MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
Under Lock & Key is a news service written by and for prisoners with a focus on what is going on behind bars throughout the United States. Under Lock & Key is available to U.S. prisoners for free through MIM(Prisons)'s Free Political Literature to Prisoners Program, by writing:
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by a North Carolina prisoner January 2025 permalink
Revolutionary Greetings,
Things here are intense!! There’s a struggle among the prisoners
beginning to form. With us being in solitary confinement it’s nearly
impossible for us to physically correct the enemy so it’s been decided
that guerrilla warfare tactics will be used (sour milk/feces are being
thrown on them). Two have been “gassed” within the past week. This may
sound like nothing, however komrade you must overstand prior to me
arriving here the overall group of prisoners on RHCP here were docile.
As soon as I got situated here a couple prisoners sent kites my way
expressing how we need to put down a demonstration to get things changed
back here. It’s been a slow process, I was recently able to get our list
of demands to someone out of all 8 blocks back here. We’re waiting to
see if everyone is in unity with the demands:
Have maintenance fix the hot water – we’ve had no hot water in
the shower or in our cells for over a month now
Have maintenance fix the heat – they have the AC blasting in the
middle of winter. Komrade it’s so cold that we have to wear three to
four layers of clothes when out from under the blankets
Give us inside rec – they are using the excuse that it’s too cold
to go outside, or they will offer us rec but it’s way too cold to be
outside. There are inside rec cages but the unit manager refuses to
allow us to use them even though I showed him the policy that supports
our grievance.
Provide us with adequate food – due to their laziness we are
given small styrofoam trays instead of the regular seg trays, so they
won’t have to come back and pick the trays up. The styrofoam trays only
have three slots for food to go in. Pursuant to policy we’re supposed to
get a certain amount of food. We’re only getting half of the required
calories.
Provide adequate mental and physical healthcare – this is by far
the worst medical staff I’ve seen. Sick calls go unanswered, self meds
are frequently lost or are given to the wrong prisoners. There are guys
back here that obviously need some mental healthcare, but yet they are
left to battle their disorders alone.
Allow the gay and transgender to be housed together on the same
tier and given their own shower – I’m catching flak behind this demand.
The hierarchical structure of the lumpen orgs preclude any form of
socialization or respect with or towards these groups of prisoners. The
L.O.’s forbid their homies from aiding any such person. But like I’ve
been telling them how can we say we’re fighting oppression when we’re
oppressing!
“[A]ll over the world now the institution of the prison serves as a
place to warehouse people who represent major social problems.” - Angela
Y. Davis
Looking at the incarcerated world around us, it is no wonder the
numbers of New Afrikan and other darker hued people who are captive is
so high. It is no wonder why the level of illiteracy is most highly
concentrated among the incarcerated. It is no wonder the level of
schooling is low among the captive population. It is no wonder why there
is more money invested in mental health services behind bars than in
free world facilities.(1)
All this means that when we imagine our resistance against prison
systems we must see prison as being more than just the place where
people who commit crimes are sent. We have to begin to analyze the
interconnected and multi-layered oppression within prison.
A key feature in warfare is physical violence. In prison, “official”
physical violence is documented as use of force. The most use of force
and most excessive use of force in Texas takes place at Bill Clements,
specifically amongst its PAMIO program participants. PAMIO, for those
who do not know, is a psychiatric program designed for those in
Ad-Seg.
If you follow the logic, Texas residents with psychiatric illness are
more likely to be held captive by the state, while in captivity they
have a greater chance to be held in Administrative segregation (Ad-Seg).
While in Ad-Seg their psychiatric state is likely to deteriorate and
they are likely to face “official” physical violence at the hands of
their captors at greater numbers than those without documented
psychiatric history.
Conditions At Clements
Our situation at Bill Clements Unit Ad-Seg or ECB, Extended Cell
Block they call it, has not improved. Although less deaths we are seeing
a rise in starvation, torture, neglect, and unsupervised migrant workers
running the prison as they see fit with little to no training.
Regardless of what administration says. These Africans on this unit have
not been taught day rules, standard operating procedures, and have zero
regard for this so called rule book. And why shouldn’t they when there
is no enforcement and or reprimand on the side of TDCJ.
