Society of the Incarcerated
Acknowledging the Voices of America's Ever-Increasing Prison Population
Who talks about prisoners these days? Certainly not the US presidential candidates or most others up for election in 2008, unless it's in tangential "get tough on crime" rhetoric. In the media, quality coverage such as Jeff Gerritt's Pulitzer-nominated series on medical care in Michigan prisons, which appeared last year in The Detroit Free Press, is overshadowed by courtroom dramas and legal thrillers. MSNBC has built something of a franchise in its "To Catch a Predator" series, which lures people to a Dateline set, humiliates them by reading their chat room transcripts with someone they thought was underage, and then calls on a police crew to rather unnecessarily tackle them in an arrest sequence right out of a summer blockbuster.
Authentic communication from and about prisoners exists, but it's relegated to a niche market outside of most print and online news sources, of influential political blogs, of the catalogues of big publishers, and of the speeches of election year candidates. Presumably, its minimal share of attention is justified because decision makers think their audiences don't care much about prisons and the people in them.
It's an odd assumption in the face of the prison industrial complex's monstrous growth. We incarcerate 500% more people today than we did thirty years ago. The United States is home to a mere five percent of the world's total population, and 25 percent of the world's incarcerated population: 2.3 million people, most of whom are incarcerated for nonviolent offenses. And that number doesn't include those living under the thumb of the criminal justice system: probationers, parolees and those on tethers, the electronic monitoring devices worn by people on house arrest.
This makes the vacuum of nuanced coverage of prisons and prisoners in the media and by the candidates all the more baffling.
The dissonance between the prison industrial complex's growth and the de facto denial of how it affects all of us struck me last year when I wanted to facilitate a writing workshop in a medium-security men's prison in Massachusetts. I'd been doing similar work in Michigan prisons and detention centers through the Prison Creative Arts Project (PCAP), beginning my freshman year at the University of Michigan. I was drawn in because I love writing, because I love working with people, and here was a place where they came together. At the same time, I wanted to venture toward the places where I'd been told, in a thousand ways, I shouldn't want to be. So many of my family members were appalled when I began. I was too young, too female, too inexperienced.
Workshops became a constant in my life; not only those that I facilitated, but others that were also part of PCAP. It was hard. It was hilarious. It made me a better writer. I loved it so much that I took on more leadership helping to initiate a project that supports incarcerated writers and artists; assisting with the annual Exhibition of Art by Michigan Prisoners; organizing prison-related events in Ann Arbor; serving as a discussion facilitator for a university class that wrestled with prisons; attending performances in and outside of prison walls; returning artwork to an incarcerated man's mother who lived near where I grew up; and exchanging letters for two years with a writer who was locked up in northern Michigan-too far for the PCAP arm to reach.
After moving to Boston I looked for ways to get back inside. Though PEN, New England's prison writing program, I thought I'd found a way in.
At the orientation for new volunteers, two representatives of the prison gushed about how much they valued folks coming. In Michigan, the prisons I worked in were high security, and at this lower level facility outside Boston, I was excited at what seemed to be an uncommon openness to creative spaces. What, you mean a corrections officer won't need to be in the room with us? We have it to ourselves? We can freely bring most materials in and out of our workshops?
Visions of an unusually strong workshop floated in my head. More than just a fun couple of hours a week, I've experienced these workshops as profound spaces of transformation and empowerment. They aren't to be taken lightly.
The prison's representatives gave a moving testament to how much they valued volunteers who were themselves formerly incarcerated. There was a nod to role-modeling.
The volunteers were then informed that a condition of our coming inside to facilitate workshops was that we were not to have any contact with anyone who is or had been incarcerated in a prison or jail, in any state, ever.
The reps made a big point of this. They told a story about one of the best volunteers they ever had, a Native woman who led extraordinary spiritual ceremonies that resonated with a great deal of the inmates. It came out that she was married to a man incarcerated in Indiana.
"We had to let her go," said one of the representatives. "It was such a shame."
