the individual several canisters of the corrosive
irritant chemical weapon. This is not third party hearsay, I know of it
personally, for it has happened to me. Of course nothing is done about
it when you have the foxes guarding the henhouse.
Think a prisoner can obtain justice through the prison’s
administrative
grievance systems? You had better think about it again, no way. And
the courts, including the federal courts, will not entertain themselves
of the issues of complaint where the completion of the administrative
appeals process has been denied by a corrupt prison administration; it
has been made law, a statutory prerequisite otherwise known in
litigation circles as a “procedural bar.” It creates gross injustice and
perpetrates unchecked human abuse which is tolerated by our society, it
is a blatant indication of how cruel and vicious we have become as a
people.
Even more sinister is the presence of food pantries created within each
of the blocks of SHU/PSU units, which are independent from the main
kitchens where mainstream prisoners receive their meals. These food
pantries are not under the control of licensed food service employees
and are in fact totally controlled by the guards assigned to that block.
Those prisoners who are targeted by the “system” quite often find
themselves physically sickened by the meals they are served, meals which
stink with rotten foodstuffs. Milk cartons are served bloated with
full-blown contamination.
The milk is a favored vehicle to get an inmate victim to ingest a
“knock-out” drug and get raped while he is unconscious. This is a fact;
it has happened to me twice. Also milk is utilized in these modernized
dungeons as a tool to get unsuspecting targeted prisoner victims to
consume psychotropic substances which has the effect of a “truth serum”
and is used as an aid in covert interrogation of all prisoners suspected
by debriefer informants and snitches. And, for the same purpose targeted
prisoners are placed in cells with low pressure or dysfunctional
ventilation systems which are used to force irritant gasses, pepper
spray or other toxic obnoxious chemical weapons through to be inhaled by
the occupant of that particular cell. In addition to the above abuses,
the usual torture routine includes the air cooling system on full blast
in mid-winter, and the heating system turned full up in mid-summer.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We appreciate the risk that our comrades take
to get reports of such horrible abuses to Under Lock & Key.
Information like this is important to get out because, as this writer
points out, very few people are looking at these prisons or monitoring
the treatment there. But Under Lock & Key is more than a
tool of exposure, it is a rallying point for activists and leaders to
bring together others and work out strategies and tactics in our fight
against the criminal injustice system. We should read reports like this
one and be outraged. And then we should turn that outrage into action,
working to educate others and build support for our fight to put an end
to this system of injustice.
When a prisoner writes the TDCJ Executive Director it will always be
forwarded
to the Ombudsman. They (Ombud) will always reply that they do not
respond to prisoner complaints and that the grievance procedures should
be followed. It’s a “closed loop” to prisoners.
The Call to
Action that I wrote which included the contacts were primarily for
our family and friends to put pressure on authorities so that our
grievances are more effective - eg. our families should contact the
Executive Director and Ombudsman to file an official complaint about the
policy change.
I got my Step 2 back around November and I sent it to the Texas Civil
Rights Project to see if they would be interested in representing this
issue in a lawsuit. I am yet to get a response from the Texas Civil
Rights Project. It could be worth while if someone could contact them
(TCRP) about this issue to prompt a response to my correspondence to
them as I know they get piles of mail every week.
We not only need to file grievances but also strongly encourage our
freeworld friends and family to contact all the contacts on the
Call to
Action to put a lot of pressure on the Texas Board of Criminal
Justice to repeal the policy.
I believe it is futile to send the Texas Grievance Petition to the
Executive Director because of the closed loop with the correspondence
being forwarded to the Ombudsman. It could be worthwhile for freeworld
people to send a version of the petition to the Exec Dir but I think
prisoners need to start directing the petition to someone else.
I also want to mention that this mail restriction should not affect
legal/privileged correspondence - prisoners should still be able to send
5 per week.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We received information from another
prisoner on this same issue:
Comrades in Texas, do not send your petitions to the Executive Director
or Central Grievance office because they are not working in our favor.
They only forward the petitions to departments that don’t address these
issues, who contacted me and said “address this grievance related issues
on a unit level with the grievance investigators.”
We on the Polunsky plantations are sending our petitions to: ARRM
Division, Administrator, PO Box 99, Huntsville, TX 77342-0099. I suggest
that all Texas prisoners do the same so that we will be in solidarity.
Let’s flood their office with our complaints. If this doesn’t work we
will flood the DOJ in Washington DC. Let’s work in solidarity!
We agree with these comrades’ recommendations that prisoners focus
sending their grievances to somewhere other than the Executive Director.
We suggest the following addresses:
ARRM Division, Administrator PO Box 99 Huntsville, TX
77342-0099
Senator John Whitmire PO Box 12068, Capitol Station Austin, TX
78711
Oliver Bell Chairman of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice PO Box
13084 Austin, TX 78711-3084
We also now have a sample Step 2 grievance available to those who had
their Step 1 on this issue rejected. Write to us if you need a copy of
this.
We know this campaign is not going to change the criminal injustice
system in any significant way. But restrictions on mail access is
equivalent to cutting many people off from the outside world. And for
those who are engaged in educational and organizing work, this is a
significant problem. For this reason, focusing a campaign on
restrictions on indigent correspondence is important to our broader
organizing work.