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:
MIM(Prisons) PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140.
The good old boys are at it again. These slipper suckers, who feed off
other people’s misery, are upset about the closing of
Tamms
Supermax in Illinois a few years ago. Rather than let Tamms sit
unoccupied, Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) officials have
devised a plan to put pressure on the legislature to open up the 500-bed
hell hole again.
Suddenly they claim we have a major gang problem here in Illinois. IDOC
officials are rounding up all the Latinos who they can claim are a part
of a security threat group (STG) and sticking them in administrative
detention (A.D.).
Some guys haven’t caught so much as a disciplinary ticket in years and
were quietly toiling away in the kitchen or some other form of
servitude. Next thing they know they’re on a bus and sent to A.D. Some
guys, after serving their segregation time for disciplinary tickets,
found themselves in Phase 1 of A.D.
The common thread that binds these guys together seems to be that they
are alleged members of an STG. It doesn’t take much to validate someone
as an active member these days. Most guys were members as kids, and
their record preceded them to the joint. Some were identified by gang
tattoos. And of course there is always that elusive confidential
informant (CI), and only the gang intel officers seem to know for
certain if the CI even exists. Personally I believe the correctional
officers (COs) make up the CIs because the COs know that all they have
to do is say the CI’s identity is being withheld for the safety and
security of the institution, and no one can or will inquire further.
These brothers sit with no recourse in the courts, stuck in limbo
waiting in administrative segregation for some sadist to stop using them
as a means to obtain a bigger piece of the tax dollar pie so they can
re-open Tamms Supermax, and give themselves a pay raise for a job well
done while they are at it.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Tamms Supermax opened in 1998. As 2008
approached many who opposed the torture chambers in Illinois formed the
Tamms Year Ten campaign to bring attention to it and get it shut down.
By January 2013, the unit was completely closed. This campaign was one
of a handful demonstrating that the closing of control units is a
winnable campaign under imperialism.
That said, almost as soon as Tamms was closed we are getting reports of
increasing use of control units in Illinois again. This is why our Shut
Down the Control Units campaign uses a
specific
definition of long-term isolation rather than just counting the
prisons officially labeled as “supermaxes” as many bourgeois press do.
The above example of pushing false gang validations for more or higher
security prisons should not surprise us because prisons are a tool of
social control for the imperialists, and that social control includes
long-term isolation cells for anyone who challenges the system. The
oppressed must organize to build power to change this.
This situation also provides a good example of how we know prisons are
not run for profit. The government regularly uses funds to open control
unit prisons, which are more expensive to run than lower security
prisons. In 1999, MIM Notes reported “Tamms’ budget works out
to well over $34,000 per year to control each prisoner, not including
the $73 million the state reports spending on building the dungeon.
Tamms’ cost per prisoner is more than three times the $11,006 estimated
cost of living for a University of Illinois student at the
Urbana-Champaign campus.” The employees (COs and other staff) make out
with nice high salaries (totaling $17 million at Tamms when it first
opened), but these salaries, and everything else in the prison, is
funded by the government, with prisoner labor offsetting some of the
costs. The imperialists don’t mind spending money to sustain their
system of social control. It’s money they got from the exploitation of
workers in the Third World, and they will spend it freely to maintain
their way of life and position of power.
At this point Leavenworth Detention Center has no gang validation or
step down program. Actually it seems that the administration does very
little to address gang violence. This is a detention facility housing
mainly pre-trial prisoners but it seems more like a war zone. No effort
is made to separate rival gang members or to place people in a safe
environment. For example it is common for the pigs to house a white
supremacist with a Muslim.
They pit us against each other and sit back and enjoy the show. We must
look beyond the tip of our noses and begin to see the bigger picture.
United we stand, divided we fall.
Recently we had a major victory! The food here is substandard at best
but the meatloaf in particular is undercooked and rancid. White, Black
and Latino all stood together and refused to accept trays and refused to
lockdown until we were fed. The pigs brought in tear gas canisters to
try to intimidate us but we simply refused to go to sleep without food.
Finally we were brought sack lunches and they took meatloaf off the
menu. If we stick together and stand up for what’s right peacefully
anything is possible.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This writer reminds us that prisons can play
lumpen organizations both ways. On the one side we oppose the validation
of people as gang members because this is used to punish and isolate and
it is used to target activists and leaders. On the other side we oppose
prisons throwing rival organizations together to try to create conflict
and violence, which is further used as justification to isolate and
lockdown whoever is perceived as a leader, activist or troublemaker.