I was startled by the contradiction in the prison's policy: the very folks they encouraged to volunteer-former prisoners-were not people other volunteers were permitted to know. While I might fathom that this prison's policy was intended as a security measure, the shear breadth of it-not knowing anyone who'd been incarcerated in any prison or jail ever-seems to leave common sense aside.
With the prison industrial complex growing as feverishly as it is, with our nation's economic interests increasingly bound up with keeping more and more people behind bars for longer and longer periods of time, no one will be untouched. We will all know someone (or many people) who has been put in a cell. It is inevitable.
I know many. I'm related to some, built friendships with others, and still others have been my colleagues. Many I know in Michigan, a few in Indiana, others in Massachusetts. For the few years I lived in Boston, I lived and worked in a community called Haley House, where I interacted daily with poor men, many of whom had been in and out of the criminal justice system. I move within progressive circles where my friends and allies practice civil disobedience, allowing themselves to be arrested to protest the prison in Guantánamo Bay, the war in Iraq, or the military base in Ft. Benning, GA, that trains its students in torture techniques.
I wasn't willing to deny these relationships. I told the prison's representatives about them at the orientation. I also testified to having experience in prisons, offered to supply letters of recommendation that could account for my work, and was pleased to have PEN New England back me up in my request to move forward as a volunteer.
I was told the final decision would be put to a particular lieutenant. After eight months, after the writing workshop's cycle had begun and ended, after constant phone calls and emails, no decision was ever offered. The prison was spared the scrutiny of a yes or no answer by waiting me out.
While I'll admit to my disappointment with this prison, I don't offer up the story to vent. It's more pertinent to understand that those 2.3 million men and women and children in prison are real people. While they are disproportionately people of color and poor-hardly the demographic given center stage in media and electoral campaigns-they are connected to other people in a thousand ways. We bear profound responsibility for the prison industrial complex we've built.
We must notice. Human lives are at stake.
There is already a movement that challenges the prison industrial complex and acts from the belief that it's real people inside those walls, and that real families are affected. The movement also acknowledges that victims of crimes are real people too, whose experiences deserve understanding, not media caricature or political exploitation.
Consider the Prison Creative Arts Project, a collaborative organization that facilitates writing, art, drama, and music workshops in prisons, detention centers and urban schools throughout Michigan. It's produced 13 annual exhibitions of art by Michigan prisoners at the University of Michigan, facilitates one-on-one arts training with people who are incarcerated and supports artists who are released from prison by connecting them with working artists in the communities they return to.
Consider The Sentencing Project, a national organization that documents the disturbing trends in the prison industrial complex while agitating for viable alternatives to incarceration and current sentencing law.
Consider PEN America's Prison Writing Program, which has provided mentoring, workshops, readings and publication to incarcerated writers since 1971.
Consider the Women's Prison Association, which advocates for women with histories in the criminal justice system. It particularly supports a woman's need for housing, employment and health care when she returns to her community.
Consider Murder Victims Families for Reconciliation, which challenges the death penalty through constant interaction with citizens, media and policy makers. Since 1976, MVFR has contended that legal executions lead to yet another family losing a loved one to violence, while capital trials absorb dollars that would be better put to victim services and law enforcement.
Most of all, consider yourself-and your own stake, intentional or not, in a system that will continually and quietly shape the direction of our country unless we agitate for an alternative.
Anna Clark is a freelance journalist and fiction writer living in Detroit, MI. Her articles have appeared or are forthcoming in Utne Reader, Women's eNews, Bitch Magazine, Writers' Journal, RH Reality Check, and other publications. She maintains the literary and social justice website, Isak.
Copyright © 2008 The Women's International Perspective
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37 Comments so far
Show AllRE: itsaNaziWorldOrder May 21st, 2008 7:28 pm
"We all know what the U.S. prison system is, and it ain't to punish, it's to suppress and disenfranchise."
With the Prison Industrial Complex now sucking $50 billion yearly from the taxpayers your statemenT is completely true if you ammend to read, "...it's to suppress and disenfranchise, AND MAKE US LOTS OF MONEY!!!"
