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What About Closing Angola, Mr. Obama?
President Obama promises to close Guantanamo, but a court proceeding in Louisiana exposes brutality closer to home.
The torture of prisoners in US custody is not only found in military prisons in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo. If President Obama is serious about ending US support for torture, he can start here in Louisiana.
The Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola is already notorious for a range of offenses, including keeping former Black Panthers Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox, in solitary for over 36 years. Now a death penalty trial in St. Francisville, Louisiana has exposed widespread and systemic abuse at the prison. Even in the context of eight years of the Bush administration, the behavior documented at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola stands out both for its brutality and for the significant evidence that it was condoned and encouraged from the very top of the chain of command.
In a remarkable hearing that explored torture practices at Angola, twenty-five inmates testified last summer to facing overwhelming violence in the aftermath of an escape attempt at the prison nearly a decade ago. These twenty-five inmates - who were not involved in the escape attempt - testified to being kicked, punched, beaten with batons and with fists, stepped on, left naked in a freezing cell, and threatened that they would be killed. They were threatened by guards that they would be sexually assaulted with batons. They were forced to urinate and defecate on themselves. They were bloodied, had teeth knocked out, were beaten until they lost control of bodily functions, and beaten until they signed statements or confessions presented to them by prison officials. One inmate had a broken jaw, and another was placed in solitary confinement for eight years.
While prison officials deny the policy of abuse, the range of prisoners who gave statements, in addition to medical records and other evidence introduced at the trial, present a powerful argument that abuse is a standard policy at the prison. Several of the prisoners received $7,000 when the state agreed to settle, without admitting liability, two civil rights lawsuits filed by 13 inmates. The inmates will have to spend that money behind bars -more than 90% of Angola's prisoners are expected to die behind its walls.
Systemic Violence
During the attempted escape at Angola, in which one guard was killed and two were taken hostage, a team of officers - including Angola warden Burl Cain - rushed in and began shooting, killing one inmate, Joel Durham, and wounding another, David Mathis.
The prison has no official guidelines for what should happen during escape attempts or other crises, a policy that seems designed to encourage the violent treatment documented in this case. Richard Stalder, at that time the secretary of the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, was also at the prison at the time. Yet despite - or because of - the presence of the prison warden and head of corrections for the state, guards were given free hand to engage in violent retribution. Cain later told a reporter after the shooting that Angola's policy was not to negotiate, saying, ''That's a message all the inmates know. They just forgot it. And now they know it again.''
Five prisoners - including Mathis - were charged with murder, and currently are on trial, facing the death penalty - partially based on testimony from other inmates that was obtained through beatings and torture. Mathis is represented by civil rights attorneys Jim Boren (who also represented one of the Jena Six youths) and Rachel Connor, with assistance from Nola Investigates, an investigative firm in New Orleans that specializes in defense for capital cases.
The St. Francisville hearing was requested by Mathis' defense counsel to demonstrate that, in the climate of violence and abuse, inmates were forced to sign statements through torture, and therefore those statements should be inadmissible. 20th Judicial District Judge George H. Ware Jr. ruled that the documented torture and abuse was not relevant. However, the behavior documented in the hearing not only raises strong doubts about the cases against the Angola Five, but it also shows that violence against inmates has become standard procedure at the prison.
The hearing shows a pattern of systemic abuse so open and regular, it defies the traditional excuse of bad apples. Inmate Doyle Billiot testified to being threatened with death by the guards, "What's not to be afraid of? Got all these security guards coming around you everyday looking at you sideways, crazy and stuff. Don't know what's on their mind, especially when they threaten to kill you." Another inmate, Robert Carley testified that a false confession was beaten out of him. ""I was afraid," he said. "I felt that if I didn't go in there and tell them something, I would die."
Inmate Kenneth "Geronimo" Edwards testified that the guards "beat us half to death." He also testified that guards threatened to sexually assault him with a baton, saying, "that's a big black...say you want it." Later, Edwards says, the guards, "put me in my cell. They took all my clothes. Took my jumpsuit. Took all the sheets, everything out the cell, and put me in the cell buck-naked...It was cold in the cell. They opened the windows and turned the blowers on." At least a dozen other inmates also testified to receiving the same beatings, assault, threats of sexual violence, and "freezing treatment."
Some guards at the prison treated the abuse as a game. Inmate Brian Johns testified at the hearing that, "one of the guards was hitting us all in the head. Said he liked the sound of the drums - the drumming sound that - from hitting us in the head with the stick."