None of these actions are for the purpose of promoting safety or
security of the prison population.
It is good to hear about people coming together in spite of the pigs
attempts to foment conflict. Winning one change in food is a small
battle, but it gives people the chance to see what is possible through
unity, and hopefully will lead to greater unity in the future. Those
conscious comrades in Leavenworth should take this opportunity to spread
political education, and try to unite all against the criminal injustice
system. If everyone is on the yard together, this is a good opportunity
to start study classes. Write to MIM(Prisons) for help getting a study
group started in your prison.
One of the most damaging aspects of U.S. prisons today is the control
units. Control units and solitary confinement are the state’s biggest
guns in their torturous arsenal. Control units are called SHU, SMU, CMU
and a variety of other names depending on what state one is in, but they
all work to employ torture on the captives held therein.
When we look to the history of the U.S. prison system we find that the
oppressed nations held within have always suffered greatly at the hands
of Amerikkka. Prisoners in the United $tates have suffered unpaid labor,
lynchings, beatings, floggings and assassinations to name a few.
Although much of this still continues – at times more concealed and
shrouded than in the past – there are other new methods of national
oppression which are employed in this new era of United States
domination. I suspect that post-Obama (so-called “post-racial
Amerikkka”) we will continue to see more of these concealed forms of
oppression which inflict the same harm, but which slip through under the
radar of the average First World citizen. This makes liberals feel warm
and cozy and allows them to believe “progress” is obtainable in the
imperialist center.
One such method employed on prisoners in dungeons within the United
Snakes is the use of the control unit. The control unit is a modern-day
torture chamber, but it cannot be advertised as a lethal killer of
mostly Brown or Black minds because the liberals might even turn their
noses up at such a revelation. Instead the public must be told that
control units are only used on incorrigibles, savages, foreigners, gang
members or the sensationalized terrorists.
Who is Locked in Control Units?
Like our ancestors who may have been asked what got the shackle around
their ankle, what got them branded with their owner’s name on their
face, or what got that noose wrapped around their necks, our answer,
like theirs, is that it is the nature of our oppressor to seek to
eliminate all rebels and revolutionaries who oppose the oppressor
nation. This is ultimately what places one in a control unit.
Of course we are up against a sophisticated oppressor nation and the
placement of prisoners in control units is wrapped in flowery language.
We are told it is for “gang activity” or a “threat to the safety and
security of the institution.” I am sometimes given a chrono stating I’m
“actively engaged in a criminal conspiracy that threatens the
institution, staff and other prisoners.” This to the untrained mind may
sound like justification for torture. Not only is this character
assassination not true, but nothing justifies torture, absolutely
nothing!
It was only after I began to write articles that spoke up for prisoners,
and began filing appeals and lawsuits on behalf of all prisoners, that I
was targeted for placement in the Secure Housing Unit (SHU). In short,
when I began to resist state repression was when I was isolated in
solitary confinement. I was allowed by the state to commit minor crimes
and fight other prisoners, until I started to become politically
conscious. I am not alone.
Most who work to advance and organize their nation, speak up on behalf
of others, or engage in jailhouse lawyering will end up in a control
unit. This is a common practice in colonized society: those who resist
and who are politically influential are imprisoned under a colonial
oppressor.
Why Does the State Have a Validation Process?
Our oppressor must devise ways of placing us in control units, and in
California it uses the validation process. The validation process
attempts to lend a legal aura to torture and national oppression by
claiming to undergo a fair and unbiased process to validate someone as a
“gang affiliate.” This process is about as unbiased as asking the fox to
guard the henhouse.
The fact that the validation process continues to use things as
ridiculous as a birthday card, an Aztec drawing, or a book written by
George Jackson as evidence of gang activity proves that there is nothing
unbiased about this validation process. The kourt cases which supposedly
stopped the prison from using these items show how much of a joke the
injustice system is and how much it really is an extension of an
oppressive state. Our victories will never come from massa’s kourthouse.
The validation system helps pacify prisoners into thinking that there is
a legitimate process they are undergoing to end the torture. That
somehow if we are patient and do as we are told that we might get out of
the SHU. This of course is ludicrous. We will stay in SHU until our
oppressor feels we no longer resist, until they feel we are broken.