I think about this man a lot. http://www.ccadp.org/nanonwilliams.htm
I am sure that he was a victim of an entrapment scheme. Why? Because he was a natural and gifted leader! So, he spent years on death row!
This is what I call, genocide, insuring that the best of the best are pruned so that communities have no leaders.
"I had a friend who is also black who used to hitchhike and then rob the drivers. One white man resisted so Lewis shot him in the head then stabbed him twice in the chest killing him. He is doing 26 to life in San Quentin."
Most people in prison are not there because they committed a crime. Most people in prison are there because they are victims of an entrapment scheme, are set-up, the cops lied or they lack the clout of the elite.
Once upon a time I was managing a sales operation. One of my salespeople was having some family trouble and I started getting the idea that he was on the brink of 'losing it' so I asked him to go and get a restraining order...
He tried but there were delays and so things got out of hand and he ended up in jail... being an orphan, he called me... being broke, I pleaded with the 'boss' to help me get an attorney...
... who finally explained to me that, "There is an underbelly to society, and its members do not have the same rights as others and it is quite unpleasant to get involved there..."
She also informed me that for every conviction, there were payoffs given to everyone in the court system, leaving me to assume that even 'defense' attorneys could be 'influenced'.
Everyone said, … it was impossible, the man was guilty, would stay in jail... But he was hardly guilty and he called each day to plead... so I prevailed with this elitist attorney and she did her job.
(Also, in the course of this and because I could not get away, I asked one of the other people working with us to deliver some money and things to our incarcerated former co-worker. The man I asked was Black. When he returned he said, "Please never ask me to do that again, you have no idea what it feels like to be near a prison for a Black man!" And no, that person had never been to prison himself.)
"We all know what the U.S. prison system is, and it ain't to punish, it's to suppress and disenfranchise."
About six years ago I had the strangest encounter in the woods... I was following a trail I knew well when suddenly it came to an unexpected halt, fenced and surrounded by young workers.
I asked them how I could get around their area of work and continue the trail on the other side... a few considered my question and then pointed me on my way...
But when I reached the other side of the project, an older surly looking person said, "Not many people have that kind of courage!"
It was then that I realized he was a guard and the youths I had spoken to were prisoners. Wow, they were so young and so gentle but the guard looked blind and sadistic… and not at all trustworthy… and I was alone in the woods except for this brigade… but I realized that the guard was one and the prisoners many, so I was safe.
I love you people !!!! If this article had been published on a web site that attracts the general public, the vast majority of comments would have been "Who cares about prisoners ? Hang 'em !" The intelligent responses here make me want to cry.
The vast majority of inmates are released sooner or later, and then we all have to deal with the aftermath of incarceration. Education and rehabilitation benefits ALL of us.
CHINA has over a BILLION people in their population [that's 1,000 MILLION] and fewer people in prison than the UNITED STATES, which is astounding in comparison to the UNITED STATES that has only a little over 300 Million people in their population. CHINA's population is over 2/3rds times larger than the United States. Why are there so many more people in prison in the United States than in CHINA? NO COUNTRY in the whole world has more prisoners than the UNITED STATES.
My daughter had a small automobile incident where she barely scraped the paint on the bumper of a vehicle that stopped wrecklessly in front of her. She had full insurance coverage on her small automobile and an above reproach driver's license; therefore it never even occurred to her that she may face a prison sentence; but, lo and behold, the judge tried to sentence her five years in prison. Luckily, she had a good attorney who saved her from the prison machines clutches. There was in no way any reason for a 5-year prison sentence, NONE WHATSOEVER, but if she had not had a good attorney and money to pay that attorney would be doing time today.
Undoubtedly, the government employees are tasked with filling the new prisons our government has made in each state. It is not a matter of whether one does or doesn't do whatever, it is a matter of whether one has the money to defend oneself as to whether or not they become an asset to the prison community. Should one be financially embarrassed and not have family to protect them, they will suffer these unjust judges prison verdicts, which is tyranny. When tyranny prevails it is time to storm the bastilles.
