Black Incarceration Rates Finally Beginning to Drop

By BitcoDavid

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics and the Sentencing Project, prison sentences for Blacks dropped significantly, from 2000 to 2009. Whites and Hispanics however, have seen an increase in that same period.

+ Midyear 2009 Incarceration Rates by Race and...

Midyear 2009 Incarceration Rates by Race and Gender per 100,000 U.S. residents of the same race and gender. Prison Inmates at Midyear 2009 – Statistical Tables – US Bureau of Justice Statistics, published June 2010. See tables 16-19 for totals and rates for blacks, Hispanics, and whites. Broken down by year, gender, and age. See page 2 for “Selected characteristics of inmates held in custody in state or federal prisons or in local jails”. It has the overall incarceration rate. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This change in the makeup of the prison population is most significant among Black women, down 30.7%. Black women who were 6 times more likely to be incarcerated at the turn of the century, are now only 2.8 times so. Black men were 7.7 times more likely than their White counterparts to be imprisoned. Their rate has dropped to 6.4 times that of Whites.

White incarceration however, is up by 47.1 percent for women and 8.5 percent for men. Latinos are down by 2.2% but Hispanic women are up by 23.3%.

Jailer to the World, America’s current prison population is approximately 38% Black and 34% White. Women – who are commonly incarcerated at twice the rate of men for similar offenses – now number over 100,000 inmates.

English: A visual representation of states in ...

A visual representation of states in the United States by number of imprisoned persons. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This isn’t as good of news as it appears to be. Essentially, although one social group who has traditionally been ill-served by the Justice system is seeing a small improvement, others are seeing a harsher backlash. Incarceration is an industry in America, and no hotel ever succeeded with empty rooms.

It is also important to bear in mind that these data reflect the number of prison terms meted out during this past decade, and do not reflect the numbers of existing inmates, previously sentenced and still serving time.

Data for this article came from the NYT. Here’s the link.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/us/incarceration-rates-for-blacks-dropped-report-shows.html

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

[This is our last post for February - our awesomest month yet. Next month is our birthday. I'm looking forward to bringing our "A" game for March. Until then, thank you all for reading and supporting DeafInPrison.com. I love you all! -- BitcoDavid]

LipreadingMom’s Hearing loss bullying Campaign

By BitcoDavid

Shanna Groves is working on a new campaign to bring awareness to the subject of bullying of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. LipreadingMom is one of our favorite sites, and she’s been a wonderful asset for us. We are honored and happy to help out with this campaign in whatever way we can.

As a person with hearing loss, I have seen bullying first hand. I’ve been called ‘stupid,’ ‘mule-headed,’ and have been nicknamed ‘La-La-Land Shanna.’ I simply want to be known as Shanna. Help the more than 48 million people in the United States and worldwide with hearing loss and deafness by bringing awareness to the need to stop this kind of harassment and bullying. People who are deaf or hard of hearing need acceptance, not rejection, to thrive in school and the workplace. Repeat this: “Hearing loss and deafness bullying ends…with ME.” Learn more about my story at LipreadingMom.com.

Here’s the link.

https://www.change.org/petitions/hearing-loss-bullying-in-schools-and-the-workplace-stop-the-bullying-of-students-and-employees-with-hearing-loss

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.
 

Petition for Justice Silenced Campaign

By BitcoDavid

 

Keith Wm DeBlasio  posted this on Prison Reform Movement’s FaceBook Page. DeafInPrison.com has long been in support of the Justice Silenced Campaign and Prison Reform Movement (PrisonMovement’s Weblog).

The Justice Silenced Campaign is asking EVERYONE to support two new major actions by using the links below to send letters regarding identified discrimination against the deaf and hard of hearing in our judicial system.
Ask West Virginia to Address Discrimination Against the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
The Justice Silenced Campaign has begun a national movement to stop the obvious discrimination against the deaf and hard of hearing within the judicial system and our nation’s prisons. As part of this campaign, Freedom of Information Act requests have revealed the definitive denial of interpreters for deaf parties by civil court, family court, and criminal court judges within West Virginia for which no disciplinary procedures have been initiated by the Judicial Investigation Commission. Some documented cases were identified in the 23rd Judicial Circuit, the 17th Family Court Circuit, and individual Magistrate Courts.
Ask the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia and the Access to Justice Commission to address discrimination against the deaf and hard of hearing in West Virginia courts.
https://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6220/c/1307/p/dia/action3/common/public/index.sjs?action_KEY=13056
Ask the Utah Dept. of Corrections to Address Discrimination Against Deaf and Hard of Hearing Prisons
The Justice Silenced Campaign has begun a national movement to stop the obvious discrimination against the deaf and hard of hearing within the judicial system and our nation’s prisons. As part of this campaign, surveys have been received from inmates across the country regarding access to interpreter services and other necessary accommodations, and many of those surveys have indicated a lack of access for the deaf and hard of hearing in in the Utah Department of Corrections.
Ask the State of Utah to investigate these claims and address the obstacles for deaf and hard of hearing prisoners.
https://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6220/c/1307/p/dia/action3/common/public/index.sjs?action_KEY=13052

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

On the Boren-Thomas Case

By BitcoDavid

Laura Christine Boren Thomas, 20 slain by Andre Thomas on March 27th 2004.Photo by Matt Rainwater for Texas Monthly, courtesy of NYT.

Laura Christine Boren Thomas, 20 slain by Andre Thomas on March 27th 2004.
Photo by Matt Rainwater for Texas Monthly, courtesy of NYT.

Andre Thomas is insane. That statement requires no validation, no clarification and leaves no room for debate. Just over 11 years ago, Thomas brutally murdered his estranged 20-year-old wife and her 2 children – 4 years old and 13 months old, respectively. He did so, by attempting to dig their hearts out of their chests. He then left the scene, and tried the same on himself. Since it is impossible to cut out your own heart, he failed – surviving to face charges. He confessed, and at age 21 was sentenced to death.

While awaiting trial, Thomas gouged out one of his own eyeballs. In 2008, he gouged out the other, this time eating it.

Mugshot from 2004. Mr. Thomas gouged out His eyes, eating one. Photo credit: Grayson County Sheriff's office, courtesy of NYT.

Mugshot from 2004. Mr. Thomas gouged out His eyes, eating one. Photo credit: Grayson County Sheriff’s office, courtesy of NYT.

During the month that preceded the crime, Mr. Thomas had sought mental health treatment, on several occasions. Twice, during this period, his obvious psychoses made doctors so nervous that they requested emergency detention warrants for him. He rang all the bells, ranting on about suicide, the Bible and his mission from God. He told the doctors that Ms. Boren was the Biblical Jezebel, that his son was the Antichrist and that his infant daughter was part of a satanic conspiracy. He ranted and raved. He spoke of hearing voices, and told how he had been called upon to free their hearts of demonic possession.
Despite all this, he was never detained, and never treated.

In Texas, as in most states, hospitals cannot hold people who check in for mental health reasons, but refuse to stay. It is necessary to obtain a warrant, in which case the burden of proof falls on the psych department, to show that the patient is a potential danger to himself or others. However, Texas does have a non-profit organization that is seeking to change that – the Texas Appleseed Project. They are urging the state to change the existing law. One such change would involve granting hospitals and mental health facilities the right to detain patients in the advent of a demonstrable mental health crisis.

This is just one more case where we – society – dropped the ball, and let a disturbed psychotic slip through the cracks. In short, we could have saved that family. Records show that Thomas had complained of hearing voices – voices that commanded him to do evil things – since he was a small child. He told school friends and teachers that he heard demons in his head. By his teens, Thomas had attempted suicide several times. He was an alcoholic and a drug addict. By his 18th birthday, he already had a long history of arrests.

We failed him, and now we want to kill him. He did a horrible thing and he deserves to be punished. Perhaps, but we need to be very careful here. Almost 2 decades before he did that horrible thing, he came to us, asking for help. We chose not to give it to him. It’s too expensive. It’s a violation of his Constitutional rights. He didn’t follow the prescribed plan. Would you lock up everybody who mutters about suicide – or even homicide?