Solitary Confinement
Two of Angola's most famous residents, political prisoners Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox, have become the primary example of another form of abuse common at Angola - the use of solitary confinement as punishment for political views. The two have now each spent more than 36 years in solitary, despite the fact that a judge recently overturned Woodfox's conviction (prison authorities continue to hold Woodfox and have announced plans to retry him). Woodfox and Wallace - who together with former prisoner King Wilkerson are known as the Angola Three - have filed a civil suit against Angola, arguing that their confinement has violated both their 8th amendment rights against cruel and unusual punishment and 4th amendment right to due process.
Recent statements by Angola warden Burl Cain makes clear that Woodfox and Wallace are being punished for their political views. At a recent deposition, attorneys for Woodfox asked Cain, "Lets just for the sake of argument assume, if you can, that he is not guilty of the murder of Brent Miller." Cain responded, "Okay. I would still keep him in (solitary)...I still know that he is still trying to practice Black Pantherism, and I still would not want him walking around my prison because he would organize the young new inmates. I would have me all kind of problems, more than I could stand, and I would have the blacks chasing after them...He has to stay in a cell while he's at Angola."
In addition to Cain's comments, Louisiana Attorney General James "Buddy" Caldwell has said the case against the Angola Three is personal to him. Statements like this indicate that this vigilante attitude not only pervades New Orleans' criminal justice system, but that the problem comes from the very top.
The problem is not limited to Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola - similar stories can be found in prisons across the US. But from the abandonment of prisoners in Orleans Parish Prison during Katrina to the case of the Jena Six, Louisiana's criminal justice system, which has the highest incarceration rate in the world, often seems to be functioning under plantation-style justice. Most recently, journalist A.C. Thompson, in an investigation of post-Katrina killings, found evidence that the New Orleans police department supported vigilante attacks against Black residents of New Orleans after Katrina.
Torture and abuse is illegal under both US law - including the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment - and international treaties that the US is signatory to, from the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ratified in 1992). Despite the laws and treaties, US prison guards have rarely been held accountable to these standards.
Once we say that abuse or torture is ok against prisoners,the next step is for it to be used in the wider population. A recent petition for administrative remedies filed by Herman Wallace states, "If Guantanamo Bay has been a national embarrassment and symbol of the U.S. government's relation to charges, trials and torture, then what is being done to the Angola 3... is what we are to expect if we fail to act quickly...The government tries out it's torture techniques on prisoners in the U.S. - just far enough to see how society will react. It doesn't take long before they unleash their techniques on society as a whole." If we don't stand up against this abuse now, it will only spread.
Despite the hearings, civil suits, and other documentation, the guards who performed the acts documented in the hearing on torture at Angola remain unpunished, and the system that designed it remains in place. In fact, many of the guards have been promoted, and remain in supervisory capacity over the same inmates they were documented to have beaten mercilessly. Warden Burl Cain still oversees Angola. Meanwhile, the trial of the Angola Five is moving forward, and those with the power to change the pattern of abuse at Angola remain silent.
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30 Comments so far
Show AllIt seems to me that we can, as a society, spend money on either education and empowerment of people with a high probability of incarceration or on keeping these people cycling throught the "justice" system. Both avenues produce jobs, but while one leads to productive lives for all parties involved, one leads to enslavement of everyone involved.
Sioux Rose
PALERIMO: Good points.
Maybe I'm oversensitive today but the common thread I hear and feel in the article about Holbrooke, about the pandering to the insurance companies (re: health care), and about Angola is CRUELTY and SADISM, a complete lack of humanity witnessed for other persons. And it's about imbalances of power.
Years ago while still a college student I worked at a place in London called "preservation of Rights of Prisoners." I am a GREAT believer in rehabilitation, in the approach ingeniously (mark of spiritual enlightenment as I see it) enacted in South Africa's "Councils on Truth and Reconciliation," that CHANGE and progress can and do occur. Instead, America focuses on kicking everyone in the teeth... from the poor adult who can't pay for health care, to the "prisoner" in a foreign land, and to the drug "offender" who is paying more for his "sin" than the soulless con artists who just RAPED our economy and cashed in the chips on Wall St.
One could not write a script with so many errors of judgment, such misplaced priorites if they tried.
By the way, the organization mentioned published a book that was prohibited from circulation and it was entitled, "Who Guards the Guards." That's what it comes down to. Those sick f--ks at Angola ARE mostly sadists and LIKE having the power to harm others, to humiliate others, to have no oversight. The racism plays a huge role in that scenario and it IS a plantation system since strong young males are farmed out to perform jobs paid about 6 cents an hour. Meanwhile the private prison owners make out like bandits.