From the pictures shown on television; CHINA, that has two times more population than the United States, in their earthquake tragedy, sent their military in to help work, carry out the people and assist their citizens, not stand over their hurting citizens with GUNS. It was stunning in comparison with what happened in New Orleans in the UNITED STATES, where there are far fewer people.
Thomas More, it certainly looks like you did your homework, so I'm not going to argue with you about your statistics. It looks like you're correct when you say blacks commit more crimes than whites do.
For me, though, the important thing to know is why? I don't believe for a moment that black people have some sort of genetic predisposition to be criminals, and I'm pretty sure you don't, either. Maybe this is going to sound like a cliche of sorts, but it's impossible for me to believe that the US's history of enslaving blacks and then, after ending slavery, keeping blacks "at the back of the bus" for so long isn't at the core of this problem.
Probably, when you cut to the chase, though, the single most important thing in this equation is the job situation, that and health care. Bring manufacturing jobs back to the US and make single-payer medicare for all a priority, and I'm willing to bet that things will start improving rapidly. And the number of people in jail, black AND white will drop rapidly. And fewer people will sell drugs. And fewer people will join the military. Hmmm . . . . that last one is kind of interesting.
Privatisation is a curse in this area above all.
I just finished this excellent piece about teaching inside. Great work (in all senses of the phrase)! With our own 12-year-+ project, The Beat Within, I understand every frustration you described. We have been publshing a WEEKLY magazine of writing from behind the locked doors of about 50 units of juveniles in Bay Area juvenile detention facilities. Organically, the magazine has grown to incorporate writing from prisoners of all ages and institutions around the country. Check us out: www.thebeatwithin.org
As I read this article, my mind went back to "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and "Soul on Ice", by Eldridge Cleaver, former Black Panther Party activist. Both of these works are absolute gems of great writing and both grew out of the authors' experience while they were "in jail".
Malcolm Little, under the tuteledge of a Black Muslim prison fellowship went from being a small-time con-man to become Malcolm X, one of the most dynamic and eloquent speakers and writers of his time.
Wouldn't it be something if the next Eric Hoffer, Arthur Miller, Kurt Vonnegut, or Joseph Heller were currently residing in some lock-up for whatever reason. As the Unitred Negro College fund has observed,"A mind is a terrible thing to waste".
"As we know events are the genesis of numerous cause factors set into motion. I am wary of any who believe something happens for ONE reason alone."
Now thats the truth.
Would you consider that Bush and his boy's started the invasion of Iraq because they wanted to create a place in history for themselves, that they actually thought they could attack another country with impunity. Remember how they could hardly constrain themselves from attacking? This of course added to your prior suggestions.
"There is also the astrological implications of the End of the Piscean"
Lets postpone that, I was born in march.
Thank you Anna Clark for your article. As some of the other posters said, the War on Drugs feeds the Prison Industrial Complex with more prisoners day after day. But America wants to be "tough on crime", so I'm sure the sheeple feel that they all "deserve to be there". Makes me want to cry but the tears won't come. The US is quickly turning into a gulag. Stalin must be smiling.
TICONDEROGA: I agree with your analysis, except that I'd add that the LOVE of power, the Rovian urge to create a Republican "ownership" of government into perpetuity, AND the banality of the evil practiced by this soul-less group that's taken over through a silent coup are also factors. There is also the astrological implications of the End of the Piscean (fish, the sea, fossil fuel origin) in synch with what Michael Klare terms the "End of Oil."
As we know events are the genesis of numerous cause factors set into motion. I am wary of any who believe something happens for ONE reason alone. Just as we see in this forum, those with a tendency to view life through the prism of economics, see that as the key factor behind political movements. Religious persons see the role of religion. We originate from 12 dimensions of experience and in being who we are bring to the world the basis for a living mosaic... ALL facets are necessary to the whole, and I sure wish more voices were invited to the decision making tables, as we'd see more WHOLE and balanced decisions regarding the status and direction of our shared globe if that indeed were the case.
ticonderoga May 19th, 2008 9:22 pm
Yes its true. Empirically undeniable. Blacks commit a very disproportunte % of crimes and most are black on black.