A friend of mine, several years ago, was going through a bad patch. His job was in jeopardy. His family was falling apart around him. He was losing his home, and he was drowning in debt. He chose to seek the advice of a mental health professional. In the ensuing session, he mentioned to the doctor, “Sometimes I just feel like I could kill.” Up went the red flags, and my friend ended up hospitalized. In Massachusetts, they can hold you for 3 days for observation. My friend wasn’t mentally ill. He was suffering. It’s something people do. Some may see those 3 days as an overreaction on the part of the doctor, and in this particular case, I would agree.

What about Dylan Klebold? Maybe 3 days of forced observation – followed up with treatment upon the realization that this young man was indeed a threat to himself and others – could have saved the lives of the Columbine students.

The mentally ill can be cured. But, it is expensive, and sadly – at times – it involves stepping on one or more of their Constitutional rights. We just need to maintain caution. There is a difference between watching out for those in need, and becoming a police state. I’m not advocating some sort of Aktion T-4, here. Individual liberty is – and must always be – paramount in American law, but we cannot continue to ignore the mentally ill, hoping they’ll just go away – and we can’t keep letting the penal system and the death penalty do the work we’re either too lazy or too inept to do.

The grave-site of Thomas' 3 young victims. Photo Credit Matt Rainwater for Texas Monthly, courtesy of NYT.

The grave-site of Thomas’ 3 young victims. Photo Credit Matt Rainwater for Texas Monthly, courtesy of NYT.

In writing the above, I consulted the following:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/24/us/advocates-seek-mental-health-changes-including-power-to-detain.html

http://crimeblog.dallasnews.com/2009/01/texas-death-row-inmate-plucks.html/

http://www.johntfloyd.com/blog/2009/02/andre-thomas-insane-in-texas/

http://www.adriangarcia.com/2013/02/20/andre-thomas-mental-health-criminal-justice-collide/

http://murderpedia.org/male.T/t/thomas-andre-lee.htm

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Why Did This Happen?

By BitcoDavid

Here’s the story. A train had pulled into the station in a Brooklyn, N.Y.  subway in late January,  and the usual throng of waiting passengers pushed and jostled to get on board. A 55-year-old man, was one such passenger, as were two teenage girls. Apparently, one or both of the girls pushed past the 55 year-old, in a somewhat violent manner. Enough so anyway, that when Charles Bunn finally got on board, he mentioned to the two girls that they could have at least said, excuse me.

According to Bunn,  the two girls jumped up from their seats and began screaming at him. He stood up to respond, and the screaming broke into a melee.

A cellphone video shows the two girls tag-teaming Bunn with a flurry of punches. Bunn, a parolee, was in the duck and cover position, unwilling to punch the girls back – partially due to the fact that they were indeed girls, and partially due to his parole status. This event could have resulted in a violation and a return to prison. Finally, as a last resort for his own defense, he began throwing some punches of his own.

It turns out, one of the girls, Chantelis Solano, 18, was pregnant – and on her way to a sonography appointment at the time.

The fight – on the train – had broken up, but all three had the misfortune of having to disembark at the same station, where after more taunting by the girls, the fight resumed. Police arrived, arrested the two girls for assault, and sent Bunn to the hospital with minor injuries.

Arraigned, the two girls spent a weekend in jail, and now face felony charges. Solano lost her baby. Charles Bunn received treatable injuries to the head and body, and an incurable blow to his pride and his masculinity.

Embedded below is the cellphone video courtesy of NBC New York.

Here’s their link: http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Teenage-Girls-Attack-Man-4-Train-Subway-Fight-Assault-Arrest-188305481.html and here’s a link to the New York Times’ coverage of the story: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/23/nyregion/in-fracas-on-train-parolee-found-that-hitting-back-was-a-risky-option.html

***

In researching this story, I came across a number of comments from readers of the different sites where it appeared. I was stunned at the number of comments that blamed Obama, and at the number of comments suggesting that Bunn should have availed himself of his Second Amendment Rights.

OK. First off, what on God’s green earth could this tragic tale have to do with the current Administration? No, really. A fat and smelly cigar to the first person who can show me a link between this idiocy and the Obama White House.

Second off… a gun? Really? A gun? You’d shoot these two girls? I’m not defending what they did. Obviously they need help, and perhaps punishment, but would you really end their lives? For this? Bunn is on parole. That’s why he didn’t hit the girls back. P-A-R-O-L-E. Maybe you should read some of the articles you’re commenting on. And what if he were to miss? In a crowded subway, he’s playing Lone Ranger, and he accidentally takes out someone’s Grandma.

Sheesh.

Everybody’s a victim here. Everybody was in the wrong – and perhaps nobody was. Women fight back now. Sadly, there isn’t always a good reason to fight back. He posed no threat to them. Conversely, his having fought back could have meant a return to prison – a double edged tragedy in itself. Tragic that he couldn’t fight back, and tragic that he had to.

This story has been eating away at me since I first learned of it. We just don’t live in the world I grew up in. Maybe its time we faced that fact.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Should We Care Beyond The School Yard?

By Jean F. Andrews

Is there a connection between early child abuse and adult criminal behavior among deaf and hard of hearing persons?

Among more than 1,400 adult females, childhood...

Among more than 1,400 adult females, childhood sexual abuse was associated with increased likelihood of drug dependence, alcohol dependence, and psychiatric disorders. The associations are expressed as odds ratios: for example, women who experienced nongenital sexual abuse in childhood were 2.93 times more likely to suffer drug dependence as adults than were women who were not abused. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

While exact statistics on this question are hard to find, from 10 cases of deaf youths in juvenile facilities around the country, it was found that 6 out of the 10 were abused by a parent, a relative or a by a neighbor. The deaf youths in turn physically or sexually abused a younger child then found themselves in a juvenile corrections facility. Thus, at one end of the spectrum we have deaf children who were physically, emotionally, communicatively and sexually abused. When they became youth and adults they act out by aggressively and physically bullying or assaulting or sexually molesting younger children.

English: Conceptual diagram showing relationsh...

English: Conceptual diagram showing relationship between adult sexual interest in children, pedophilia, and child sexual abuse. These distinct concepts overlap, but academics and clinicians consider them separate. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

At the core are two key issues according to Dr. Harold Johnson, professor of special education at Michigan State University. In his research he has found that deaf children often do not have the ability to report the abuse because they do not have the language skills. In addition, caring adults, particularly teachers around them lack of awareness to pick up on the cues of the abused child.

According to Dr. Johnson, awareness and building a knowledge base about childhood abuse is critical for teachers and teacher-educators. Dr. Johnson, a professor of special education in Michigan State University’s Department of Counseling, Educational Psychology, and Special Education has focused his research, training and writing on how web-based technologies and resources can be used to reduce isolation, facilitate collaboration, recognize excellence, and enhance teaching/learning within K–20 deaf education. He also has investigated the maltreatment of children with disabilities, particularly those with hearing losses.

English: The grave of Lisa Launders

The grave of Lisa Launders. On November 1, 1987, Joel Steinberg delivered several blows to Lisa’s head and then he and Hedda Nussbaum waited over 12 hours to call for help. Lisa did not die that day, she died three days later from severe brain injuries. (Photo Credit: Wikipedia)

Dr. Johnson has provided outstanding resources for schools, administrators, parents and families to address the heinous crime of the abuses of children who are deaf and hard of hearing. Such work can lead to preventive measures that have the potential of curtailing the growth of deaf adults in jails and prisons who after being victims as children, become the victimizers as adults.