It gives me strength to know there is a universal law of karma, but it's very hard to face the fact that its gears turn slowly, and to feel on empathic levels, the incredible pain and terror that so many are being forced to face while those gears finally align with Justice. One thing that CAN and should be done is a system of accountability. Hey, if they now have cameras placed at intersections to catch people who jump red lights, or in dressing rooms at malls to make sure people don't steal bathing suits, why not have cameras operating in prisons so that guards are also under surveillance. Some people have broken souls and probably look for this kind of work just so they can take out their self-hatred on others. And these dark impulses have to be curtailed. The climate of immunity that exists between "the men in blue" grants a kind of permission to this type of inhuman barbaric behavior... and that's where "Smile, YOU'RE on public camera!" comes into play as remedial device!
Sounds like an intelligent idea about the cameras, These guards definitely need watching to stop their sadistic fun, but we need also to root out all the higher ups who encourage or tolerate such behavior. Not all Americans are like these people.
deleted.
This is your best posting yet! Congrats
But you are like those people. Look in the mirror you hypocrite.
Like Sioux Rose I think you posted something we as a society should all consider before The "darker elements" destroy us all. I would also like to believe we as "Americans" have built up some "good karma" over the centuries if Bush has not squandered it all. We are not all like Cheney, Bush and their evil lackeys.
Maybe not, but many Americans like you, especially the Starbucks pseudoprogressives, always seem to cop that sickening self righteous holier than thou attitude that make the world hate America.
Sioux Rose
REBEL: Good point about the everyday acts of kindness that DO function as good karma.
I think we should keep Angola open, but release the current population in order to clear out space for the Wall Street speculators, the bankers, the torturers, the war profiteers, and those who lied to send us to war.
The current Angola prisoners could be housed in an Erik Prince family compound, Bernie Madoff's penthouse or Dick Fuld's Florida mansion (to keep his wife company while he is away).
Joe
Sould we include Chris Dodd and Barnie Frank who resisted all efforts to reregulate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and who told the American public that the financial system was sound until Sept of 2008 on that list of new inmates. Or how about the democrats of the Clinton years who mandated that loans be given to people who could not afford them and destroyed the morgage system and gave rise to all the sub-prime loans that led to this mess. I also seem to recall Bill and Hillary also declaring that Hussein had the weapons we were looking for, not to mention Kerry and Edwards and all the other hypocrits, are these people on your list? There is plenty of blame to go around , but the lefties that you obviously adore so much are just as much to blame as anyone.
I see that Rush Limbaugh reads Common Dreams.
I am not surprised at all with your response as it totally ignores the questions raised by my post, the left always believes that their way is the only way. I make my decisions by listening to both sides of the story , unlike you. Remember, it takes a right wing and a left wing to fly.
No that's not true. You admitted on another posting that you watch Bill Orally and Faux News you neocon fraud.
Some people want to see what both sides are saying before they make up their minds. I prefer Matthews, Olberman and Maddow but I also like to see what the other side say's before I decide who is full of crap. I'm close to a decision on you and it's not looking good.
Give me some change so I can call somebody that cares. I don't care what you think about my posts, so I don't care about your stupid decision. You don't pay my bills. I'm not here to make friends. BTW even my worst enemies like yourself support Obama and watch Keith and Rachel. It's self righteous and holier than thou people like yourself that make the world hate America!
You sir sound like a intelligent man whose mind is open, and to whom facts are important no matter where they lead you. I salute you.
Get a room.
I'm a true believer in Obama and change in Washington, but facts are facts. Tell me Mr Winning ticket exactly what was untrue about the man's statement? He was just pointing out the misguided mistakes done by the Clinton's and their crowd. Reagan, Clinton and the Bush's all got us in this mess we are in now. There is plenty of blame for all side's in this for Republicans and Democrats alike. I just happen to believe that the Republicans were the greediest, nastiest and most evil of them all! But I have read a few of your post's and haven't found you to have added anything intelligent to the discourse.
Are you one of those Starbucks drinking pseudoprogressives? BTW FYI I don't mind conservative viewpoints, I just don't like trolls (and their sycophant supporters like yourself) going over to this site to post Fox News shopworn talking points and calling people names like leftie. You seem to give your friend a pass on that, while you cop a self righteous holier than thou attitude with me. If that makes me a bad person in your eyes then so be it. Better for me to be bad than be a self righteous hypocrite like yourself. BTW I have read your posts and you don't contribute jack! You have to admit it's hard to suffer self righteous hypocritical fools like yourself.
However, if you truly don't like my posts, then please call 1-800-EAT DIRT. Operators are standing by.
hey Joe, do you think the communities where many of the inmates of Angola came from, want them back? Many ARE murderers, rapists, gang members, drug dealers, ect. Maybe we could relocate about 1,000 of them to YOUR neighborhood. How much room you got in your house? Can you house 3 or 4 of them?