During the last shakedown, a state-wide
attempt to catch contraband, they had me in a cage outdoors for 2
hours while they tossed my cell. Guards and inmates watched me in
handcuffs while Major Pacheo instructed Field Boss Shrader to steal all
my electronics and commissary food items – over 200 dollars worth. All
this I believe is because my toilet hasn’t worked for months and I keep
requesting maintenance but it never comes. Same with the broken shower
and the water leak resulting in a wet floor. I have receipts for all the
electronics and commissary items they stole, and I listed all this and
the witnesses on grievance – they put the witnesses on chain! Nobody
goes on chain unless it’s to Montford Psych or hospital.
The second week of December we were allowed to shop commissary, the
second time in 4 months. Breakfast chow consisted of two tablespoons of
scrambled eggs with a quarter inch of grits and applesauce. In total it
was 4 spoons of food. For lunch and dinner we had a cheese sandwich.
They back-doored commissary with a shakedown and stole what we
purchased.
I was allowed 1 hour out of my cell twice this year. The “weekly”
library ran 9 times. Average time to see a mental health professional is
9-12 months. Delivered mail can sit in the mail room for over 6 months.
They are understaffed and don’t have enough people to properly run the
facility. Once they tried to put some beef on dough and call it pizza,
it was not cooked and the meat was bad. Raw dough and spoiled meat. No
shit. No exaggeration.
Not feeding us is not only to starve us but to keep us from relaxing.
We are constantly fasting involuntarily. The hunger keeps us anxious and
irritable, to put it mildly. In my pod of 60 I have seen 12 people
lifted out on stretchers this year, nobody checking for a pulse or
performing CPR. That’s 1 per month on average. This cell is worse than
the third world POW camps I visited during my time in the USMC. The
corruption is so bad with so many hands in the cookie jar that one
cannot even get a judge to hear them out about violations. TDCJ just
ignores our requests and cites their lack of staff as to why they have
nobody to process the documents.
War in Ferguson
On November 16th all the interconnected elements of prison war worked
together on the Ferguson unit as five officers, unprovoked and without
cause, entered the cell of two men demanding they submit to a complete
strip search and handcuffs. When one of the captives asked why, he was
immediately hit in his face with closed fist by CIT Gates while SGT
Vasquez grabbed the captive’s head and slammed it against the concrete
wall, causing injury. The captive fell to the ground and was kicked, his
head was banged against the floor repeatedly. Afterwards he was dragged
to the run, outside of the cell, where he was continuously kicked in his
face and was even stood on. The entire time other captives were yelling
in protest for the guards to stop, but they refused. While on another
row, but hearing what was happening, I began launching projectiles from
my cell. Eventually this caused the guards to cease their beating. They
escorted the beaten man away, then returned minutes later to handcuff
and escort me.
I was housed in solitary two cells down from the victim. I had the
opportunity to speak with him for the first time, find out first hand
what took place. He also shared with me his history of intellectual
disabilities, and mild history of psychiatric illness. He had been
adopted at a young age and raised in the foster care system. Our time
near each other came to a close after the pressures of solitary
confinement pushed this brother to attempt suicide. Days later as a
result of this incident I was notified by the Ferguson Unit Warden Wheat
that I would be reassigned to Administrative Segregation, under trumped
up charges of assault on staff with a weapon.
Attempts to appeal the reassignment to Ad-Seg have been hampered by
Unit Grievance Officer D. Turner not allowing my appeal of
classification to go through.
I have personally reported the unprovoked excessive assaults these
same clique of guards have taken part in in the five months I’ve been on
Ferguson. There is a culture of unmitigated brutality here and the
slightest show of counter-force is excessively punished. Warden Wheat
has been made aware of this clique of pigs constantly assaulting people
without cause, he has ignored or punished reporters.
Prison is War. Prison is Violence. Administrative Segregation is the
highest form of it, where prisoncrats are allowed to hide you and abuse
you away from any and all scrutiny. A tool that is used to throw away
resisters in the prison battlefield. End RHU!
Sources: (1) Angela Y. Davis, Freedom is a Constant
Struggle, pp. 23-24.
On 6 September 2023 the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) prison system mandated a statewide Lockdown due to the number of deaths related to drugs: a total of 16. They think that will stop the flow of drugs, but you and I know that it will not. You and I know that as long as you have officers that are willing, it will continue.
