Showing posts with label prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prison. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

An American Just Disappeared From a Prison in Yemen, and No One Will Say What Happened

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An American Just Disappeared From a Prison in Yemen, and No One Will Say What Happened

Friday, March 21, 2014

Half Ounce of Pot Gets Man 20 Years in Prison

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Half Ounce of Pot Gets Man 20 Years in Prison

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Profit + Prison = EXACTLY THIS

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Profit + Prison = EXACTLY THIS

Profit + Prison = EXACTLY THIS

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Profit + Prison = EXACTLY THIS

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Bradley Manning to face life in prison?

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Bradley Manning to face life in prison?

Monday, March 10, 2014

Alabama DA Drops Effort to Send Man Who Raped 14-Year-Old to Prison

Facing an uphill battle in the state supreme court, an Alabama district attorney has dropped his effort to put a man convicted of raping a 14-year-old behind bars. The News Courier reports that Limestone County District Attorney Brian Jones has decided not to challenge the state appeals court ruling that allowed Austin Smith Clem to avoid prison time for his three rape convictions. “After consultation with the victim and her family, we have decided not to pursue a petition for writ of mandamus to the Alabama Supreme Court,” Jones told the News Courier. “Courtney Andrews has shown immense courage and tenacity during this ordeal. My hope is that, through her example, other victims of sexual offenses will find the courage to speak out and to come forward with these crimes.”


Read our earlier coverage of the Clem case here and here.


 



MoJo Blogs and Articles | Mother Jones



Alabama DA Drops Effort to Send Man Who Raped 14-Year-Old to Prison

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Child-Stealers and Prison Profiteers: A Case Study


Pro Liberate – by William Norman Grigg


For reasons beyond his control, it had taken Donny* three attempts to complete his senior year in high school. On his twentieth birthday, Donny was three days from finishing the classwork necessary to graduate from the Rebound School of Opportunity in Meridian, Idaho. All he had left was to make an oral presentation of his senior report. He had already been offered a post-graduation job at Valley Truss, a local construction service and supply store.  


At home, Donny’s father and mother, David and Norma, had prepared a party in honor of their oldest son’s birthday and his anticipated graduation.  When they got home from school, Donny’s siblings, Larry and Sally*, were eager to celebrate with their older brother. But Donny didn’t come home from school that day. Just before classes ended, he was dragged away in handcuffs by his probation officer, Robert Youngkin and taken to the Ada County Jail, where he will remain until April 28.


Over the past six years, Donny has been incarcerated in a variety of institutions, from “treatment centers” in both Idaho and Utah to the Idaho Department Juvenile Corrections Center in Nampa. The juvenile facility in Nampa has become notorious for corruption and sexual exploitation of inmates by guards and other staff members.



In 2008, Donny pleaded guilty to charges of indecent exposure and battery as a result of an incident with his younger brother and sister that did not involve physical contact.


“Norma and I went to Papa Murphy’s to pick up some pizzas for dinner,” David recounted to Pro Libertate. “We were gone just a few minutes – not even a half hour – and we left Donny here in charge of the younger kids. He was 14 at the time, and he seemed able to handle things. Besides, it was just down the block.”


At the time, Sally was six years of age, and Larry was ten. When Dave and Norma returned, Sarah told them that Donny had “asked us to take our clothes off.”


“We were upset and worried, of course, and we tried to find out immediately what had happened,” Dave related. “As far as we could tell, it wasn’t as if he had abused the kids, or even touched them. It was a `You show me yours, and I’ll show you mine’ kind of thing, which is bad, and wrong, but it was not anywhere near as bad as we were afraid it might be.”


Still, out of an abundance of caution, and acting as conscientious parents, Dave and Norma decided to have their daughter examined.


“We took Sarah to the hospital right away, and she was fine,” Dave reports. However, the hospital visit resulted in a mandatory report to social workers and police, and Donny was in custody before his parents returned.


An examination of Donny conducted on behalf of the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare concluded that the teenager displayed “Mild Mental Retardation to Borderline Intellectual Functioning.” He was on a variety of prescription medications and severely depressed by the prospect of being separated from his family. His parents, who were hardly people of means, were predictably desperate to find an alternative to juvenile prison. They didn’t understand that the juvenile “justice” system is designed to prolong needless and unproductive suffering.


