Showing posts with label Inmate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inmate. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Parole for Va. inmate seeking sex-change surgery

Parole for Va. inmate seeking sex-change surgery
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(AP) — A Virginia prison inmate who’s suing the state to finance a sex-change operation has been granted parole.


Virginia Parole Board chairman William Muse said Thursday that the board approved Ophelia De’Lonta’s release last month. De’Lonta remains in custody at Buckingham Correctional Center pending approval of her parole plan, which Muse says can take 45 days or longer.


De’Lonta was born Michael A. Stokes and has served 34 years of a 73-year sentence for robbery. She has been diagnosed with gender identity disorder. Her desire for a sex-change operation has prompted several attempts at self-castration.


Muse says the lawsuit had no bearing on the parole decision. De’Lonta’s attorney, Alan Schoenfeld, declined to comment on what effect the parole might have on the suit.


The parole decision was first reported by WWBT-TV.


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Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Attempted Extortion: Aspiring Actor’s New Role is Inmate

Attempted Extortion: Aspiring Actor’s New Role is Inmate
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2013/december/attempted-extortion-aspiring-actors-new-role-is-inmate/image/extortion-note

Vivek Shah was pursuing an acting career when he thought of a better way to make money.





12/03/13


It was an outrageous plan worthy of a Hollywood thriller. But an aspiring actor’s real-life attempt to extort tens of millions of dollars from wealthy targets earned him decidedly bad reviews in federal court and a new role for the next seven years—as a prison inmate.


Vivek Shah was pursuing an acting career in Los Angeles in 2012 when he thought of a better way to make money than from the bit parts he had landed in movies. He planned to extort billionaires—a coal tycoon and movie producer among them—by threatening to kill members of their families if they didn’t pay.






“He was very ambitious,” said Special Agent Jim Lafferty, who works out of our Pittsburgh Division and specializes in white-collar crime. Shah, 26, attempted to extort more than $ 120 million from seven prominent victims, including movie producer Harvey Weinstein ($ 4 million demanded), Groupon co-founder Eric Lefkofsky ($ 16 million demanded), coal executive Chris Cline ($ 13 million demanded), and oil and gas billionaire Terry Pegula ($ 34 million demanded).


He chose victims after doing online research about the world’s wealthiest people, and his targets were instructed to wire money to offshore bank accounts. To set up those accounts, Shah needed a proof of address, so he established a post office box in Los Angeles using a fake driver’s license bearing the name Ray Amin.


“He had the fake ID created for the sole purpose of opening the PO Box,” Lafferty said. “He purchased it from someone who makes false IDs for underage college students.” Shah used various other means to avoid detection—conducting online research from public places that provided anonymous Wi-Fi, and using prepaid debit cards to purchase postage online for the extortion letters.


But things didn’t turn out like he planned. Shah had been involved in a domestic dispute with his roommate several weeks before he established the PO Box. When police were called to the scene in May 2012, they discovered the fake ID, which they checked against the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database. Shah told the officers he was an actor and that the bogus driver’s license was merely a prop. The NCIC check confirmed that no criminal activity was associated with the name Ray Amin.


Later, when agents discovered that “Ray Amin” had opened the PO Box connected with the extortion scheme, they ran their own NCIC check, and Shah’s name came back associated with Amin.


From there, agents were able to monitor Shah’s real online accounts, which led from California to Chicago, where video surveillance showed him mailing more extortion letters. The FBI Laboratory later matched his DNA with the letters. Shah was arrested in August 2012, pled guilty to the extortion scheme in May 2013, and was sentenced in September. Lafferty credits the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of West Virginia with helping to bring the investigation to a quick and successful resolution.


After his arrest, Shah claimed his plan was to draw attention to himself. “He imagined the case going public and him gaining notoriety and somehow benefitting from that,” Lafferty said. “That obviously didn’t happen.”


Although the fake ID quickly led agents to Shah, Lafferty noted that the crime was ill-advised from the start. “The technology and investigative capability the FBI and our partners possess would make it extremely difficult to pull off an extortion scheme like this,” he said. “He really never had a chance.”


Resource:
- Press release




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Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Prison Officials Finally Agree to Transfer Floridly Psychotic Inmate



Jonathan Francisco as a child with his mother, Linda Embrack, and as an adult (Linda Embrack)

Government shutdown notwithstanding, Justice Department lawyers came to federal court in Colorado yesterday to defend the Bureau of Prisons against an “emergency motion.” The lawyers who had filed the motion represented some of the inmates at ADX-Florence, the “Supermax” facility that houses some of the nation’s most notorious prisoners. Turns out, there wasn’t much of a defense to offer.