…Most here are having to do all of their sentence, and some have said fuck it, I will continue to get high. They don’t have to worry about going to jail, cause they are already in jail. But it seems to be that the only ones making parole are the ones that consistently stay high. Do you think that if more were making parole that would cut down on some of the drugs being used?
Choper reports from Bill Clements on the same day: The Bill Clements Unit has been continually operating at 20% to 30% short of staff for three straight years now. In Ad-Seg I have had my 1 hour out of cell 4 times in 2 years. We have had spaghetti sauce and beans 2x per day every day for 90+ days. Commissary always has an excuse why they don’t run and library runs roughly 6x per year instead of weekly.
The wardens and majors and rank walk through and focus on taking down pictures and string lines. Micromanaging the small shit instead of handling real issues like starvation and excessive suicide. There is no medical provider on staff here so don’t run medical. No mental health. Prescriptions run out long ago and nobody to refill.
Today we are on lockdown because they can’t control contraband: this itself is an admission of failure by staff. I mean you can’t manage 20-30% staff? WTF would they do with 100% staff? Their incompetence is killing, literally killing us. As in deaths. A lot of them.
A Connally Unit prisoner wrote on 25 September 2023: I am currently G5 custody level being held at Connally Unit in Kennedy, Texas at a Texas State Prison (TDCJ). We are currently on lockdown. I believe all TDCJ is under lockdown. Apparently they are cracking down on narcotics and any other form of contraband. We have been on lockdown since Wednesday, 6 September 2023. Correction, that was an annual lockdown. We had a restriction lockdown on 24 August 2023, and we have been on lockdown ever since.
Our last commissary day, the last time we actually hit, was on August 21st. I believe we are supposed to go every 30 days or so, at least a hygiene store and we haven’t had any of that! The first restriction lockdown was placed (not formally but rumor goes) because someone snitched gave TDCJ staff heads up about some contraband and people involved. Who and what I am not sure. I am not allowed out of the cell except for showers! Up until recently they was not running showers regularly.
We received tablets (all G5 custody) on Tuesday, 19 September 2023. Since then things have gotten way better! Showers run more regularly, food comes at reasonable times. We get cold water runs! The food portions are better than before. The fires have stopped! You know, I am not sure if visitation is now open. The terrors have since stopped though! What a relief. Ok, so the terrors began on the 1st day of restriction lockdown (8/24) I couldn’t see much and didn’t know what was going on but they raided (shookdown) a couple people’s cells in 8 Building L pod 3 section. We was never informed that we was placed on restriction lockdown or why. I found out gossip from another inmate.
Since day one, no showers, no cold water runs, no heat respite, (I don’t believe G5’s get any respite) small food portions and they would run late. It is extremely hot in Connally. It is even hotter back here. Connally Unit is a down south Texas max security unit. There have been multiple times I have passed out due to the heat, woken up with major headaches, bloodshot eyes, and chapped lips!
…They shook us down on September 9th, Saturday. They didn’t finish the whole building til 15th or 16th, which is about when we got our dearly beloved SSI’s back!!! The suffering ends, partially… When they shook us down – cell search – they took the whole section out cell by cell in cuffs, and placed half the section in one side multi-purpose room and the other half in another multi-purpose room.
We came back to a Great Mess! Haha, I don’t mind the mess, I had to re-organize my belongings anyways. I wonder why they would ask us to place our things, all of our property, neatly on our own bunks, mattress like this and that, come back to our things mixed up?! Comical! One dude went hysterical, yelling at the laws and complaining about coffee spilled on all his property! Clothes, sheets, family pictures, etc. Then, here come the fires! Multiple inmates was angry, each with their own complaints. By this time the guards had given up on putting out the fires. Which is unpleasant, adding heat literally to the already hot building and smoke. Many times I had to cover up not to breath the toxic carbon monoxide! The section gets so full of smoke it’s completely black. I figured the best thing to do was place one fan by the door blowing outwards and a fan by the window blowing hot air in. I would have to place a wet towel on the door to keep smoke from coming in. Every day was something new, every day an issue appeared! Every day a fire was made, some two, some three at a time, two or three times a day… The last fire was put out by an officer, a sergeant.