“The original evaluation called for outpatient therapy through SANE Solutions,” David points out. “However, at the hearing [counselor] Larry Overholzer discouraged us from seeking outpatient treatment, insisting that what he called an`in-patient’ approach would be better.”


Dave and Norma took that advice, without being told explicitly what it would entail. They soon regretted their decision.


“We asked the judge for Donny to receive in-patient treatment. He agreed – and the bailiffs took him into custody immediately. That happened six years ago. He has been a prisoner ever since.”


Seeing their son confined in a facility where he was surrounded by violent offenders – both among fellow inmates and the staff – led his parents to wonder “if we should sue the County for child endangerment,” David observes. They wouldn’t be the first to file a lawsuit of that kind against the JCC.


In June 2012, seven Idaho Department of Juvenile Corrections employees filed a whistleblower lawsuitalleging that their supervisors had permitted female staffers to engage in sexual misconduct with male detainees. According to the lawsuit, the facility’s “cronyist, incompetent, corrupt, and unresponsive administration” had abetted widespread “fraud and waste of public resources”; bestowed promotions on unqualified personnel, who were insulated from accountability; and retaliated against employees who expressed concerns to supervisors.


One former employee described how some staffers would sexually exploit prisoners and were “grooming” others to replace them as resident predators.


“One staff member was [sexually] involved with a juvenile,” Shane Penrod told the Boise Weekly. “That juvenile became a staff member and now they are involved with another juvenile.”


The allegations didn’t reflect the isolated views of a few embittered dissidents: A total of 47 current and former employees eventually lodged complaints against the agency. The lawsuit claimed that the Nampa Police Department was made aware of the widespread problems – including sexual misconduct – at the jail, but did nothing about it.


The IDJC filed an official response denying all of the allegations. Sharon Harrigfeld, director of the Idaho Department of Juvenile Corrections, issued a statement reassuring the public “that our facilities are safe” and thanking “all staff for the public service provided each day to community safety.”


That statement was issued on July 31, 2012. At that time, the facility’s staff, whose indivisible probity had earned Harrigfeld’s unqualified endorsement, included 31-year-old employee Julie McCormick, who was arrested several months later and charged with sexual assault on a 15-year-old boy.


McCormick, who has entered a guilty plea, faces a sentencing hearing on March 17. The sexual offenses she committed are outlined, in infuriating detail, in a $ 1.2 million tort claim filed on behalf of her 15-year-old victim in November 2012.


While confined in the Juvenile Corrections Center’s mental health unit, the young boy “was a victim of statutory rape” by McCormick, who had been designated as “Safety and Security Supervisor” despite having “little or no qualifications for security, management, or care and treatment of juveniles or mental health patients….” That position gave McCormick the opportunity to groom the teenager, who was on psychiatric medications, “in a manner commonly used by child molesters” — lavishing attention on him, laundering his clothes and bedding at home, giving the boy “love notes” and taking his “letters and photos of his girlfriend out of his cell, isolating him from other persons.”


The sexual exploitation began on July 4, 2012 and continued for several months. Staff and management were aware of what was happening, but no action was taken.


IDJC staffer Rhonda Ledford, one of the original plaintiffs in the whistleblower suit, has confirmed that employees had seen evidence of McCormick’s criminal conduct and expressed concerns to supervisors the previous April, but were “required to sign confidentiality statements about the situation.”


On February 5 of this year, notice of an impending lawsuit was filed against the Department Juvenile Corrections on behalf of a former inmate who claims he was “threatened with bodily harm” by the staff if he were to “talk about crimes committed in the facility.” The plaintiff was committed to the JCC in June 2008 and released in February 2010 –a time frame that includes the two months Donny  served there. He claims that the Idaho Department of Juvenile Corrections has allowed “sexual predators to have continued access to inmates” at the JCC.