Its hard to get a job when your own government is intent on shipping those "starter" jobs overseas, allowing business to use illegal aliens in your place and your drop out rate is close to the Latino 50%. I am struck by the argument of allowing illegal immigration made by many and then complaining that our poor and our disadvantaged can't get a job. It just boggles my mind at the disconnect.
I was struck by something Bill Cosby said..."Hard to get a job as a surgeon when you say, that tumor be nasty."
Do some of all the things that everyone here mentions happen? Sure. Is it racism that holds Blacks back? Sometimes.
The real problem seems to be the culture of victim, that many blacks don't want another black to be sucessful. That studying is "being white." Making good grades is somehow not a good thing, not cool. Add all the other current failures for all kids and you have quite a problem.
By the way, building a wall on the border is useless and I think we are going to get it mostly stopped. So far, so good. Got HS in court now.
Personally I think us poor old white guys get a bad rap, rich or otherwise. If we have or had the power imputed to us, misused as suggested, you wouldn't be discussing this. Blacks would still be segregated, along with all the rest of the field hand minorities. Obama would be in Kansas washing dishes. Don't you think we might get some credit for where we are now?
If you don't agree with my analysis....well, my wife says I'm sometimes wrong....hard to believe I know, but I do think I'm mostly right here.
Some statistics:
"The favorite culprits for high black prison rates include a biased legal system, draconian drug enforcement and even prison itself. None of these explanations stands up to scrutiny.
The black incarceration rate is overwhelmingly a function of black crime. Insisting otherwise only worsens black alienation and further defers a real solution to the black crime problem.
Racial activists usually remain silent about that problem. But in 2005, the black homicide rate was more than seven times higher than that of whites and Hispanics combined, according to the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics.
From 1976 to 2005, blacks committed more than 52% of all murders in America. In 2006, the black arrest rate for most crimes was two to nearly three times blacks' representation in the population. Blacks constituted 39.3% of all violent-crime arrests, including 56.3% of all robbery and 34.5% of all aggravated-assault arrests, and 29.4% of all property-crime arrests.
The advocates acknowledge such crime data only indirectly: by charging bias on the part of the system's decision makers. As Obama suggested in the Martin Luther King debate, police, prosecutors and judges treat blacks and whites differently "for the same crime."
But in fact, cops don't over-arrest blacks and ignore white criminals. The race of criminals reported by crime victims matches arrest data. No one has ever come up with a plausible argument as to why crime victims would be biased in their reports.
Racial activists also allege that prosecutors overcharge and judges oversentence blacks. Backing up this bias claim has been the holy grail of criminology for decades — and the prize remains as elusive as ever.
In 1997, criminologists Robert Sampson and Janet Lauritsen concluded that "large racial differences in criminal offending," not racism, explained why more blacks were in prison proportionately than whites and for longer terms.
A 1994 Justice Department survey of felony cases from the country's 75 largest urban areas discovered that blacks actually had a lower chance of prosecution after a felony than whites did and that they were less likely to be found guilty at trial. After conviction, blacks were more likely to receive prison sentences, however — an outcome that reflected the gravity of their offenses as well as their criminal records."
Folks ran this entire page and never once mentioned Race.
80% of Crime is White
80% of Drug Use is White
80% of Poverty is White
In 1964/65 640000 people in the System. Whites 87% of the general population. Black 12%. 2/3 of prison population White. THEN America passed the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts and Everything changed. Couldn't "KEEP THEM IN THEIR PLACE" at the voting booth, so we put them in jail and made sure they couldn't vote again. It's our fucking bloody ugly history for the last 43 years.
Selective Enforcement
Disproportionate Sentencing
Targeted Incarceration
Little Jonny @ MIddle Class White High School Inc. has a baggy of coke, he goes to rehab. Rashid has the same he gets 15 to life, that's if they don't shoot him in the head with a sniper, you know, 'target practice'.
2008. Whites are 70% Blacks are still 12%. 1.3 million in the System and the demographics are reversed 2/3 are Black and Brown. 1/3 of Black males are in jail, in prison, or on parole. In any other country of the world, you jail 1/3 of a minority population you have a crime against humanity going on, AND WE DO.