***

Dr. Johnson’s resources are:

http://deafed-childabuse-neglect-col.wiki.educ.msu.edu/Presentations

Protecting the Most Vulnerable From Abuse

http://www.asha.org/Publications/leader/2012/121120/Protecting-the-Most-Vulnerable-From-Abuse.htm

The Risk & Prevention of Maltreatment of Children w/Disabilities

https://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/prevenres/focus/pdf

http://www.handsandvoices.org/resources/OUR/Index.htm

http://deafed-childabuse-neglect-col.wiki.edu.msu.edu/Bright+Spot+-+Home+Page.

***

At the other end of the spectrum are the deaf children and youth who do not receive proper treatment and end up as adults in the criminal justice system. If not appropriately rehabilitated, they become repeat offenders and as adults, they are incarcerated in Federal or state prisons where interpreters and accessible rehabilitative services may not be provided. Most of these deaf adults have low reading levels and low signing levels which further compounds their difficulties in prison and getting their Constitutional Rights in court.

If teachers, interpreters, social workers, counselors and psychologists-in-training could see both ends of the spectrum—Dr. Johnson’s work on child abuse preventive measures and www.deafinprison.com’s work on deaf adults who fall through the cracks and become adult offenders, then professors in teacher-education and other professional programs could make a significant contribution in educating the next generation of professionals in prevention, and when prevention fails, to care for the victims and victimizers beyond the school yard.

Jean F. Andrews is a Reading Specialist and Professor of Deaf Studies/Deaf Education at Lamar University.

He Was About to Take Out His Gun

By BitcoDavid

Craig Egan made this video after he had a harrowing experience with a security guard. He writes, ” I am traumatized! Please watch my video from the beginning to the end. I am sending one STRONG message that everybody needs to build a better deaf awareness.”

Apparently Egan was attempting to gain access to a building which required inputting a password ID. That Egan was attempting to enter a password known to him, suggests that he had rights to be in this particular building. The assumption is that it was his place of employment. When his password failed to work, he was approached by a security guard. Egan is Deaf, and could not hear the guard’s attempts at communication. When he finally looked in the direction of the guard, it was too late. Feeling threatened, the guard went for his gun.

This is but one more example of what happens when ill-trained authorities interact with the Deaf. Had the individual received proper training beforehand, he would have known to tap Egan lightly, on the shoulder, and to speak directly to him after having established eye contact. Further training would have even made it possible for the guard to communicate with Egan via ASL, or an interpreter.

As it was, it would have taken very little for this episode to have escalated into a disaster.

Here is the link to the youtube Video.

http://youtu.be/WQj7FX-2WLU

Learn more about all this by requesting to join the Deaf and Hard of Hearing group on FaceBook.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Remember We Are Picture People

By Pat Bliss

Image: Pat Bliss

Image: Pat Bliss

I just came back from my third trip to Florida in 4 1/2 months. Each trip had a purpose as a step further to show the innocence of Felix Garcia and towards his freedom. Felix may not be fully cognizant of what all these meetings/interviews      mean to him but he certainly participates with all his might, and answers questions to the best of his ability.

This trip involved Felix being interviewed by a reporter for a major Florida newspaper. Our scheduled appointment began at 9 A.M. But, there are procedures one must go through up front. Before being allowed into the prison, we gave the staff at the outside window, our IDs. They checked these IDs with their computer roster. When it was Okayed, and because we were going in as media, we all got special badges. The heavy metal gates clinked open and we went on inside – first, to be searched; all rings, bracelets, watches, eyeglasses accounted for. Oh yes, cannot forget the car key. The reporter had a pen and pad and of course, the camera equipment for taking pictures. Staff led us into the visiting area for the interview. The visiting area at Tomoka comprises of one enclosed large room with a canteen. From this room, you can go through double doors to a fairly large semi-enclosed room with barred windows. this room opens to the outside area, where there are concrete picnic tables. Everything is enclosed in barbwire. We settled for the middle room with its large picnic type tables.

A generic visiting room, not the one at Tomoka.http://bahlool.deviantart.com/art/Prison-visiting-room-99587324

A generic visiting room, not the one at Tomoka.
http://bahlool.deviantart.com/art/Prison-visiting-room-99587324

As per past interviews we’ve had, it was a very emotional time. Felix is so open and expressive. In my title, I said picture people, meaning that the deaf relate to pictures – not words – in general. Felix told me the reason for this, is the Deaf dictionary and the hearing world’s dictionaries are inches apart (he showed me the difference with his fingers). So, Felix tells much of his story to the reporter by demonstration. He is so precise, as to exactly what took place, that no one could misunderstand what he was saying.  Sign interpreter, Cheryl Santana from Interpreter Source in St. Augustine, was the conduit between us hearing people and Felix in understanding one another.

[Editor's note: ASL interpreters view their clients with the same level of confidentiality as do doctors and lawyers. Generally, they ask that we don't print their names. To facilitate those seeking interpreter services, in the Florida area, I have left the company name intact. --BitcoDavid]

Felix can read lips and speak pretty well but he’s not wise in formal settings for legal visits or media interviews – room for misinterpretation comes into play. During the interview, the camera operator was clicking away. She must have taken at least a hundred pictures. We were limited as to where the cameras would be shooting so not to include any wire fences or other inmates in the background. The interview should be in print in about 2-3 months. I will definitely let DeafInPrison.com know when it comes out, so it can have a link available to you readers.

I stayed over the weekend with a friend in Daytona Beach Shores and visited with Felix. The procedure as a visitor is the same for access inside the prison except there is a hand scan machine to put my right hand in to identify me electronically.  Once Felix arrived and we found seats, we talked about what is going on with his supporters, his prison life and anything else we could think of. The acoustics are very bad in these rooms. The noise (people talking loudly) around me was unbelievable to the degree that I was “deaf” in understanding much of what he was saying. There is also the fact our communication is not perfect and misunderstandings do occur. So Felix was thinking ahead. He had a pen handy, grabbed a few white napkins, and what I could not understand, he printed in brief sentences to get his point across. Or, if there was something I needed to remember, I would write it down and show him to be sure I understood what he said.  Nevertheless, one thing stood out. The phrase he repeatedly said many times. “Remember, we are picture people.” I took note of that and was quite aware then, as to why he drew diagrams a lot – it was in order for me to better understand what he was trying to convey.

On my way home, I was thinking about the phrase “we are picture people” and realized over the years, that Felix was in the habit of drawing – he would draw for clarity. Strangely, it wasn’t until this past weekend that I fully understood this was a Deaf trait in communication. I have come to appreciate the pictures in a new light.

Pat Bliss is a retired paralegal in criminal law. She continues to do legal work for indigent prisoner cases showing innocence. She is a Certified Community Chaplain, Certified as a volunteer for CISM (Crises Intervention Stress Management) and involved in community events.

What, No Digest Post?

By BitcoDavid

The New York Times reported on February 20th, that attorneys are seeking a Federal appeal for Death row inmate, Augustus Howell. Apparently, all death penalty inmates are to receive one final - Federal - appeal, a Habeas appeal, before the sentence can be carried out. Howell however, never got his because his original attorney missed the filing deadline. The court is being asked to rule that negligence by an attorney is sufficient grounds to waive the deadline.

This all stems from a law called the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. Quoting Wikipedia,

Other provisions of the AEDPA created entirely new statutory law. For example, before AEDPA the judicially created abuse-of-the-writ doctrine restricted the presentation of new claims through subsequent habeas petitions. The AEDPA replaced this doctrine with an absolute bar on second or successive petitions. Petitioners who attempted to bring claims in federal habeas proceedings that have already been decided in a previous habeas petition would find those claims barred. Additionally, petitioners who had already filed a federal habeas petition were required to first secure authorization from the appropriate federal court of appeals. Furthermore, AEDPA took away from the Supreme Court the power to review a court of appeals’s denial of that permission, thus placing final authority for the filing of second petitions in the hands of the federal courts of appeals.

According to Howell’s current attorneys, his original  lawyer was compromised by a conflict of interest. If Howell wins the judgement, some 30 other Death row inmates – who also were not granted Habeas appeals – would be eligible for the same benefit.