That's you and America's answer to everything. Throw everyone in jail. Maybe those "lockup" shows really entertain you. Why don't we just throw all of America in jail and be done with it?
Factoid: Louisiana has the highest incarceration rate in a country that has the highest world's prison population. Eat your heart out Stalin!
Not in my neighborhood, heavens to betsy! Nobody in my neighborhood has any spare rooms anyway. I want them switch places with the better class of criminals.
Seriously, my post was partly satirical. I wanted to point out the difference in how rich and poor are treated by the justice system. I guess when you have to explain it, the joke has failed. :|
Joe
Dave Chappelle did a segment about switching around the justice systems for the rich and poor...it was pretty damn funny :-)
Joe,
Smiling as I type this as your earlier post was good satire.
It's bad when we have to add "snark" to a satirical post.
deleted
An American worker who once upon a time made $8/hour, loses his job when the company relocates to Thailand where workers are paid only $2/day. Unemployed, and alienated from a society indifferent to his needs, he becomes involved in the drug economy or some other outlawed means of survival. He is arrested, put in prison, and put to work. His new salary: 22 cents/hour.
>From worker to unemployed to criminal to convict laborer, the cycle has come full circle. And the only victor is big business.
For private business, prison labor is like a pot of gold. No strikes. No union organizing. No unemployment insurance or workers' compensation to pay. No language problem, as in a foreign country. New leviathan prisons are being built with thousands of eerie acres of factories inside the walls. Prisoners do data entry for Chevron, make telephone reservations for TWA, raise hogs, shovel manure, make circuit boards, limousines, waterbeds, and lingerie for Victoria's Secret. All at a fraction of the cost of "free labor."
Prisoners can be forced to work for pennies because they have no rights. Even the 14th Amendment to the Constitution which abolished slavery, excludes prisoners from its protections.
And, more and more, prisons are charging inmates for basic necessities from medical care, to toilet paper, to use of the law library. Many states are now charging "room and board." Berks County prison in Pennsylvania is charging inmates $10 per day to be there. California has similar legislation pending. So, while government cannot (yet) actually require inmates to work at private industry jobs for less than minimum wage, they are forced to by necessity.
Some prison enterprises are state run. Inmates working at UNICOR (the federal prison industry corporation) make recycled furniture and work 40 hours a week for about $40 per month. The Oregon Prison Industries produces a line of "Prison Blues" blue jeans. An ad in their catalogue shows a handsome prison inmate saying, "I say we should make bell-bottoms. They say I've been in here too long."
Bizarre, but true...
Prison industries are often directly competing with private industry. Small furniture manufacturers around the country complain that they are being driven out of business by UNICOR which pays 23 cents/hour and has the inside track on government contracts. In another case, U.S. Technologies sold its electronics plant in Austin, Texas, leaving its 150 workers unemployed. Six week later, the electronics plant reopened in a nearby prison.Just like war it is a racket and the bottom line is money. The us has more prisoners than any country on the planet. We don't live in a country anymore the us is a corporation. Peace
Perfect description of the purpose of prisons today.
Joe
>>For private business, prison labor is like a pot of gold. No strikes. No union organizing. No unemployment insurance or workers' compensation to pay. No language problem, as in a foreign country. New leviathan prisons are being built with thousands of eerie acres of factories inside the walls. Prisoners do data entry for Chevron, make telephone reservations for TWA, raise hogs, shovel manure, make circuit boards, limousines, waterbeds, and lingerie for Victoria's Secret. All at a fraction of the cost of "free labor."
I had not realized it had gotten to this stage in the United States legal system. Unbelievable.
That "Lets get tough on crime" approach has its followers up here In Canada but I hope it never gets to that state. (I suspect Stephen harper would LOVE such a prison system up here)
Some up here complain that our Charter of Rights and freedoms protects criminals. Given the alternative, I am glad that it does.
Prisoners even have the right to Vote In Canada. The prison population is some 36,000.
If prisoners are going to be treated as something less then Human, as beasts without any rights whatsover, then what do they become when they are released back into the population? Do they suddenly become Human again?
Sioux Rose
FREEYOURMIND: Your post was an education! It reminds me of all the foreigners that get sold on work in another land, and once there are "treated" to disgusting living situations that are charged against their transportation so that they become effective slaves or indentured servants until their "debt" is paid off. It happens with so called "sex workers," too. Nor are these conditions not far removed from the case of America's migrant workers, a caste set to toil in the soil for miserable wages and similar treatment.
What a cruel land this alleged zone of the free began as, and has turned out to be.