Category Archives: Uncategorized

Big House Books Wins Lawsuit!

As reported in in May, Big House Books based in Mississippi sued MS DOC for banning donated/free books from coming into MS prisons. We found out this week that they WON their lawsuit!

This is great news for everyone and MS and beyond! And given similar wins at the federal level and right here in NC, it’s safe to say that prison administrators are on notice that messing with incarcerated people’s access to books is NOT GOING TO FLY.

As always, there is more work to do–but today, we celebrate and heartily congratulate Big House Books for this win!!

Asheville Prison Books Endorses #August21 Nationwide Prison Strike: 8/21-9/9

Asheville Prison Books endorses the national prison strike called for by prisoners which begins August 21st and extends to September 9th.

The insane incarceration rate in the United Sates should be common knowledge by now, but you may not have known this horrifying piece of information: North Carolina, which has a population of about 10 million, has almost as many people locked up as France, a country with about 67 million people. NC has about 66k and France has about 69k. If that wasn’t bad enough, NC only has the 12th largest incarcerated popluation by state and the 31st highest incarceration rate. If they have a paying job, prisoners in NC make between $0.05 and $1.00 per hour.

After seven people were killed in a South Carolina prison earlier this year, Jailhouse Laywers Speak (a national collective of incarcerated people who fight for human rights by providing other incarcerated people with access to legal education, resources, and assistance) put out a press release calling for a two-week national strike beginning on August 21st, the anniversary of George Jackson’s assassination, and extending until September 9th, the anniversary of the Attica Prison Rebellion in 1971.

This strike is already being met with repression. People have been transferred around to other facilities and communication has been restricted. Facilities will be put on lockdown as they have during strikes for the past couple of years. Last year, the entire Florida DOC locked down.

Bringing more visibility to this movement will help combat the repression. Prison officials will be more hesitant with the public’s eyes on them and will be less likely to mess with particular prisoners if they have outside support. This is one reason Asheville Prison Books is endorsing the national prison strike. We encourage you to spread the word about the strike. Post about it on social media and try to get news outlets to cover it. Have your organization endorse the strike. Start corresponding and building relationships with people inside.

We are also endorsing the strike because we believe it’s necessary to support the movements that are attempting to transform the prison conditions that we work to mitigate every day: The lack of resources, the sense of isolation and boredom, the dehumanization and despair that comes with being viewed as disposable, and the physical danger and emotional trauma that comes along with the consequences of that disposability.

The demands of the strike speak directly to these realities, including basic things such as “prison policies that recognize the humanity of imprisoned men and women,” and “recognition of voting rights.” The demands also include things near to the hearts of many in this network, such as reinstatement of Pell Grants and access to rehabilitation services. You can find the full list of demands and the press release announcing the strike below.

Get involved

There will be a meeting this coming Tuesday, July 17th, at 5:00PM at Firestorm Books & Coffee to discuss building support for striking prisoners.

We’ll also be holding our monthly volunteer orientation this Sunday, July 15th, at 1:00PM also at Firestorm. Please come to the orientation if you’re interested in supporting the strike but can’t make it to the meeting on Tuesday.

Press release from Jailhouse Lawyers Speak:

Men and women incarcerated in prisons across the nation declare a nationwide strike in response to the riot in Lee Correctional Institution, a maximum security prison in South Carolina. Seven comrades lost their lives during a senseless uprising that could have been avoided had the prison not been so overcrowded from the greed wrought by mass incarceration and a lack of respect for human life that is embedded in our nation’s penal ideology.

These men and women are demanding humane living conditions, access to rehabilitation, sentencing reform and the end of modern day slavery.

These are the NATIONAL DEMANDS of the men and women in federal, immigration and state prisons:

  1. Immediate improvements to the conditions of prisons and prison policies that recognize the humanity of imprisoned men and women.
  2. An immediate end to prison slavery. All persons imprisoned in any place of detention under United States jurisdiction must be paid the prevailing wage in their state or territory for their labor.
  3. Rescission of the Prison Litigation Reform Act, allowing imprisoned humans a proper channel to address grievances and violations of their rights.
  4. Rescission of the Truth in Sentencing Act and the Sentencing Reform Act so that imprisoned humans have a possibility of rehabilitation and parole. No human shall be sentenced to death by incarceration or serve any sentence without the possibility of parole.
  5. An immediate end to the racial overcharging, over-sentencing and parole denials of Black and brown humans. Black humans shall no longer be denied parole because the victim of the crime was white, which is a particular problem in Southern states.
  6. An immediate end to racist gang enhancement laws targeting Black and Brown humans.
  7. No denial of access to rehabilitation programs for imprisoned humans at their place of detention because of their label as a violent offender.
  8. State prisons must be funded specifically to offer more rehabilitation services.
  9. Reinstatement of Pell grant eligibility to prisoners in all US states and territories.
  10. Recognition of voting rights for all confined citizens serving prison sentences, pretrial detainees and so-called “ex-felons.” Their votes must be counted. Representation is demanded. All voices count!

