Unlocking America
Summary by David Rhodes
view whole study
A November 2007 report on criminal justice in the United States was completed by professors from across the country, including,
James Austin, President, The JFA Institute, Washington D.C.
Todd Clear, Professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Troy Duster, Professor, New York University
David F. Greenberg, Professor, New York University
John Irwin, Professor Emeritus, San Francisco State University
Candace McCoy, Professor, City University of New York
Alan Mobley, Assistant Professor, San Diego State University
Barbara Owen, Professor, California State University, Fresno
Joshua Page, Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota
Funded by the Rosenbaum Foundation and Open Society Institute, the report is filled with statistics, tables, charts, documentation and recommendations for how and why to reduce America’s prison population. The full report is available on the web at
http://www.jfa-associates.com/publications/srs/UnlockingAmerica.pdf
A few highlights, edited and presented in brief, are below:
The United States is the world leader in imprisonment. China, with a much larger population, has the second largest incarcerated population, with 1.5 million imprisoned. With 737 people incarcerated per 100,000 persons, the U.S. also leads the world in rates of incarceration—well above Russia, which has the next highest rate of 581 per 100,000. Other Western democratic countries manage with prison populations far smaller than ours.
Not only are our lengths of imprisonment significantly longer than in earlier periods in our history, for the same crimes, Americans receive sentences twice as long as English prisoners, three times as long as Canadian prisoners, four times as long as Dutch prisoners, five to 10 times as long as French prisoners, and five times as long as Swedish prisoners. Yet these countries’ rates of violent crime are lower than ours, and their rates of property crime are comparable.
In the United States, every year since 1970, when only 196,429 persons were in state and federal prisons, the prison population has grown. Today there are over 1.5 million in state and federal prisons. Another 750,000 are in the nation’s jails, bringing to total to 2.2 million. The growth has been constant—in years of rising crime and falling crime, in good economic times and bad, during war and peacetime. Prison populations are now eight times those in 1970. Under current sentencing policies state and federal prisons will grow by another 192,000 prisoners in five years. And the nation will spend an additional $27.5 billion in operational and construction costs on top of the over $60 billion now spent.
It is tempting to say that crime rates fell over the past dozen years due to imprisonment policies, but a look at data about crime will show that prison populations continued to swell long after crime rates declined. Today, whatever is driving imprisonment policies, it is not primarily crime.
Prisons are self-fueling. About two-thirds of the 650,000 prison admissions are persons who fail probation or parole—approximately half of these people are sent to prison for technical violations. In many states these violations include petty drug and property crimes or violations of parole requirements that do not even constitute crimes. This high rate of recidivism is, in part, a result of a range of policies that increase surveillance over people released from prison, impose obstacles to their reentry into society, and eliminate support systems that ease their transition from prison to the streets.
Americans have become accustomed to demonizing certain people who break
the law. This is somewhat odd, given that few citizens go through life without ever violating a law. A significant number of Americans cheat on their taxes, steal from their employers, receive stolen goods, purchase illegal cable boxes, illegally download music, use illegal drugs, or participate in many other illegal acts. Hardly a day goes by without reports of corporate executives indicted for fraud, insider trading, or price fixing. Politicians are convicted for accepting bribes. The most prestigious Wall Street firms have engaged in large-scale illegal trading practices. Some of our most idolized entertainment figures are indicted for shoplifting, domestic violence, drunk driving, possessing drugs, and molesting children. Policemen are filmed using excessive use of force on citizens, make arrests based on racial stereotypes, deal in drugs, plant evidence on innocent people, and lie under oath. Sports figures are accused of rape, assault and taking steroids. Priests are charged with child molestation. Doctors bill Medicare for procedures they did not perform. Each day thousands drive while legally drunk. Self-report surveys find that lawbreaking is widely distributed among the young, especially males.
As many as one-third of all boys are arrested before reaching adulthood. A majority of males will be arrested for a non-traffic offense at some point in their lives. But given that most of us commit some type of crimes in our lifetimes, the most severe punishments are targeted toward lower class citizens. It is this class of people we are willing to punish disproportionately.
