CALIF. PRISONER HUNGER STRIKE SOLIDARITY VIGIL, San Francisco

THURSDAY, JULY 21: 5 PM – 7 PM 

ALAMEDA COUNTY COURTHOUSE  

1225 FALLON STREET

(near Lake Merritt BART Station)

San Francisco, CA 

Please join us as we continue to support the California Prisoners on Hunger Strike by holding a protest vigil in their honor this Thursday at the Alameda County Courthouse in San Francisco from 5pm to 7pm. We welcome anyone to come with candles and a good spirit. There will be an open mic for anyone who chooses to speak.

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=187593497968610

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DYING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: CALIF. MASS SUICIDE IN PRISONS CONTINUES; 10 WAYS TO SUPPORT PRISONERS

 Click on http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=194722523914909 for info on TWO DAYS OF MASS CALL-INS FOR PRISONERS IN SOLITARY CONFINEMENT INCLUDING CALIFORNIA HUNGER STRIKERS; Thurs. July 21, 12 a.m. to Friday, July 22 at 12 a.m.

Deborah Dupre

Human Rights Examiner

July 18, 2011 – Like this? Subscribe to get instant updates.

Crisis stage, media silence in mass hunger strike California prisons

On Day 18 of America’s historical, human rights-based, Pelican Bay Prison Hunger Strike, a mass suicide being committed due to what The New York Times described Sunday as “Barbarous Confinement,” Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity notes that, after unanimously rejecting an “insulting” offer by CDCR on Saturday, the prisoners are continuing their strike for meaningful changes in Security Housing Unit (SHU) conditions and policies. Despite prisoners now in critical condition due to rejecting food and water, rights defender Michael Novick noted Monday that press coverage of this monumental United States human rights abuse event has been inadequate.

The less sympathetic public might believe prisoners deserve the abuse inflicted. This is partially due to a lack of unawareness that it is not the most violent, the “worst of the worst,” being tortured in prisons reported veteran human rights defenders Jean Casella and James Ridgeway of the lockdown watchdog group, Solidarity Watch on Monday.

“Officials at Pelican Bay, in Northern California, claim that those incarcerated in the Security Housing Unit [SHU] are ‘“the worst of the worst,’” reported Colin Dayan in an Op Ed piece in The New York Times. “Yet often it is the most vulnerable, especially the mentally ill, not the most violent, who end up in indefinite isolation.”

To raise awareness without mainstream media coverage, on Friday, as prison authorities refused negotiating even while hunger striker inmates are dying in prison clinics, human rights defenders marched through downtown San Francisco in heavy 5:00 pm traffic to the UN Plaza in protest of United State human rights abuses in California prisons described as worse than hell. 

Among other human rights rallies being conducted across the nation in solidarity with the suiciding prisoners, approximately 100 marchers in San Francisco loudly chanted in peak hour traffic Friday, “Support! The hunger strikers! At Pelican Bay!” (See: Indymedia video, “San Franciscans rallied and marched to show their solidarity with hunger strikers at Pelican Bay State Prison,” on this page above.  Continue reading

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“WHY SHOULD YOU DIE FOR A TRANSFER?” SF POLICE KILL 19-YEAR-OLD, PROTESTS ERUPT

 SF police kill teen, Kenneth Harding, as he ran from them at T-train stop; crowds protest, rallies planned

Updates on protests against police murder of Kenneth Harding at:  http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_8028.shtml

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/07/20/BAUR1KCGBA.DTL and http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/2011/07/about-half-arrested-muni-shooting-protesters-live-outside-san-francisco

Kenneth Harding, Jr.. 19

By Willie Ratcliff  

San Francisco Bay View National Black Newspaper

June 18, 2011

When police stopped a teenager stepping off the T-train yesterday to show his transfer as proof he’d paid his fare – $2 at most – he ran from them. They shot him as many as 10 times in the back and neck, according to witnesses. For many long minutes, as a crowd watched in horror, the boy, who had fallen to the sidewalk a block away, lay in a quickly growing pool of blood writhing in pain and trying to lift himself up as the cops trained their guns on him and threatened bystanders.

This frame from a video shot by a bystander shows the teenager struggling to lift himself out of a pool of his own blood as a San Francisco police officer – one of several – aims his gun at the boy rather than trying to save his life. – Video frame: TheOneNonly457. The teen, Kenneth Harding, is loudly moaning in pain and crying out for help.

