Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Jail house blues: If voting won't help much, what can we do?

So why didn't the slaves just vote themselves freedom? Well, OK, they weren't allowed to vote and there were other problems like this original provision of the U.S. Constitution:

No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in Consequence of any Law or Regulation therein, be discharged from such Service or Labour, but shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour may be due.

In other words, if you run away, we track you down and bring you back.

Sound familiar? Now ask why we cannot just elect different county commissioners and sheriff and improve jail conditions?

Inmates, like slaves, cannot vote and if they run away we track them down and bring them back. Even very democratic rule (which we do not have) may leave a despised minority without rights and with harsh treatment. Comments on earlier blog posts have discussed the hatred engendered by being gay, socialist or atheist. Imagine being an inmate.

This is one problem (among many more) that cannot be voted away.

I urge ideas from everywhere; community organization is not my strength. Nonetheless, here are some things that occur to me may be started locally or encouraged statewide that may make a difference:

1. Jailers--they hold the key.
a. Organize jailers and increase their pay and education.
b. Make jailers a profession with a code of ethics and a risk of loss of license for ethical violations.
c. Within the code of ethics require reporting of inmate abuse or other violations of minimum standards.
d. Give jailers civil service protection to require due process so they will not be punished for reporting violations.
e. Make sure many jailers have paramedic training like firefighters.
f. Encourage social work, psychology educations for jailers.
How can this be done? Some trade unions may be interested. AFSCME, maybe. I understand the weaknesses of trade unions as opposed to industrial unions, but the trade unions at least are still alive.

Jailers attended the Pax Christi meeting on jail conditions and some of the candidates were either past or present jailers. Encouraging at least some support group to begin to wield some influence. Jailers and their families, unlike most inmates, can vote.

2. Organize inmate families. The extent of the damage done to families, jail house widows and orphans, is difficult to overstate. Often if people who have a son, husband, brother in jail they are embarrassed for themselves or loved ones and keep it a secret. Protests including children were historically what first began to give ML King a measure of success. Families Against Mandatory Minimums is one organization and I know there is a local organization as well.

3. Seek help from religious groups to promote these issues. Valley Interfaith may be interested. Scripture certainly supports a jail ministry. Church members can also vote.

4. Educate the inmates. Copies of forms for Federal Tort Claims Act complaints should help the federal prisoners. Copies of the Jail Commission Standards. Case law summary on 8th Amendment protections. International human rights treaties to which the U.S. is a signatory. All in Spanish.

5. Opening of the jail to education, ministry and the press (including photographs). All of these are restricted and inadequate. These restrictions are made on the basis of arguing security risks.

Of course, to an extent this is true. Anytime anyone is allowed into a jail facility there is at least a theoretical risk of introducing contraband. Anytime anyone or anything is allowed out of a jail, there is a risk of introducing information that would allow an escape, riot or introduction of contraband. So everything that humanizes the jail and makes it otherwise function such as family visits, jail ministries, bringing in and taking out of supplies, mail, books, art, GED training, AA, lawyer visits, foreign consul visits, probation and parole officer visits, shift changes in jail employees, medical visits, contact with one another, creates a security risk. Especially if that risk involves some political heat or extra expense, and sometimes only because of the political heat and extra expense, using security as a pretext, the first reaction seems to be to exclude the risk rather than increase the security.

However, prisoners cannot be kept sealed air tight plastic wraps. And to the extent extra security requires more personnel and equipment to conduct searches and examinations of the people and things going in and out of the jail, this is simply part of the basic required expense of the jail, just like bars and walls.

6. Involve the Mexican Consul. The folks there want to help and have intervened on behalf of individual clients. They also seem to be able to get in for visits.

7. The county could hire an inmate ombudsman and allow that person full access. Talk to the commissioners about this. Sen. Lucio and the State Reps Oliveira, Lucio and Rios Ybarra (elect) could promote this on a statewide basis.