Sometimes they want to train their agents and attempt to capture all who
associate with us out on the mainline, as if we were live bait. But so
long as we remain resistant to their oppression, we will not be allowed
to freely associate with others. The validation process only works to
uphold our national oppression.
The Step Down Program is More Repression
When we go to committee in California SHUs we are given a form called
the “CDCR Advisement of Expectations.” This form gives a list of
supposed STG behavior which includes “participating in STG group
exercise, using gestures, handshakes, possession of artwork with STG
symbols.” Note that we are not informed what STG symbols are.
We basically cannot socialize with anyone, or we might be accused of STG
behavior. We are not told who is validated as part of a STG or given any
information about STG behavior. We are simply told we better not
associate with STGs or engage in their behavior. The state will decide
if we are behaving properly and allowed to proceed in the Step Down
Program. They claim they are the experts.
I have heard of some being put on this “Step Down” Program, but the
state is picking and choosing who they put in the program. In my opinion
it is a pacification program and I am not going to participate in it.
Participation masks the oppression of the state while also allowing them
to attempt to coerce me and any participants of being guilty, of
confessing guilt, even if only guilty of what they deem to be incorrect
thoughts.
Recent news of a federal class action lawsuit challenging policies and
conditions at the Pelican Bay SHU is welcome and something we all should
be following. Ashker et al. v. Governor of California et al., No. C
09-05796 claims that being held for more than ten years in SHU is
cruel and unusual punishment and that the validation process is a
violation of due process.(1) But here’s the kicker: if you have joined
the Step Down Program you are not included in this class action. So
already we see how the new Step Down Program is serving the state by
making it more difficult for prisoners to challenge their conditions.
My behavior is no more incorrect today than it was the first day I was
captured and housed in the SHU. The state will not be let off the hook
and I refuse to step down from resisting oppression. The Step Down
Program continues the same oppression that the validation process
started: it attempts to justify what the state is doing to the oppressed
nations.
What will End the Validation/Step Down Program?
The Step Down Program is not only similar to the validation process, but
here in California many prisons are still using both methods, so we need
to end them both.
From the beginning I saw the need to struggle for closing the SHU. From
the first hunger strike I knew that if we don’t close the SHU
altogether, the state will just have us fighting the same problem under
new names for decades via strikes/lawsuits. This will never accomplish
our goal. We need to keep all justifications for the use of solitary
confinement in our scope. No matter why someone is held in solitary
confinement, it is always torture and it should always be opposed.
At the same time we have made improvements in many prisoners’ lives and
some have gotten out of SHU, and I am happy for this. However validation
and Step Down Programs will keep us locked in the SHUs until we can make
resistance to oppression a hip and common thing. When hunger strikes
occur more often than once every ten years, and peaceful protests are as
frequent as spring cleaning, then maybe we will finally end
validation/step down programs.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Most civilians would say that controlling gang
violence is a good thing, and that perspective is exactly what the
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) is
relying on for its gang validation and Step Down Programs. The
assumption is that all groups classified as gangs are engaged in
criminal activity, and anyone in contact with the gang must be a member.
Let’s put aside for now the reality that the U.$. military and police
force is the biggest gang in world history. If anyone is organized in
criminal activity and terrorism, it’s them. That any U.$. government
agency claims to be against gang activity without being critical of
itself is just a joke.
Lumpen organizations that are not necessarily revolutionary are also
targeted as gangs, whether or not they break U.$. laws. The real threat
is not the activities that the lumpen are engaged in, but that they have
any level of unity and organization. STG labels and Step Down Programs
criminialize the association, not actual crime.
The U.$. government will do everything it can to protect its
international hegemony. Controlling any potentially subversive
population within its borders, especially the internal semi-colonies, is
a high priority, no matter how much they dress it up with fancy titles
and administrative process.
In New York what you call “gang validation” is called “gang
intelligence” and every prison has at least one sergeant who works on it
full time.
Alleged gang members are very often self-identified by foolish displays
of colors, flags, and wacky writings found on cell searches. Sadly, many
are not real gang members in any substantive sense, but foolish young
wannabes who are horribly manipulated by “gang leaders.” In New York,
and likely everywhere, nearly all “gang leaders” are really
collaborators of the worst, most manipulative kind, and they are nearly
all rats. It’s pretty easy for the “gang intelligence sergeant” to look
good when the leader gives him a written membership list! Which doesn’t
have to be at all accurate, of course.