Middle- and upper-class people understand that their families and close associates are not defined entirely by their law violations. But they often lack understanding for those whose life circumstances are different from their own. The demonization of criminals has become a special burden for young black males, of whom nearly one-third will spend time in prison during their life. Today approximately 60% of those incarcerated are black or Hispanic. In effect, the imprisonment binge has created our own American apartheid. While we may differ on the basis for racial differences in imprisonment, there can be no disagreement that this is not the sign of a healthy society.
Three Key Myths about Crime and Incarceration
Myth #1: We can identify “career criminals” and their imprisonment will reduce crime.
Most people who commit crimes stop committing crimes by the age of 25. One of the primary justifications for lengthy sentences is that we can identify early in life the “career criminals” who continue to commit most serious crimes. These people, it is argued, must be “incapacitated” for long periods of time. However, scientific efforts to develop methods for identifying career criminals have failed. Studies find that delinquents who had been incarcerated were more likely to commit crimes later in life than those who had been sentenced to probation or local jail time. The implication is that imprisonment itself can encourage later criminality.
Myth #2: Tougher penalties are needed to protect the public from “dangerous” criminals.
The failure to accurately identify the small number of offenders who do commit particularly horrendous crimes after serving their sentences fueled demands for longer sentences across the board. In other words, if we can’t single out the truly dangerous, we will assume anyone with two or three convictions for a relatively wide range of offenses is a habitual criminal, and keep them all in prison for an extremely long time. On this basis, a number of states adopted mandatory sentencing, truth-in-sentencing and “three strikes” laws. These have done little to reduce crime. This is because rates of return to serious crime by those released from prison are not high. Just 1.2% of those who served time for homicide and were released in 1994 were rearrested for a new homicide within three years, and just 2.5% of released rapists were arrested for another rape. Sex offenders were less likely than non-sex-offenders to be rearrested for any offense. Their rates of re-arrest were only 5.3%. A substantial percentage (over 60%) of released prisoners are eventually rearrested, but mostly for drug offenses or violations of parole regulations. Studies make clear that, while many people who are released from prison end up back behind bars, they are a fraction of the overall crime problem. Lengthening their sentences as a means of dealing with crime will at best have only marginal impact.
Myth #3: Tougher penalties will deter criminals
The hope that brutal prisons and longer sentences will deter crime is as old as the invention of the prison itself. This notion simplifies and distorts the dynamics of criminal behavior. When most people commit a crime, they correctly believe that they will not be caught. (About 60% of all crimes are not reported to police.) The FBI reports that 4.6 million arrests were made for property or violent crimes, a number representing only 19% of the reported victimizations. State and federal courts dealing with serious felony crimes produce about one million convictions—of which 68% result in a prison or jail sentence. Therefore, the chances of being arrested, convicted, and sentenced to jail or prison are quite small. Further, different types of crimes vary markedly in their potential for being deterred and people differ in their susceptibility to being deterred by the threat of punishment.
The population roughly divides into three groups:
1) those who, because of personal values and social commitments, would not knowingly commit crimes under any circumstances;
2) those who are deterred when they believe that there is some risk they will be caught
3) those who are not deterred.
The type of crime most likely to result in arrest and conviction tends to be committed by those least likely to be deterred—generally young males excluded from the conventional pathways to success and already severely punished by the juvenile justice system. The vast majority of these youth desist from crime after their twenties for reasons unrelated to any penalties imposed. Ironically, those who are deterred when punishment is seen as likely—polluters, price fixers, slum lords, inside traders, stock swindlers, workplace safety violators, and other “white-collar” criminals—receive relatively lenient punishment when caught.
The persistent faith that prisoners can be discouraged from returning to crime by subjecting them to harsh penalties, and that the population at large will be deterred from committing crimes more effectively with severe penalties, has never had empirical support. Decades of research on capital punishment have failed to produce compelling evidence that it prevents homicide more effectively than long prison sentences. Community penalties, it has been shown, are at least as effective in discouraging return to crime as institutional penalties. Rigorous prison conditions substantially increase recidivism. Evaluations show that boot camps and “scared straight” programs either have no effect on recidivism or increase it. “Tough” sanctions are popular, but they do not reduce crime.