8. Website support: Post inmate complaints and medical information on a website (redacting inmate names to protect privacy). Post personnel information about jail employees on a website, including salaries and sanctions (again, redacting names). Post jail populations in the different facilities. Post numbers of inmates in different facilities and compare with maximum capacity in that facility. Give locations as to facility of inmates. Family members and lawyers would be able to find the inmate and the jail would be less likely to lose one or overstay the end of the sentence. Post judgments with sentencing in connection with the inmate. (This is also public information already). Post name of medical personnel on duty. Status of other jail systems such as life safety rules, something we only hear about in after a tragedy, should be publicly posted. The jail commission standards require each jail to have extensive plans regarding many areas of standards and these should be posted as well.

9. Ask Sen. Lucio and State Reps. Oliveira, Lucio, (and now) Rios Ybarra to give someone authority to enforce the Minimum Jail Standards--the DA, Attorney General, or maybe a standing special enforcement agency for jails. Our commentators from yesterday discuss the strictness of the TCJS, but after reports of violations are issued, it seems there is little pressure for change. Variances appear to be readily granted. I may be mistaken about this, but it is how things appear to me as an outsider. Also, a statewide agency is unfit to oversee daily and micro local jail problems. There is a particular regulation dealing with our famous toilet paper issue:

RULE §277.5 Toilet Paper: Toilet paper shall be available at all times.

How is a state agency without a local staff, supposed to oversee this, for instance?

10. The minimum jail standards themselves may not meet constitutional muster and if they are treated as an aspirational standard for the jails, rather than a true minimum standard, unless the jail standards are improved, unconstitutional jails will be guaranteed. The chapter of the minimum jail standards that applies to education and rehab programs does not address religious exercise and I cannot find it otherwise. Inmates, including convicts in prison, must still be provided some access to the Free Exercise of Religion. The jail standards themselves may require revision.

And then, when all else fails, or at least to augment everything else, the Civil Rights Acts of 1866 were codified in 42 USC Section 1988 helped end the other kind of slavery. Our "evolving sense of decency" has not evolved yet to the point where we may expect the abolition of jails. But maybe we can agree decency must include mattresses, soap and toilet paper.

7 comments:

BobbyWC said...

Ed,

I hate to go back to the church issue, but for now they are the only large scale organization in any community. This is my great frustration with so many churches. Jesus ministered among the outcasts not those who need to be seen or view themselves as important.

How we treat these people (prisoners) is a reflection of our community and a reflection on our churches. A Sunday service wherein the priests and ministers speak to the issue will raise the awareness. Maybe the Bishop is the best place to begin.

Until there is public awareness, there will be no solution. The churches, not only on this issue, have failed the community. They are so obsessed with preaching going to hell for private behavior, they have forgotten how to teach being a good person and caring for your fellow man. You see, it is easier to teach people to hate and judge, than to teach people to love and compassion.

Nice post

The Merovingian said...

"That you do to the least of thy brothers, that you do unto me."

But, you knew that, already.

Good post

StapletonAndStapleton said...

Thank you, both.

The Churches seem to be more interested in the poor than I ever remember in the past.

It may be just that I have gravitated to people who are more involved, but it seems like the old alliance of Wall Street Republican and fundamentalist working people seems to be falling apart.

Anonymous said...

I wonder, what are the dynamics involved in the esteemed position of public defender within our local state system?

Surely we have a fluid model that is the envy of all.

Clara Foltz

Anonymous said...

Our majority party within our community thinks all is well. The system is fine. No problems with the status quo.

No toilet paper.

give me a break...blame it on the jailers?

c,mon wake up... It's broke from the top. All the Barristers and Esquires in our county have never made a formal compaint?

If it's so important to this community than it needs to be addressed .

The Merovingian said...

Maybe a gigantic writ of habeas corpus is called for, with the entire jail population called before the bench, en masse.

StapletonAndStapleton said...

Ms. Foltz and Anonymous ask the role of lawyers for indigents in the whole problem of jail conditions.

It is substantial and I know this because I am part of the problem.

This is a whole 'nother can of worms that I want to dig around in.

Merovingian's gigantic writ of habeas corpus for the entire jail population will likely be required, accompanied by some form of writ of habeas corpus for the lawyers who are loaded down with impossible caseloads for little pay.