Archive for the 'prison' Category

In defense of Bradley Manning

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010
Several Cop Block readers have been appalled we would support Bradley Manning. At least one reader has stated that due to our Bradley Manning call flood post, he will never read Cop Block again. It is not clear why this post generated so much anger, but ultimately, our support for Mr. Manning is not in [...]

Cops raping women, threatening them with prison (or worse) to keep them silent afterwards

Monday, November 8th, 2010
That’s what happened to “M”, a 27-yr-old woman who was raped by an on-duty cop in her own home last week. It all started when she called the police after getting in a traffic accident. A cop arrived at the scene, gathered her information, and gave her a ticket. And that was the end of [...]

Worthless jurors help imprison a woman for “drug crimes”

Saturday, October 30th, 2010
Pardon the little outburst, but these jurors fucking disgust me. If a single one of them did what any decent human being should have, then Patrica Smith would not be spending two to four years of her life wasting away in a prison nor would she be labeled a felon for the rest of her [...]

The Baker Act and Police Brutality

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010
This post was sent to me via email from a person who doesn’t want to be identified.  We’ll always respect the wished of those who wish to share their stories with us.  Thanks. Story by anonymous: According to a recent article, A Naples woman has filed complaints against three veteran Naples police officers accusing them of police brutality while [...]

Confession coerced by police leads to death penalty

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010
By C. Rutledge Wilson, contributor Seven days from now is an important moment for an Arkansas man named Damien Echols, the only member of the infamous “West Memphis Three” to be given the death penalty by an Arkansas jury. Echols’ legal team will be presenting oral arguments before the Arkansas State Supreme Court in Little Rock [...]

Monday Link Roundup

Monday, September 20th, 2010
In case you missed all the updates on Liberty On Tour and our Facebook page, Adam was arrested in Las Vegas yesterday. He was released earlier this evening. Over at Reason Magazine, Radley Balko offers some good advice to people on filming the police. You’ve probably heard criticisms of the US government trying to act as “world [...]

Free Marc Emery!

Thursday, August 12th, 2010
Canadian freedom activist Marc Emery is a political prisoner of the DEA. Find out how you can help him.

Cop Lies, Man Spends Five Years in Prison

Friday, July 30th, 2010
In 1999, Ted White Jr. was convicted of child molestation in a Missouri courtroom.   He would spend five years in prison before being exonerated and released.   What the jury in White’s first trial did not know was that the lead detective, Richard McKinley, who was investigating the allegations against White, was having an affair with [...]

Bummer

Friday, January 1st, 2010

I posted this at the new and improved STR, and it’s continuing to gnaw at me.  It’s about the Rebecca Project for Human Rights, founded by Malika Saada Saar, random emphases mine:

The story of a prisoner’s death in Arizona over the summer popped up in the national media for a single news cycle and disappeared without provoking much outrage. Marcia Powell died after being left in an outdoor holding cell in triple-digit heat for more than four hours. She had a history of mental problems and was serving a 27-month sentence for prostitution—a crime for which we can assume none of her clients were prosecuted.

Women are the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. prison population, and sexual violence is often at the root of the events that put them behind bars.

According to the National Council on Crime and Delinquency (NCCD), as many as 88 percent of female inmates have experienced sexual or physical abuse before coming to prison. And by and large the mothers behind bars are not gang-bangers, murderers, or drug kingpins. They are first-time, nonviolent offenders, arrested for untreated addiction. With the drug wars and the passage of mandatory minimum sentences, the incarceration of mothers has skyrocketed.

When the Victim Is Jailed – Page 1 – The Daily Beast.

It is fashionable to get worked up about the shackling of pregnant mothers giving birth in prison, or to advocate reform of “the system” ad nauseum.  These are topics to get worked up about, but the proposed solutions are usually little better than bandaids.  If people focused on ending the prosecution of victimless crimes–prostitution, drug use–a lot of nonviolent women (and men) would be free to deal only with our screwed-up society, not our screwed-up society plus the horrors of prison.  But it’s far more fashionable to dither about what Sarah Palin or Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama or whoever means for women in our “national moment” or whatever.  You know, Bible Spice and something about rape kits, while actual women are actually raped inside and outside of prison.

Posted in Feminism, Prison Tagged: feminismwhatisitgoodfor, rant

Wups, our bad

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Via ABC News and AFP-via-Google-news:

Man ‘cooked’ to death in Australian prison van

SYDNEY (AFP) — The family of an Australian Aboriginal elder who died after being “cooked” in the back of a scorching hot prison van may sue after a coroner branded his treatment inhumane.

A coroner Friday described the treatment of the 46-year-old man as a “disgrace” and inhumane, saying he would ask prosecutors to consider criminal charges over his death from heatstroke in Western Australia in January 2008.

His shirt in this photo reading "Zen - Awakening - Mind", and looking like a terrible menace, we can all rest easier that the criminal Mr. Ward was dispatched promptly by our overlords

His shirt here reading "Zen - Awakening - Mind", and looking like a terrible menace, we can all rest easier that the evil Mr. Ward was dispatched promptly by our overlords

The elder, known only as Mr Ward as his first name was withheld for cultural reasons, was transported 360 kilometres (225 miles) to jail in temperatures of up to 50 degrees Celsius (122 F) in a van with faulty air conditioning.

Ward, who was arrested a day earlier for drink driving, spent four hours in the searing heat between the mining towns of Laverton and Kalgoorlie, suffering third-degree burns where his body touched the metal floor, the inquest heard.

Western Australia Coroner Alastair Hope found that Ward was effectively “cooked” to death and heavily criticised the state prisons department, the private security firm that operated the van and the two guards who escorted Ward.

“It is a disgrace that a prisoner in the 21st century, particularly a prisoner who has not been convicted of any crime, was transported for a long distance in high temperatures in this pod,” Hope said.

The hearing was told that when Ward eventually arrived unconscious at hospital in Kalgoorlie, his body was so hot that staff were unable to cool him down. After an ice bath, which failed to save him, he had a body temperature of 41.7 degrees Celsius as opposed to a normal temperature of 37 degrees Celsius.

Mr. Coroner Alastair Hope has it wrong, of course. The disgrace is that the uniformed gangsters roaming the countryside being paid with money stolen from innocents and kidnapping people, throwing them in chains and metal boxes in order to take them to larger cages made of concrete and steel where they’ll be kept like animals, all without said kidnap victims having harmed anyone, don’t wake up one fine morning to find their severed heads mounted on pikes along the palisades of the free cities.

But, oh, geez, I forgot. That wouldn’t be “civilized”, now, would it?

I’m sure it’s a great relief for the people of Occupied Australia that the two outsourced thugs from G4S aka Group 4 Securicor contracted for prisoner kidnap victim transport, “have now been suspended,” a year and a half later.

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Tags: Australia, crime, death, drunken driving, Gangsters in Blue, kidnapping, negligent homicide, outsourcing, prison

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