RACE. but we don't talk about that here, not nice.
Here in California the medical marijuana law is pretty loose. At the Venice Beach boardwalk pretty girls hand out cards for walk-in clinics where you can get a prescription for marijuana as long as you are 18 and there are stores there where you can purchase your "medicine." When you get the prescription you get a small passport looking document that makes it legal to possess up to 4 ounces of weed. I haven't seen any statistics, but intuitively I think this must be reducing the number of people in prison here in CA for pot possession.
I only recently learned about the laid back way in which medical marijuana is available here. I was telling the story of it at a community barbecue recently and one person at my table is the mother of a Highway Patrol officer, and she told the story of how her son had recently stopped a Cadillac Escalade full of young people on their way to the Mammoth Mountain ski resort near here and that they had 4 ounces of pot with them, but, since they all had their pot passports, the pot was legal and he had to let them go.
I found the medical marijuana "clinic" hilarious, by the way. There was a column in the LA Times recently where the columnist and a comedian friend of hers went into a clinic and tried to get a prescription for medical marijuana.
The doctor asked the comedian if he had been having any health problems and he replied, "weak back." The doctor said, "How long have you had this problem?" The comedian replied "Oh- about a week back." He got the prescription.
All the pot is certified California grown, and sells for about the usual street price - $55 for 1/8 of an ounce.
Hi Siouxrose,
As far as 9/11 is concerned, what strikes me the most are the various theories as to exactly why the US used that tragedy to invade Iraq. Most people who don't react out of revenge and patriotic fervor tend to think it was to control Iraq oil and to increase the profits of arms manufacturers, and both reasons are certainly part of the picture, but I'm thinking there's another, as well:
Prior to the removal of the tariffs on goods manufactured outside the US, the traditional republican tactic to get the poor to vote for them was the "trickle down" tactic, ie "Vote for us and we'll support business and if business is healthy you poor people will have jobs," while the democratic tactic was "Vote for us and if you poor people lose your jobs you'll have better safety nets, like welfare and unemployment insurance and medicare and so on."
But once those tariffs were removed there was nothing to stop manufacturers from using cheap labor to make goods overseas, instead of in the US, thereby making the traditional republican "trickle down" tactic null and void. After all, you can't get people to vote for you by offering them jobs when the jobs are out of their reach. So they had to invent another tactic to get the poor to vote for them, or rather two tactics: fear of terrorism and love of Armageddon.
It's hard to say what's worse, starting a war to control something that should be bartered for, starting a war to sell weapons, or starting a war to give poor people a reason to vote for you. Or manipulating people through something they love (their religion). Or putting people in jail because your profiling of them tells you they're unlikely to vote for you.
It's all propaganda, which, out of all the things you listed that make your skin crawl, is by far the worst.
WJM: All I can do is lend my empathy... the things that ARE legal in this nation often make my skin and spirit crawl: guns, propaganda, porn, tobacco, alcohol... and ALL of them favor violent or antisocial or unhealthy behavior(s). POT is the peace pipe, but in a nation that makes war its most profitable mantra and raison d'etre, the peacekeepers (remember the FBI spying on Quakers? Or arresting Father John Dear? Or those nuns who put blood on a missile silo?) are the ONES to be watched, and preferably kept under watch or worse.
TICONDEROGA: Excellent response to Thomas More. And it also works when the right wing uses 911 as a (false) reason to have atacked Iraq... remember their mockery of liberals who wanted to provide "therapy" to the "enemy"? Ah, framing... when so much truth lives outside those fake and darkly orchestrated borders.
Thomas More: Do blacks commit more crimes? Probably, although I've never really done a study on this. They almost certainly get convicted of more crimes, though, and one of the things that keeps people from getting convicted of crimes is having enough money to hire lawyers, so you're right that it's a social issue. It's also a job issue. Why commit a crime when you've got a decent job and a reasonable chance of a decent life? Why take the risk of selling drugs such as marijuana if you've got a decent job and a reasonable chance of a decent life?