Howell was convicted for killing Trooper James Fulford in 1992. Apparently, Trooper Fulford encountered Mr. Howell in a routine traffic stop. In the car at the time, was a homemade pipe bomb intended for use in a drug related retaliation. Fulford discovered the bomb, and when he tried to open the container it was in, it exploded, killing him. Howell, who was already up on charges for other drug related crimes, ended up getting the death penalty.

The attorneys are arguing that Florida Governor Rick Scott, shouldn’t want to go up against Federal law in terms of carrying out executions.

Here’s the NYT‘s link: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/21/us/lawyers-seek-final-appeal-for-man-due-to-be-executed.html

***

The New York School for the Deaf in White Plains N.Y. has a championship basketball team, but the best player on the all boy team – is a girl.

This story also came from the Times. Holly Marschke, 14, is the youngest member of her team. She’s also the shortest, and the only female. She was mainstreamed until age 12, when she transferred to the White Plains facility. According to her parents, she was born deaf.

Holly plays along side the boys, and receives no special treatment. She averages 14 points a game, and plays the point guard position. According to the Times, she loves the show Switched at Birth, and says she will never give up basketball because she wants to be famous.

Here’s the link: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/18/sports/holly-marschke-sparks-boys-team-at-school-for-the-deaf.html

***

Explosion in ASL may do more harm than good. Mia Engle is a sophomore at Goshen College in Indiana, majoring in American Sign Language Interpreting. In a recent OpEd for the Times, she points out some of the problems faced by volunteers helping the Deaf in countries other than the U.S.A.

As readers of this site are well aware, ASL is a complex and complete language, and merely learning a few signs is not sufficient for communication in an immersion environment. Moreover, it is but one form of sign language and more closely parallels French sign than it does British or Australian.

Engle covers these points well, and advises goodhearted hearies to make sure they’re fully conversational in the sign applicable to the country in which they wish to volunteer.

What I found most interesting however, in her NYT piece, is that ASL is becoming so popular amongst the hearing. She says for example, that many parents are teaching their children sign from DVDs, even before the children are learning English.

Boy, the Grey Lady’s gonna owe us big time. Here’s another link.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/21/opinion/global/helping-hands.html

***

Finally, a non-New York Times piece. After 30 years as the ranking Blackwater of the Penal system, my favorite evil empire – CCA – has a baby sister. The GEO group claims 73,000 beds, and 18,000 employees around the globe. It even runs prisons in South Africa, although that’s not something I personally, would brag about. Here’s a pic of their corporate offices.

According to their Web site, the stock’s dropping. Too bad. I guess you’ll have to make those prisoners work a little harder in the tire factory.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

My Pick of the Year’s Best Posts

By BitcoDavid

Here’s an embedded PDF showing some of our best posts over the past year. I’ve tried to mix it up some, and include  – or at least mention – all our contributors and guest posters.

On a side note, I need to mention that Google will be changing their algorithm in the very near future, and the term “guest post” will no longer be used on DeafInPrison.com. It appears that Google will be marking posts with that appellation as spam. If you have a Blog site, and you frequently rely on guest posts, you might want to think about using different terminology.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

English: A Major Obstacle For the Deaf Suspect and Deaf Inmate

By Jean F. Andrews

ASL_Painting.jpg

ASL_Painting.jpg (Photo credit: robert.barney)

Police and jail officers are often confused by the many forms of English that come from the mouths and lips, and off the fingers and hands of deaf suspects. Just because the deaf person can speak some words, and lipread the question, “what is your name,” or even sign some words in English with voice, it is often assumed the deaf suspect knows enough English to get by without a qualified sign language interpreter. In one case a neighbor of a deaf suspect knew some Fingerspelling and a police officer assumed she was signing and could interpret his questioning. Often police officers will take out a pad and paper, and begin questioning expecting the deaf suspect to be able to read and write. Even when only fragmented phrases are the result, the officers will believe communication is going along just fine as they add charades, gestures and facial expressions. This comedy of errors continues to the jail, where the suspect is booked, fingerprinted, photographed. Then the Jail officers will speak louder and slower, gesture, and come out with a flurry of forms for the deaf suspect to place his signature on. The expectation is that the deaf person can understand slower speech as well as having a high enough reading level to understand these forms. Further, deaf inmates are expected to read the inmate handbook. Who would want to be in jail and not know the rules and regulations?

English: pictures of 2 sign language interpret...

2 sign language interpreters working together as a team for a student association meeting. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Because mainstreaming has often led to the dumbing-down of deaf education within public education, and the conventional policy of delaying the access of American Sign Language for deaf babies, we are seeing generations of semi-lingual deaf youth and adults who have impoverished skills in both English and ASL. It is the poor language environments that are holding them back in language acquisition. Instead of allowing deaf babies to grow and flourish cognitively, socially, emotionally and linguistically in bilingual ASL/English rich language environments, they flounder and flail in impoverished language environments where they get bits of speech and bits of sign thereby stifling their development of a whole visual language grammar upon which to build emergent English literacy as well as opportunities to acquire auditory/spoken language built on signed concepts. Many emerge from such poor language environments with a jumbled signing of English mixed with visual spatial elements of ASL signing. Most cannot read beyond the 3rd grade level. The result is devastating for them particularly in a jail or prison setting where English is the language used by police and jail officers.

One solution is to make it a police department and jail policy to provide qualified sign language interpreters for signing deaf suspects and inmates. Qualified sign language interpreters have the training and the skill to move their signing interpretation across the continuum from English-like signing, contact signing, and ASL for those suspects and inmates with varied signing skills. For deaf suspects and inmates with more severe language delays a Certified Deaf Interpreter (CDI) may be needed.

English: A Video Relay Service session, where ...

A Video Relay Service session. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Providing the qualified sign language interpreter accommodation 24/7 may be impractical. But providing qualified sign language interpreters whenever warranted as in all communicative interactions that have serious consequence (i.e. parole hearings) or when the deaf person’s Constitutional Rights are in jeopardy (i.e. Miranda Warning) is critical. For instance, a police officer will want to get the deaf person’s side of the story during a domestic dispute or a suspected drug deal or during the booking stage, or when jail staff need to ask medical and psychological questions or during the classification process and so forth.

Understanding the obstacles deaf suspects and inmates face using English on the hands, on the lips, out of the mouth and in print is complex. More training is needed to disentangle the misconception that a little bit of English will get the deaf suspect and inmate by, in the jail setting. It simply won’t.

Jean F. Andrews is a Reading Specialist and Professor of Deaf Studies/Deaf Education at Lamar University.

Happy Birthday, DeafInPrison.com

By BitcoDavid

Happy Birthday

Happy Birthday (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

We officially launched this site on Mar 4th, 2012. In honor of our upcoming birthday, I have made several improvements, and would like to take a minute to spell them out for you.

A web page, running

A web page, running (Photo credit: Beantin webbkommunikation)

Immediately, you will notice a difference in our top menu. We no longer have individual pages for the authors. Instead, each contributor receives a bio on our single Author’s page. Here, you can find their contact information, leave comments, view their Gravatars and follow what they’re working on.

Next, we have a page dedicated to recruitment of new contributors – either as guest authors or as regulars. Eventually, that page will be automated. You will be able to view the page, type in a post right there, and it will automatically submit it. Further, there will be an automated script that will allow you to sign up as a contributor, without going through the WordPress rigamarole.

English: A tag cloud (a typical Web 2.0 phenom...

A tag cloud (a typical Web 2.0 phenomenon in itself) presenting Web 2.0 themes. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Best of all, we now have an active Calendar page, listing important events – either in RL or virtual - that you can attend. This page is an embedded PDF. Like all our embeds, you can zoom it in for easier reading, or go see it in full size by clicking the link. This is an active page, and will be constantly updated as I receive more events. It will show 2 months at time.

If you are planning an event that you feel would be of interest to our audience, please e-mail me at service@bitcoelectronics.com with the pertinent details as well as a live link to the page or invitation. FaceBook events can be included. I will be only too glad to publish it on our Calendar page.