Having killed the boy [Kenneth Harding] at 4:44 p.m., according to the San Francisco Chronicle, [1] in broad daylight at the main intersection – Third Street between Palou and Oakdale – in Bayview Hunters Point, San Francisco’s last largely Black neighborhood, the police seemed eager to terrorize the community. They waited and waited and waited as the teenager stopped moving but continued breathing before eventually setting him on a gurney and taking him to the hospital, where the Chronicle reports he died at 7:01 p.m.

“Why should you die for a transfer?” asked a witness known as Tiptoe in the crowd of hundreds of residents that soon gathered in the plaza at the Oakdale/Palou light rail stop. “Justice will be brought!” hollered one man repeatedly in a booming voice as the crowd shouted at the long line of police in riot gear standing between them and the dying youngster. “I saw the riot squad fly by me on Palou yesterday – five trucks in all,” wrote Bayview resident Sherry Bryson on Facebook.

As night fell, firefighters washed the teenager's blood off the sidewalk and police and reporters talked. Rick Hauptman, who posted this photo on Facebook, noted: "The police seemed almost jolly. I saw many handshakes among them; I couldn't figure that out. Were they solely being respectful to their colleagues and to senior officers, or was it something else?”

As usual following police murders, the San Francisco Police Department came up with an excuse. The Chronicle [1] relayed it: “As the officers tried to detain the man, he took off running and drew a gun, police said,” according to staff writer Joe Garofoli. “When the suspect shot at the officers, they returned fire, fatally wounding him,” he continued, quoting SFPD Sgt. Michael Andraychak.

None of the many witnesses I spoke with yesterday saw the young victim either holding or shooting a gun and firmly believe he was unarmed. ABC7’s Carolyn Tyler balanced the police claim that they shot the youngster in self-defense by interviewing Trivon Dixon, who said: “He was running. How could he be a threat in retreat? And he wasn’t running backwards, turning around shooting. He was in full throttle, running away from the police. I don’t see in any way how he could be a threat to the police.”

On Sunday, KTVU.com reported [2] an announcement by San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr that a gun had been found which he said belonged to the victim. That police have also kicked off the usual campaign to demonize the victim is evident in KTVU noting that “the suspect had an extensive criminal record out of state.” And in another standard response to a police murder, KTVU reported, “Police patrolled the Third Street corridor Sunday with an additional 10 officers due to an increase in gun violence in the past three weeks.”

“How come a Black man can get shot for not having a transfer? How come a Black man has to be so terrorized that he feels that he has to run for not having a transfer?” ponders activist and graduate student Malaika Kambon. “These kinds of killings have not, would not, do not ever happen in white communities anywhere in the world,” she notes in a Facebook discussion.

“This is insane! They are shooting people over transfers?” exclaimed Renaldo Ricketts on Facebook. “Over a transfer – a piece of paper? That is just so wrong!” wrote Sherry Bryson. Continue reading

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DAVONTAE SANFORD’S INNOCENCE V. DETROIT POLICE AND PROSECUTORS’ REPUTATIONS

 

Davontae Sanford was imprisoned at 14 for life for four homicides to which another man has confessed

Posted on July 12, 2011 by Susan Chandler

Wobbly Warrior’s blog

 Self-proclaimed “hit man” Vincent Smothers authorized his attorney to testify on Davontae Sanford’s behalf, to apprise the courts that Smothers and an accomplice had committed Detroit’s infamous Runyon Street quadruple homicide, not Davontae. Smothers had admitted to twelve homicides, but was only prosecuted for eight, so that Detroit police and prosecutors could hide their having coerced a confession out of blind-in-one-eye, developmentally disabled, 14-year-old Davontae. The judge wouldn’t allow Smother’s attorney to testify.  

Subject: False imprisonment of Davontae Sanford – Citizen Inquiry AG# 2010-0026914

The Honorable Bill Schuette, Attorney General
State of Michigan
G. Mennen Williams Building, 7th Floor
Lansing, MI 48909 

Mich. Atty. General Bill Schuette

Dear Attorney General Schuette: 

I am writing again to ask that you personally intervene in the ongoing persecution of Davontae Sanford. 

Allowing a judge to ignore a client-authorized exception to attorney/client privilege does not serve justice; it instead furthers a four-year fraud on Michigan taxpayers.

I also ask you to personally intervene in Governor Rick Snyder’s lawlessness.  For all you know, you may be the next elected public servant whom Snyder deems too inefficient to retain elected office. 

After it, it is fiscally irresponsible to incarcerate innocent young Davontae Sandford while guilty, self-proclaimed “hit man” Vincent Smothers is already behind bars and has named an accomplice who remains free to commit additional homicides. 