But the cards are stacked against black people (poor people, too), any way you look at it. If they do commit more crimes, the answer is to find out why and fix the problem, instead of just saying, "Oh, but they commit more crimes, so just throw 'em in jail."
I'm just guessing about this, but it seems to me that there's a very specific reason why the powers that be might want to keep a lot of black people in jail, and that's because the powers that be are very rich conservative white men and it's in their best interests to keep as many black people (Hipanics and Asians, too) from voting as possible, because they're less likely to vote for very rich conservative white men than most white people are. So put 'em in jail and build a wall across the Mexican border.
We are led by an idiocracy. What can we expect?
Very disturbing information here, even if a bit dated. The situation looks like it might have only gotten worse, however:
From the link about Gerry Scanlon:
http://www.justicedenied.org/inthenameofthefather.htm
Although it was hoped by many observers that the Miranda decision (1966) would provide a measure of protection from criminal suspects' falsely confessing, there is no evidence that it has done so. The findings of several studies have indicated that Miranda warnings have had a negligible effect on the extraction of confessions by law enforcement personnel. Those findings are empirically supported by the fact that more people are convicted by a confession of guilt today than prior to Miranda.
The adoption of sophisticated psychological interrogation techniques has enabled law enforcement agencies in this country to rely on extracting confessions in one form or another to obtain 92% of all convictions. (Source: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics.)
Furthermore, a study published in the Harvard Law Review concluded that at least 35% of all people who pleaded guilty would have been acquitted after a trial. (A Statistical Analysis of Guilty Plea Practices in the Federal Courts, Michael O. Finkelstein, Harvard Law Review, V.89 N.2 pp293-315, Dec. 1975)
This means that nationwide approximately a quarter of a million people every year confess to felony crimes that the prosecution can't prove beyond a reasonable doubt they are guilty of, and which they may be in fact innocent of committing.
This is why I support Ron Paul for president (and I gave Nader gas money) Ron Paul is the only candidate resending power Bush took and talking about ending the war on drugs, as does Nader.
You know what they say: a good prosecutor with the right Grand Jury could hanfgonmg a ham sandwich.
It's dirty judges that create the problem , judges have taken over as prosecutor to ensure aby kind if conviction-either by coerced plea bargains, mock/twinky trials or the actions of the judge steer the trial to a pre-ordained result. The district attornewy & judge are supposed to be immune & judfgges have granted immunity to lying police, see Briscoe v Lahue & Imbler v Patchman. We need to start hanfgonmg judges for treason
It's one of the few ways we can be competitive with China.
Excellent article, Anna. the prison industrial complex needs many more critics.
checked out your web-site too. George Orwell is the shit, I discovered his essays when I was 19 and he's been an inspiration ever since.
best of luck fighting the power,
Dave Burt from What's Up magazine
"The privatization of prisons has been particularly scary over the last few decades. I understand the need for corporations like Wackenhut and American Corrections Corporation to make a profit, but should the public oblige them by offering up our youth, our poor and our mentally ill as long term inmates?"
Good point. But I'd ask if prisons should be privitized at all? Every time a real government duty is privitized it bevcomes a mess. Yiou should see what they did to Social Services in Texas. Its a disgrace that our most vulnerable are paying for politicians and business's mistakes and ineptness.
Discussion of the abysmal state of prisons and how undeserving people end up there, are always avoided by the mainstream media due to the fact that Corporate America loves the cash they're making out of locking marginal people up. Of course corporate theft is the exception, but God forbid that some poor kid is caught with marijuana!
The privatization of prisons has been particularly scary over the last few decades. I understand the need for corporations like Wackenhut and American Corrections Corporation to make a profit, but should the public oblige them by offering up our youth, our poor and our mentally ill as long term inmates?
The U.S. has more prisons, more inmates, more cops and more lawyers than any other country in the world. All this is done supposedly to 'keep us safe'. What a lot of baloney!
Nothing will change either as long as the general populace receives its daily dosage of misinformation from the Neo-Con controlled MSM. One day we will all wake up and realize that most of us are locked up for one reason or another. It is a classic case of class warfare and the proletariat is losing badly.