I have been skulking around the Internet since the bulletin board days, and my goal with DeafInPrison.com has long been one of active content. I know you want more than just text and pictures. Unfortunately, WordPress isn’t too hip to that stuff. But here at the massive DeafInPrison.com Plaza, we have a saying. “There’s more than one way to skin a cat.” (My apologies to cats, everywhere.) I have been working tirelessly to bring you the latest in Web 2.0 technology, and will continue to do so.

While you’re looking at all the changes taking place, please notice our sidebars. I have removed all the “milestone” widgets. We’re a year old now, and we have had over 30,000 views. I felt that valuable real estate could be better used by bringing you more information – and again – more active content. Look for more RSS feeds from the plethora of great sites we associate with, and eventually, some truly powerful and interactive additions. The sidebars are a source of pride for me. I want them to be a valuable resource for our many followers and fans.

English: Does Your Website Need a Web Content ...

Does Your Website Need a Web Content Management System? This fun flowchart can help you decide which features you’ll need for your website, and whether or not you’ll need a content management system such as Joomla, Drupal or WordPress (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I hope you can make use of these changes as you visit our site. Please feel free to comment on any of them, and suggest others that you would like to see. While I know that DeafInPrison.com is the Internet’s coolest Blog site, I also know that it can always be cooler still.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

A Great Idea, A Commitment and an Embeded File

By BitcoDavid

I am fortunate enough to live in quiet bedroom community outside of Boston, but it was not always thus. I used to live in the heart of one of the inner city’s biggest ghettos, Roxbury. I bring this up, because it was there, that dwelt a profound and long-lived piece of graffiti. Sprayed unceremoniously across a back-alley wall – and left untouched for years, perhaps even a decade – was simply, “Vietnam women carry guns.”

I always saw this brief epithet as an admonition to us, the three-legged gender. A line in the sand, if you will. To my interpretation, women were telling us that they would no longer bear the inequity, the violence, and the sexual servitude that made up their slice of the American pie. This spray-painted missive wasn’t a plea. It wasn’t even a demand. It was a warning.

US incarceration timeline

US incarceration timeline (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Since that time, I have seen our national incarceration rates increase by nearly 800%. What I didn’t know however, was that that number consists of a 2 to 1 ratio of women over men. That’s right. Women are being sentenced to prison terms at almost double the rate of men. In addition, the prisons in question are not keeping up with this massive influx of population. They’re failing to offer job and drug counseling. They’re desperately wonton in providing prenatal and postnatal care. They are at a loss to address inmate on inmate violence and rape, and evidence exists that they may even be complicit in it. In fact, the prison system in America is woefully inadequate at addressing the psychological and physical needs of women.

Consider these points from the Sentencing Project.

  • The Criminal Justice System currently has jurisdiction over more than 1 million women.
  • More than a quarter of those are currently housed in some form of state prison or jail.
  • Women now account for 7% of all prisoners in the U.S.
  • The number of women in correctional facilities has increased by over 400% since the mid-eighties.
  • In 2003,  29% of women’s convictions were for a drug offense. Thirty percent were for a property offense, where men were at 19% and 20% respectively. On the other hand, men were convicted of a violent crime 53% of the time, as compared to women’s 35%.

Are women committing more crimes than they did 30 years ago? Is law enforcement doing a better job of catching and prosecuting these women? Or is it that the economic, social and legislative pressures that are working on building our new criminal class, have an even more devastating effect on our female population? In other words, are more and more women turning to drugs, prostitution and theft, because they see no other way out?

Our gratitude to the Sentencing Project for their great work in putting together this report. To see the original, you can go here:

http://www.sentencingproject.org/doc/publications/womenincj_total.pdf

Tapestry Entertainment set out on a mission to bring awareness of this situation to the public. They decided that the best way to do that would be a movie – but here’s where their idea evolved from simply good to great. They didn’t want to make another documentary, and they certainly didn’t want to make a teen-porn Chained Heat kind of thing. What they did was to take letters and interview information from real women serving time in real prisons, and create a fictionalized facility which bears the title of their independently produced and marketed film – Women’s Playground.

Currently, their marketing plan involves screening events at selected independent theaters. As yet, they haven’t been able to get the film out, beyond the Philadelphia area. DeafInPrison.com has been in talks with Tapestry to work toward getting this powerful and entertaining independent film produced in DVD and streaming media formats. We are committed to making that happen. I think this movie needs to be seen. I think a film that is both educational and entertaining will work wonders in moving this tragic situation into the national debate.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Interview With Glenn Langohr, Author of Prison Riot

By BitcoDavid

While reading Prison Riot, I was struck by how similar this story is to the classic Melville novella, Billy Budd. Of course, the latter was written in a much more stilted voice, and was built on Biblical allegory – but the thread of the story is very much the same.

Here we have a power struggle between a cruel and sadistic Corrections Lieutenant, and a fair minded but ineffectual Warden. The victim in that power struggle ends up being the innocent – the powerless everyman, whom in the Melville book was represented by Billy, and in Prison Riot is represented by B.J. and his friend, Giant.

Where the analogy breaks down however, is that Billy Budd was fiction.

Suspension of disbelief is not necessary when the writer actually lived through the hell of the California prison system. As a student of literature, I can think of no author, better suited to tell the story of incarceration than a former inmate. Glenn Langohr’s writing is filled with tension, vivid characterization, in the moment conflict and a true pathos that dispels stereotypical thought. The reader sees his characters as people – not just inmates.

From the entertainment standpoint, Prison Riot is filled with all the stuff that a good novel needs. There’s plenty of action, violence, conflict and tension. From the educational point of view, one can use this book as a blueprint for how to behave, should the reader ever face the misfortune of confinement in an American penal facility. For example, at one point in a conversation with a fellow inmate, B.J. is asked a question that he sees as a violation of his personal space – the kind of thing that just wouldn’t happen in the outside world. His response? “I know how to do prison time.” Of all the prison books I’ve read – and there’s been a plethora of them – I’ve never read one that delved so deeply into the social mores and memes of prison life.

The book is short – only about 30,000 words. His writing style is quick and terse. The words race off the page. One can read this book in a sitting, but the impact will stay with you long after you’ve put it down.

As a writer myself, what I like best about Langohr is his voice. He writes for readers, not for the dictionary, and he peppers his books with argot. In short, this book should be a College textbook for all students of Law Enforcement, and a users manual for the rest of us. Read this book, and internalize it, and you’ll be able to walk the yard with confidence – and you’ll never sit at the wrong table.

–BitcoDavid

***

The Destruction after the Fremantle Prison Rio...

The Destruction after the Fremantle Prison Riots 4 January 1988 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

BD: You refer to the term “Block Guns.” Could you describe these? I take it from one of your paragraphs, that they shoot some sort of inert charge (apparently made of wood) or blank round, but can also accept live ammo. Can you expound on that?

GL: Great question. I didn’t explain it well enough in Prison Riot. The prison guards in California State prisons have a supply of block guns in the gun towers. Each building has a gun tower that overlooks the interior of the building, and also has a view of the yard where that building releases inmates. The block guns look like shotguns, but only shoot wooden blocks. They don’t shoot live rounds. The tower guards also have rifles that shoot live rounds – that legally, they are only supposed to use when inmates are using deadly weapons, not for fist fights. The block guns are used for fist fights.

The wooden blocks are compacted into a circular shape about the size of a silver dollar, but are a little thicker then a ping pong ball. The block guns are extrememly effective – in part because of the noise. In the building, or on the yard, the echo “booms” so loud that inmates inside every other building on the yard can hear it.

At Centinella State prison in Imperial Valley on the California and Mexican border, the prison yards are close enough together that inmates can hear the block gun go off on other yards. At Centinella it is an almost daily occurrence. As an inmate you become trained to expect it shortly after you hear the alarm go off, followed by a tower guard yelling, “GET DOWN!! GET DOWN!!” and then, “BOOM!! BOOM!!”