We all agree to spread this strike throughout the prisons of Ameri¢¢¢a! From Aug. 21 to Sept. 9, 2018, men and women in prisons across the nation will strike in the following manner:

  1. Work Strikes: Prisoners will not report to assigned jobs. Each place of detention will determine how long its strike will last. Some of these strikes may translate into a local list of demands designed to improve conditions and reduce harm within the prison.
  2. Sit-ins: In certain prisons, men and women will engage in peaceful sit-in protests.
  3. Boycotts: All spending should be halted. We ask those outside the walls not to make financial judgments for those inside. Men and women on the inside will inform you if they are participating in this boycott. We support the call of the Free Alabama Movement Campaign to “Redistribute the Pain” 2018, as Bennu Hannibal Ra-Sun, formerly known as Melvin Ray, has laid out – with the exception of refusing visitation. See these principles described here: https://redistributethepain.wordpress.com/.
  4. Hunger Strikes: Men and women shall refuse to eat.

How you can help:

  1. Make the nation take a look at our demands. Demand action on our demands by contacting your local, state and federal political representatives with these demands. Ask them where they stand.
  2. Spread the strike and word of the strike in every place of detention.
  3. Contact a supporting local organization to see how you can be supportive. If you are unsure of who to connect with, email millionsforprisonersmarch@gmail.com.
  4. Be prepared by making contact with people in prison, family members of prisoners and prisoner support organizations in your state to assist in notifying the public and media on strike conditions.
  5. Assist in our announced initiatives to have the votes of people in jail and prison counted in elections.

Media inquiries should be directed to prisonstrikemedia@gmail.com.

Big Ups to Big House Books! Fight the Power!

Big Ups to Big House Books! Fight the Power!

A books-to-prisons project in Mississippi called Big House Books fights the good fight against arbitrary and inhumane restrictions on access to free books!

Arbitrary and discriminatory restrictions

Up until last year, Big House Books–a project very similar to Asheville Prison Books–had been sending free reading material in South Mississippi Correctional Institution (SMCI), located in Leakesville, with no problems.

Then one day, out of the blue, individuals who normally received books from BHB were told by prison administrators that they could no longer receive free, secular books.

That’s right: they could continue to receive free books if they were “religious,” while all other books had to be paid for.

Fighting back!

But those incarcerated at the facility didn’t give up; they decided to fight.

First, they tried to resolve the issue utilizing the prison’s mandatory internal grievance process, but to no avail. Their concerns were rebuffed by prison officials, who, after all, had crafted the mean-spirited policy in the first place.

But two incarcerated individuals were willing to stand their ground and risk retaliation by becoming named plaintiffs in a lawsuit. Charles Owens and Jess Green reached out to Big House Books to help them challenge this irrational, cruel policy, and BHB secured the assistance of a legal advocacy group called the Mississippi Center for Justice (MCJ).

MCJ wrote the formal legal complaint and filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging that the new prison book policy violates incarcerated people’s First and 14th Amendment rights.

Hitting a little too close to home

We’ll be watching closely to see what happens in this case, as we are dealing at this moment with an identical situation in North Carolina.

Just a couple months ago, administrators at Alexander Correctional Institute in Taylorsville, NC got it in to their heads that free and donated books should no longer be permitted to send into the facility.

Asheville Prison Books investigated the reasons. At first, we were told that it was part of an effort to combat the introduction of contraband into the facility, but when questioned as to whether APB had ever been accused of sending in contraband, Assistant Superintendent Eric Dye acknowledged that, no, we had always operated in good faith.

Additionally, Mr. Dye even stated that the prison “really appreciated” our work. If that is the case, why are they doing everything in their power to hinder it?

Furthermore, when pressed to give a legitimate reason for the ban, Dye changed his answer from “contraband” to “It’s just too many books! They’re a nuisance!”

So the truth comes out. The reason they are no longer allowing donated books has nothing to do with contraband or security; it is because they don’t feel like doing their jobs, which is to sort and distribute prisoner mail.

We don’t accept their bogus claims!

This is simply absurd. AXCI’s decision is a mean-spirited, punitive action poorly disguised as a “security” measure.

Well, the folks at SMCI weren’t fooled, and neither was Big House Books, and neither are we! Asheville Prison Books is committed to challenging this policy. We applaud BHB for their advocacy, and will certainly be taking a page out of their book (and then sending that book into AXCI!) in the coming weeks and months.

We need your help!

Please call Alexander CI and tell them you want them to change this policy! Five minutes of your time goes A LONG WAY to helping these folks keep a key mental, emotional and education resource at their disposal.

The prison number is (828) 632-1331 and Eric Dye’s extension is x1502. Ask to speak with Assistant Superintendent Eric Dye, or to leave a message with this receptionist.

Say you are calling because you heard about the new policy disallowing donated books into the prison and you are very concerned about the gap in access this will create. Say you would like to see the policy changed or something worked out so that people and organizations can still donate free books.