Here is the link to the brief filed by the lawyers on behalf of inmate Jonathan Francisco. When confronted with a floridly psychotic inmate eating his own feces — the manifestation of severe mental illness occurring day after day, month after month — the BOP did little more than place sandbags around his cell to reduce the odor of excrement. Here are the astonishing key paragraphs from the plaintiff’s motion:
 


As demonstrated in the attached declarations and other evidence, for nearly five years Francisco has displayed a persistent pattern of bizarre and worrisome signs and symptoms suggesting that he suffers from a severe and worsening mental illness. During that time, he has been almost entirely mute, speaking very little, if any, to anyone, including family members with whom he previously had a close relationship. He spends most of his time standing with his face very near a wall, staring blankly at the surface before him.

He also obsessively hoards and handles his own feces, placing it on food trays, rolling it into balls, making sculptures out of it, and smearing it on his walls and sometimes on his body or in his hair. He has repeatedly defecated in common-use shower facilities, and on at least one occasion has been seen consuming his feces. In addition, he often has little if any personal property in his cell, frequently sleeps without even a mattress, and continuously lives in unsanitary conditions verging on squalor.

Despite all of this, BOP records reflect that he receives no meaningful ongoing mental health treatment; instead, the BOP’s mental health professionals essentially ignore him. The available evidence suggests that the BOP’s response to his situation, thus far, has been to occasionally force him into a shower stall, and to pile sandbags outside his door in a futile effort to prevent the overwhelming smell of feces emanating from his cell from spreading throughout the part of the prison where he lives.


The government lawyers didn’t say much in response to this motion. They did not try to defend BOP practices or policies. Instead, they quickly assured a grim-faced U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch that the forms for Francisco’s transfer to the federal mental health prison at Springfield, Missouri, already had been filled out and that he would be moved for treatment at the end of next week. Judge Matsch reasonably asked why the process was taking so long. Indeed, that’s a question that goes beyond yesterday’s hearing.

I wrote about the manifestations of Francisco’s mental illness four months ago, in early June, and since that time, the Bureau of Prisons has done nothing to help Francisco. Another mentally ill inmate at ADX-Florence, a man named Robert Gerald Knott, committed suicide at the facility in early September and the Bureau of Prisons did nothing to help Francisco. There has been civil rights litigation pending now for nearly 18 months and the BOP has done nothing to help Francisco. Prison officials promised Congress long ago that there were adequate mental health programs at ADX-Florence and no one helped Francisco.


Tuesday’s acknowledgement by the government that Francisco needs help and finally will get it surely comes as a relief to his mother, Linda Embrack, who has tried for five years to get treatment for her obviously ill son. In April 2010, for example, she wrote a heartbreaking letter to a federal magistrate judge chronicling her son’s descent into madness in prison. “Very uncharacteristic of Jonathan to stop writing or calling,” she told the judge, describing how her only son’s appearance had become disheveled, his hair matted, as he grew unable to speak and or recognize his own mother.


I spoke Wednesday morning with Embrack. Naturally, she is pleased with yesterday’s news.  “I’m so excited. I thank God for this,” she said. She told me that Francisco first became ill in 2008. “The people said that he was just playing but I knew that he wasn’t just playing.” At ADX-Florence, she alleges, prison officials “were doing everything they could to hide Jonathan.” But they can’t hide him any longer. If he makes it to next week, if he makes it Springfield, he will have a chance at a life of sanity, and dignity, even if it’s still a life behind bars. 






    








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Prison Officials Finally Agree to Transfer Floridly Psychotic Inmate

Saturday, August 10, 2013

California Inmate in Prison Hunger Strike Says "Each Minute Has Been Torturous"



Hundreds of inmates across the state enter second month of protest against "inhumane" solitary confinement units








California"s prison hunger strike is pitting hundreds of inmates against authorities in a battle of wills largely invisible to outsiders.


A mass protest which has just entered its second month is playing out in the solitary confinement units of maximum security jails where an estimated 400 prisoners are refusing food to demand an end to what they call inhumane conditions.


Some have been hospitalised as their bodies, stripped of fat, now consume muscle, a point when health can be permanently damaged.


Inmates" supporters held small rallies in Oakland and Los Angeles on Thursday to mark one month – 32 days – since the July 8 start of the protest. A “bike for the strike” event is scheduled in Oakland on Friday.