To give you a feel for the prison politics at Centinella, the Mexican inmates are ordered [by their shot callers] not to stop fighting until the block gun has gone off. Most of the time they keep going for about 30 seconds after the “BOOM” for respect and effect. That means you can expect to see a fight or stabbing on the yard, continue until the alarm screeches a whining noise – that rises and falls in decibels – followed by the order to get down; followed by a swarm of a couple dozen prison guards running to the incident, with about every third guard carrying a block gun.

At close range, block guns hurt bad and will knock the wind out of you and put you down. At more than around 40 feet, the block begins to come apart. Seeing it up close so many times, I can tell you that it breaks apart into circular rings and sizzles – burning  on the ground – on fire from the explosion sending it.

Prison Tactical Team (riot control)

Prison Tactical Team (riot control) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I find it interesting that in your descriptions of the riot – you make it clear that the guards are seen as a lower priority then the “enemy” inmates. Did you find that to be the case? In other words, was it common that an inmate would attack even at a time when an armed guard was standing there?

With this question you are getting really deep into prison life politics. It is the most eerie feeling to know a prison riot is coming well before it comes. Now you are getting into a gang riot or a Race riot. The gangs are where the pressure and most of the decisions are coming from. The prison guards don’t matter at all, compared to orders. To give you a better understanding, pretend you are in a California prison and you are told by your race, “If you ever see another race attacking one of us, you have to help and fight. If you don’t, you will be considered weak and you will be attacked.” This is the common mentality of every single race and to me, an ex prisoner of over 10 years, understandable and respectable.

I guess to fully understand this kind of thinking you have to picture being housed race by race, as far as who is in each cell. To watch your own race get outnumbered, attacked and possibly killed, while you are just watching, is a guarantee that you will be attacked by your own race later, as a form of discipline and order. So in that regard, as an inmate, the guard with the gun in the tower, or even 10 feet away in the chow hall, isn’t there at all.

Since we are getting so deep into prison life politics amoung races and gangs, I will explain it as it relates to other then race war and gang war situations. Lets say that I’m a White inmate and I watch another White inmate get attacked by a group of Black inmates – and instead of rushing to his aid, I follow the guards orders to “GET DOWN,” and just get on my stomach and watch the pummeling. For being in the area and not helping, I am in big trouble. In that situation, when the order is given to get me, the inmates will pick a spot to handle the business. That means that it will be done on the yard, as far away form the guards as possible. At times they – the guards, just can’t be avoided.  We call those suicide missions.

There has been a lot of discussion in the tech world and the media – over the past decade – of use of non-lethal but highly effective methods of stopping this kind of thing. Stuff like foam, high-pressure water, low frequency sound and pancake bullets – that sort of thing. In your experience, was any of this newer technology ever employed, or did the guards stay within the older framework of guns and gas?

While I was in prison from 1990, on and off through 2008, before I found a new path in writing books, I saw some changes in those deadly force measures. Keep in mind I’m talking California State prisons. First of all, the pepper spray works! It isn’t the kind of pepper spray you can imagine if all you are used to is what the police use on the streets. California prison pepper spray at one point killed a number of inmates because it was so pure that it stopped peoples breathing, caused shock and heart attacks. Somewhere in the mid 1990’s they finally toned it down slightly.

Don’t picture a little pepper spray bottle, picture a small fire extenquisher. Picture inmates drenched in so much pepper spray that it looks like they have been painted orange. I’ve seen white shirts and bald heads completely drenched in dripping orange fire. The pepper spray is so strong that if a fight is going down in the building, all of the inmates inside the cells will start coughing.  They will stand at the cell watching, with their faces covered with shirts like bandanas.

The next level of force was the old fashioned billy clubs. New laws changed the shape of them from the same kind the police use on the streets to higher tech ones that are spring loaded and eject a thinner steel outward. Those disappeared later. As mentioned earlier the guns start with the block guns and graduate to “LIVE ROUNDS COMING NEXT,” usually with that exact warning.

I have finally got around to writing about life at Centinella, where I spent my last amount of prison time and will use an example of a respectable gun tower guard. I had made it my business to develop conversations with gun tower guards, because I figured they would see me in a human light. I tried to pick their brains and make them laugh. One prison guard I talked to was an ex-military sharp shooter. When the Mexican inmates and Black inmates went off in a yard riot, that everyone knew was coming, that tower guard never fired a live round. That riot was a very serious one and prison made weapons were scattered all over the yard. More than a dozen inmates had puncture wounds from being stabbed. He probably should have fired live rounds, even if he only fired into the ground. But he had a lot of pressure on him to dance that fine line of which inmates can I righteously say are trying to kill. Later he was laughed at by many of the other guards as weak.

That Mexican and Black war was a long way from done. The next time they came off lockdown to wage another round, that same guard fired a live round in a smaller riot. He fired it through the middle of the basketball backboards right where the red square is.

I get the distinct impression that the guards’ reactions to you would have been no different, had you not been involved in the fighting. From your writing, I felt that they just kind of swept in and mopped up – paying no heed to innocence or guilt. In other words, even if you had hunkered down with your hands over your head, you still would have been tied up with zip ties and carted off to the SHU. Is that true, or am I missing something?

You have that part right on. In a riot like that they take everyone in the area and sort it out in ad-seg. To be found guilty of “being a combatant” it takes the written reports of eye witness accounts from the guards, pepper spray proof dripping off the inmate, injuries, hand evidence from punching or using a weapon and the very rare testimony from another inmate.

It’s clear to me that the financial rewards benefit the guards in these situations. Overtime, Hazard pay, etc. Bearing in mind that neither of us are corrections professionals, in your opinion, were the guards complicit in these riots? Did they see the financial benefits as incentives to foster dis-harmony among the many inmate groups?

Fantastic question and hard answer. Yes I have painted that picture in a number of my books that this is the case, and yes it does happen. However, it is rare where the guards do it in an evil way. For people who haven’t been there, this must be so hard to understand, but even the prison guards become affected by all the violence and pressure.

There are so many examples I can use of this but to be fair to how hard their jobs are, they can know a riot is coming just as well as the inmates – because a tiny percentage of the inmates send them written notes, telling them it is going to happen – yet they can’t stop it. What are they going to do, ship hundreds of inmates to other yards every time? I have been on over 25 different prison yards. In my experiences, I have seen guards get evil and instigate wars to continue, by what they say while we are locked down. When one side wins a yard fight in a big way – let’s say the Mexican inmates are attacked by the Black inmates and get their asses handed to them – and a Mexican veteran prison guard says things in the building like, “You guys aren’t getting off lockdown for years. You know that if you mess with one bean you get the whole burrito.” That is putting pressure on both races to keep the war going.

The prison guards and gun towers can pop cells open inside the building where both races are let out, in those situations, and the war reignites with what is called, on site orders. That kind of situation keeps the yard on lockdown and that hazard pay – time and a half continues.

Again, to be fair to the 99% of the prison guards who don’t deserve to be painted this way, it is a rare fact of California prison life. But, besides the extra money incentives, and overtime control, the prison guards are following a divide and conquer strategy because they would rather see the inmates fighting against each other versus fighting them!

There are 3 reasons that I can see for becoming a prison guard. A) One could have an anti-crime hard-on. Say one’s family or one’s self were victims of crime, for example. B) Money. It’s possibly the best paying and most in demand area of law enforcement. C) A genuine desire to help people turn their lives around. However, several psychological experiments conducted over the last half century would indicate that regardless of the motivations for joining up, the tendency is to move towards a culture of cruelty and corruption. Based on your experience, would you say you found that to be true? Were there any guards that you thought highly of?

Yes I found many that I respected and thought highly of. Most of those either usually looked like they could have been in prison themselves, and or they were militarily trained pros. As mentioned earlier I studied them like my life depended on it and this became getting to know them through conversation.