If you make a call please let us know what kind of response you get! Hit us up any time at ashevilleprisonbooks@gmail.com

Ands always, if you’d like to support our work monetarily, donations are warmly appreciated: https://www.paypal.me/AVLPrisonBooks

UPDATE: GOOD NEWS!

We’ve received word from Alexander CI that they will be allowing us to send in free books! Big thanks to everyone who called in!

South Carolina “riot” and call for National Prisoners Strike

South Carolina "riot" and call for National Prisoners Strike

Corey Scott, Eddie Casey Gaskins, Raymond Angelo Scott, Damonte Rivera, Michael Milledge, Cornelius McClary and Joshua Jenkins were killed and 22 prisoners wounded in a rebellion at the Lee Correctional Institution late Sunday and early Monday, April 15-16, 2018, in Bishopville, S.C.

Check out this piece about the incident at Lee Correctional Institution, How a South Carolina Prison Riot Really Went Down

From the piece:

Yes, it was a gang fight, prisoners tell me, but it was corrections officials who had decided to house rival gangs in the same dormitory, and it was the officials’ increasingly punitive policies that exacerbated tensions on the inside. The fact that the rioting went on for seven hours, and that so many died and were injured — 22 were taken to the hospital — was, they say, in no small part because corrections officers were AWOL.

Notably, it is contraband cellphones that make it possible for these prisoners to get their own accounts of the riot to the public, as well as to document their claim that corrections officials could have prevented the high death toll.

Then there was the video a prisoner sent me of the putrid water coming out of the sink of his cell — water, another man told me, that it “smells like feces.”

And they want us all to know that cellphones don’t just help them to tell the public about abuses in the system; cellphones also tether them to family, which should matter to all of us. (Prisons have phones inmates can use, but they are controlled by private companies that charge usurious rates.) As one man explained to me, every night he calls his daughter to help her with her homework. He is trying hard to be a good father even though he is locked up. The state is telling us that the inmates fight over cellphones, but this man told me he willingly shares his phone so others can reach out to their families, and that this practice is common.

Prisoners are now calling for a national prison strike from August 21 to September 9th.

Men and women incarcerated in prisons across the nation declare a nationwide strike in response to the riot in Lee Correctional Institution, a maximum security prison in South Carolina. Seven comrades lost their lives during a senseless uprising that could have been avoided had the prison not been so overcrowded from the greed wrought by mass incarceration and a lack of respect for human life that is embedded in our nation’s penal ideology.

These men and women are demanding humane living conditions, access to rehabilitation, sentencing reform and the end of modern day slavery.

These are the NATIONAL DEMANDS of the men and women in federal, immigration and state prisons:

  1. Immediate improvements to the conditions of prisons and prison policies that recognize the humanity of imprisoned men and women.
  2. An immediate end to prison slavery. All persons imprisoned in any place of detention under United States jurisdiction must be paid the prevailing wage in their state or territory for their labor.
  3. Rescission of the Prison Litigation Reform Act, allowing imprisoned humans a proper channel to address grievances and violations of their rights.
  4. Rescission of the Truth in Sentencing Act and the Sentencing Reform Act so that imprisoned humans have a possibility of rehabilitation and parole. No human shall be sentenced to death by incarceration or serve any sentence without the possibility of parole.
  5. An immediate end to the racial overcharging, over-sentencing and parole denials of Black and brown humans. Black humans shall no longer be denied parole because the victim of the crime was white, which is a particular problem in Southern states.
  6. An immediate end to racist gang enhancement laws targeting Black and Brown humans.
  7. No denial of access to rehabilitation programs for imprisoned humans at their place of detention because of their label as a violent offender.
  8. State prisons must be funded specifically to offer more rehabilitation services.
  9. Reinstatement of Pell grant eligibility to prisoners in all US states and territories.
  10. Recognition of voting rights for all confined citizens serving prison sentences, pretrial detainees and so-called “ex-felons.” Their votes must be counted. Representation is demanded. All voices count!

We all agree to spread this strike throughout the prisons of Amerikkka! From Aug. 21 to Sept. 9, 2018, men and women in prisons across the nation will strike in the following manner:

  1. Work Strikes: Prisoners will not report to assigned jobs. Each place of detention will determine how long its strike will last. Some of these strikes may translate into a local list of demands designed to improve conditions and reduce harm within the prison.
  2. Sit-ins: In certain prisons, men and women will engage in peaceful sit-in protests.
  3. Boycotts: All spending should be halted. We ask those outside the walls not to make financial judgments for those inside. Men and women on the inside will inform you if they are participating in this boycott. We support the call of the Free Alabama Movement Campaign to “Redistribute the Pain” 2018, as Bennu Hannibal Ra-Sun, formerly known as Melvin Ray, has laid out – with the exception of refusing visitation. See these principles described here: https://redistributethepain.wordpress.com/.
  4. Hunger Strikes: Men and women shall refuse to eat.