According to the plaintiff, he was the victim of repeated sexual assaults, including one that took place “while [he] was shackled and recovering from being anesthetized from surgical dental procedures in October 2008.” One staffer “locked him in a room … and had sexual intercourse” with the boy, who had been sexually abused before arriving at the JCC. The predator would seek to “pay” the victim for sexual favors – and then threaten “to turn him in for having cash in the facility.” The guard also “threatened she would tell Plaintiff’s friends and family of his sex acts if he spoke to anyone” about what had been done to him.


Some of the female staffers “watched Plaintiff and other male inmates shower for their own prurient interests,” according to the tort claim. Others “arranged for physical fights involving juvenile and young adult inmates at the facility, off camera, in a large closet room.” After he filed a complaint about his mistreatment, the staff “retaliated against him with extended incarceration and false accusations of behavior.”



The victim’s criminal record, and the possibility of being sent incarcerated again after his parole, left him vulnerable to blackmail following his release: His chief tormentor “continued to threaten and intimidate [him] through 2013.”


Rather than carrying out a thorough lustration of the facility in Nampa, the IDOJC filed a motion to seal the documents connected to the whistleblower lawsuit. This was to be expected, given that covering up sexual misconduct by “corrections” personnel is standard operating procedure.


In 2007, Timothy Ray Gilligan, who was employed as a prison guard at the Idaho Maximum Security Institution in 2007, admitted that he had repeatedly had sexual relations with a female inmate. In September 2009, Gilligan was arraigned on a charge of felonious sexual misconduct. Thanks to an all but inexplicable act of leniency by the Ada County prosecutor, and the uncharacteristic generosity of the Idaho Sex Offender Classification Board, Gilligan did not have to register as a sex offender. He wasn’t even prosecuted on the sex charge. As a result, he served only a few months of a three-year sentence.



The Ada County Prosecutor’s office, in collaboration with 4thDistrict Judge Ronald Wilper, arranged an agreement in which Gilligan was permitted to plead guilty to a charge of burglary — despite the fact that the only thing the offender may have taken by force was a captive woman’s self-respect.


The Sex Offender Classification Board helped out by relieving Gilligan of the prospect of being a registered sex offender, or even a violent sexual predator (VSP). This decision was supposedly made on account of the results of a “psycho-sexual evaluation” carried out by SANE Solutions, a quasi-private psychological counseling service that provides such evaluations and supervises treatment of convicted sex offenders.


A quick reminder: If Donny and his parents had agreed to an “out-patient” treatment program, it would have been conducted through SANE Solutions.


Gilligan, who worked as a “psychiatric technician” in the prison system subsequent to his admitted offenses, may have known how to game that system. Then again, it’s obvious that Gilligan’s erstwhile colleagues in the criminal “justice” system extended every conceivable professional courtesy in the effort to avoid ruining his life by forcing him to register as a sex offender.


As Donny  and his parents can testify, in sexual misconduct cases not involving employees of the state criminal “justice” system, the Ada County prosecutor’s office is not inclined toward such generosity.


The stated reason for Donny’s final arrest was an alleged probation violation. Specifically, he had not subjected himself to a required polygraph examination. Donny’s parents insist that they had received approval for an alternative treatment program as a substitute for a polygraph examination.


The polygraph ranks just below the witching rod as a reliable scientific instrument. It was invented by the same man who created the comic book character “Wonder Woman,” an Amazonian princess who wielded a magic lasso that could compel truthful disclosures from those whom it encompassed. Polygraph findings are generally not admissible as evidence in court, but the device is routinely used during interrogations as a way to intimidate suspects into confessing. It is also widely used to “re-offend” people on probation.


Several years ago, Donny “failed” a polygraph question about being alone with his siblings in violation of the terms of his probation. His father David insists that this was not only untrue, but impossible.


“We were appalled by that result,” he declares. “Donny was never left alone. He was under 24/7 supervision.”


Donny requested a second polygraph examination, which meant another $ 150 fee had to be paid by the family.  An appointment was made with an approved polygraph technician, and Donny, along with his father and his attorney, went to the appointed location – only to be told that the technician had selected a different location several miles away.