In California prisons you have regular prison guards, tower guards, free staff workers who work the clothing, food and other shops, Inmate Gang Investigators, Security Escorts, Special Teams for searches and cell extractions and Counselers that go all the way up to the Warden. They are hardly ever all on the same side themselves. Inmates are constantly studying this angle to find cracks in their structure. How do you think all the cell phones are landing in prisoners hands? How about a percentage of the dope and pretty much all of the tabacco? How about inside info?

For the most part most of the prison guards are there to earn a paycheck. On the serious level 4 yards where the inmate population is more then half lifers, there isn’t much room for a prison guard with a hard on to be disrespectful to inmates because he knows he will get stabbed. In a place where violence and pressure are a constant, moment by moment, 24-7 affair – 365 days a year, the senses are hardened and the culture becomes emotionless.

What is the relationship between I.C.C. and the store? You waited for a long time to get I.C.C. so you could buy essentials like toothpaste and deodorant. Why is it viewed as necessary for an inmate to be classified before he’s allowed store privileges?

Because an inmate has to be classified to a certain level for yard and store priviledges. I.C.C. is a collection of prison administrators mostly made up of counselors who do the paperwork. That part of the process is where they determine special needs situations. Lets say that an inmate gets off the bus and enters a prison, that person has to be cleared for yard before they get to go to yard and get store. I.C.C. looks through the file to determine if there are any enemies or reasons not to put the inmate on the yard. For instance, a well know rapist, police officer doing time, or even Charlie Manson, can’t just be put on a mainline prison yard because they are all consided, points to earn and will get stabbed. For that and many other reasons, I.C.C. keeps inmates locked down, without priveledges, until that process is determined.

Once determined, and you are on the mainline, and a riot or any form of discipline puts you in the hole-ad-seg (SHU), you have to go through that process all over again to get yard and store in there.

I get that it was terribly important for the I.C.C. to classify you as what you were – White inmates, but could you spell out for our readers why the Southern Mexican label would have been so detrimental.

In the true story I wrote, Prison Riot – I was involved in a massive riot that made the news at Solano in 1998. The southern Mexicans were outnumbered by the northern Mexicans and my friend Steve Smith, also known as Giant and myself decided to lend a hand to the southern Mexicans because we were friends with many of them.

Let me make this very clear, I’m a White man who doesn’t gang bang or claim a gang, and I helped them because I don’t like to see people bullied or outnumbered. Giant felt the same way. The problem with being 2 White guys in the midst of almost 100 Mexicans at war in a riot is that the prison guards had to assume we were what is called, Sleepers, who were Mexican gangsters. The massive problem for us as White inmates to be classified as southern Mexicans in the hole, is that when our SHU term ran its course, we were going to be housed as southern Mexicans. That is a massive problem.

Imagine getting off the bus at a new prison, being put in a cell with a southern Mexican, and having to tell him, “Look I’m sorry to disturb you but I’m a White inmate so please don’t tell me about who you guys are stabbing tomorrow.” On the other side of that coin you are also going to have to explain to the rest of the White inmates that you are indeed a White inmate!

I’d be very interested in some of your views regarding the impact of America’s drug war on these racial politics within the prison system. Could you give me a brief paragraph showing a connection between the Drug Culture in the U.S. and the struggle as it is currently playing out in Mexico – and could you tie that to the California prison system?

Perfect question to add to the last one, to show you how crazy it is –because of the drug war and the direct connection to it, breeding more violence and gangs, under the current policy where we incarcerate drug offenders!

In California prisons southern Mexican inmates are under enormous amounts of pressure to straight up be gangsters, and that breeds an army of gangs. That is also the case for every other race, maybe to a lesser extent. The amount of gangs in southern California is staggering and their reach is long. By not getting to the root of the problem – drugs and poverty – prison is the breeding grounds. People see the news that the Mexican cartels are powerful and they don’t understand that in California’s prisons, those cartel members don’t have the most influence. So if I’m in a cell with a southern Mexican all of those politics are crossing into a White inmate’s loyalties.

Back to the drug war breeding gangs. By incarcerating low level drug offenders we are turning an addiction into an affliction much harder to escape, where gangs and violence are the calling cards. The problem gets bigger when these displaced, tattooed down, harder to get a job, mentally taxed from post traumatic stress, human beings get released without any job training or housing placement.

Now you mentioned Mexico’s drug war also. Most people don’t know this but in Mexico it is legal to have up to an ounce of Meth, Heroin, Cocaine etc. You just can’t bring it to sporting events or sell it! I used to hear this on the radio in my cell in Centinella, on the border of Mexico, and scratch my head in exasperation. But guess what. By decriminalizing drugs you take the power out of them! Look at Canada, their policing of drug addicts is more of a nursing program to get them into treatment. If we treat drug addiction as a disease, which it is now looked at like alcoholism, we are being not only smarter, but more humane. We shouldn’t call drug addicts criminals. For those of you with kids who have become addicted you understand.

English: Aerial view of San Quentin State Pris...

Aerial view of San Quentin State Prison, in Marin County, California. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Kind of a side note here, but the homemade lighter you spoke of is actually called a carbon-arc lamp. It was one of the first lamps used for film projection in the 1890s. Necessity truly is the mother of invention. Can you think of some other prison fabrications you created that were of equal technical interest?

The Asian inmates are the most advanced, go figure. They made lighters with batteries that were almost like a regular lighter! We also used salt water lighters. Inmates can make cell phone chargers and so much more, but I personally am not that talented.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Happy Birthday CCA! You’re the New Parchman Farm!

By BitcoDavid

This past Sunday marked Correction Corporation of America’s 30th birthday, making this article about as timely as a CCA guard feeding a diabetic inmate.

Let me tell you a little story.

English: Convict workers at Parchman

Convict workers at Parchman (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In 1905, the state of Mississippi launched an experiment in crime prevention. The program was referred to as the convict lease system. Private companies could lease prison labor at a huge discount over paying traditional workers. That year, the state added 185,000 dollars to their coffers. The lessees were responsible for any and all manner of care for the inmates they rented. So, it can be plainly seen that the inmates received inadequate food, clothing and medical care. And those were the lucky ones.

English: A typical Parchman prison camp "...

A typical Parchman prison camp “Prison camps, such as the one above, could be seen at the Mississippi State Penitentiary prior to the modernization of the of the (sic) state’s correctional system. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The facility that this system was implemented in was called Parchman Farm. Inmates that weren’t working at outside locations were bade to work the prison farm. The farm supplied food for these inmates, but what wasn’t used by them could be sold on the free market. Since production costs were significantly lower than the competition, profits were high. Another boon to Mississippi. Of course, in order to enjoy those high profits, it would be necessary to curtail how much of the product was consumed by the men who actually grew it.

English: The first official warden's residence...

The first official warden’s residence at Parchman. “The original official residence at Parchman.” (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The prison for profit idea paved the way for  entrapment and a high rate of convictions for minor offenses, starvation, abuse of prisoners and violence amongst inmates, as rivals competed for basics like food and medical attention. And since the farm was built in the Jim Crow South, the inmates of the segregated system were Black.

Now here’s where things got interesting. Paying guards really cut into this wonderful bottom line. So it was decided that White inmates from other institutions could be exploited by making them the guards. The term applied to these inmate guards was “Trustee.” Now these White trustees were hard men. They were all serving life sentences for violent crimes, themselves. It was thought that Lifers would make the best trustees, because they had the most to gain and were therefore likely not to object to the work. What happened in fact, was that these inmates considered the work offensive and took out their resentment on their charges.

English: Female prisoners in a Mississippi sta...

Female prisoners in a Mississippi state prison producing textiles “Date Unknown – Female inmates work producing textile products” (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

So you take a bunch of White men – violent criminals themselves – and you put them in charge of Black men in the segregated South Add to that volatile mix, a profit motive, as well as bitter resentment, and you’ve got a recipe for disaster.

Until its closing and reorganization in the 1980s, Parchman was a notorious pit of abuse, torture, violence, starvation and death. The mortality rate was so high that inmates were actually buried in mass graves. Investigators to this day are still digging up corpses of Parchman Farm inmates.