How you can help:

  1. Make the nation take a look at our demands. Demand action on our demands by contacting your local, state and federal political representatives with these demands. Ask them where they stand.
  2. Spread the strike and word of the strike in every place of detention.
  3. Contact a supporting local organization to see how you can be supportive. If you are unsure of who to connect with, email millionsforprisonersmarch@gmail.com.
  4. Be prepared by making contact with people in prison, family members of prisoners and prisoner support organizations in your state to assist in notifying the public and media on strike conditions.
  5. Assist in our announced initiatives to have the votes of people in jail and prison counted in elections.

Media inquiries should be directed to prisonstrikemedia@gmail.com.

Asheville Anarchist Rad Fair!

On April 1 we tabled at the Asheville Anarchist Rad Fair, an outdoor gathering of local projects run by anarchists/anti-authoritarians that do a wide variety of excellent work in our community, from prisoner solidarity and support to grassroots organizing to community self defense, medical solidarity, and more!

The sun was shining (so hard in fact that we got our first sunburns of the year!) and people were in good spirits as they strolled by with kids and dogs in tow. Many of them stopped at our table to sign up as volunteers and chat about prison reform and abolition.

We got to have conversations we don’t normally have with people we don’t normally meet, while strengthening connections with the other rad projects in town–in other words, it was a huge success!

AARF! happens each first Sunday of the month over the warm spring and summer months. Missed the first one? No worries! Your next chance is May 6, so save the date!

Got a project and want to table at the next AARF!? Get in touch!

Help us get these books into people’s hands!

AVL Prison Books is 100% volunteer run. We only have one real expense: postage. Every month we get between 100-200 requests for books, and each package costs about 3 dollars to mail. So every contribution is necessary and warmly appreciated–by our collective, sure, but most of all by the folks who receive these books!

Currently we have four boxes of book packages sitting around waiting to be mailed out; a donation of just $10 gets three of those packages out in to the world!

https://www.paypal.me/AVLPrisonBooks

New Jim Crow on its way into NC prisons!

Thanks to our community partner Faith 4 Justice & Malaprops Books!

We are delighted to be partnering with Faith4Justice Asheville to get copies of the ground-breaking book The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander into NC prisons, where it had previously been banned.

Local bookstore Malaprops helped source the book by offering copies for customers to purchase at a discounted price for donation. We picked up the first eight copies of the book yesterday, and will begin sending them out immediately!

Banned no more!

Until very recently The New Jim Crow was on the NC Department of Public Safety’s banned book list.

The banning of this book, which does not encourage violence in any way, was clearly politically motivated. Because its subject matter traces the racialized nature of mass incarceration and tracks the historic growth of this institution over the last 40 years, DPS viewed incarcerated people’s awareness of these dynamics and facts as a threat to its authority.

In 2013 anarchists who run one of the many books-to-prisons programs in the country challenged this policy and successfully got the book removed from the ban list. However, as the book’s popularity grew DPS cracked down and banned it once again in 2015. It stayed on the banned book list until this January, when the ACLU’s legal team got involved.

Celebrate and agitate!

Banning books is just one way that prisons control the flow of information into and out of them; on a daily basis the communications and activities of incarcerated people are monitored and restricted in ways that make the most basic of interactions with friends and family difficult and painful–to say nothing of repression of political organizing on the inside.

So getting a previously-banned book into a correctional facility feels like a big win: an assertion of the humanity and agency of incarcerated people to read and study what they want, especially when it’s a text that speaks so directly to the structural forces behind their lived experiences.

Of course, we know there’s way more work to be done. The real goal is not getting books into prisons, but getting people out of them! Here are some things you can do right now to support incarcerated people:

  1. Become a pen pal! Email ashevilleprisonbooks@gmail.com to request more info on how to get started!
  2. Support prisoner organizing! Follow the #endprisonslavery hashtag and visit http://fighttoxicprisons.wordpress.com/
  3. Look for a books to prisons program near you to help out at or donate to, or start one if it doesn’t already exist in your town!

Keep PUSHing: Building on the #OperationPUSH demands

Mere days before FDC’s repression effort began scattering active prisoners into new facilities, and into solitary confinement for the weeks surrounding January 15, an Operation PUSH prisoner’s anonymous voice reached the world and called on outside supporters to ‘shine a light from the outside in on the system.’

In essence, this prisoner saw what was coming and passed the torch to us on the outside. With three clear demands and a simple strategy, this invisible group of prisoners gave a glimpse of what could be, if the networks of outside solidarity and inside communication could coalesce.

While we have heard from many prisoners since January 15, we know that the vast majority of FL prisoners still do not know how much support they garnered on the outside. And many who made plans to struggle together have not seen or heard from each other in weeks. In many ways, the next steps towards victory for them are in our hands.

It is with this understanding that a group of us on the outside are developing an additional list of demands, based primarily on communication from prisoners we’ve gotten in recent weeks, that aims to honor the countless who have suffered major sacrifices to develop or report on Operation PUSH as well as those who had no idea what it was, but were punished preemptively simply because they were viewed as potential organizers or participants.