“Somehow we made it there on time, probably breaking several traffic laws doing so,” David recalls. This sudden change of plans resulted in the creation of an unnecessary high-stress situation, just as the harried young man was going to undergo a scientifically dubious examination that measures, among other things, his stress levels.


The second polygraph examination resulted in Donny being sent back to confinement to be treated for what were described as “thinking errors.”


“What on earth is a `thinking error’?” David asked, his voice burdened with incredulity. One of the doctors who examined Donny asked the same question: “He told us that he had no idea what was meant by the expression `thinking error,’ or how it could be treated.”


This meant another prolonged separation from the family as Donny made the circuit of treatment facilities in Idaho and Utah. Despite the anxiety, depression, and other difficulties he faced, Donny excelled in his independent study program, earning top grades in academic subjects and finding a place on the Honor Roll. Yet with metronomic regularity, some new problem would arise to extend his period of confinement and prevent him from graduating.


After Donny enrolled in the Rebound School, David recalls, “We went to a counselor … to try arranging an alternative to a polygraph. The proposal was that he would undergo six additional counseling sessions, and do some special assignments, in place of the polygraph examination.” David says that this alternative course was approved, leaving the family hopeful that the ordeal was, at last, winding down. He was once again living at home, flourishing in his studies, and doing volunteer work, along with his mother, every Thursday night at a food pantry run by a church in Kuna.


Every evaluation attested that Donny was not a danger to “re-offend.” If the object had been rehabilitation, that goal had clearly been achieved. But the probation and parole system is run by people who have the power to prolong the suffering of harmless people, and the whimsical cruelty necessary to do so on the thinnest pretext.


“We were half-way through the supplemental therapy sessions when the probation officer showed up and arrested him at school” last November 18, David recalls. “He had called the Principal at the Rebound Academy and found out that Donny had two weeks left to finish his work for graduation.” In what could reasonably be construed as an act of deliberate sadism, the probation officer waited until Donny’s birthday to drag him away from school in handcuffs.


“Our family had prepared a birthday party for Donny,” Dave points out. “The kids came home from school eager to see their brother, expecting to have a party. Instead we find out that he was arrested.”


According to the State of Idaho, the “kids” who were so eager to see Donny were his victims, and they needed to be protected from him. The terms dictated to the family made it impossible for David, who is on disability, to find a job: While Donny was at home, one of his parents had to be present to supervise him, especially when the younger children were at home.


“It’s been six years, and our family simply cannot take it anymore,” David told the judge during the January 14 hearing in which it was decided that the state Corrections system would steal another 168 days of Donny’s life.


“Idaho has to be number one in something – and it’s number one in dropout rate,” Norma pointed out in her statement to the judge. “I don’t want my kid to be a statistic.”


Donny wasn’t merely a statistic:  He was in many ways typical of thousands of troubled but essentially harmless people who are devoured by the tax-fueled engine of misery called the Idaho Criminal Justice System.



Despite its reputation for being commendably hostile toward government, the state ranks second in the country in terms of the prison population’s growth rate.


Those convicted of non-violent offenses in Idaho compose 62 percent of the inmate population, and they typically serve sentences twice as long as the national average.


Over the next five years, barring dramatic changes in the system, Idaho tax victims will pay roughly $ 300 million in prison construction and operating costs. The “corrections” system is an immensely lucrative racket, sustaining not only those directly employed to operate prisons and jails but also the profiteers  who populate an ever-expanding network of “private” organizations affiliated with the probation and parole system.


Among the changes being considered by the Idaho legislature is a proposal to hire more probation and parole officers and authorize them “to impose immediate sanctions for violators.” As the ordeal of Donny and his family illustrates, such “reforms” would not be an improvement. Non-violent “offenders” sentenced to probation are handed a Sisyphean stone and assigned an overseer who can extend their suffering at his discretion.


__
*The names of the children have been changed for the purposes of this story.


http://www.freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2014/02/child-stealers-and-prison-profiteers.html






Child-Stealers and Prison Profiteers: A Case Study

Monday, February 10, 2014

Sexual assaults by US military in Japan unlikely to end in prison


Press TV
February 9, 2014


U.S. Sec. of Defense Hagel said there is no “one simple answer” to the ethical crisis gripping the US military.

