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by Committee on Raza Rights
Monday, Jul. 09, 2001 at 3:45 AM
crr1995@hotmail.com
The Hunger Strikers in Pelican Bay State Prison (PBSP)
errorBrochure/Statement Released By CMPP on July 1, 2001:
Compañeras y Compañeros,
Chicano Mexicano Prison Project (CMPP) is supporting “The Hunger Strikers” in Pelican Bay State Prison (PBSP). Steve Castillo and other inmates, in their effort to raise the consciousness of the public to the human rights violations suffered by prisoners in the SHU (Security Housing Units) at Pelican Bay State Prison and in “Concentration Prison Camps” across the U.S., have begun a massive and historic hunger strike.
CMPP is in total solidarity with the hunger strikers and we will are supporting this effort by getting the word out gente in the community and to progressive forces nationally and internationally. We are utilizing every resource at our disposal to publicize the struggle being waged by compa Steve Castillo and other prisoners. We have begun doing mass e-mails, community leafleting (talking to Raza in the streets), putting this information on movement web sites, and publishing this information in the next issue of Las Calles (CMPP newsletter). Also, we are implementing a letter campaign to the California Department of Corrections.
Anyone interested supporting this particular issue, please contact CMPP at: Chicano Mexicano Prison Project PO BOX 620095 San Diego, CA 92162 (619) 696-9224
Que Viva La Raza! Venceremos Cathy Espitia Coordinator, CMPP
Below is a Press Release by compañero Steve Castillo, which explains from the point of the view of the hunger strikers, the reasons for their actions.
Press Release From Pelican Bay State Prison Inmates We Merely Seek To Be Treated Humanely And Fairly
On July 1, 2001, myself and several other prisoners of all ethnic groups will begin a hunger strike in solidarity and in protest to the on-going arbitrary and oppressive “gang policy” by the California Department of Corrections (CDC).
CDC has a policy and practice of labeling prisoners as gang affiliates and placing them in the Security Housing Unit(SHU) for an indefinite period of time. In the SHU, prisoners are confined to their cells for 22 1/2 hours a day. There are no windows or view of the outside world. No programs are available. Idleness, isolation, and sensory deprivation are the norm. Prisoners have been housed in the SHU under this policy for 5, 10, 15 years or more. And the SHU placement was imposed not for any violation of law or prison rule infraction, but rather as a result of the gang label imposed on prisoners by CDC.
The main basis for our protest is that CDC refuses to implement clear, fair, and uniform standards for accurately determining whether (or not) a prisoner is truly a gang affiliate or found unsuitable for SHU release based on false, unreliable, or out-right ridiculous information.
For instance, we have been labeled as gang affiliate or found unsuitable for SHU release for merely talking to other prisoners labeled as gang affiliates. And it doesn't even matter if the alleged gang affiliate is a relative, or, if a prisoner knows of another's affiliation -or, if that CDC affiliation label is true.
Other examples are: signing a card for a dying prisoner, prisoners assisting each other with legal work, or an issue of speech and an association that has absolutely nothing to do with gang affiliation or gang related matters. Even some of our family members and friends have been labeled by CDC as gang affiliates and denied visits with us.
For years we have been denied SHU release or parole because we refuse to "debrief" (snitch); only to learn that in 1999, a court of law found that requirement to be an illegal CDC regulation. Now, CDC claims we can be release from the SHU if we remain six years clean from "gang activity". Problem is, CDC refuses to give a clear definition as to what constitutes "gang activity". And, as a result we are being kept in the SHU under the same examples previously mentioned.
Further, it is not difficult to imagine our frustration over knowing that other prisoners serve out their entire prison sentence in general prison population, which is often a sentence shorter than the one we serve in the SHU as a result of a type of speech and association that is not unlawful or in violation of any prison regulation.
We have continuously exhausted letter campaigns and administrative appeals to no avail. We can not get the courts to give our legal challenges the timely and adequate review they deserve. Therefore, we feel we have no other recourse but to strike and bring to public light the severity of the issues.
It is important to note that we do not seek to avoid responsibility or consequences for our actions. Yes, we must adhere to the law and prison regulations, but we also expect CDC to be a model of compliance to do the same. We merely seek to be treated humanely and fairly, with an opportunity to demonstrate our suitability for parole and SHU release.