Studies on the impact of incarceration on crime rates come to a range of conclusions that vary from “making crime worse” to “reducing crime a great deal.” Though conclusive evidence is lacking, the bulk of the evidence points to three conclusions:
1) The effect of imprisonment on crime rates, if there is one, is small;
2) If there is an effect, it diminishes as prison populations expand; and
3) The overwhelming and undisputed negative side effects of incarceration far outweigh its potential, unproven benefits.
A recent “meta-analysis” of treatment programs reviewed 291 evaluations of adult offender treatment programs, both in-prison and in-community, conducted in the United States and other English-speaking nations. It reports that 42% of the evaluated programs, including jail diversion programs, domestic violence programs, faith-based, psychotherapy or behavior therapy for sex offenders, boot camps, electronic monitoring, and restorative justice programs had no impact on recidivism. Of the 167 effective programs, only one-fourth were prison-based. Of these, the reduction in recidivism rates generally ranged from 4% to 10%. These recidivism reduction results are similar to those found in other major evaluations of “what works” (or “doesn’t work”). Notably, many other programs do not reduce recidivism and may actually increase rates of failure.
Imprisonment can legitimately satisfy a social and personal need for retribution toward those who violate society’s laws. Most contemporary philosophies of punishment give a large role to retribution. In addition to satisfying victims’ needs, punishing lawbreakers according to what they deserve can perform important social functions. Punishment can promote social solidarity, while failure to respond to crime weakens commitment to social norms. At the same time, excessive punishment can exacerbate social tensions and widens divisions, reducing solidarity. It can corrode a nation’s political culture, and obstruct efforts to deal constructively with social problems. Retribution should not be used as an excuse for mindless punitiveness as is the case now. The essence of retribution is to punish people proportionately, based on the crime they have committed. Excessive leniency and undeserved harshness both violate the principle of proportionality. Failure to limit the severity of punishment to what is deserved is unjust. It alienates citizens from the government and undercuts the effectiveness of law enforcement. When those who are punished are disproportionately poor and members of minority groups, it is inevitable that they will believe that the law is being used to repress them, rather than holding them accountable for their crimes.
FOUR RECOMMENDATIONS THAT WILL REDUCE
PRISON POPULATION WITH NO ADVERSE IMPACE ON CRIME RATES1: Reduce time served in prison.
Reducing sentencing severity would mean probation or a short jail sentences for some; for others, it would mean less time spent in prison, as well as less time on parole. This central recommendation is grounded in three facts:
1) many prisoners are now serving longer prison terms;
2) the longer prison terms are not proportionate to the severity of the crimes they were convicted of
3) the extension of their length of incarceration has no major impact on their recidivism rate, or crime rates in general.
2: Eliminate the use of prison for parole or probation technical violators.
Today anywhere from 50-65% of the 650,000 prisoners admitted to state prison are those who have failed probation or parole. Of those who have failed, about half are being sent to prison for technical violations. Such violations include absconding from supervision, failure to pay supervision fees, restitution costs, or fines, failure to attend treatment, drug use as detected by urine-analysis, failure to maintain employment, or being arrested (but not convicted) for misdemeanor or felony level crimes. While these behaviors are troublesome, they do not reach the level of seriousness of requiring incarceration for many months or years in state or federal prison. The U.S. Department of Justice reports that parole violators returned to prison serve an average of 18 months before being re-released. Prosecutors and correctional officials erroneously believe that unless individuals are re-incarcerated for technical violations, the individuals will commit serious crimes in the future. There is no scientific evidence to support this belief and attendant policy, yet it continues to be the primary rationale for re-incarcerating tens of thousands of people for criminal or non-criminal behavior for which ordinary citizens could not be incarcerated.
3: Reduce the length of parole and probation supervision periods.