U.S. Sec. of Defense Hagel said there is no “one simple answer” to the ethical crisis gripping the US military.



The majority of the US military personnel stationed in Japan who were charged with serious sexual violations escaped prison and received light punishments, according to a new report.

US military commanders in Japan increasingly are resolving sexual assault cases through nonjudicial punishment rather than courts-martial, resulting in light punishments, the Associated Press has found.


The AP obtained more than 1,000 documents of sex-crime cases involving US military personnel stationed in Japan, following Freedom of Information Act requests filed with the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.


The documents, filed between 2005 and early 2013, show that out of 473 Marines and Navy sailors accused of sex offenses, 179 were given a small punishment, and only 68 went to prison.


The Air Force was the most lenient as 21 sexual offenders were punished with nothing more than a letter of reprimand.


Of more than 620 serious sex-crime allegations against US military personnel in Japan, at least 323 of the alleged victims also were in the military. Civilians were the accusers in 94 cases, but in nearly 200 cases the alleged victim’s status was unclear.


Losing confidence in the US justice system, victims often refused to cooperate with investigators.


On Friday, US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel said there is no “one simple answer” to the ethical crisis gripping the US military and vowed to get to the bottom of a trend of embarrassing disclosures.


All service branches of the US military have been dealing with a series of scandals including cases of cheating, alcohol abuse, gambling, drugs use, and sexual misconduct which surfaced over the past months.


This article was posted: Sunday, February 9, 2014 at 12:09 pm










Infowars



Sexual assaults by US military in Japan unlikely to end in prison

In Illinois Prison, A Hunger Strike Against ‘Inhumanity’

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In Illinois Prison, A Hunger Strike Against ‘Inhumanity’

Monday, January 13, 2014

Number of US Prison Inmates Serving Life Sentences Hits New Record


A report released by The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit criminal justice advocacy group, reveals that the number of prisoners serving life sentences in the US state and federal prisons reached a new record of close to 160,000 in 2012. Of these, 49,000 are serving life without possibility of parole, an increase of 22.2 percent since 2008.


The study’s findings place in relief figures being promoted by the federal government indicating a reduction in the overall number of prisoners in federal and state facilities, from 1.62 million to 1.57 million between 2009 and 2012.


Ashley Nellis, senior research analyst with the Sentencing Project, argues that the rise in prisoners serving life sentences has to do with political posturing over “tough on crime” measures. “Unfortunately, lifers are typically excluded from most sentencing reform conversations because there’s this sense that it’s not going to sell, politically or with the public,” Nellis says. “Legislators are saying, ‘We have to throw somebody under the bus.’”


At 40,362 California holds a quarter of lifers, followed by Florida (12,549) and New York (10,245), Texas (9,031), Georgia (7,938), Ohio (6,075), Michigan (5,137), Pennsylvania (5,104) and Louisiana (4,657).


Sources:


David Krajicek, “Hard Time: Prisons Are Packed With More Lifers Than Ever,”, WhoWhatWhy.com, September 18, 2013, http://whowhatwhy.com/2013/09/18/hard-time-prisons-are-packed-with-more-lifers-than-ever/.


Ashley Nellis, “Life Goes On: The Historic Rise in Life Sentences in America,” The Sentencing Project, September 2013, http://sentencingproject.org/doc/publications/inc_Life Goes On 2013.pdf.


Student Researcher: Isabella Diaz (Florida Atlantic University)


Faculty Evaluator: James F. Tracy (Florida Atlantic University)





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Number of US Prison Inmates Serving Life Sentences Hits New Record

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Prison Or Castration For Gays In Post WW2 Britain | Alan Turing Pardoned


“Alan Turing is credited with cracking Nazi Germany’s Enigma code, in the process shortening World War Two, and saving countless lives. He was also a mathema…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Prison Or Castration For Gays In Post WW2 Britain | Alan Turing Pardoned

