VCNV organised a 150 mile peace walk between 28th May to 10th June, fromĀ downtown Chicago to Thomson Prison, a new supermax federal facility dueĀ to open next summer with 1,900 solitary confinement cells.
The U.S.Ā currently incarcerates 2.3 million people, that’s 10% of the population, orĀ 25% of world prisoners.
Nationally, Blacks and Latinos are 5Ā times more likely to be incarcerated than whites, and in Illinois it’sĀ 15 times more likely.
Our walk started in downtown Chicago outside the MetropolitanĀ Correctional Centre on Van Buren and State. By coincidence the fullĀ brunt of the Memorial Day Parades started to decamp along our street, aĀ mass of young people congregated to unknowingly rest in the shade of anĀ ominous urban concrete prison.Ā Some 6,000 teenagers in military uniform,Ā many brandishing model artillery, others marching in blocks and a luckyĀ few in drum and brass bands. Looking across the sea of young andĀ promising faces it was revealing to note that the majority of theĀ teenagers were black or Latino.
It was as if these kids were marchingĀ straight out of the parade and into the military or prison.
47% percent of 20- to 24-year-old black men in Chicago, and 44% inĀ Illinois, were out of school and out of work in 2014, compared with 20Ā percent of Hispanic men and 10 percent of white men in the same ageĀ group,Ā the national average is 32%.
The walk traced a roughly westerly direction out of Chicago, across aĀ semi rural corn belt, through some obscure towns and into Thomson whichĀ has a population of 600.
WhenĀ weĀ walkedĀ theĀ
In the town of De Kalb we met members of a black congregation who toldĀ us their personal stories. One woman said her main worry in lifeĀ wasĀ keeping her three black grandsons out of prison. The eldest one hadĀ already been picked up twice for the ‘scent of marijuana’ in his car. HeĀ had been hauled into police custody andĀ remanded on bail without a crumbĀ of evidence. Raising theĀ $1200 bail was a massive toll on familyĀ finances, as well as continued involvement with police.
95% of prisoners in the U.S. never receive a trial, the vastĀ majority plea guilty in the hope of receiving a reduced sentence.
Some of the older members of the congregation reflected on how theĀ situation for black people in the US had actually worsened inĀ the lastĀ few decades, a direct result of the 1994 Crime Bill, theĀ ‘tough onĀ crime’ policy started by Reagan and acceleratedĀ under Bill Clinton whereĀ incarceration rates jumped byĀ 673,000 inmatesĀ within justĀ two terms.
AnĀ olderĀ blackĀ fatherĀ inĀ theĀ
It’s now commonly documented by academics and activists that the USĀ system of mass incarceration is the modern day form of slavery forĀ blacks and Latinos. Prisons are being likened to slave ships with cellsĀ densely stacked on top of one another: police officers like slaveĀ overseers, legally endorsed to operate freely within black communities,Ā shooting and terrorising people without being held to account, withoutĀ scrutiny.
58% of all prisoners in the US are black or Latino, yet they make upĀ only 1/4 of the national population.
Within privately owned penitentiaries inmates are put to work with jobsĀ that range from making military equipment, blue jeans and baseball capsĀ to fighting fires, clearing trees and harvesting corn, soybeans andĀ cotton (sometimes on former slaveĀ plantation lands). Manual labour onĀ average can earn a prisoner between 70 cents and $1.70 perĀ day.Ā PersonalĀ overheads for a prisoner include things like making phone calls. AĀ prison phone contract is leased out to a private company whichĀ canĀ charge up to 50 cents a minute, just a small part of the prisonĀ industrial complex which is now a multi billion dollar industry.
When you look at how the US treats its own citizens, it’sĀ lessĀ surprising that it is now the central power whichĀ terrorisesĀ otherĀ nations with war and weaponised drones.Ā UsingĀ the same demographics toĀ incarcerate black andĀ brownĀ people, the US military uses skin colour,Ā clothing,Ā age,Ā gender and area to assassinate individualsĀ with drones –Ā without dueĀ process (evidence or trail), but with the vagueĀ justification of “imminentĀ threat” to the security of the US. My thoughts turn to Tamir Rice, theĀ innocent 12 year old boy inĀ Cleveland, Ohio, shot dead within seconds ofĀ police arriving at the scene.
