by an Iowa Prisoner, Oct. 18, 1995 (reprinted from MIM Notes)
In the late 18th century, the Walnut Street Prison in Philadelphia, PA,
became the first penitentiary in U.S. history to experiment with the use
of long-term isolation. This was based on the “Quaker theory” that
without social interaction, a prisoner could not be influenced by fellow
inmates and that a religious conversion would occur during the years of
enforced meditation and result in the individual’s reformation. This
theory had monstrous effects upon those incarcerated between its walls.
Some fell into a condition from which it was almost impossible to arouse
them. Others became violently insane, some to the extreme of committing
suicide. Those who underwent these isolating conditions were generally
not reformed. In most cases individuals did not recover sufficient
mental activity to be of any service to the community. It would seem
that after such experimentation, that this type of treatment would be
eliminated by prisoncrats. Instead the practice of confining prisoners
to small cells for long periods of time is still in full force.
In modern times the U.S. penitentiary at Alcatraz became notorious for
holding the most dangerous criminals within the U.S. penal system. In
reality it became the first “control unit prison” used as a mechanism to
enforce control over prisoners and society. More recently the super-max
penitentiary in Marion, Illinois became the new “End of the line” for
both state and federal prisoners who prisoncrats considered to be
“institutional problems” or “too dangerous” to be housed in any other
institution. Because of appalling conditions in October, 1983, a riot
broke out and two guards were killed. This gave the prisoncrats the
excuse to lock down the entire prison population. This meant that
prisoners were confined to their cells for 23 and a half hours a day and
all visits were suspended. Until a court order was enforced, even
attorneys were denied access to the prison. Eventually the lockdown
eased in some areas, but stringent and restrictive policies remained
largely in effect. Months after the riot an emerging pattern of brutal
repression against the 350 inmates became apparent. 60 additional guards
were brought in from other parts of the federal prison system to
systematically beat and brutalize scores of prisoners.
The idea of Marionization spread rapidly throughout the Amerikkkan
prison system because prison officials cried that their institutions
were unsafe and control over the convict in every way possible was
desperately needed. The truth behind the reasons these control units are
needed is they are a means of political, economic and social control of
a whole class of oppressed and disenfranchised people. These include
especially African, Latino and indigenous people who are a
disproportionate part of control unit populations.
These torture units go beyond the usual constraints of maximum security
prisons. Better defined as a prison within a prison, these control units
are used to defeat prisoners’ revolutionary attitudes, organization,
militancy, legal and administrative challenges; and anything else the
prison administrators deem objectionable. These control units have
various names such as: Adjustment center, security housing unit (SHU),
maximum control complex (MCC), administrative maximum (ad- max),
intensive management unit, and administrative segregation (ad-seg).
Every prison possesses the label control unit status if long-term
punishment and/or isolation are used.
While conditions vary from prison to prison, the goal of these units is
always to achieve the spiritual, psychological and physical breakdown of
the prisoner. Once prisoners are confined to a control unit, gross human
rights violations take place on a daily basis. With minor differences,
these control units share the following features: Prisoners spend years
of isolation in tiny cells, usually 6 by 8 feet for 22-23.5 hours a day.
The short time that they do spend outside their cell within a cement or
chain link “dog pen” that lacks any kind of equipment and proper space
to for physical exercise. Participation in programs including religious
services, educational/work/job training, congregate dining and exercise
are strongly prohibited by the administration. Also greatly limited is
access to medical and psychiatric care.
The most damaging aspect of control units is the physical and mental
torture that is imposed upon their victims. First the methods of how
physical torture is inflicted: Forced cell extractions by militarily
attired, baton-wielding guards are constantly used without cause or
warning. These guards violently beat, choke, and kick already-shackled
prisoners. Sometimes these cell extractions are so abusive that
prisoners require extensive medical attention. Devices such as tazer
guns, pepper spray, maces and manacles are used and four-point
restraints and hog-tying are routinely overused, despite the fact that
such instruments have caused bodily harm and death.
Another cruel practice is “caging”. This is where scantily clad or naked
prisoners are held in outdoor cages for hours in cold and rainy weather.
The systematic use of firehosing shackled prisoners while in their
cells, with high-pressure cold water, then leaving standing water in the
cell, usually accompanies a prisoner being put in “strip cell status.”
While frigid temperatures make it impossible to sleep or even lay down,
a bright light shines upon the cell 24 hours a day.
For those who can endure the physical cruelty, the mental torture can
surely affect one’s sanity. One example of this is sensory deprivation.
This is when the prisoncrats forbid prisoners to have books,
televisions, radios and contact visits, including those with lawyers. In
some control units it is impossible for prisoners to communicate amongst
themselves. Verbal harassment containing derogatory or racial statements
are made by the guards. Mail is misplaced, delayed, destroyed or
censored. Threats are made against family and visitors. The passing of
false confidential information to foster paranoia and fights between
convicts is utilized to weaken any unionization between prisoners. Legal
access is another area that is greatly violated. This includes the
censoring of lawyer and court mail, guards monitoring attorney-client
phone and visit conversations, and the hindering of access to legal
books and materials.
Control Units are designed to administer the very most in sensory
deprivation and dehumanization of inmates. Currently Iowa is building a
control unit and this writer faces the possibility of being transferred
because of my political and rebellious attitude toward the capitalist
system. Essentially control units serve only one purpose, and that is to
control society. All control units must be abolished, and the victims of
these dungeons treated as survivors of torture.