Prison Or Castration For Gays In Post WW2 Britain | Alan Turing Pardoned


“Alan Turing is credited with cracking Nazi Germany’s Enigma code, in the process shortening World War Two, and saving countless lives. He was also a mathema…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Prison Or Castration For Gays In Post WW2 Britain | Alan Turing Pardoned

Sunday, December 1, 2013

32 Privacy Destroying Technologies That Are Systematically Transforming America Into A Giant Prison

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32 Privacy Destroying Technologies That Are Systematically Transforming America Into A Giant Prison

Monday, October 28, 2013

South Africa G4S prison staff accused of abuse


BBC
October 28, 2013


Leaked video footage shows a prisoner resisting an injection

Leaked video footage shows a prisoner resisting an injection



Staff at one of South Africa’s most dangerous prisons, run by British firm G4S, have been accused of “shocking” abuses and of losing control.

The South African government has temporarily taken over the running of Mangaung prison from G4S and launched an official investigation.


It comes after inmates claimed they had been subjected to electric shocks and forced injections.


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, October 28, 2013 at 9:49 am


Tags:










Infowars



South Africa G4S prison staff accused of abuse

South Africa G4S prison staff accused of abuse


BBC
October 28, 2013


Leaked video footage shows a prisoner resisting an injection

Leaked video footage shows a prisoner resisting an injection



Staff at one of South Africa’s most dangerous prisons, run by British firm G4S, have been accused of “shocking” abuses and of losing control.

The South African government has temporarily taken over the running of Mangaung prison from G4S and launched an official investigation.


It comes after inmates claimed they had been subjected to electric shocks and forced injections.


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, October 28, 2013 at 9:49 am


Tags: foreign affairs










Infowars



South Africa G4S prison staff accused of abuse

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

Friday, September 27, 2013

Ex-pharmacist gets 14 years in federal prison for covering hospital surfaces with same toxic substance doctors inject into children











DeliciousPin It

(NaturalNews) It can still be found in virtually every influenza vaccine available at your local CVS, Rite Aid or Walgreens pharmacy, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) maintains an official position that it is perfectly safe when injected into a child’s arm. But the heavy metal mercury has landed a former New York pharmacist in the slammer following a conviction that he intentionally spread the substance on surfaces throughout the Albany Medical Center in New York out of anger over a hospital bill.

According to reports, the saga began when 60-year-old Martin Kimber of Ruby, New York, underwent two separate treatments at the Albany Medical Center back in December 2010. According to CSMonitor.com, Kimber was outraged when he received the bill for these treatments, which he tried to contend were too high. When hospital administrators denied these claims and explained that the charges were, in fact, correct, Kimber apparently went ballistic and decided to seek “revenge.”


Official court documents explain that, over the course of several months, Kimber applied at least six pounds of mercury, which he had apparently stolen, to surfaces throughout the facility’s cafeteria and elsewhere. He reportedly engaged in this activity on at least four different occasions, spreading mercury on the cafeteria salad bar, inside a toaster, inside an ice cream freezer and even directly on some chicken tenders that were later found to have made a hospital employee sick.


“Kimber’s action placed … others in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury because he placed the mercury in food and food containment areas where cafeteria patrons would be directly exposed,” reads a federal agent’s sworn affidavit. “[Kimber] was observed reaching into the ice cream cooler while cupping something in his hand and engaging in a pouring action. He did not take anything from this or other food stations, nor did he stay to eat any food.”


It was later confirmed through toll road records and security footage that Kimber had, indeed, been the culprit in each of these acts of “domestic terrorism,” to pull the words directly from official reports, and police later tracked him down and searched his vehicle and residence. Agents apparently found 21 firearms and roughly 50 knives in Kimber’s car and a Nazi swastika on a wall inside his home.


Kimber’s actions were obviously malicious and designed to harm innocent people, which clearly warrants his sentence. But what is most interesting about many of the reports on the case is their repeated use of terms like “highly hospital. But when a drug company poisons children with it, we call it “medicine.”

If mercury is really as toxic as all these reports claim, however — and it truly is, as we have been saying around here for years — then the vaccine industry is just as guilty as Kimber of committing crimes against humanity. Except vaccines have harmed far more people than the mere handful that ate Kimber’s mercury-laced foods. When will the vaccine companies and their executives be held criminally liable for domestic terrorism against the millions of children who have been forcibly vaccinated with mercury-containing vaccines?