16 March 2023 – Here at Eastern Correctional Institution (ECI), we have implemented the below program. We turned in over 200 copies to the Governor of Maryland, state delegates and senators. We also sent copies to the Commissioner of Corrections and the Warden. We are still sending copies out on the compound to have brothers do their part.
We have been met with a few obstacles but we still are struggling against intel (they’re like Prison FBI, Gang Task Force, etc.), they started going in to cells searching for these papers. They even complemented the organization for our resistance (even though they’re trying to lock us up). After the people heard about intel and their continued and increased oppression some brothers got discouraged and actually returned some of the copies. It broke my heart to see such cowardice in men. But the sacrifices of those that came before us motivates me to keep pushing.
I want to thank MIM and all the comrades involved with MIM that helped me learn from the materialist method. This form of resistance I took was a page out of MIM’s book and I appreciate it. But what we need here at ECI for there to be change is outside support. So if you comrades are reading this or are listening. Please contact these numbers and write these addresses in order to bring about change more quickly.
Delegate Charles Otto 309 Lowe House Office Building 6 Bladen Street Annapolis, MD 21401
Governor Wesmoore 100 State Central Annapolis, MD 21401-1925
Senator Mary Beth Carozza 316 Jame Senate Office Building 11 Bladen Street Annapolis, MD 21401
Commissioner of Corrections 6776 Reistertown Road Baltimore, MD 21215
We the incarcerated citizens of ECI feel we are not being treated as we should and we want change. Incarcerated yes, but we are still human beings. The conditions we are forced to live in are inadequate to say the least. The opportunity for rehabilitation is insufficient and because this is the case recidivism seems inevitable. As such, a place built on the pretense of rehabilitation becomes a concentration camp. It becomes a place where people are waiting to die. Our recreation has been reduced, our visits have been reduced and our meals have gotten worse. Along with these there are many more things we want changed, but here below we highlight the ones we deem most important.
Request #1. Educational Opportunities
We request access to college education along with training in trades that will serve us when we return to society. We also ask that proper tutoring be provided to those that struggle in certain subjects. It must be understood that lack of education played a major role in our bad decision making that lead us to prison, so it only make sense that education play a role in our rehabilitation.
Request #2. Employment
We want jobs for all able-bodied incarcerated citizens. We also ask that we be paid minimum wage for these jobs. Please understand that many of us were the sole provider for our family, so to not grant us this request may result in our family turning to criminal activity to pay bills out of desperation.
Request #3. Programs
We want programs that address our individual needs. For we understand that every incarcerated citizen isn’t locked up for the same crime. Therefore we believe each individual should be programmed off his individual crime and sentence. This is the only way to properly rehabilitate us.
Request #4. Medical
We ask for faster response to our sick calls. Every time we are told to put a sick call in by the time we get called for it, the issue is worse off or it has spread. We are asking for a switch in medical protocol. By this we mean to proper test to be ran based off the patient’s feeling. The issue may need an X-ray or MRI. These things should not wait until the problem worsens in order to carry out these minor procedures. We demand that our health issues to be paid close attention to because the lack of attention may result in an unnecessary death of an incarcerated citizen.
Request #5. Psych/Therapy
We want proper psycho analysis to be done on each incarcerated citizen in order to understand his actual mental problems. For we understand that our actions are a result of our mental workings so if we act in a manner that is unfitting it is the result of our brain work. We do not wish to be doped up on psych meds that will only have us ‘Zombified’. We want actual treatment that will identify our problems so we can work on them. We understand that therapy is important to health and to deny us this tool is to deny us our right to be healthy.
Request #6. Sanitation
Our sanitation time is not enough to thoroughly clean the tiers the way that is needed. Our showers contain black mold and no matter the day our tier is not fully clean. This is not the workers fault it is because the shortage of time. What we want is an extended time period for sanitation workers, an increase in sanitation workers. And to do so by hiring workers from that tier. This we understand is a matter of health and not to address this matter is to disregard the health of the incarcerated citizens of ECI.
Request #7. Hygiene
We demand more than one wash day out of the week. We shower everyday but do not possess the amount of clothes we need to sustain good hygiene throughout the week without washing our clothes more than one time. We want C-shift laundry men to be hired to do the workers clothes so that they won’t be in the way of general population’s clothes. Also we want weekend wash days to be added. We are asking for soap and soap powder to be distributed weekly to those who need it. We understand that there is a such thing as welfare commissary that will provide these things but to meet the qualifications one must show proof of no income for months in order to receive these benefits when the effects of not showering or washing are immediate.