We will do all we can to bring these demands to FDC, the Governor and State Legislature, in an effort to carry the prisoners’ vision for Operation PUSH forward.

In addition to the Operation PUSH demands of payment, parole and pricing, we, supporters of all Florida prisoners struggling for dignity, demand:

  • An end to censorship of publications that give voice to prisoners and/or critique prisons
  • An end to repression of prisoners for communication with outside advocates
  • An end to the use of Security Threat Group status as a means for political repression
  • An end to strip cells and extreme temperatures to torture prisoners
  • An explanation of the cause for a major spike in 2017 prisoner deaths
  • Protection of prisoners health from nearby industrial activity, including phosphate mining and landfills
  • An end to black mold-infested facilities, spoiled food and dilapidated buildings
  • Removal of all KKK members, and other recognized racist hate groups, from FDC staff
  • An end to the medical co-pay that results in financial debt and untreated illness
  • An immediate reduction in prison population using existing guidelines for clemency
  • A face-to-face meeting with FDC officials to further discuss these matters

Check out this audio recording from one of the original PUSH organizers, recorded on 2/16/18:

Brews for Books

New Beer Thursday Fundraiser at Catawba!

Join us at Catawba’s South Slope Tasting Room & Brewery on Thursday, Feburary 15th for their first New Beer Thursday fundraiser of 2018!! Starting with the release on the 15th and running through March, $1 from every glass of their pomegranate sour sold will be donated to the Asheville Prison Books Program!

We’ll be tabling at Catawba’s South Slope Tasting Room & Brewery on the 15th.
32 Banks Avenue #105, Asheville, North Carolina 28801

Rashid Details FDOC Torture Practices

Fight Toxic Prisons:

Time on Ice: Florida Officials Torture Prisoners With Freezing Strip Cells (2018)

By Kevin Rashid Johnson

When I first arrived in the Florida prison system on June 22, 2017, and was thrown in solitary confinement in the latest of numerous retaliatory interstate transfers for publicizing and resisting prison abuses, I questioned and discussed with numerous other prisoners our being forced to live in sweltering cells without air-conditioning, or fans, or any other protections against the severe Florida heat.

Many responded that in Florida Department of corruption (FDOC), officials deliberately use extreme temperatures to torture prisoners, especially targeting those of color and the mentally ill, and that many have died as a result. And it wasn’t just with the heat.

They forecasted that as soon as outside temperatures began to drop, I’d witness—and likely also experience, on account of my propensity to challenge abuses—the constant abuse of strip cells (namely the removal of all property with which they might keep warm from prisoners’ cells for 72 hours) in order to torture them in extremely cold cells.

When It’s Cold Outside…

Those predictions proved prescient…

As October arrived and outside temperatures dipped into the 50 to 60° range, I witnessed a sudden spike in the abuse of strip cells, and it’s been almost exclusively targeted at mentally ill prisoners and prisoners of color.

To speciously justify these abuses guards routinely lie, usually claiming falsely that the prisoner misused property items inside his cell in a manner that threatened prison safety or security. Often the claimed ‘threat’ is so patently absurd as to be laughable even if it were true—such as claiming the prisoner’s bed wasn’t properly made.

Sometimes they also fabricate a disciplinary report (DR) to create a record to make the strip cell appear justified. But the abuse occurs with such impunity and regularity that most times they don’t bother writing a DR, making evident that the prisoner did nothing wrong.

Not writing the DR is also portrayed by guards as a trade-off, to manipulate prisoners to not grieve (1) or otherwise challenge the abuse. Since, receiving a DR (of which prisoners are almost never acquitted) typically means an automatic additional six months in solitary confinement (euphemistically called Close Management in the FDOC).

Guards lie to put prisoners on strip cell upon their slightest whims—including obvious racial prejudice and intolerance of the mentally ill, out of spite for prisoners talking cell to cell, based on the guard’s grudge or foul mood, for a prisoner’s requesting emergency medical or mental health care, or for no discernible reason at all.

In only three months—October 2017 to January 2018—I witnessed and documented so many instances of this abuse that it would be unfeasible to list them all here. Therefore I will give just a random sampling.

… It Gets Cold Inside

Before setting out specific incidents of abuses of strip cell, I should explain why the cells here at Florida State Prison (FSP) for example become and remain extremely cold during cold weather, although the prison does have an internal heating system.

Each FSP cell has a large shuttered back window measuring approximately 2 1/2 feet by 3 feet, which opens to the outside. Because FSP is old and poorly maintained, most of the cell windows don’t close at all or all the way, or they have drafts.

Also, atop each cellblock are large exhaust fans that remain on at all times. These exhausts suck air into the cells through the open or drafty windows overpowering any potential in-cell heat with cold outside air, much like driving a car in the cold with the windows open. The cell temperatures therefore remain as cold or nearly as cold as the temperatures out-of-doors.