Sources for this article include:


http://www.syracuse.com


http://www.dailyfreeman.com


http://www.csmonitor.com


http://science.naturalnews.com





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Ex-pharmacist gets 14 years in federal prison for covering hospital surfaces with same toxic substance doctors inject into children

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Katie Beers" Captor Found Dead in Prison Cell

Another kidnapper is dead : John Esposito, the man convicted of holding a 10-year-old girl prisoner for 17 days in a suburban New York dungeon, was found dead in his Sing Sing prison cell last night, the state Department of Corrections said today. The death is under investigation but does not…
Crime & Courts from Newser



Katie Beers" Captor Found Dead in Prison Cell

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

California"s Dubious Course on Prison Crowding



In 1976, under the golden dome of the State Capitol in Sacramento, a governor responsive to what he later called the anti-crime “mood” of the day signed legislation significantly increasing the length of prison terms in California.


The new law scrapped indeterminate sentencing, which gave judges and parole boards wide flexibility, and replaced it with a system that imposed fixed prison terms for most crimes. California’s “determinant sentencing” statute was the beginning of a trend. Over the years, ballot initiatives and legislative actions mandated ever lengthier sentences for repeat offenders. By 2011, California housed more than 143,000 inmates in 33 prisons built for 83,000, and the Supreme Court ordered the state to reduce its prison population. Writing for the 5-4 majority, Justice Anthony Kennedy said California prison overcrowding had exacerbated mental illness and caused “needless suffering and death.”


California’s governor, after fiercely resisting the Supreme Court order with legal and political maneuvers, eventually reduced the prison population by more than 40,000. Mostly, this was accomplished by a process called “re-alignment,” in which those convicted of specified crimes were sent to county jails instead of state prisons. Now, the governor is balking at another federal court requiring him to release another 9,600 prisoners by year’s end.


The governor is Jerry Brown, the man who signed the determinate sentence bill in 1976. He was then the nation’s youngest governor, an eccentric and unfocused politician who earned the sobriquet of “Governor Moonbeam” from columnist Mike Royko. Judging by the debate at the time, neither Brown nor the legislators who approved the bill contemplated the possibility of prison overcrowding.


Brown subsequently mastered the gritty nuts-and-bolts of governance as a no-nonsense mayor of troubled Oakland, and California voters in 2010 gave him another chance as governor. Now 75 years old, Brown has on balance been an effective governor — some would say an exceptional one — the second time around. Brown notably persuaded voters to raise taxes while also making cutbacks that restored the state to fiscal solvency. Polls give him strong approval ratings; he is favored to win re-election if he runs again next year.


Even so, Brown has displayed what California journalist Richard Ehisen, who has written on prison issues, calls a “puzzling” reluctance to endorse sentencing reform at a time when states not known for their liberalism are doing just that. In 2003, Texas passed a law that substituted probation for a prison term for persons convicted of possessing less than a gram of drugs. In 2007, under conservative Republican Gov. Rick Perry, Texas allocated $ 241 million for drug treatment and other prison alternatives. Both inmate populations and violent crime are down in the state. Republicans also control statehouses in Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio, among others, which have embraced drug rehabilitation and sentencing reform with positive results.


Democrats, traditionally more liberal on criminal issues, hold every state office and a super-majority in the Legislature in California. But with a few notable exceptions, they have been more resistant to sentencing reform than Republican counterparts in supposedly less progressive states.


A century ago California pioneered indeterminate sentencing, which often results in shorter terms for offenders whom judges or probation officers consider likely candidates for rehabilitation. This practice was widespread under Brown’s father, Pat, governor of California from 1959 to 1967, and his successor, Ronald Reagan, whose law-and-order rhetoric did not prevent him from approving conjugal visits in California prisons. But during Jerry Brown’s first term as governor from 1975-1979, the state experienced a populist clamor against sentencing discrepancies coupled with conservative distaste for Rose Bird, the Brown-appointed California chief justice who refused to uphold death sentences and was recalled by voters.


