Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

When Prisons Retaliate: California Inmates Still Paying Price for Demanding Rights
Sarah Lazare
05 Nov 2013
🖨️ Print Article

by Sarah Lazare

California prison inmates have held three hunger strikes and mass work stoppages in the last two years, protesting appalling conditions and the torture of solitary confinement. The state is striking back. "We've received letters around individual guards or groups of guards targeting people who participated in the strike.” As many as 30,000 inmates may face some form of retaliation.

 

When Prisons Retaliate: California Inmates Still Paying Price for Demanding Rights

by Sarah Lazare

This article originally appeared in Common Dreams.

“We demand an end to retaliation, and those demands are entwined with continued political organizing work to change the system.”

Four months after California prisoners declared a hunger strike to protest solitary confinement and other abuse, they are still suffering retaliatory punishment at the hands of corrections authorities, the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition announced Monday.

"We demand an end to retaliation, and those demands are entwined with continued political organizing work to change the system," said Isaac Ontiveros, with the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition and Critical Resistance, in an interview with Common Dreams. "It is the minimum of human decency to not retaliate against people who participated in the peaceful protest."

Prisoners who participated in the California-wide prisoner hunger strike, launched July eighth, have been slammed with what are called a “115 write-ups.” The penalty accuses the prisoners "of committing a serious rule violation" for participation in the hunger strike, according to a statement from the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition.

The write-ups have serious consequences for inmates who can face years-long extensions of their solitary confinement and denial of parole as a result. "It is something that goes into your record, so that when you are reviewed for whatever reason around parole, moving from one place to another, it affects the nature of your imprisonment," Ontiveros explains.

"People perceived as supporting the strike, whether refusing meals, refusing work, or supporting the strike with other action faced retaliation," said attorney Caitlin Kelly-Henry in an interview with Common Dreams. "As many as 30,000 people are documented as refusing meals at the time the strike was declared. We don't have numbers of people who refused work. It could be as many as hundreds or thousands of people who faced 115 and other write-ups."

“The write-ups have serious consequences for inmates.”

The 115 write-ups are part of broad retaliatory measures inflicted against prisoners who participated in the hunger strike, including searching cells, obstructing inmates' communications with the outside world—including lawyers—punishing strikers with more severe solitary confinement, and intimidating inmates to prevent them from appealing the harsh measures. Prisons were also given the green light to force-feed hunger striking prisoners—a move that human rights advocates slammed as a gross violation of human rights.

Much retaliation is informal, in an environment where prison guards hold staggering power over the lives of inmates. "We've received letters around individual guards or groups of guards targeting people who participated in the strike," explains Ontiveros. "This is highly racialized, with high incidence of targeting of black prisoners who participated in the strike."

In a legislative hearing last month with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation—won by the prisoner hunger strikes and outside support—prison authorities admitted they retaliated against inmates who participated in the hunger strikes, says Ontiveros.

Supporters of the inmates are demanding that Michael Stainer, Director of the Division of Adult Institutions at CDCR, use his authority to immediately reverse the retaliatory measure.

Stainer's office did not immediately respond to repeated requests from Common Dreams for an interview.

Ontiveros says that as supporters on the outside demand an end for retaliation, and push for legislative hearings, they also work to "end the CDCR's repression that leads to solitary confinement.

"This is an important moment to act in very strong solidarity," he added.

Sarah Lazare is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

 

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Krys Cerisier
    South Africa’s Case Against Israel and the (Il)Legitimacy of World Governance
    15 May 2024
    The U.S. and the West as a whole maintain dominance over the Global South through their control of international institutions they wield as a weapon against nations who attempt to move from…
  • Black Alliance For Peace
    The Mask is Off: The Hideous Connections Between Zionism, Colonialism, Capitalism and Genocide
    15 May 2024
    The enemies of humanity are revealing themselves. It is up to the movement to rise to the occasion and deepen the analysis of the forces at play.
  • Marie Laurette Numa
    US Appointed Haitian Transitional Council Calls for Foreign Military Intervention
    15 May 2024
    The West is continuing to push through the occupation of Haiti, otherwise known as the Multinational Security Support Mission, using the Presidential Transitional Council as cover.
  • Shawn Musgrave
    Even Biden’s Lawyers are Urging the White House to Change Course on Gaza
    15 May 2024
    An open letter from government attorneys questions the legal cover for arms transfers to Israel.
  • Abayomi Azikiwe
    Imperialist Weaponry and Shifting Alliances in the Sahel
    15 May 2024
    Reports of the downsizing of Pentagon troops in Chad comes as the United States continues to delay departure from Niger.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us