There is little evidence that lengthy parole and probation terms decrease crime. Probation or parole supervision failure is most likely to occur within the first 12 months of supervision; thereafter, supervision is more of a nuisance than a means for assisting people after prison or preventing them from committing another crime.
New research indicates that parole supervision is largely ineffective with respect to reducing recidivism. The obvious explanation is that people who have no parole obligations when they leave prison (“max out”) can only be returned to prison if they are convicted of a new felony crime. Conversely, those placed on parole and probation can be re-incarcerated for either non-criminal behavior or misdemeanor crimes. A 2005 Urban Institute study, among others, revealed that individuals released with no parole supervision return to prison at a significantly lower rate than those released on parole.
4: Decriminalize “victimless” crimes, particularly those related to drug use.
In recent years, behaviors have been criminalized that are not dangerous and pose little if any threat to others. They involve the consent of all immediate parties. Common examples in American history have included abortion, gambling, illicit sexual conduct that does not involve coercion (e.g., prostitution and, until recently, homosexual activity), and the sale and possession of recreational drugs. According to the U.S.Department of Justice, approximately 30-40% of all current prison admissions involve crimes that have no direct or obvious victim other than the perpetrator. The drug category constitutes the largest offense category, with 31% of all prison admissions resulting from such crimes.
Politicians and the public have ignored the lessons of Prohibition in formulating drug policy. In an attempt to eliminate harms caused to individuals, their families and society from the abuse of heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and other drugs, legislatures have passed laws sending large numbers of users, abusers and low-level dealers to prison with very long sentences. This prohibition, like the earlier one, has led to violence as dealers have sought to eliminate rivals in the lucrative market. Like Prohibition, it has resulted in the distribution of adulterated drugs that have injured and killed users.
The high profits of drug dealing are largely the consequence of legislation that eliminates competition from anyone unwilling to risk draconian penalties. Every time a dealer is taken out of circulation by a prison sentence, a new dealer is drawn in by the lure of large profits. The prosecution and imprisonment of low-level traffickers has increased racial disparities, and is the largest factor contributing to the rapid rise in imprisonment rates for women. Dealers’ use of violence to eliminate competition helps to sustain the myth linking drug use to violence. Notwithstanding our extraordinary effort to discourage the use and sale of illegal drugs, they remain widely available and widely used.
TWO ADDITIONAL RECOMMENDATIONS
5: Improve conditions of imprisonment.
Reducing the size of the prison population is not enough. We could not in good conscience recommend that anyone serve a prison sentence unless we ensure that those who end up behind walls are treated in a humane manner. Prisons that systematically deny human dignity, basic human rights, and life necessities are creating festering sores that poison the entire society. Clearly, prison terms have a residual impact on the families and communities of the imprisoned. Enduring years of separation from family and community—deprived of material possessions, subjected to high levels of noise and artificial light, crowded conditions and/or solitary confinement, devoid of privacy, with reduced options, arbitrary control, disrespect, and economic exploitation—is maddening and profoundly deleterious. Anger, frustration, and a burning sense of injustice, coupled with the crippling processes inherent in imprisonment, significantly reduce the likelihood that prisoners are able to pursue a viable, relatively conventional life after release.
Unsafe, inhumane, and secretive prisons not only traumatize the incarcerated but also contaminate prison staff and their families, as well as townsfolk near the prison. More generally, support for an inhumane prison system requires that prison workers and the public embrace the simplistic concept that prisoners are unworthy beings that deserve their harsh punishment above and beyond the segregation from society and loss of freedom.
There are five fundamental features of prison administration that should be acceptable to anyone interested in accomplishing the prison’s practicable purposes—punishment and deterrence—without engaging in unnecessary, counterproductive, and cruel practices.
1. Eliminate Cruel and Unusual Punishment
These include denial of adequate medical services, excessive use of physical force, and housing prisoners in exceptionally punitive arrangements, such as solitary confinement units. Federal courts have ruled that these practices violate the Constitution’s Eighth Amendment.