In subsequent decades, as California governors, legislators and voters took an increasingly punitive approach to crime, the prison population increased 750 percent. The union representing prison guards became Sacramento’s largest political contributor, giving generously to candidates of both parties who supported the union’s agenda. Among them was Brown, who received $ 600,000 from the union in his 2010 campaign.


Of more importance than any contribution, however, is Brown’s sensitivity to political history; the governor knows that accusation of being “soft on crime” can be damaging in a California political campaign. Last month he bridled when former Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado tried to drum up support for a prospective Republican gubernatorial candidacy by charging that Brown had released prisoners before their terms expired.


Responding to Maldonado’s attack, Brown denied that state prisoners were given early release. This is technically accurate, but Brown’s re-alignment sent thousands of prisoners into county jails already bursting at the seams. This in turn forced counties to free thousands of inmates who had not completed their terms, 23,000 this year in Los Angeles County alone. County officials, although short on numbers and details, say that some of those released have been convicted of violent crimes.


As the Los Angeles Times has noted, a number of state prisoners could safely be released, not to the streets “but to nursing homes and hospice care because so many of the longest-service prisoners are elderly, infirm and well past the age at which studies show even the most hardened prisoners commit crimes.”


Brown has ignored this point and put forward a plan that would keep the 9,600 prisoners that the court has ordered him to release behind bars in private lock-ups inside and out of California. In a nod to the guards’ union, the California private prisons would employ state prison guards.


Ehisen, editor of State Net Capitol Journal, says the proposal raises more questions than it answers. One question is its budget impact. Thanks largely to Brown, the state has built up a meaningful “rainy day” reserve fund for the first time in decades. But the governor’s plan would, in the next two years alone, cost more than $ 700 million, equivalent to two-thirds of the reserve.


The latest Brown proposal was too much for state Senate leader Darrell Steinberg, a brainy politician not known for taking bold positions. This time was different. Steinberg denounced the Brown plan and countered with a detailed one that would set a cap on prison population, settle still-pending lawsuits with prison plaintiffs who allege overcrowding, and expand rehabilitation, drug, and mental health treatment programs for criminal offenders. This would cost $ 500 million in the next two years, about $ 200 million less than the Brown plan, which provides no extra funds for treatment programs.


The outcome is uncertain. The State Assembly, has gone along with Brown’s proposal, but Steinberg’s opposition could block it in the Senate. It’s also conceivable the Legislature could come up a compromise before it adjourns on Sept. 13, but for now California prison reform remains in the limbo in which it’s been for years.


More is at stake than the fate of a few thousand inmates. The Golden State has in the past often been a leading national indicator on issues ranging from tax reduction to medical marijuana, but it’s now swimming against the tide of prison reform.


The United States is currently the world’s leading jailer, with China (with four times the population) a distant second. In a blistering editorial, The Economist observed that the “Land of the Free has 5 percent of the world’s population but 25 percent of its prisoners. In all, about 2.2 million Americans fester behind bars; one in every 107 adults. Minor crimes are punished severely; serious ones ferociously.”


The cost of this imprisonment is enormous — $ 80 billion a year (or $ 35,000 per inmate), not to mention “human and moral costs that are impossible to calculate,” as U.S. Attorney Gen. Eric Holder put it last month when he announced that federal prosecutors will no longer charge low-level nonviolent drug suspects with offenses that carry “draconian” mandatory minimum sentences. The London-based Economist, which favors drug legalization, praised Holder and Texas Gov. Perry, an unlikely couple if there ever was one, for turning away from a punitive approach to drug crimes to one favoring treatment and rehabilitation.


There’s still a long way to go. Sentencing reform, as well as treatment of mental illness and attempts at rehabilitation, have potentially broad constituencies that cross partisan and ideological lines. Conservatives say they save money. Civil rights groups say these non-punitive approaches will benefit African-Americans and Hispanics, who are disproportionately imprisoned, often for long sentences.


They are both right.


It’s time for California to get on the bandwagon. 




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California"s Dubious Course on Prison Crowding