The core demand is an end to indefinite solitary confinement in Security Housing Units, known as SHUs. Some inmates have been in such cells for decades, prompting denunciations from Amnesty International and other human rights advocates.


Strike leaders – an unusual alliance of whites, African Americans and Latinos – say the conditions amount to torture and that the system for selecting those for segregation is callous and capricious. A condition of release into the general jail population is to “debrief” – inform – against gang members.


Authorities reject the criticism and say the strike is an attempt by gang leaders to regain the ability to terrorise fellow prisoners, staff and communities throughout California. Each side accuses the other of brutality and manipulation. There is little sign of negotiation or compromise.


The media have not been granted access to striking inmates but eight in solitary confinement at Pelican Bay state prison, an isolated, windswept facility outside Crescent City, and the protest"s epicentre, have written to the Guardian shedding light on their motivations and states of mind.


In handwritten letters on A4 notepaper they all pledged continued defiance and gave no indication about when the strike may end. Todd Ashker, an outspoken member of the so-called Short Corridor Collective, a group of segregated strike leaders, said he was inspired by the 1981 hunger strikes by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland which left 10 men dead.


Ashker said he had become friends with Denis O"Hearn, a sociology professor and author of Nothing But an Unfinished Song: Bobby Sands, the Irish Hunger Striker who Ignited a Generation. He called the book “one of many inspirations” and vowed to continue his protest. “Staying strong and committed!!”


Ashker, 50, a convicted killer with neo-Nazi tatoos, has obtained a paralegal degree and initiated multiple lawsuits, helping inmates win the right to order books and earn interest on jail savings accounts.


He said he had been denied human contact with loved ones during 27 years in solitary confinement. “Each minute has been torturous to my mind and body.” He would be released into the general prison population only if he informed against others but he had no information, he said.


Ronnie Dewberry, 54, another strike leader who has adopted the name Sitawa Nantambu Jamaa, called himself a “captive new Afrikan prisoner of war” unjustly jailed for a 1980 murder he denies.


An alleged member of the Black Guerrilla Family, he enclosed a five-page essay titled “I know my destiny” which vowed to never inform on fellow inmates. “From this day until the day I die I shall always be ready to keep fighting/struggling and liberating the mental chains from our people"s minds.”


Marcus Harrison, who has adopted the name Kijana Tashiri Askari, sent “revolutionary greetings” and said he was a political prisoner at a “slave kamp” which waged psychological war against inmates.


Fati Carter, who has been in the Pelican Bay SHU “for 23 years and one month”, alleged authorities were manipulating the media by giving occasional access to inmates who had been released from solitary confinement after informing. Such men were compromised and “attempting to curry favor with their handlers”, said Carter.


Strikers could not communicate but were united, he added. “The motive force which inspired those I know to support the strike is the injustice we suffer.”


The Aryan Brotherhood and Black Guerrilla Family reportedly instigated the hunger strike and persuaded traditional latino rivals, the Mexican Mafia and Nuestra Familia, to join.


Inmates abandoned two hunger strikes in 2011 after authorities promised to review solitary confinement cases and change selection procedures. Activists say some 33,000 inmates joined the beginning of the latest strike and that the number has settled to around 400. The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has not supplied a recent estimates but usually gives a lower number than activists.


Martin Bibbs, who was convicted of attempted murder, said this time strikers would continue until obtaining meaningful change. “Change is sometimes just a new pile of shit. And that"s what we"ve been getting – new piles of shit which they call change.”


There are 122,000 inmates in California"s 33 state prisons. Last week the US supreme court upheld a federal court ruling that the state cut its jail population to 110,000 by the end of the year to reduce overcrowding, which has been blamed for illness and violence. Four of the state jails – Pelican Bay, Corcoran, Folsom and Tehachapi – have the special security SHU units.


Jeffrey Beard, who heads the California department of corrections and rehabilitation, urged the public not to be “fooled” by the strike, calling it an attempt by homicidal gang leaders to turn the clock back to when they ran jails like fiefdoms.


Many of those refusing food were doing so under duress, he said in a Los Angeles Times op-ed. “The inmates calling the shots are leaders in four the most violent and influential prisons gangs in California. Brutal killers should not be glorified. This hunger strike is dangerous, disruptive and needs to end.”


 

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California Inmate in Prison Hunger Strike Says "Each Minute Has Been Torturous"