Sincerely,

Susan Chandler 

Judge in Davontae Sanford hearings bars testimony from hit man’s former lawyer – Detroit Crime | Examiner.com

http://www.examiner.com/crime-in-detroit/judge-davontae-sanford-hearings-bars-testimony-from-hit-man-s-former-lawyer  Continue reading

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RALLY JULY 23 TO REMEMBER ’67 DETROIT UPRISING

Detroit rebellion, 12th and Clairmount, 1967

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PRISON PHONE RATE HIKE PROTEST HELPS BRING POSSIBLE VICTORY

(L to R) Cathryn Bachus, Robin Brooks, Robert Wagner, (unknown), and Robert Hart protest rate hikes for calls to their loved ones in prison at MDOC HQ, Lansing, July 7, 2011

By Diane Bukowski

 July 16, 2011 

LANSING – Family members and friends of Michigan prisoners came from as far away as Holland to march outside the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC) headquarters here July 12. They said recent prison phone rate hikes of 80 percent have prevented their loved ones from calling them as often as needed to stay sane and rehabilitate themselves. 

The rate hike resulted from a contract with Public Communications Services, Inc.. It is a subsidiary of Global Tel-Link.

Global Tel Link is also connected with DSI-ITI.

Gov. Rick Snyder

On July 13, the day after the protest, Governor Rick Snyder signed an MDOC appropriations bill with the clause, “Any contract for prisoner telephone services shall impose fee schedules for prisoner telephone calls that are no greater than the fee schedules for standard calls placed by residential users in the area surrounding the correctional facility.” 

It is yet unclear what this will mean, but prisoner advocates say they hope it is a victory. The protest was well-covered in the state’s capitol by print and television media. 

Mitchell Pugh, incarcerated since 1988 at the age of 16, is one of 800 parolable lifers kept behind bars far beyond what their sentencing judges intended, despite evidence of rehabilitation

“We used to talk half an hour a day,” said Cathryn Bachus of her boyfriend Mitchell Pugh, who has been incarcerated since 1988, when he was 16, and is serving a parolable life sentence. “Now we can only afford twice a week. I travel to see him, but it’s a long way from Holland to Carson City.” 

Bachus organized the protest. 

A federal class-action lawsuit, Foster-Bey v. Rubitschun, filed on behalf of over 800 parolable lifers, who have been imprisoned under Gov. John Engler’s parole board mandates long beyond what their sentencing judges intended, resulted at least indirectly in the release of some, she said. 

U.S. District Court Judge Marianne Battani ruled in their favor in 2007, but in 2010, the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered her to grant the state’s motion for summary disposition. At least three lead plaintiffs, Kenneth Foster-Bey, John Alexander, and Waymon Kincaid, are still imprisoned after 30 years and more, while one, William Sleeper, was paroled in 2009. 

Kenneth Foster-Bey is lead plaintiff in parolable lifers lawsuit, but still behind bars

Bachus said a request for commutation of Pugh’s sentence, endorsed by the Carson City Correctional Facility warden based on Pugh’s progress in rehabilitation, including his assistance to other prisoners, was denied after Snyder took office. 

“I just think that being able to communicate with your loved one aids in their rehabilitation,” said Robin Brooks of West Bloomfield, whose son is incarcerated. “For the state to hinder that shows they are not truly into ‘correcting.’ The money they are spending on additional equipment supposedly to keep prisoners from getting cell phones can be used for more rehabilitation and education, as well as pensions for state workers like the guards.”

She said aside from problems with rates, the PCS system requires that each person the prisoner calls must set up their own account. She said that is very difficult for elderly people like her son’s grandparents, for whom she had to set up account herself.  Continue reading

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PELICAN BAY PRISONERS’ HUNGER STRIKE GOES STATE-WIDE: HUNDREDS OF PRISONERS SUFFERING, SOME IN DANGER OF DEATH

More at The Real News

 More on Medical Crisis, Need Support Pressuring Immediate Negotiations

http://prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com    

July 14, 2011 

A mother with two sons on hunger strike in Pelican Bay speaks to the media in front of the California State Building in San Francisco on July 13 surrounded by members of the Hunger Strike Solidarity coalition

Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity (PHSS) is “a coalition based in the Bay Area made up of grassroots organizations committed to amplifying the voices of and supporting the prisoners at Pelican Bay Security Housing Unit (SHU) in their hunger strike to end tortuous conditions.”

Legal representatives made visits to Pelican Bay SHU Tuesday and interviewed a number of hunger strikers. Each prisoner explained how medical conditions of hundreds of hunger strikers in the SHU are worsening. Many prisoners are experiencing irregular heartbeats and palpitations, some are suffering from diagnosed cardiac arrhythmia. Many are also experiencing dizziness and constantly feel light-headed. Many struggle with shortness of breath and other lung and respiratory problems. 