The biggest gang intelligence tool is the phones – New York State
prisons record 100% of phone calls on digital hard drives. Obviously,
there are not enough ears to listen to 80,000+ prisoners all the time,
so they just sample or review a particular prisoner’s calls. Or they may
review calls to a certain phone number by multiple different prisoners.
And the authorities are very careful. They rarely make direct use of
recorded calls to nail minor offenders. I know about the extent of the
monitoring because I double-bunked with a guy whose ex-girlfriend’s new
boyfriend was beaten up very badly. My bunky was questioned harshly and
almost charged based on calls going back two years. Another man, who I
worked with, a defrocked politician, got six months in the box, when
“they” had it in for him, based on year-old recorded conversations.
A technical note: hard drive voice recording costs about 1 cent per hour
once the system is set up. Put another way, it would cost more to have
someone periodically erase old recordings than it costs them to keep
them indefinitely.
From snippets of phone conversations I’ve overheard while making my own
calls, nearly all prisoners are lulled into complacency and extreme
carelessness by the authorities letting little transgressions slip by
while they wait for the really useful information.
In New York, men identified as gang affiliates go to the most miserable
prisons which have the fewest educational and remedial programs (nearly
zero). Young, generally terrified, totally uneducated men get no help. I
call them “five centers,” just empty recyclable cans. Recidivism is good
for job security. Just like a hotel or restaurant, prison employees make
real money on repeat customers.
Another method is to record the information on the outside of mail. I
happen to know Green Haven Correctional Facility was doing that big time
(probably related to Muslim prisoners). Authorities look for multiple
prisoners written from or writing to the same address. Same game with
phone numbers. It’s not likely ten guys have the same wife or grandma.
Regarding the petitions advertised on page 12 of Under Lock &
Key, please be very careful. Petitions from prisoners are
completely illegal in New York. A clear constitutional violation which
has, unfortunately, been allowed by every level of New York and federal
courts. Please find another word, at least, and please don’t encourage
more than one signature on any piece of paper, or multiple letters
mailed together. Anything considered a petition in New York is a quick
bus ride to a six-month box stay.
I do not mention anything in New York out of admiration. It’s the worst
and sometimes the best because they spend (waste and steal) the most.
The real fixes are real pay, real freedom, not the phony kindness of the
dictator. The most distressed prisoners must get the most help, not the
least. The gangs exist mostly as a tool of domination and manipulation –
in the larger view they are created by and for the system, not combated
by the prison system. The only usefulness to my mind of somewhat better
practices in New York prisons or elsewhere is that New York’s practices
may temporarily help men’s arguments in other states.
MIM(Prisons) responds: There are people out for themselves in all
prisons, who will sell out their fellow prisoners to the guards. But we
would not categorize all so-called “gang leaders” as collaborators. No
doubt some are, but some are working with lumpen organizations that have
a genuine interest in the anti-imperialist fight. We need to judge each
individual for their own actions and political line. Similarly we judge
each organization in the same way.
This comrade correctly points out the many difficulties prisoners face
with secure communications and general security of self-preservation. As
we’ve written in the past,
secure
communications are a critical part of self-defense at this stage in
the struggle. Everyone needs to be conscious of the many ways the
imperialist state can monitor our work and communications. The Amerikan
public knows that all its communications are being monitored now, and
prisoners should be under no illusion about theirs.
Along those lines, comrades in New York should take heed of this warning
about petitions. At the same time, we should not be scared into
complacency. Petitioning the government is a basic right guaranteed by
the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, which
reads, “the right of the people… to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.” So while we should be strategic about using
petitions in conditions where they have been used as an excuse for
political repression, we must fight these battles for basic civil rights
for the imprisoned population in this country. MIM(Prisons) will work
with comrades in New York to push this battle further.
Things have been pretty rough here at Kern Valley State Prison (KVSP). A
prisoncrat-orchestrated racial riot has put me in administrative
segregation since July. KVSP’s “A” yard (the only general population,
non-honor yard) has been, more or less, on a constant lock-down since
the beginning of the year. This lock-down is due to racial tensions that
have been exacerbated by the prison’s state-sponsored security threat
group, also known as the goon squad, or simply the gooners.
The best way for the prison oligarchy to remain in power and thwart any
organizing or political dissent is to keep us all fighting amongst
ourselves. Of course this is nothing new for many of us, but for some
reason we all find ourselves locked down time and again, pointing
fingers (and unfortunately, knives) at one another instead of using our
minds of reason to see that clearly this whole war/mess has been
instigated by the very pigs that always have the most to gain. It’s
extremely frustrating to sit here watching the same pattern of senseless
fighting and rioting occur while the pigs laugh, crack jokes, and
generally play us against each other for their sick jollies and
political agenda.