2. Safety
Prisoners should be protected from assault, rape, murder, etc., by other prisoners and staff. Effective strategies such as adequate surveillance, voluntary access to safe living areas within the prison, housing prisoners in small units, and “single-celling” should be practiced to ensure prisoners’ safety.
3. Health
Prisoners should have access to the resources and services required to maintain their physical and mental health. These include access to medical and psychiatric services, adequate diet, and recreation. Prisoners should not be subjected to physically and mentally deleterious incarceration regimens such as extended periods of isolation and restricted mobility, and excessive noise.
4. Programs
Any rational and humane system of punishment should provide access to opportunities that increase prison safety and improve prisoners’ chances of making it in the community after prison. Such programs would include academic, technical and citizenship education, as well as a wide variety of treatment programs that help prisoners improve themselves and develop more conventional, law-abiding interests and pursuits. These types of programs should be provided regardless of whether they reduce recidivism.
5. Post-Release Assistance
Most prisoners receive little or no preparation for release from prison or assistance subsequent to their release. They face extraordinary difficulties in achieving stability, viability, and life fulfillment on the outside. States should develop and provide access to transitional and permanent housing, education, vocational training and placement, counseling, coaching, and mentoring.
RECOMMENDATION 6: Restore ex-prisoner voting and other rights.
Prisoners face exceptional problems from their stigmatized status. They are barred from most city, county, and state employment and from some housing such as federally subsidized housing and are systematically denied employment by many private employers. Their right to vote varies from state to state, even from county to county in some states. It will be difficult to overcome private employers’ restrictions on hiring ex-prisoners, but persistent efforts should be made toward this goal. Perhaps laws against discrimination against employment of ex-prisoners can be adopted in the future. Government agencies, however, could easily change their policies. In San Francisco, the city government has removed the question regarding prior arrests on job applications. Other government jurisdictions should follow this example. Opening up relatively good-paying jobs to ex-prisoners greatly increases public safety by moving potential criminals into conventional pathways. Government subsidies for hiring ex-convicts could overcome some employers’ hesitations. In addition, exclusion from welfare, public housing, and subsidies should be ended as should rules barring ex-convicts from living in certain neighborhoods. Licensing restrictions should be maintained only when demonstrably necessary to protect the public
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Another AFSC site, devoted to the injustice of solitary confinement.
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2008 manual by AFSC
http://realcostofprisons.org/materials/Survivors_manual_2008-11-24.pdf
AFSC is a Quaker organization devoted to service, development, and peace programs throughout the world. Our work is based on the belief in the worth of every person, and faith in the power of love to overcome violence and injustice
Another AFSC site, devoted to the injustice of solitary confinement.
http://www.afsc.org/stopmax/ AFSC: StopMax
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The Sentencing Project is a national organization working for a fair and effective criminal justice system by promoting reforms in sentencing law and practice, and alternatives to incarceration.
The Sentencing Project was founded in 1986 to provide defense lawyers with sentencing advocacy training and to reduce the reliance on incarceration. Since that time, The Sentencing Project has become a leader in the effort to bring national attention to disturbing trends and inequities in the criminal justice system with a successful formula that includes the publication of groundbreaking research, aggressive media campaigns and strategic advocacy for policy reform. As a result of The Sentencing Project's research, publications and advocacy, many people know that this country is the world's leader in incarceration, that one in three young black men is under control of the criminal justice system, that five million Americans can't vote because of felony convictions, and that thousands of women and children have lost welfare, education and housing benefits as the result of convictions for minor drug offenses. The Sentencing Project is dedicated to changing the way Americans think about crime and punishment.
research and advocacy for reform
The Sentencing Project is a national organization working for a fair and effective criminal justice system by promoting reforms in sentencing law and practice, and alternatives to incarceration.
The Sentencing Project was founded in 1986 to provide defense lawyers with sentencing advocacy training and to reduce the reliance on incarceration. Since that time, The Sentencing Project has become a leader in the effort to bring national attention to disturbing trends and inequities in the criminal justice system with a successful formula that includes the publication of groundbreaking research, aggressive media campaigns and strategic advocacy for policy reform. As a result of The Sentencing Project's research, publications and advocacy, many people know that this country is the world's leader in incarceration, that one in three young black men is under control of the criminal justice system, that five million Americans can't vote because of felony convictions, and that thousands of women and children have lost welfare, education and housing benefits as the result of convictions for minor drug offenses. The Sentencing Project is dedicated to changing the way Americans think about crime and punishment.