Young black men in the U.S. are 9 times more likely to be shot byĀ police, there were 1,134 police shootings of black men in 2015.
Solitary confinement consists of being locked in a cell 23 out ofĀ 24Ā hours, without human contact, without a TV. Inmates who are illiterateĀ are deprived of the only available form of escapism –Ā books. During theĀ walk we were joined by Brian Nelson whoĀ had spent 23 years in solitaryĀ confinement. He said the onlyĀ thing which kept him going was receivingĀ books from hisĀ mother and becoming a ‘jailhouse lawyer’. Brian now worksĀ with a prisoner support organisation but strugglesĀ everyday with anxietyĀ and depression. Public transportĀ is impossible, as are crowded spacesĀ and driving canĀ bring on panic attacks. Prior to entering solitaryĀ confinementĀ he had no mental health issues, within 9 months he was onĀ medication to cope with depression.
Today he’s still trying to get an answer as to why he was actuallyĀ placed in solitary. “I went from an open prison in NewĀ Mexico to beingĀ strapped to a stretcher and transported to a supermax. My lawyers can’tĀ get an answer”. The desire toĀ continue living is a struggle, he’s still on medication and needsĀ to see a psychiatrist every week. Brian nowĀ prefers to spend time alone: “I first went into solitary when I was 14.Ā TheyĀ said it was for my own ‘protection’ as I was little. NowĀ it’s likeĀ my social skills stopped developing at that age. Socially I’m still 14”.
Nobody knows how many people are currently in solitaryĀ confinement. WithĀ the massive scale of privately runĀ prisons, the government is unable toĀ keep a track on who’sĀ actually in solitary and where. However it’s beenĀ estimatedĀ that upwards of 80 thousand are in some sort ofĀ segregatedĀ incarceration. The statement I repeatedly heardĀ was, “You might not haveĀ mental health issues when youĀ enter solitary, but by the time you getĀ out you will”.
The UN has classified solitary confinement for more than 10Ā days asĀ torture. Human rights activists are currently pushingĀ for House BillĀ 5417 which proposes to limit the use ofĀ solitary confinement to 5 days.
The closing of Guantanamo was one of Obama’s key electionĀ promises whenĀ he came to office. Two terms later andĀ he’s still struggling to makeĀ good on the promise. At oneĀ point Thomson prison was considered a likelyĀ facility toĀ transfer the remaining 91 detainees, many of them have been incarcerated and tortured for 14 years, without trial andĀ withoutĀ substantial evidence to justify their continuedĀ imprisonment. In totalĀ 779 people have been kept atĀ Guantanamo, 23 of which were juveniles,Ā detained indefinitelyĀ in a blackspot, immune from international laws,Ā devoid of human rights. Ā It’s unlikely their state will improveĀ ifĀ transferred to Thomson where they will almostĀ definitely be deprivedĀ theĀ rightsĀ ofĀ otherĀ
During the walk we invited Senator Dick Durbin and PresidentĀ Obama toĀ spend a week in solitary confinement byĀ way of a small qualificationĀ required before having the powerĀ to incarcerate other individuals. OurĀ invitation wentĀ unanswered, though we did receive police surveillanceĀ andĀ a massive presence (18 cop cars) when ourĀ group of 15 walkersĀ arrived in Thomson. PerhapsĀ coincidentally there was also a policeĀ helicopter circlingĀ overhead, and Thomson locals had been informed thatĀ “a riot from Chicago was heading into town”.
The US has now dispensed with due process, whether you be aĀ brownĀ skinned person in the Middle East targeted by a USĀ drone, a youngĀ African American man shot on the streets byĀ police, or part of the 95%Ā of USĀ prisoners incarcerated without trial. This is reinforced by USĀ policy abroad, the CIA’sĀ extraordinary rendition and detention program,Ā symbolisedĀ
Philando Castile was shot on Wednesday,Ā in Minneapolis, after being stopped for a broken tail light.
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