This madness on “A” yard at KVSP and elsewhere in the state is
definitely part of a much bigger political agenda. One of the results of
the 2013 general hunger strike is that, slowly but surely, a lot of
those guys have been returning to the main lines after spending ten,
fifteen, or twenty years back there in the SHU. Well, CDCR can’t just
let those beds remain empty so we’ve been seeing the gooners dropping
fallacious gang validation packets on people for all kinds of erroneous
reasons. And the best way to “prove” gang conspiracy or activity is to
run us all into these stupid racial riots. The fucked up thing about it
is that it’s working. Every time we all go out to the yard and fight
each other is another victory for the pigs, and another bus load of
“gang members” heading to the SHU torture units and thus, the very
“evidence” CDCR points to as justification in keeping those control
units open and full.
This white vs. Black violence needs to stop for the benefit and health
of both our people. Let’s stop and remember that it should always be
blue vs. green! It’s time for peace on these yards. Don’t forget who the
real enemy is.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This comrade’s call for peace on the yards
underscores the importance of the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons. We need organizations to come together behind
bars to stop the pigs and the imperialist system in general. A United
Front is comprised of groups with different views and goals, that have a
common enemy. It doesn’t require everyone to agree on everything, and in
the case of the UFPP there are just
five
key principles around which groups have unity: Peace, Unity, Growth,
Internationalism and Independence. If your organization is interested in
putting an end to the fighting amongst the oppressed and ready to take a
stand against the oppressor get in touch for more information about the
UFPP.
For the past 19 months I have been locked down in solitary confinement,
all because of a gang validation. In February 2013, I was taken from my
cell and locked down in the hole, for nothing. I haven’t broken any
rules of the prison or given them any reason to punish me. Without a
hearing or a proper investigation I was thrown in the hole and labeled
“Goodfellas” (G.F.). They put a label on me and several others, and we
are “guilty by association.” No matter if you are G.F. or not, Smith
State Prison will label you G.F. if you are from Atlanta. And the
Goodfellas are the only group of people in this prison on lockdown.
Georgia Department of Corrections (GDC) started this new program called
the “tier program.” From my understanding it was designed to treat us as
individuals instead of as a group. It’s supposedly a 9-month program,
and when you complete the program you are supposed to get out of the
hole. But that only applies to those who are not validated Goodfellas.
If you are validated G.F. then you are stuck in the hole even after you
complete the 9 months.
I have the Standard Operating Procedures of the administrative
segregation Tier 2, and it states that Tier 2 program is not a
punishment measure. Why do I feel that I’m being punished for no reason?
All my privileges have been taken away. I can’t go to the store for the
same things as general population. I can’t order a CD player, radio,
books, magazines, etc. By being in the hole I have no access to a TV so
I’m lost on what’s going on in da outside world.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This system of labeling people as members of
an organization based on where they are from is well documented in
California as well, and we’re sure it’s going on in other states. While
this practice purports to address regional disputes that may turn
dangerous behind bars, this practice actually forces people who may not
have identified with a lumpen organization to become affiliated for
self-defense. It does help promote one goal of the prisons: to fuel
disputes between prisoners and expand gang validations to justify
locking up more people in long-term isolation, just like this writer
explains is happening in Georgia where people labeled Goodfellas aren’t
let out of the hole in violation of the prison’s own rules. We have
reports
that some G.F.s have been held in isolation for many years.
The
United
Front for Peace in Prison is taking this validation and turning it
against the prisons by calling on all organizations and individuals to
come together and fight together against the criminal injustice system.
Whether or not you are actually a part of a lumpen organization, if you
are put in a unit with others you can use this opportunity to promote
peace and unity. And together we can fight to shut down control units,
and build a movement that can defeat the imperialist system that needs
prisons and long-term isolation units for social control.
I am housed at Suwannee Correctional Close Management Unit, which is the
Florida Department of Corruption’s equivalent of the SHU or AdSeg. On 4
August 2014, myself and several other political prisoners on my cell
block were targeted for repression during a shakedown which was
conducted by the pigs. This shakedown was in retaliation for several
grievances/complaints being filed about the corrections officers denying
us outdoor yard access and indoor day room activities, including access
to the phones.