It is for this reason, that I will never sanction the concept of private prison corporations. Whenever a profit is created by the suffering of our burgeoning criminal class there is no incentive to alleviate that suffering or shrink the size of that social group. In short, prison for profit not only feeds a system of abuse, but it does nothing to prevent crime. On the contrary, it gives birth to it.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Romancing the Wind

By Joanne Greenberg

Next time someone tells you to go fly a kite, show them this.

Ray Bethell is in his 80s, and Deaf. A Canadian, Ray comes to the Washington State Kite Festival every year. He flies 3 kites. Two with his hands and one attached to his waist. The audience signals their applause by waving their arms in the air. Please enjoy this man’s unique artwork.

Joanne Greenberg was born in 1932, in Brooklyn, NY. She was educated at American University and received and honorary Doctorate from Gallaudet University – the world’s only college for the Deaf. She has written 2 books on the subject and has spent decades working with state mental hospitals for appropriate care for the mentally ill Deaf.

Law Enforcement Incentivized to Lie in Drug War

By BitcoDavid

Michelle Alexander has written a book that has received mention on these venerable virtual pages -  The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. She recently wrote an OpEd for the NYT, on the propensity of police officers and other law enforcement to lie on the stand in regards to drug cases.

According to Alexander, in 2011, in New York alone, hundreds of drug related cases had to be dismissed, due to police lying on the stand or mishandling evidence. A state Supreme Court Judge has condemned what he referred to as a widespread culture of lying and corruption in the [police] department’s drug units. “I thought I was not naïve. But even this court was shocked, not only by the seeming pervasive scope of misconduct but even more distressingly by the seeming casualness by which such conduct is employed.” –NYT

The case of Annie Dookhan speaks to the fact that law enforcement has been incentivized to fabricate evidence and purger themselves in order to maintain high conviction rates.

In her piece, Alexander goes on to say that:

In September it was reported that the Bronx district attorney’s office was so alarmed by police lying that it decided to stop prosecuting people who were stopped and arrested for trespassing at public housing projects, unless prosecutors first interviewed the arresting officer to ensure the arrest was actually warranted.

She adds:

Police departments have been rewarded in recent years for the sheer numbers of stops, searches and arrests. In the war on drugs, federal grant programs like the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program have encouraged state and local law enforcement agencies to boost drug arrests in order to compete for millions of dollars in funding. Agencies receive cash rewards for arresting high numbers of people for drug offenses, no matter how minor the offenses or how weak the evidence. Law enforcement has increasingly become a numbers game. And as it has, police officers’ tendency to regard procedural rules as optional and to lie and distort the facts has grown as well. Numerous scandals involving police officers lying or planting drugs — in Tulia, Tex. and Oakland, Calif., for example — have been linked to federally funded drug task forces eager to keep the cash rolling in.

To see this eye-opening article in the Times, click the link below.

www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/opinion/sunday/why-police-officers-lie-under-oath.html

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Deaf CCA Inmate Sues DC for Mistreatment

By BitcoDavid

(William Pierce) - The ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of deaf D.C. inmate William Pierce, claiming his rights were violated in prison.Image: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/hiv-positive-deaf-man-sues-dc-department-of-corrections/2013/02/01/8f7df72a-6c8a-11e2-8740-9b58f43c191a_story.html

(William Pierce) – The ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of deaf D.C. inmate William Pierce, claiming his rights were violated in prison.
Image: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/hiv-positive-deaf-man-sues-dc-department-of-corrections/2013/02/01/8f7df72a-6c8a-11e2-8740-9b58f43c191a_story.html

The Washington Post reports that William Pierce, a 44 year-old Deaf HIV patient has filed suit against the city of D.C. because he was denied treatment, unfairly kept in solitary, and handcuffed – essentially a gag for the Deaf.

The ACLU, which is handling the case, has stated Pierce was denied access to an interpreter and handcuffed during visits from his mother and his partner. He was denied access to his prescribed HIV medications – necessary to prevent his life threatening illness from progressing.

Pierce was serving a 60 day sentence – for assault – at the Central Treatment Facility, one of the private jails run by the Corrections Corporation of America. CCA is not listed as a defendant in the case, and the D.C. Department of Corrections did not reply to the Post’s request for a statement.

In an e-mail, a spokesman for CCA said, “[T]he treatment of the inmates in our care very seriously and work diligently to accommodate any special needs they might have. –WaPo

The ACLU is claiming that CCA – and by extension, the city of D.C. – is in violation of the Americans With Disabilities Act. Their Washington Legal Director is quoted as saying, “It’s in their contract that they’re supposed to comply with these laws. It’s a big company with a lot of money. D.C. has to make it clear to them that they are supposed to do what they are contracted to do.” –WaPo

Read more here:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/hiv-positive-deaf-man-sues-dc-department-of-corrections/2013/02/01/8f7df72a-6c8a-11e2-8740-9b58f43c191a_story.html

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

FCC to Hear Case on Deaf Telephone Rate Inequity

By BitcoDavid

The following announcement and the associated PDF embed are courtesy of H.E.A.R.D.

Deaf Community members & Allies should submit comments to the FCC by March 25, 2013.

Telephone Typewriter (TTY) This device is also...

Telephone Typewriter (TTY) This device is also known as a text telephone (TT), or telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD). TTY indicates a device used with the telephone for communication with and between deaf, hard of hearing, speech impaired and/or hearing persons. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

On December 28, 2012, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to address the long-standing issue of high prison telephone rates.  Hearing prisoners’ telephone calls can cost their family members as much as $17 for just 15 minutes of time.  These excessive rates prevent families from maintaining contact with loved ones.

Deaf, hard of hearing, deaf-blind, speech impaired, and hearing prisoners with deaf family members endure an even greater financial burden with respect to telephone rates due to a number of factors, including (1) telephone rates being applied evenly to TTY and regular voice phone calls, the former of which is much more time-consuming; (2) failure of prisons to install videophones and captioned telephones; (3) security measures that either prevent deaf prisoners from calling relay operators or cause them to incur additional fees by requiring relay services; and (4) security measures that require deaf prisoners to only place collect calls.

 
Telephone

Remember these?Telephone (Photo credit: plenty.r.)

The FCC has requested public comments on whether prisoner phone rates and on deaf & disabled prisoner telecommunications access. The attached document explains some of the inequities that persist for deaf, signing & speech impaired prisoners and their families with regard to rates for and access to telecommunications in prison.  Please follow the directions in the document to submit a comment to the FCC.

 
HEARD will post a signed & captioned video of this information this week.

BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.

Booking, Medical/Psychological intake, and Classification: Why a Live Interpreter is Critical

By Jean F. Andrews

While it is commonly accepted to provide interpreters in court, deaf suspects and offenders still struggle to get sign interpreters for arrest, booking, medical/psychological intakes, classification, grievance committee meetings and for translation of the inmate handbook. Most vulnerable are hard of hearing persons who use sign language, and profoundly deaf persons with minimal social speech skills.

A dangerous trend seen in some police departments and jails is the use of video productions that are used in place of live interpreters. These videos are useful for review purposes but because they are not interactive, the video product does not allow the deaf person to ask questions to clarify misunderstandings. The videos give police and jail officials the false impression they are meeting ADA requirements. They are not. ADA is clear. The law mandates the Deaf person must have access to information in the same manner as a hearing person. So slick videos, charades and gestures with jail and police officers speaking slowly do not meet the letter of the law.

Granted, jails cannot provide sign interpreters 24/7, but they should be providing live sign language interpreters during times where interactive communication is critical – situations such as the booking, medical/psychological intake, classification and translation of the inmate handbook.

Police and jail officials can avoid costly lawsuits if they put in place policies that require live interpreters in these situations.

Jean F. Andrews is a Reading Specialist and Professor of Deaf Studies/Deaf Education at Lamar University.

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