Kudos to Anna Clark for giving a s__t, and doing something about it.
It is shameful as a nation that we fail to make common cause with the incarcerated. In other countries, it is common for entire families to stand vigil outside prisons and demand access and improvements in conditions, hell, even amnesty.
Here, we have been conditioned by three decades of the incarceration state, and now mass searches courtesy of "DUI" roadblacks and homeland security, to accept our designated role as passive subjects.
There is a method to the madness of prisoner "programs" that are overly restrictive about actual contact with...prisoners! The state can't have prisoners viewed as people with any rights, nor "volunteers" that deviate from their assigned roles as facilitors for the incarceration nation.
Prison re-entry programs scare me too since, while needed, they provide yet another avenue to expand the incarceration nation, and build another "public service" (read charity pimp) constituency begging for dollars and inder the control of the state.
The only real answer will be to dismantle the apparatus of this terrible and failed policy. Cripes, it will takes decades to undo the damage.
WJM May 19th, 2008 1:27 pm
Some excellent points!
militantliberal May 19th, 2008 1:31 pm
Good thought! Why does a kid that stole a car get 15 years and a guy that stole 15 million from his company and its employees/shareholders get 5 years and only has to pay $500,000 in fines?
ticonderoga May 19th, 2008 2:22 pm
First half absolutely correct! second half I'd suggest that its not that there is no injustice in the CJ system, but Bill Cosby is quite right that the main reason that there are more blacks is that they do more crimes. And most are black on black. This needs a social answer, at least in my opinon.
WJM just about said it all:
The war on drugs is a sham, being primarily a tool for politicians to use to garner votes, and most nonviolent offenders shouldn't be in prison; they should do some sort of public service, instead. Only thing to add is that our prison system is unfairly slanted to keep black people subjugated (and from voting).
Americans will finally know safety and security when everyone is in jail.
We all know what the U.S. prison system is, and it ain't to punish, it's to suppress and disenfranchise. Unfortunately, none of our candidates, not even those who profess to be for change, have given it any thought at all. The U.S. has no right to speak about human rights in other lands until it is willing to deal with this matter.
I don't want fewer prisoners but more. Rich people and well-connected politicians need to go to prison more often and for longer periods for their crimes against the people.
If you really want to make a dent in this, then you have GOT to repeal the idiocy of the "War on Drugs". It would make a HUGE dent in these numbers. in 2006 alone, this country arrested 830,000 Americans JUST for cannabis, mostly for mere possession.
I myself am on probation for using cannabis medicinally, and we HAVE a medicinal cannabis law in this state, but not for what I was using it for (depression and alcoholism). It has been working just fine for over 20 years, but now I don't have that availiable, or I go to jail for 5 years, according to the DA. I have 20 months left on my probation, and to make me do this without my medicine is just plain cruel. I have never been arrested for anything else, I was not being an issue to anyone, anywhere, until the county came into MY yard and made me an issue for themselves. Now I not only get to shell out over a third of what I am making this year in "fines", but I have to do alcohol tests and "anger management classes", both of which cost me money as well.
We do not have a justice system, we have a state sponsored extortion system. If they can't get it out of me, they put me in jail at the county's expense, and get ten times more ($24,000 per year in the county lockup).
There are some thing which SHOULD be the duty of the state, and justice is one of them. If you have a vested interest in putting people in jail, you will never stop doing it, and you will keep them there longer than is sensible. You will even put them in there for things that don't require jail, just so you can keep making the money.
In Colorado, we are 49th in school spending and thrid in prisons. Guess what that is a recipe for? Every community that has a for profit prison in it sooner or later turns into nothing but a prison town. Other industry won't go there, and sooner or later, all other businesses that aren't related to it's upkeep leave. Frontline did a great episode on it, and it's incredibly depressing to watch.
So this is what you get with republicans in charge. I've been saying ever since Reagan that they won't be happy until half of us are in jail, and the other half are watching us. It's the republcian "full employment" plan. It's also incredibly foolish.
Two words: Police State. Anyone paying attention?
Excellent article!!!! More attention on this subject, please!