The cellblocks typically get so cold when the temperatures drop outside, that guards working them remain bundled up in their coats and hats, especially at night. Only when it becomes unbearably cold to them will they turn off the exhaust fan to allow their work areas outside the cells to warm up. This allows the cells to warm up also. I now come to specific instances of abuse of strip cells.

Group Freeze

On October 23, 2017, I was moved onto the third floor of one of FSP’s disciplinary cellblocks (B-wing), to serve a disciplinary sentence imposed for a DR falsified against me by a sergeant Alvin Cazee, in retaliation for my naming and quoting him in a recent article boasting about FSP officials having killed numerous prisoners and covered those killings up (2).

At that time outside temperatures were dipping into the 40s—50°s. Throughout my time on B wing the heating system was turned off as guards claimed the wing’s boiler was broken, but as already noted, even when on the heating system does not keep the cells warm.

On B- wing’s third floor there are 34 cells. On the day I was moved on to the wing there were eight prisoners on just that floor on strip cell, (all of them Black and Latino), including Steven Harris, #R53631; Eduardo Vargas, # AL61184; Thomas Valentine, #T62025; Thomas Partlow #J42484; Christopher McGrady, # B09103; and others.

That following night when they were on strip cell it was so cold that even those of us who had bedding, clothing, mattresses and even thermal underwear were cold. Many of us spoke up telling the wing sergeant to turn off the exhaust fan, specifically because of those on strip cell—to no avail.

Gregory Ashley

Gregory Ashley #W78952, one of the many men who forewarned me about the cold weather strip cell abuses, was himself a victim numerous times, simply because of being outspoken.

On December 24, 2016 he was ordered by a sergeant Warner to stop talking out of his back window to a prisoner in another cell. Ashley replied that if he was doing something wrong to write him a DR, but he was going to keep talking.

Incensed by Ashley’s defiant response, Warner left and returned with a captain William Hall and lieutenant Stephen Thompson who told him he was going on strip cell for allegedly covering his cell window. Ashley protested that he never had any covering over his window and had done nothing to go on strip cell. In turn he was repeatedly gassed and put on strip cell for three days.

As soon as his property was returned, Ashley filed grievances on the abuse, including informal grievance #1701-205-080.

In retaliation for his filing grievances against them, Hall, Thompson and Warner returned on December 29, 2016 and repeatedly gassed Ashley again and put him on strip cell for another three days.

Ashley received no DR for any claimed wrongdoing on either occasion. The responses he received to his grievances stated that his complaints were referred to the FDOC’s Inspector General’s office, which Office has been repeatedly exposed in the media and is notorious for ignoring and covering up abuses and killings of prisoners by FDOC officials. (3) Predictably, Ashley never heard anything from that office.

Corinthian Johnson

On October 18, 2017, Corinthian Johnson #B08931 was randomly targeted for strip cell for no reason. Upon protesting that he’d done nothing to be put on strip cell, he was repeatedly gassed and thereupon put on strip cell for three days.

To justify this abuse, a guard Lucas Karr fabricated a ridiculous DR against Johnson claiming that during the security round he observed Johnson wasn’t fully dressed in pants and shirt and his bed wasn’t properly made (DR number 205—172390—a copy of that DR is posted with this article). The DR falsely claimed that Johnson refused to obey Karr’s instructions to be fully dressed and to make his bed properly, which never happened, but even had it, there was obviously nothing done, or not done, that justified taking his property or gassing him.

Derald Young

Derald Young #A132676 is a chronic asthmatic who receives chronic medical care for his condition and often requires breathing treatment. On October 17, 2017 he needed his breathing treatment and told guards he was having a medical emergency. They refused to contact medical staff so Young tried to speak to the wing lieutenant Stephen Thompson about his situation.

Instead of contacting the medical department, Thompson maliciously put Young on strip cell, with no DR written. Young later wrote a grievance on this abuse.

On October 31, 2017 Young attempted again to address Thompson, this time about needing some missing legal property of his. Again, instead of addressing his issue Thompson told Young he was going on strip cell, stating his bed wasn’t made up properly, although it was. Young relinquished all of his bedding and clothing, except what he was wearing, because he couldn’t sleep the entire 3 days when last put on strip cell by Thompson due to the cold; also because cold aggravates and triggers his asthma.

In turn Thompson and a captain S. Lola had Young cell extracted. The ‘cell extraction’ team of 5 body armored guards beat Young at length (as is the common practice during cell extractions at FSP), including repeatedly punching him in the face and head using handcuffs as brass knuckles. (4)

Young consequently suffered a lacerated lip and brow, hemorrhages across the white of his right eye, and knots and contusions across his head and face. He received no medical care except you have a nurse wipe away the blood that covered his face, as the guards who’d beaten him cursed the guard who was operating a portable audio-video camera during the cell extraction, because he’d recorded part of the assault on Young. Young was then put on strip cell for 3 days. He received no DRs for any claimed misconduct neither on October 17 nor 31st.