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Inside the PTO web community you will be able to find support from others who are dealing with, or have been down the same dark road you may currently find yourself, information
The PrisonTalk Online web community was conceived in a prison cell, designed in a halfway house, and funded by donations from families of ex-offenders, to bring those with an interest in the prisoner support community a forum in which their issues and concerns may be addressed by others in similar circumstances and beliefs.
Inside the PTO web community you will be able to find support from others who are dealing with, or have been down the same dark road you may currently find yourself, information
law.wustl.edu/journal/22/p325grassian.pdf
Stuart Grassian: Psychiatric Effects of Solitary Confinement
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Justice strategies http://www.justicestrategies.net/ The Justice Strategies principals - Judith Greene and Kevin Pranis - have over 40 years of collective experience doing research and advocacy on sentencing and correctional policy, the political economy of incarceration, and the detention and imprisonment of immigrants.
http://jonsjailjournal.blogspot.com/ Jon's Jail Journal The
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Celebrating 24 years of united independent activism for human rights and humane alternatives in mental health. MindFreedom International is a voice for survivors of abuse in mental health care.
Celebrating 24 years of united independent activism for human rights and humane alternatives in mental health. MindFreedom International is a voice for survivors of abuse in mental health care.
http://www.prisonersolidarity.org/index.htm Prisoner Solidarity
Prisoner solidarity.org serves as a catalyst for communication between prisoners and people on "the outside." It publishes updated research, news, opinion pieces and educational material from activists, writers, prisoners, and the concerned public.
Prisonersolidarity.org is a movement that grew out of the Youngstown Prison Forum. In the last decade, Ohio has had one of the largest per capita growths in prison spending in the United States. And in the rustbelt city of Youngstown, a growing (state and federally funded) prison industry has parasitically fed the economy since the steel industry's collapse. While we're based in Ohio, Prisonersolidarity also incorporates a discussion of national and international trends. We invite contributions from around the U.S. and abroad, and especially encourage submissions from prisoners, and from people wishing to discuss how their communities and families are affected by the prison industry. What are your views and concerns? Make your voice heard.
Prisoner solidarity.org serves as a catalyst for communication between prisoners and people on "the outside." It publishes updated research, news, opinion pieces and educational material from activists, writers, prisoners, and the concerned public.
Prisonersolidarity.org is a movement that grew out of the Youngstown Prison Forum. In the last decade, Ohio has had one of the largest per capita growths in prison spending in the United States. And in the rustbelt city of Youngstown, a growing (state and federally funded) prison industry has parasitically fed the economy since the steel industry's collapse. While we're based in Ohio, Prisonersolidarity also incorporates a discussion of national and international trends. We invite contributions from around the U.S. and abroad, and especially encourage submissions from prisoners, and from people wishing to discuss how their communities and families are affected by the prison industry. What are your views and concerns? Make your voice heard.
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Watching critically how the State of Nevada treats those in prison. Checking up
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Human Rights Coalition PA/VA Chapter
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http://www.thomasmertoncenter.org/fedup/index.htm FedUp! is the Pittsburgh chapter of the Human Rights Coalition dedicated to upholding the rights of prisoners through providing resources and support, exposing injustices, and building relationships with people in prison and their advocates. We are a organization of concerned citizens, people in prison and their loved ones. Our focus is on high level security facilities in Pennsylvania.
http://www.thomasmertoncenter.org/fedup/index.htm FedUp! is the Pittsburgh chapter of the Human Rights Coalition dedicated to upholding the rights of prisoners through providing resources and support, exposing injustices, and building relationships with people in prison and their advocates. We are a organization of concerned citizens, people in prison and their loved ones. Our focus is on high level security facilities in Pennsylvania.
