Archive for Friday, September 29, 2000
Imprisonment Should Not Be Revenge
By B. Cayenne Bird
September 29, 2000 in print edition B-9
We’re all responsible for ignoring the inhumane conditions that amount
to nothing less than torture in California’s prisons.
Our group of 4,600 doctors, nurses, teachers, college professors and
social workers receives hundreds of pleas weekly from the families of inmates
asking for help. Here are three:
* James Diesso, a mentally ill inmate in the California Medical Facility
in Vacaville, was put in a double cell with another mentally ill person.
Both inmates had violent histories of acting out their mental illnesses.
Now, Jeffrey Ford, Diesso’s cellmate, is dead. Diesso is on trial for murder.
Who takes the responsibility for careless double-celling practices when
there are 18,500 mentally ill people housed with others throughout the
system?
* Charles Wesley, an inmate serving time at Chino for auto theft, now
has permanent nerve damage because of medical neglect. He asked officials
and staff of the prison’s medical clinic for help 61 times and was denied
it until it was too late. Seven months later, he had back surgery, which
found seriously herniated discs. He was made to work for less than 20 cents
an hour while suffering excruciating pain. Wesley will be released from
prison soon, permanently disabled.
* James Rookwood, a 33-year-old inmate serving an 11-month sentence
for parole violation, is now sitting in a 5-by-7-foot cell in Vacaville
in a wheelchair. He suffered a stroke, which has paralyzed 80% of his right
side. He was denied access to a doctor or physical therapy and will be
released from prison permanently disabled and much sicker, mentally and
physically, than before he went in.
Reports of medical neglect, rape, murder, psychological torture and
intimidation by guards comparable to that in a Third World country are
well-documented in our files. If the inmates speak to the press, there
is retribution in the form of lost visits or worse.
The Department of Health Services has asked for money to handle the
constant conveyor belt of thousands of inmates being sent to prison by
the courts. Gov. Gray Davis has refused. Instead, millions of taxpayer
dollars are paid out in medical lawsuits. Where’s the “correction” part
of Corrections?
Cells were built for one person, yet the inmates are jammed together
because of overcrowding. To get a taste of living in a cell, go into your
8-by-10-foot bathroom for a month. Take a mentally ill person with you.
Some prisons have been on lockdown, in which inmates are confined to their
cells for 23 hours a day, for a year or more.
It puts great stress on inmates when their “cellies” are mentally ill,
so great that they must sleep with one eye open and be afraid for their
lives at all times. There is little if any education, rehabilitation or
counseling.
At Mule Creek, the so-called model prison in Ione, prisoners in the
dormitory live under a heavy cloud of second-hand smoke. And treatment
for cancer is virtually nonexistent for prisoners, except for a brand-new
oncology arrangement just beginning at Vacaville. The wait for medical
care is six weeks at most state prisons. If an inmate is allowed to see
a dentist, there is an eight-month wait.
Is this inhumane treatment of prisoners really lowering crime? If statistics
were to be believed, there’s more evidence to support alternatives such
as rehabilitation, community service and after-school supervision of youth.
Somebody needs to sit down and think this crime thing through because
the current system is causing more crime than it is preventing. The right
thing to do is to release nonviolent prisoners–70% of California’s total
prison population; institute alternative sentencing for the mentally ill
and drug addicts; and send dying prisoners home on compassionate release.
Otherwise, all we get is revenge against wrongdoers that results in them
going home to their communities sicker.
http://articles.latimes.com/2000/sep/29/local/me-28723
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