During the shakedown the pigs read some notes I had written down from
studying politics, history, and communism. These notes contained some
commentary that wasn’t very patriotic or friendly toward the Amerikan
imperialist regime. When the pigs ordered me to explain the notes I told
them that “I like to take notes on politics and current events,” and “I
like to keep tabs on what’s going on in the outside world.” The sergeant
then held up one of the notes referring to “sovereignty” and said “so
you’re a sovereign citizen?” To which I replied, “No, I’m just a normal
human being.” Then he told me to explain why I had notes on weapons. I
told him how I was in the U.$. army and developed a fascination for
firearms, and he responded by saying, “so now you’re a domestic
terrorist?” I then told him that the average Amerikan citizen is more
likely to be terrorized by their own local law enforcement than by
so-called “terrorists.”
Myself and three other prisoners were placed in confinement after the
shakedown and we were charged with the disciplinary infraction of
“Possession of Gang Related Paraphernalia.” They tried to validate me as
a member of a Security Threat Group (STG) on the basis that in the notes
I made a reference to “Popular Sovereignty” and that therefore I was in
possession of documents related to the sovereign association, which the
imperialist bureaucrats view as a STG because sovereign citizens are not
compelled to abide by U.$. laws.
When I went to my disciplinary hearing I told these pigs that the
so-called evidence they have against me (the “gang paraphernalia”) is
merely a bunch of notes I copied from social studies. I explained that
“Popular Sovereignty” is (supposed) to be one of the five basic
principles of Amerikan government and that anyone who claims to be a
patriotic Amerikan citizen should at least know this.
I used this argument to beat this charge and I also presented my own
evidence as a defense – part of a social studies assignment on Amerikan
government from FDOC’s very own educational department which explains
(what is supposed to be) the Five Basic Principles of Amerikan
Government; 1) Federal System, 2) Popular Sovereignty, 3) Separation of
Powers, 4) Checks and Balances, and 5) Limited Government. In real life
these “principles” hold no valuable meaning, just as the U.$.
constitution is merely a piece of paper.
It seems evident that anyone making an attempt to educate themselves is
viewed as a threat by the imperialist bureaucrats and anyone who is
against oppression and imperialism is a “domestic terrorist.” As
revolutionaries, it is imperative that we educate ourselves and our
fellow comrades and expose the true terrorists for who they really are:
the terrorists in pig clothing, masquerading as those who “protect and
serve” and provide “care, custody and control.”
We shall prevail in our struggle against imperialist oppression.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We have heard from some comrades that even
writing to MIM(Prisons) or participating in our correspondence study
groups can be used as evidence for STG validation. We know there is a
risk to corresponding and working with MIM(Prisons) but the education
and organizing opportunities are great. We hope others will take this
comrade’s example to fight false validation attempts made against them
and stay active in political work and study. For those not yet involved
in political study, write to us to join our next introductory study
group.
I recently came across something that may be of interest to you. I was
doing some research into this reactionary pro-prison propagandist
organization known as the National Gang Crime Research Center (NGCRC).
It’s run by an adamant apologist for this pernicious system named
Dr. George W. Knox. Dr. Knox and the swine that work for NGCRC routinely
conduct surveys for the gulag system to help them identify and
neutralize any potential “threats.” I was able to get my hands on one of
these surveys and preliminary finding reports that was conducted within
148 gulags in the U$A, representing 48 states, and nearly 150,000
prisoners. Now, the part of the survey that I thought may be of some
interest to MIM(Prisons) is the following:
Low Level of Contamination from the MIM
Some types of political extremist groups try to recruit inmates and
prisoners in America, they can do this through the U.S. Postal Service.
These groups often have sophisticated websites as well. The Maoist
International Movement (MIM) exists to spread communist ideology among
inmates incarcerated in American jails and prisons. It seeks to
radicalize prison inmates and give them a platform for organizing
resistance against the American government. If your inmates are
corresponding with MIM, you might have a problem brewing.
The survey included the question “have any of the inmates in your
facility corresponded with the Maoist International Movement (MIM)”?