Request #8. Recreation
We request mixed recreation; top and bottom together. The separation limits our yard and gym access to only 3 times a week. Along with this limitation is an extended period of time where we have to sit in the cell dirty. By this I mean if we choose to participate in all 3 days of gym/yard there will be a day where we are either last or first and the top will have second rec. So that will mean that we will have to wait a minimum of 6 hours and 30 minutes before we shower depending on what yard we have. This in turn will limit our gym/yard to 2 days if we don’t want to sit in the cell dirty. Not to mention the negative health effects from sitting in the cell for that long without a shower. (Example: people breaking out into rashes).
Request #9. Visits
We demand that in person visits be once a week. This will increase our opportunities to see our families. The majority of us cannot get our families to make the trip without scheduling a day around it because of the 4 hour journey it takes to get to ECI. Increasing the visit to once a week will increase our family’s availability. We also ask that for those families that are 4 hours away be given an extended visit of 2 hours. Lastly we ask that the process to acquire visitation be less difficult for us and our families. Being able to see our loved ones is vital to our mental health and it plays a major role in the way we act.
Request #10. Food
We request that our menu be changed to food we deem desirable. We want food that free people would eat. Fresh food that’s nutritious. We are also asking for portions fit for grown men, because the time in which we eat and the quantity of food we eat leaves us hungry waiting for the next meal. So we request a change.
Request #11. Dietary Sanitation
The kitchen is infested with roaches and mice that leave urine and feces all over the place. And because of this we demand that pest control come once a week until we have a pest free kitchen. There should be no reason this kitchen pass inspection with this infestation. As such we demand change.
Request #12. Grievance
We request that our grievances be dealt with separate from the state prison administration. We believe that our grievances are being swept under the rug and disregarded at times. As a result of this we don’t trust the administration. So we ask that our grievances be handled by an outside non-profit civil rights organization.
Request #13. Maintenance
We request that the maintenance of our housing units be maintained. There are times our sink or toilet may leak, or it may not work at all in the cell. And with these incidents there are too many times we have requested for things like that to be fixed and it would take weeks. Understanding these small things can tum into large things through the accumulation of bacteria and mold etc. we request that four men in each housing unit get trained in the field of plumbing and maintenance in order to maintain livable conditions for the incarcerated citizens.
We the incarcerated citizens conclude this request list asking one more question, “would you want to be housed under these conditions?” We want change because we want to change. Help us change. Thank you for your consideration.
In early December of last year a hunger strike was called at Ely
State Prison, joined by at least 39 prisoners at the start and
fluctuating over the following weeks. A prison advocacy group, Return
Strong, represented the prisoners’ demands as follows:
End the continued and extended use of solitary confinement,
lockdowns, modified lockdowns, and de facto solitary confinement.
End correctional abuse.
End group punishment and administrative abuse.
Address due process interference and violation in the grievance
process.
Provide adequate and nutritious food.
Address health and safety concerns in all Nevada facilities and
provide resolution status to them.
In response, the Nevada Department of Corrections (NDOC) ignored
several of the demands, calling them “false,” (2) but addressed some of
the concerns related to food and administrative handling of punishments.
Lower-level sanctions that result in loss of privileges will now run
concurrently instead of consecutively, and Aramark, the food vendor, is
being questioned about the portion sizes. Even the head of the local
prison guards union mentioned that they’d noticed the portions shrinking
recently.(1) Aramark has faced repeated legal challenges regarding its
poor food from prisons across the country (3), so the fact that it’s now
squeezing portion sizes in Nevada doesn’t come as too much of a
surprise.
Some of the more serious allegations NDOC ignored include food being
stolen from prisoners by staff, the existence of no-camera “beat-up
rooms,” collective punishment and indefinite 23-hour lockdowns excused
by laying the blame on “staffing issues,” and the de facto suspension of
programming for many prisoners.(4)
Prisoners at Ely State Prison voluntarily suspended the strike after
four weeks and the adjustment of some of the handling of administrative
sanctions were addressed.(5) We didn’t receive any info from inside or
outside coordinators about how/why the strike ended, just that it did.
If any of our readers can provide insight we’d appreciate it.