Robert Griffin

On December 7, 2017 Robert Griffin #S12986, went to the FSP medical department and returned to his assigned cellblock—J-wing. Upon entering J-wing, the guard who was ‘escorting’ Griffin, named Chism, whispered something to the wing sergeant D. Tollefsrud, who then told Chism to lock Griffin inside the wing’s shower.

Several guards then went into and searched Griffin’s cell, and came out with nothing. Tollefsrud sent them back into the cell, and this time they took all of Griffin’s clothes out of his cell.

As they escorted him back to the cell he asked why his clothes were taken and was told, for his allegedly “altering state property.” He protested that they were obviously lying and playing games to set him up. Upon being locked inside his cell he was told to give them the clothes he was wearing, which he protested and refused to do.

In turn the guards called lieutenant Stephen Thompson and captain S. Lola to the wing. They then had Griffin gassed repeatedly, cell extracted and put on 3 days strip cell in a cell with a back window that doesn’t close, while outside temperatures were in the 40s.

The extraction team kicked, kneed and beat Griffin at length, including using handcuffs as brass knuckles. When he was brought out of the cell afterward, I observed Griffin’s resultant injuries, including a lacerated left eyebrow, swollen nose (which he believes is fractured), blackened bruises to his right eye which was swollen shut, multiple contusions, swelling and knots across his face. Griffin received no DR.

Rickie Watson

On December 29, 2017 Ricky Watson #B11163, was standing at his cell door listening to a radio through headphones. A guard with a black eye who was working the wing began yelling and cursing at an unidentified prisoner to stop talking, which brought a taunting response, “That’s why you got a black eye now!”

The guard came to Watson’s cell, apparently because he happened to be standing at the door, and held up his pen at Watson, who asked what he meant by that gesture. The guard responded, “You already know,” and walked off. A few minutes later Watson was put on strip cell.

A DR was fabricated against Watson, to create a pretext for the strip cell. A guard R. McDade lied on the DR claiming falsely that he’d observed Watson with the state issued shirt tied around his head, his mattress on the cell floor instead of on the bunk and a blanket covering his cell’s back window. McDade claimed he ordered Watson to remove the shirt and blanket and to place the mattress on the bunk and Watson refused. Which didn’t happen. (DR # 205—172952).

McDade crafted the DR so to justify targeting Watson’s bedding, mattress and clothes. Watson’s personal clothes were also confiscated with no explanation, including his thermal underwear and sweatshirt. This was all done so he’d suffer on three days strip cell with nothing in the cell to keep warm with while it was extremely cold in the cells.

Elijah Bowden

During late autumn and winter FSP officials are required to provide prisoners extra blankets specifically because the cells become extremely cold. FSP officials have a set of housing rules in solitary confinement that require prisoners to have their beds made and to remain fully dressed in pants and shirt from 7am to 4pm while in their cells. A prisoner may lay on his bed so long as it remains made up.

On November 29th 2017 at around 7:10 am Elijah Bowden #T00793 was lying on top of his made up bed, but lying under his extra blanket because the cell was extremely cold.

Because he was lying under his extra blanket, a guard Econom had Bowden and put on strip cell. To bolster the pretext for this, Econom lied claiming Bowden was not fully dressed and his bed wasn’t made, and he refused to obey orders to dress and make his bed. A DR was written to this effect. (DR number 205—172693). Clearly the accusations against Bowden presented no threat, yet captain William Hall and lieutenant Stephen Thompson put him on strip cell in an extremely cold cell with nothing except his boxer shorts.

Bowden was so cold that he could not sleep the entire three days and sat by the cell door on a steel locker shivering violently.

On December 27 he filed a formal grievance complaining in part that, “the property restriction was completely unauthorized by [Florida Administrative Code] rule 33—601.800 (10)(a), (b) and (c) … because I was not doing anything remotely close to deserving or warranting the action. Nevertheless I almost froze to death for 3 days in the middle of winter in this cell in violation of the rule while I had been lied on by Officer Econom….”

In response to this grievance assistant warden (as acting warden) Jeffrey McClelland admitted the strip cell torture was imposed for Brown’s alleged disobedience as a “management tool.” (Grievance #1801—205—002).

Diaunte Byrd

Just as I began writing this article on January 8, 2018 I witnessed yet another prisoner fall victim to strip cell upon guards lying on him. I listened as Diante Byrd #T53983 complained to a guard C. Collins that he had a medical emergency and needed to see medical staff. Collins told him to shut up or he was going on strip cell.

Byrd persisted that he had a pressing medical problem and announced for the audio surveillance system in the cellblock that he had a medical emergency, and staff were unresponsive. In turn Collins yelled to Byrd to pack up his property because he was going on strip cell.

Collins and sergeant D. Tollefsrud called lieutenant Stephen Thompson to the wing, who told Byrd he wasn’t interested in anything he had to say, and to submit to a strip search and being handcuffed to go on strip cell, or he’d be gassed. And so it went. Byrd complied and was put on three days strip cell.

I listened as the guards concocted a lie that Byrd had his cell door window covered and refused orders to uncover it as a typical pretext for the strip cell. He was then written a bogus DR.