Only 4.6 percent of the respondents indicated that their inmates have
been in contact with MIM. Thus, it would appear that MIM is not
effectively reaching out to the vast majority of American inmates. Not
yet at least. Alternatively, maybe such contact with MIM is going under
the radar of prison and jail officials.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This report on “Gangs and Security Threat
Groups” does not include mention of any other communist groups, so we
could see our inclusion as an indication of MIM(Prisons)’s success in
reaching oppressed nation activists and the correctness of our political
line in threatening imperialism and Amerikkkan rule. Communism is our
goal: a society where no group has power over another group. This
threatens the imperialist criminal injustice system for sure. In
reality, as the study admits, they cannot really judge our reach based
on survey of prison administrators alone. We would love to reach the
vast majority of prisoners, but in practice we are focused on those who
are interested in anti-imperialist politics and/or open-minded and
looking to learn. Nonetheless, we take this as a call to action for
Under Lock & Key readers: we need to increase the
percentage of people in contact with MIM(Prisons)!
A few years ago, former Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (PA DOC)
Director Jeffrey Beard relocated to the California Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). Director Beard was known for his
tyrannical style of utilizing confinement and isolation for more
sadistic than safety purposes, by increasing constantly the number of
prisoners placed on the restricted release list (RRL). Once on this
list, the only persyn who can finalize your release back to general
population is the Governor of Pennsylvania. Beard, after seeing the
practice of the California STG program, informed current PA DOC
Director, John Wetzel, of these tactics of oppression, suppression and
repression. In the summer of 2012 the Pennsylvania security threat group
(STG) unit was started.
In Pennsylvania, a security threat group is any group of persyns who
continuously ignore the department’s administrative rules, i.e. any
unauthorized group activity. The word “group” is the concealing factor
of the oppressive practices in place in the PA DOC. Members of religious
“groups” such as Muslims, Jews, Moors, Nation of Islam, Nation of Gods
& Earths, etc., are placed on the list of documented STGs violating
the First Amendment right to freedom of religion and freedom of
association. Members of political “groups” such as the New Afrikan
Communists, New Afrikan Independence Movement, Black Liberation Army,
etc. are placed on the list of documented STGs, violating the first
amendment right to freedom of political identification and freedom of
association.
Of approximately 175 captives brought to the Pennsylvania STG program,
95% (166) are of oppressed nation heritage. Out of this percentage,
about 20 were actually told why they were abducted for the program,
i.e. why they were labeled STG members, although the reasons were mostly
untruthful and unjustifiable. There is no appeal process in place to
combat placement in the program. There is no validation/assessment
hearing or procedure in place to present your side of the alleged claims
or bring forth any evidence or witnesses on your behalf. Those who do
attempt to refuse this assignment are placed on RRL. In order to be
released from there you have to agree to do the STG program (the same
program you refused in the first place!).
The tactics employed here are quite surely the same as any other STG
unit. Obstruction of correspondence (incoming and outgoing), no visits
(unless earned through advancing in the program), no phone privileges
(unless earned through advancing in the program), inadequate legal
services and materials (unless earned through advancing in the program),
thought police/Orwellian indoctrination and debriefing systems disguised
as cognitive restructuring. Those who hold firm the belief this is an
injustice are labeled as “in denial and unwilling to give up
participation in group activity.” Those who express their opinions are
titled as “thinking criminally” or using a “gang mentality.” The
guidelines, procedures and policies governing the programs are
restricted to the public. Instead a prisoner supplement handbook is
issued to each captive which quite surely differentiates from the
restricted policy.
Exercise, food, commissary and restraints are used as an enticement
method as well as punishment. For example, you may hear a pig say “if
you program, you won’t have to wear handcuffs.” Or “if you don’t
complete the assignments you won’t be able to order commissary.” To
increase the allure of these “privileges” they make contrasting
practices as hard and uncomfortable as possible. They feed you next to
nothing to increase hunger and craving for commissary. They make all
movements restrained to add to the uncomfortability. This is all done in
hopes of breaking your spirit or to make you “give in to the
inevitable,” to quote a pig.
These are only a few of the ever-changing, ever-occurring issues here
for myself and the komrades. There is a resistance to struggle not only
for our liberties but for those who would come after us as an example of
unity, komradery and solidarity in struggle.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We are seeing this STG classification used to
target activists in
Colorado,
Maryland,
North
Carolina,
Michigan,
as well as
California
and no doubt many more states. While the development of STG programs is
a sign of the strength of the oppressed nation organizations and
political activists, it is also a dangerous tool of repression that we
must expose and fight. Targetting prisoners for “group” or “gang”
activity has long been an excuse to bring down oppression on those with
the greatest interest and organization in fighting the criminal
injustice system.
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.