http://www.thomasmertoncenter.org/fedup/index.htm
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NEWEST POSTS Just starting 2024
- a)Families for a Second Chance
- b)Plea for investigation by the DOC:
- c)FFUP CASES :Health care cases ( HSU- health service unit)
- d) FFUP CASES:mental health and abuse and overuse of solitary confinement
- e)FFUP cases policies, rules laws corrupted
- f)FFUP cases: PREA, rape elimination act and failure to protect
- g)The elephant in the room- no treatment or training then release with no support
- h)Room rental project for soon to be released prisoners
So who ARE we incarcerating? posts old and new tell the real story
- a)so who ARE we incarcerating? let's take a look.
- Dead TIme
- Evolving Justice: links to Studies and Articles on Wordpress
- POPS Program/
- Recidivism decline with age
- Ron Schilling: to all those genuinely Concerned
- Second Chance for Juveniles
- UNLOCKING AMERICA: a summary from JFA Institute Unlocking America by David Rhodes
GREAT National and statewide STUDIES/REPORTS
- UNLOCKING AMERICA: a summary from JFA Institute/Summary by David Rhodes
- Whole study OF THE above
- ACLU:AT AMERICA'S EXPENSE: THE MASS INCARCERATION OF THE ELDERLY
- Wisconsin’s Mass Incarceration of African American Males: Workforce Challenges for 2013 By: Employment and Training Institute University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 2013
REPORTS by FFUP and supporters
- a)Torture in WI Prisons: a report solitary in WI prisons
- b)Staffing Crowding and Death in WI Prisons, an FFUP REPORT
- c)FFUP Report: WCI response to COVID lackadaisical and punitive
- d)Parole Rule change petition submitted to governor Evers 2018
- e)mind control in prison by Cesar DeLeon, a GBCI prisoner
- f) ( 2020)Best Release Paths for prisoners at risk in these covid days
OLDER posts on this blog (2013 thru 2022)
- Waupun Christmas Eve Lockdown
- warden Novak continues to Provoke
- Warden Delaying Flu shots at CCI
- Updates on CCI lockdowns from Nate Lindell
- Update and Retaliation against Ron
- UNLOCKING AMERICA STUDY Summary
- Torture in Wisconsin Prisons, A New FFUP Report
- Staffing, Crowding and Death in the WI DOC
- spring 2018 newsletter
- spring 2016 Money scam
- some solitary prisoners FFUP is working with
- second chance for juveniles
- Revocations-some collected documents
- Report on January 22 meeting with DOC
- Proposal for Rejuvenating Wisconsin's Failed Corrections System
- POPS PROGRAM - a good model for WI
- our evolving justice
- Open Letter to Evers
- Nine Rule Change Recommendations
- More Deaths =a report
- Makda Fessahaye response to lockdown
- Lockdown update letters from Jerome
- Let our people go rally Feb 5
- Larry Bracey Killed by Medical
- Kerby Win money scam clarified
- January 8 2020 Parole Commission Meeting
- January 2020 CCI Lockdown update
- In WARM BLOOD book by DarRen Morris and Judy Adrian
- Important graph/statistic- crime declines with age
- Ideas for prison action coalition
- Hunger strikers demands met at CCI
- Gut Punched, a promise Betrayed
- great links to other blogs and webs
- FFUP wish list for new governor
- FFUP UTUBE CHANNEL
- FFUP Intake report first half 2019
- exhibits in our solitary suit 2018
- Executive Clemencies give by WI governors form 1970 to 1986
- Culture of Forced Homelessness by Ron
- complaint and two court orders in our suit against overuse and abuse of solitary
- CCI Lockdown retaliation and update
- CCI LOCKDOWN 11- 2019
- Carl McDaniel, another victim of deliberate indifference
- Brief Summary of next steps at CCI
- Black Mass Incarceration by Dewitt King
- art, writing songs, poetry
- Art of LaRon McKinley
- Advocacy Meetings with Leigslators
- action to bring back Clemency