Finally, over the years I have received letters from friends and families of prisoners I know, and many who I don't know. They ask, sometimes beg me, to help their husbands, sons or fathers to get out of the SHU. And, I don't know what is more difficult; reading how badly a mother wants to hold her son before she dies; a son telling me his father is going crazy in here; a daughter who wants her father out of the SHU so he can parole and give her hand in marriage; or just trying to explain to them, the senselessness of the CDC policy.
After seven years in the Pelican Bay-SHU, one thing that is perfectly clear to me: this protest is not just about us prisoners and CDC, it's also about our family and the evolving standards of decency that signifies a maturing human race.
Steve Castillo #D-89028 SHU D8-219 P.O. Box 7500 Crescent City, CA 95523
Part or all of this maybe reproduced if it is used to advance the National Mexicano Liberation Struggle and the struggles of oppressed people throughout the world. To get permission, write to the:
La Verdad Publications P.O. BOX 620095 San Diego, CA 92162
burn.ucsd.edu/~udb/cmpp/index.html
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by Lori
Monday, Jul. 09, 2001 at 9:04 AM
You say CDC "labels" you as a gang member or affiliate. Probably was not very difficult to come up with that label with gang/prison tattoos covering 50% of your body, or known associations outside of prison, or just a cursorary look at any of your criminal records. Any prison system would be remiss to not attempt to separate the gangster predators in the inmate population from the rest of the prison population. How many inmates outside of this housing unit share your cause or plan to go on this hunger strike too? How many of them would just rather you be kept apart from them? You act as though you aren't responsible for your ultimate destiny in prison. Try taking some responsibility, maybe that will help the prison decide when or if you can be returned to mainline.
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by Crow
Monday, Jul. 09, 2001 at 12:40 PM
Why is this posted in the first place? What does this have to do with the bioresistance cause?
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by IC
Monday, Jul. 09, 2001 at 12:44 PM
Not to worry, the inmates are eating again! They apparently decided a diet consisting of commissary candy bars and whatever else they were eating when nobody was looking wasn't worth the effort. (If they could control their impulses they probably wouldn't be in prison anyway.) Again, not to worry, they are back on their three square meals a day courtesy of the taxpayers.
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by Ed
Monday, Jul. 09, 2001 at 11:31 PM
besimo@earthlink.com
I am both troubled and appalled by the responses to the situation at the SHU units at Pelican Bay. First these SHU/SuperMax/Control Units are designed to dehumanize individuals and frankly shouldn't be tolerated on the mass scale on which they have been implemented. Just try staying in an 8'X 14' room for 24 hours a day, day after day, week after week, year after year. Cut off from outside contact, fresh air, etc. and subjected to a daily grind of abusive treatment and a cacophony of noise. Try reading "Prison Madness" by Terry Kupers. This is not going to rehabilitate anyone. Unless , of course, you feel that the best policy is to lock-em up and throw away the key. In that case the current scenario should be to your liking.
Sure there are some who may require seperation from the general population, but many times those who end up in the SHU are either politically active, a "litigator", an emotionally unstable individuals, or have only a peripheral gang involvement. And of course if you go the debriefing route, you will be labelled a "snitch" and you will likely face repercussions at the next prison or when you parole.
Another thing to think about is that in the Rampart Division of the LAPD thousands of arrests were made by the CRASH anti-gang units over a three year period prior to the Perez revelations. ALL of those arrests resulted in guilty pleas or verdicts. So I guess ALL of those gang "affiliates" deserve a good long SHU term.
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by Trapper
Tuesday, Jul. 10, 2001 at 3:57 AM
Why be "troubled and appalled" by these responses? You are talking about prisons aren't you? And career criminals who made deliberate choices along the way to prey on the rest of us? Why not have your buddies spend some time and energy on changing themselves? We all love success stories alot more than we care about making changes in our prisons to suit the creature comfort of those who deserve to be in them.
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by Ed
Tuesday, Jul. 10, 2001 at 4:37 PM
Well thanks for the enlightenment. I would direct your attention to two web sites if you are at all interested in broadening your perspective. (1)www.unix.oit.umass.edu/~kastor/groups/nacun/c.u.pamphlet.html - this site has an overview re control units nationwide
2) phoenix.marymount.edu/~mrobbers/SOC131/Assgn9.html - this site discusses someone at Pelican Bay and how they arrived there. You might want to see the related site www.brandonhein.com
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by ED
Tuesday, Jul. 10, 2001 at 5:17 PM
The first web address should read http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~kastor/groups/nacun/c.u.pamphlet.html. I mistakenly replaced the hyphen with a period.
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