I’d like to speak in regards to the Special Needs Yards (SNY) situation.
It’s synonymous with the plight of my comrades, relatives and brothers
detained in Pelican Bay, Tehachapi and Corcoran Security Housing Units
(SHUs), from which I was released in 2010.
The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
Institutional Gang Investigations (CDCR IGI) squad uses insidiously foul
tactics, involving “validating” or “associating” an “active” [gang
member] who isn’t really active. Somewhere within my 16.5 years on this
joke, many, including myself, lost our sense of direction and
consciousness. Because we’ve lost our direction, the CDCR has found
flaws in our infrastructure as a collective.
All of the tactics you hear about to validate or get homies to debrief
are true. After being detained for an assault on a faulty comrade, a SHU
term was assessed and completed. After numerous incidents on Corcoran’s
integrated yard, and relationships with individuals of other
acknowledged sects, IGI tried to seize their opportunity with
interrogations. They were met with my defiance, then, they manifested a
“packet”.
What was troubling is that these silly goons were adamant of an alleged
association with a sect that literally would be treason, had I been
linked to them. Now my existence is in jeopardy.
After consultation with a selected few of my infrastructure, I had to
denounce my legitimate association with whom I truly move to subterfuge
the fabricated trash the IGI spawned. Pride was hard to swallow, but the
flaw in their system relegated me to fall back without compromisin’
comradz.
The procedures to become SNY depend on the administration at each
institution, and it’s at their administrative discretion. For me, in
Corcoran SHU, I denounced my legitimate gang association without
debriefing in order to rebuke a false alleged association. Once the
process begins you are infected like a plague, whether you’ve debriefed
or not. So I chose to drop out without debriefing, but the outcome is
the same: SNY. With that label, the assumption is that I’ve either
snitched/debriefed or I am some kind of “victim.” There are now many
prisoners in the SHU who are SNY and pending or are validated because
someone on SNY can join the Enhanced Outpatient Program (EOP) for
mentally ill prisoners, and get his SNY status revoked to be
re-integrated into the EOP/GP program. EOP basically was SNY prior to
the implementation of SNYs.
There seems to be a plague, a misconception that all are debriefing on
SNY – no! Nor is it legit for the validated homies to only have the
lesser option to debrief in order to obtain civility and humanity in
prison. That’s not an option.
I now find myself in the eighth month of an 18 month SHU term.
Initially, there was shame in my decision, yet I been kickin’ dust from
Calipat to the Bay; my gangsta, my manhood, my integrity is and always
will be solidified. I’m still pushin’ and movin’, and was surprised to
see many reputable comradz and relatives on SNY too! Don’t let the fence
in the middle misconstrue reality: it’s us vs. them!
Do not lose consciousness, whatever side you’re on. I agree, most SNYs
are faulty. There’s an influx of kids who tapped out without ever
walkin’ any line, even for a hot second! Real spill. Now, consciousness
is lost when homies are unconsciously toten’ “burners” and gettin’
caught? Fumblin’ missives? Harborin’ hooks? Politicin’ with emotions as
opposed to rational thinking? C’mon, we’ve all done it. The
infrastructure must be tightened. Why do you think all these young
homies needed on the line are now on SNY?
Again, not everyone is faulty; they weren’t groomed right. We are
responsible for us, so as the homies in these SHU complexes hunger
strike and resist, our lack of consciousness is inconsiderate to the
struggle. The lack of consciousness only perpetuates the offensive of
the CDCR.
So, yeah, I’ve spoke on it. I am SNY, but don’t think I ain’t still
active!
MIM(Prisons) responds: This letter is referring back to the long
running debate in Under Lock & Key about
SNY
yards and whether or not we should work with people in SNY who want
to get involved in the fight against the criminal injustice system. We
agree with the author that we’ve come across good comrades who are doing
good work in SNY. We judge individuals by their actions, not by their
prison-imposed classification. However, we would not glorify the
activities on the street that lead to prison. We do need to educate the
youth, but kids coming to prison aren’t going to be more political
because they did more street crime. Our job is to turn that energy
against the system, preferably before they are locked up by the system.
There are deep contradictions within the lumpen organizations (LOs) that
are alluded to by this comrade in his calls for self-criticism and
evaluation. He echoes our previous points that the LOs are playing a big
role in pushing people into SNY. Right now the SHU prisoners are leading
the way, showing how to gain power and respect without being predators
on each other, or other oppressed people. Internationalism means not
just looking out for your group or clique. When the oppressed unite
internationally, then self-determination can be real and power will no
longer be fleeting as it is in current U.$. prison culture.