- Action gets the goods-notes from February 5th
- a revocation case that beats all
- 2020 New Years Eve solidarity demonstration at CCI
- 2017 report death and extortion
- 2014 abuse, parole
Campaign Posts
- intro to Families for a Second Chance Campaign
- First Petition- end monopoly over hygiene and canteen items- a big issue for families and prisoners
- Pamphlet pilot project room rental project/ help us plug the prison pipeline
- first example for your to follow : OPEN LETTER to new parole Chairman Christopher Blythe
- second example of open letter- this one to WIDOC SECRETARY CARR
- Let's get some facts out there- charts and studies, essays, to combat the hate/fear rhetoric
- who are we really incarcerating? a look at the people in our prisons/a start
Overuse and Abuse of solitary confinement
Posts here on art, poetry. Writing.song
studies and articles:Solitary confinement in the news and studies
COVID 19 AND WI PRISONS
- Bringing back clemency to WI prisoners
- a) 8 actions to help fight Covid 1o
- b) crisis in our prisons-emails and letters needed
- c) a sampling of our most vulnerable prisoners
- d) open letter to Governor Evers
- e) WCI Response to Covid 19 exposure lackadaisicle and punitive
- f) a segregation primer
- g)Reports from prisoners sorted by prison
- h)prisons as covid 19 death traps
- i)"torture in WI Prisons" FFUP report on solitary and how present prison crisis got set up.
- j) DOC Secretary Carr's public statement
- J)occupy Kevin's inbox
- k)report on 100's of aged and infirm at SCI
- l)Occupation ourside Kevin Carr's house
- m)notes on Covid from Matthew
- n) the illogic of Stanley's Response to Covid19
Search This Blog
FFUP Latest reports
LATEST NEWSLETTER ,CAMPAIGN MATERIALS
- Bridge of Voices 11-2019
- Bridge of Voices Summer 2019
- newsletter Bridge of Voices Spring 2019
- FFUP Newsletter Winter 2018
- newsletter summer 2018
- newsletter spring 2018
- Newsletter 9 17 Fall
- newsletter 6 17 summer
- newsletter 4 17
- Bridge of Voices FFUP newls end of 2016
- FFUP newsletter july, August 2016
- FFUP newsletter april to June 2016
- January 2016 newsletter
- September 2015 newsletter
- New blog for Old Law PAROLE Campaign-new campaign/click here
- March 2015 FFUP/ Bridge of Voices
- SECOND CHANCE OLD LAW FLIER-HELP US MAKE THE LAW DO RIGHT!!!
- links to Center for Investigative Journalism 7 14 articles on abuse by guards in Waupun seg unit and actions following
- Data on Waupun abuse articles in pdf form
- WAUPUN 7 14 ABUSE ARTICLES in PDF form
- OLD LAW PRISONERS/Blog of individual prisoners waiting for parole
- Bridge of Voices JUNE NEWSLETTER/present one held up till January
- BRIDGE of VOICES- NEWSLETTER 2 14
Posts on Misuse of ACT 355/ the MONEY SCAM
DONATE
Using paypal:
Make checks payable to:
FFUP
29631 Wild Rose Drive
Blue River, WI 53518
We are a 501c3 non profit. All donations are tax deductible.
Contact us at pgswan3@aol.com
Send us an email to ask questions.
Make checks payable to:
FFUP
29631 Wild Rose Drive
Blue River, WI 53518
We are a 501c3 non profit. All donations are tax deductible.
Contact us at pgswan3@aol.com
Send us an email to ask questions.
some FFUP BLOGS showing Human Face of our prisons( ALL NEED UPDATING )
- art gallery started
- blog of diverse prisoners "meet you prisoners"
- Lutalo , from victim/offender to activist: blog "Vanguards oif Justice"
- meet prisoners long overdue for parole
- Second Chance for juvenile offenders blog
- second chance for juvenile offenders-see page
- stories of prisoners wrongly convicted
UNLOCKING AMERICA
solitary confinement "recreation" by Tommy Silverstein, forever entombed in solitary
this blog is under construction and is not ready yet.
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