Dozens of prisoners have fainted and been taken to either the infirmary and/or outside hospitals. Some prisoners also have Crohn’s disease, which leads to extreme loss of fluids and electrolytes and needs to be treated by adequate nutrition and hydration. 

Pelican Bay is a living hell media.spcr.org

At least 200 prisoners continue the strike in solidarity with the prisoners at Pelican Bay at Calipatria State Prison, where summer heat has reached to 110 degrees F, even hotter inside the SHUs. Some people have experienced heat stroke due to severe dehydration. 

Prisoners at Corcoran have also notified us that hunger strikers there are struggling with the same symptoms of severe dehydration. After mild seizures and severe diabetic shock, some people have been taken to the infirmary. 

Many doctors outside of prison, some of whom have experience working with prisoners, have explained to us that adequate hydration is paramount to preventing fatal starvation. The fact that the prisoners are showing symptoms of such extreme dehydration shows the prisoners are approaching a medical crisis. 

Thirteen years ago Pelican Bay State Prison was cut out of a dense forest near Crescent City, CA. The highlight of the new super-max prison was the Security Housing Unit (SHU), the X-shaped builing at front, where 1,300 prisoners are kept in near isolation.

Dr. Corey Weinstein, a private correctional medical consultant and human rights investigator with 40 years experience providing health care to CA prisoners, explains: 

“The strikers’ claims of substandard and prejudicial medical care at Pelican Bay are certainly true. As well the medical staff refuses to take on their responsibilities as health professionals to advocate for their patients in matters of daily life related to food, nutrition, exercise and mental hygiene. Those who should be providing care act the jailer instead. Given my long history of working with California prisoners, I have grave doubts about the Department of Corrections’ ability to adequately carry out their own guidelines and protocols even during this urgent and public moment. Reports such as prisoners with very low blood sugar levels and lack of urination for 3 days should not be coming from the prison. These are men who require hospital care under prison protocols. We should ask why do they remain at the prison?”   Continue reading

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TASK FORCE CONTINUES BATTLE TO EXPOSE CRIME LAB CRIMES; WANTS ALL AT COUNCIL MEETING JULY 19 WHEN WORTHY ASKS FOR RENEWAL OF FUNDS

Marilyn Jordan talks to major media as crime lab protesters lend support June 28 outside federal building

PLAN TO PROTEST RENEWAL OF CITY CONTRACT FOR PROSECUTOR WORTHY’S INVESTIGATION, ON COUNCIL AGENDA TUES. JULY 19 

By Diane Bukowski

July 14, 2011 

Sandra Hines and Asst. h Grand Sheik Douglas Smith-El of Moorish Science Temple of American #4 head up portion of protest June 28

DETROIT  —  The Detroit People’s Task Force to Free the Wrongfully convicted has kept up the battle  to expose what they say is blatantly falsified crime lab evidence and the fates of many who have languished behind bars for years as a result of convictions tainted by it. 

“We want accountability,” said Kevin Carey, Executive Director of the People’s Task Force, during a protest outside the Detroit Federal Building office of U.S. Congressman John Conyers June 28. “We want a federal investigation which he promised us last year, and we want crime lab personnel and Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy and her assistant prosecutors who have been using the falsified evidence to convict innocent people to be incarcerated.” 

They also appeared in front of Detroit City Council July 12 to demand to know why Council members voted $2.7 million in funding for an investigation of the crime lab over the past three years to Worthy, and what happened to the funds. They have contended that it is a conflice of interest for Worthy to investigate the cases, because her prosecutors brought charges on falsified evidence in the first place. 

Kevin Carey speaks to media

Afterwards, members held a boisterous protest outside the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center which garnered major media coverage, as did the June 28 protest. 

The Council, which voted that day to ask Worthy for an accounting, is to consider a renewal of her contract Tues. July 19. Councilwoman Brenda Jones requested that Worthy and former Deputy Mayor Saul Green be present. 

Mothers Marilyn Jordan and Valerie Watts-Williams tell of their sons' plight

The firestorm over the crime lab exploded in 2008 when an audit of its firearms unit, staffed wholly by Detroit police officers, showed a 10% error rate. In the case of Jarrhod Williams, state police auditors said results bordered on criminal conduct by firearms technicians. 