They Got Me Too

On November 21, 2017 a white guard Modi Tovaas had me put on strip cell after trying unsuccessfully the prior night to do the same, by claiming falsely that I had a sheet covering my back window, after referring to me as “one of these smart niggers,” and stating that I had crossed “the brotherhood.”

He fabricated a DR claiming I’d defied his orders to uncover the window. (DR # 205—172648).

A Culture of Lies and Abuse

It turns out that guards fabricating DRs is an entrenched cultural practice in the FDOC, whether to have prisoners punished, to extend their imprisonment, or to justify assaulting them. And it is widespread because guards aretaught to do it. As the Miami Herald learned from guards, this is part of a “code” taught by ranking officials. As one former guard reported:

” ‘First, they teach you how to write a false DR [disciplinary report] against an inmate. They tell you how to write it to ‘Make it stick,’ to use certain language. “Disciplinary reports result in loss of privileges and can also lead to delays in an inmates release.

“ ‘Sometimes they will even write it for you—all filled with lies so that they can say they beat or gassed someone because they deserved it’, he said.“Sometimes those reports written by corrections officers have a familiar cadence and wording.” (4)

As that guard reported,”he knew the [FDOC] was corrupt, but he was unprepared for how things really were.” (5).

And not only is the strip cell torture something that has been going on in the FDOC for a long time, but it was supposedly ordered stopped upon being exposed as one of many abuse tactics employed by former Warden Samuel Culpepper, at the notoriously abusive Northwest Florida Reception Center, where, as the Herald exposed, prisoners:

“Were stripped naked or down to their boxers at the whim of guards and had all their belongings and their mattresses taken away, then left around the clock on a cold metal bunk for 72 hours or more, with nothing to hold, not even a Bible….

“ Inmates complained that they would shiver, cold and petrified… .”(6).

Cullpepper was promoted to a regional director despite the torture and murderous abuse he orchestrated as a warden. But the

“DOC did, however, order Culpeper to ‘amend’ the manner in which he placed inmates on property restriction.

“In an email to NWFRC officers in July 2009, Culpepper said, ‘I’ve been called down on my interpretation of the rule and instructed to immediately cease utilizing property restriction as a discipline tool.”

“In the future, he told subordinates, inmates who fail to make their beds or keep their cell clean will be written up in disciplinary reportsbut not have their belongings taken away.” (7).

So the cold strip cell torture in the FDOC has been previously exposed and ordered discontinued, yet it persists.

And not just this, but to deprive prisoners of protection from extreme cold is to deny their fundamental right to shelter and is it illegal cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the U.S. Constitution’s 8th amendment. (8). Which is not just a human and civil rights violation but a federal crime. (9)

As already noted, this abuse is going on with the FSP warden’s express knowledge and approval as a “management tool.” In fact, prisoners suffering this torture are directly observed by all FSP administrative officials, who make inspections in the cellblocks at least weekly and look in on each prisoner, as do mental health staff. Medical staff made daily rounds. And administrators from FDOC headquarters and regional offices tour the cellblocks, sometimes multiple times per month.

As Fyodor Dostoyevsky once said, to understand society one need only look inside its prisons. I would add, to understand the nature of a society’s government one need only look at those who run its prisons. America is clearly ruled by a criminal fascist dictatorship shrouded in lies and democratic hypocrisy.

Dared to struggle there to win!

All power to the people!


Notes:

  1. By prisoners not grieving such abuses, there is no record of such patterns of abuse which prove valuable in the instance of outside investigations or litigation.
  2. See, Kevin “Rashid” Johnson, “Lynching Culture: Florida Officials Are Experts at Killing Prisoners by Natural Causes,” (2017) http://rashidmod.com/?p=2471
  3. Mary Ellen Klas, “Florida Prison Inspectors Detail Alleged Interference in their Investigations,” Miami Herald, June 1, 2016; Paula Dockery, “Inspector General Fiasco Adds to Prison Woes, Florida Today, May 9, 2015; http://On.flatoday.com/1b EXGrT; Julie K. Brown, “Top Cop Accused of Thwarting Investigations Quits Florida Prison System,” Miami Herald, December 21, 2016.
  4. Julie K Brown, “For Allegedly Brutal Prison Guard, Day of Reckoning Arrives,” Miami Herald, September 20, 2014.
  5. Ibid
  6. Julie K. Brown, “Culture of Brutality Reigned at State Prison in Florida Panhandle,” Miami Herald, March 21, 2014
  7. Ibid
  8. Federal court rulings on this point are legion. See, e.g. Chandler v Baird, 926 F. 2d 1057 (11th Cir. 1991); Antonelli v Sheahan, 81 F. 3d 1422, 1433 (7th Cir. 1996) (no blankets to combat cold); Murphy v Walker, 51 F. 3d 714, 720-21 (7th Cir. 1995) (no clothes, bed or bed clothing in mid-November); etc.
  9. Violation of one’s federal civil rights is a crime under 18 U.S. Code Sections 242 and 243.