5 September 2019

A Border Patrol Agent Reveals What It’s Really Like to Guard Migrant Children

Migrant children at W. Texas detention center

[Photo: Migrant children at a West Texas detention center (Womens News Network).]

By Ginger Thompson
Source: ProPublica
Leer en Español.


Editor's Note
We hear the word “normalization” multiple times a day on news and news shows. We hear it so frequently because of the behavior of Donald Trump, the President of the United States. He consistently breaks the rules of not just Presidential behavior, but of ordinary day to day behavior. The concern about normalization is that this behavior is so consistent that folks will “forget” what “normal” used to be. The immediate second concern is that the cruel and erratic behavior of this president will set the bar for future presidents. However, the greater concern should be how it affects the tenor of our day to day interactions. There is another problem here and that is “What does ‘normalization’ actually mean, and how does it work in the broader context ?”.

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Category: Guest, Immigrants and Refugees, Incarceration, Norms, Social (In)Justice, Trump & Administration, Violence | Comments Off on A Border Patrol Agent Reveals What It’s Really Like to Guard Migrant Children
8 March 2019

Georgia legislators try to kill bail reform and require jail for the poor

bail bonds legal

[Photo: By Neil Youngson via The Blue Diamond Gallery under CC BY SA 3.0.]

By Billy Corriher
Source:  Facing South

Editor's Note
Fighting the forces that make their money off the lives of the poor means taking on big corporate interests and their toady legislators. It is not exactly a secret that many people are incarcerated simply because they are poor. One would think it would be illegal to incarcerate folks because they do not have resources, but we have moved to a point where jails are effectively becoming Debtor’s Prisons. I don’t know who first made that observation, but kudos to them for the cutting insight.

While legal representation in criminal cases is guaranteed under law, the funding for such aid is sparse to the point of inadequacy. It is not unusual for a defendant to not even see their lawyer until they enter the courtroom, and it is not unusual for a public defender (often contracted) to have over a hundred active cases at a time. In Missouri, they may have over 200 cases at a time:

“Barrett acknowledges that when defenders are handling as many as 200 cases at a time, there’s no way they can fulfill their professional and ethical duties to their clients.”  (Yang & Carlson, PBS, May 3, 2018)

But there is another barrier that is leading to incarceration even before being convicted of any crime. That is because many folks cannot afford bail. Without bail, they sit in jail.  Unable to work and likely to face many losses including their housing, jobs, and perhaps their children. This is a steep price that is paid whether they are ultimately adjudicated as innocent or guilty, and if innocent they will never be compensated for the massive losses and disruption of their lives.

As the following article discusses, intimately vested in the bail process are the bail bonds industry, and like the pay day loan and title loan industries, they want their rights to exploit protected (and even enhanced).  Should we be surprised that the same cadre of questionable characters that suppressed votes in the 2018 elections. Georgia is where Kemp (then Attorney General and in charge of the elections) faced off against long time voting rights advocate Stacey Abrams. Should we be surprised that the Republicon’s are attempting to reassert racial penalties where they can?

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Category: Classism, Corporate - Corporatization, Criminal Justice, Guest, Incarceration, Law, Politics, Prison-Industrial Complex, Racism | Comments Off on Georgia legislators try to kill bail reform and require jail for the poor
25 November 2018

The War for Survival

Revolutionary Portraits: Leonard Peltier

[Photo: Revolutionary Portraits: Leonard Peltier (Gary Stevens).]

By Leonard Peltier
Source: Counterpunch

Editor's Note
As I read this letter from Leonard Peltier to the world it struck me that there is likely one, if not two, generations who have never heard of Leonard Peltier. That made me almost as sad as an innocent man who became a political prisoners and sits in a federal prison with two life terms. He is convicted of murdering two FBI agents during a conflict on the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1975. It is widely believed that he is innocent and was framed for the deaths, but he was involved in the American Indian Movement. For many, Peltier is seen as a political prisoner, and Amnesty International has petitioned for Peltier’s release for years. He recently made the news in the state of Washington in a free speech suit because the Department of Labor and Industries removed Peltier’s artwork from a public display.

I take strength from Peltier, whom I feel is wrongfully imprisoned, because despite his situation he continues to hold a deep interest in the world and the earth. In the face of an implacable bureaucracy he maintains both his dignity and hope.

 

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Category: Activists, Guest, Incarceration, Social (In)Justice | Comments Off on The War for Survival