“The gun involved in my son’s case was never shot, and the bullets the prosecution presented at his trial didn’t match the gun,” Valerie Watts-Williams, Jarrhod’s mother, said outside the federal building June 28.  “He is serving two natural life sentences for double homicide. He turned down eight plea bargains offered to him because he is innocent.” 

Dominique Manuel, cousi of Jarrhod Williams, was about many Task Force members who spoke at City Council July 12

“No one ever sees new trials, despite Worthy’s promise that she would review all the cases,” said the Task Force’s paralegal Roberto Guzman. “We do want the guilty to go to prison, but we want the innocent to have their charges dismissed or at least get new trials. If you value your freedom, it could be you tomorrow. Karen Plants [head of Worthy’s drug task force] is in jail for perjury, but she is by no means the only one suborning perjury in her office.” 

Marilyn Jordan, President of the Task Force, said they are determined to fight until they win. 

“My son Kelly Nobles was falsely convicted in 2002 even though there’s tons of evidence in his case and others we’ve investigated that prove his innocence. This is not something that just started, it’s been going on for a long time. There were federal investigations when crime lab evidence unraveled in Boston, Dallas and in other cities, and the Kym Worthy said herself that there are thousands of cases here that need to be reviewed.” 

To date, only four convicted individuals have received new trials as a result of Worthy’s investigation since 2008. Three, including Jarrhod Williams, of them were re-convicted, generally using the same evidence from their first trials.  Continue reading

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MY CHILD DOES NOT BELONG TO THE STATE! RALLY FOR MARYANNE GODBOLDO SUN. JULY 17; COURT HEARING MON. JULY 25

 Click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/07/11/godboldo-hearing-adjourned-to-mon-july-25-830-a-m-%e2%80%9cpromptly%e2%80%9d-mother%e2%80%99s-supporters-to-rally-sun-july-17-8801-woodward-4-6-p-m/ for VOD story on the latest in Maryanne Godboldo’s case.

PACK THE COURT FOR MARYANNE’S PRELIMINARY EXAM:  

MONDAY JULY 25  at 8:30 am promptly, 36TH DISTRICT COURT

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“DEEP POVERTY” GROWING IN DETROIT, NATIONALLY AS BENEFITS ARE CUT

DETROIT - NOVEMBER 20: A pedestrian walks by graffiti on a downtown street November 20, 2008 in Detroit, Michigan. An estimated one in three Detroiters lives in poverty, making the city the poorest large city in America.

The Impact of Poverty on Utility Shut-offs

 Report to the Dexter Inquiry

 By Debra Watson
31 March 2010

http://wsws.org

The following report on poverty and welfare in Michigan was submitted to the Citizens Inquiry into the Dexter Avenue Fire, which held a hearing on March 20.

For several years, Detroit has had the highest poverty rate in the country. Many of the victims of deadly house fires are struggling to get by, balancing utility payments with other necessities. With real unemployment of 50 percent, many households rely on the completely inadequate social safety net.

Homeless people line up for food in downtown Detroit

Even the term “poor” is no longer adequate to describe the desperate conditions in Detroit. Judy Putnam, spokesperson for the non-profit Michigan League for Human Services (MLHS), told the World Socialist Web Site that a new term, “deep poverty,” has entered the agency’s lexicon. It describes a vast and growing population of US families whose income has fallen to a fraction of the official poverty level.

Putnam decried the failing of the safety net in Michigan. MLHS reports that since 1979 the value of the maximum public assistance grant has dropped from 23 percent below the poverty threshold to 66 percent below the poverty threshold. Thus a Michigan welfare or Family Independence Program (FIP) recipient today often lives at just 34 percent of the poverty level, a situation dictated by the very design of the program.

The current FIP grant is about $492 a month for a family of three. This leaves even the small percentage of families that do qualify for some form of state cash assistance without an adequate safety net to counter the effects of double-digit unemployment. As the recession drags on, more and more people are simply unable to live.

Display for Sylvia Young's three children at their funeral; they died due to a DTE utility shut-off in their desperately poor neighborhood.

One tragic form this situation has taken in Detroit is the death of three children, Trávion, Fantasia, and Selena Young, ages five, four, and three respectively, in the March 5 house fire on Bangor Street. Their mother, Sylvia Young, received FIP payments and was using a faulty space heater after utilities were shut off.

The current maximum FIP grant in Michigan for a family with seven children, the size of Young’s family, is only $11,820 annually. This is about one third of the 2009 poverty level for a family of this size ($37,010). Even with the full food stamp benefit for a large family, currently equal to a little over $1,000 per month, the family would have been far below the already inadequate monthly income the federal government has designated as the official poverty level. Continue reading

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