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Indybay Feature

Neo-Cowpokes Fail to Corral Corruption

by T. Mounted (tantamounted [at] yahoo.ca)
California politicians seeking re-election turn blind eyes on sweet and dirty deals in northern coastal communities.
DEL NORTE COUNTY, Ca. --- Neo-cowboy Schwarzenegger’s latest bid for political stardom includes a saddle-sore goose-step with the mafia-like prison guards union. Not surprisingly, glittering stars in the eyes of Arnold and his ranch-hand, Attorney General, Bill Lockyer, have blinded them to escalating tales of corruption festering like pimples around communities closest to the state’s shameful, corruption-riddled, super max prisons.

Within miles of infamous Pelican Bay State Prison, notorious for its abusive guards, the Del Norte County District Attorney, Mike Riese, was reportedly caught in scams to sell illegal automatic weapons and mysteriously dropping felony charges against defendants who were able to cough up over a million dollars in “restitution,” for which Riese raked in a whopping $100,000. investigative fee. Riese reportedly testified before a Grand Jury that he had the approval of ranch-hand Lockyer’s Office in selling freedom-for-money, which Lockyer’s Office later denied.

Even as the ATF confiscated the weapons and Riese was forced to refund the proceeds, which had taken a circuitous accounting route, local Sheriff, Dean Wilson, said Riese had “done nothing illegal.” Wilson added of Riese, “If we believed he had done something illegal, we would be arresting him.”

If ranch-hand Lockyer can’t be troubled with tales of prevaricating, gun-running, freedom-selling, D.A.’s and their pony-show sheriff, twiddling logic in ways even a seven year old sociopath would be embarrassed of, then perhaps Good Ol’ Bill can’t handle the job of guarding our public treasury.

Uber-cowpoke Arnold’s blithe blindness to the plight of citizens whose law enforcement have taken a head-dive down the slippery slope of corruption makes him a wonderful candidate for a starring role as the next Boss Hogg, but not quite gubernatorial material.
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by of prisoners and rural community
Christian Parentti has an article in ZNet about the beginning of the CDC offer to Crescent City residents to construct a maximum security prison in their town following the devasation of an earthquake induced tsunami..

"In 1964 a tsunami swept over Crescent City, California completely destroying the downtown. Only nine people died, but the town—nestled just below the Oregon border—never recovered. It was rebuilt as a shabby imitation of Southern California’s worst planning examples; empty parking spaces and box-like buildings dominate the landscape.

In 1989 another tsunami hit—this time the tidal wave was political. The California Department of Corrections (CDC) rolled in, and with little opposition, built the sprawling, $277.5 million Pelican Bay State Prison, one of the newest, meanest super-max prisons in the system. Pelican Bay is now an international model of sensory deprivation and isolation; half the inmates are deemed incorrigible and locked in their cells 23 hours-a-day. The prison is also Crescent City and Del Norte county’s largest employer—and, some say, its new colonial master."

read on @;
http://zena.secureforum.com/Znet/zmag/articles/june97parenti.htm

Now Pelican Bay is overcrowded and tension between prison gangs and guards results in violence to prisoners, abuse (psychological & physical) and rape. The range of offenses resulting in young men being carted off to Pelican Bay include minor drug offenses (including medical cannabis arrests) and repeated tresspassing (three strike law targets homeless, low income) with other charges thrown in. Here non-violent criminals are forced to interact with murderers, rapists and other violent criminals. In the long term, pennetentiaries like Pelican Bay only worsens people with years of repeated abuse from guards, gangs and more violent prisoners..

Many corporations now employ prisoners in sweatshop like conditions for below minimum wage pay. Computer boards and other various technological devices are assembled in prisons by hand, the long hours and low wages similar to undocumented immigrants in the US and sweatshops operating in less fortunate nations. The only difference is that lower income people in US prisons are accussed of a crime, usually a result of living in poverty or drug addiction..

While people are requested by society to be personally responsible, we can hardly apply this ideology to US corporations, many of whom recieve billions of dollars yearly in taxpayer subsidies, when welfare payments to lower income people are far less. If large US corporations like McDonalds, Wal-Mart, etc.. actually needed to be financially independent of US taxpayer funds, thier business would consume far more resources than the toxic unhealthy substances they create and poison the public with misleading advertisements. Try having heart disease when you're forty and sue McDonalds because they were the only affordable foods available in your neighborhood. This lawsuit in Brooklyn occurred and was dismissed because the person was suppossed to have "free will" and refrain from eating unhealthy foods, despite the fact that this food is physiologically addictive..

Tulane researchers observe low income and ethnic neighborhoods tend to concentrate fast food corporations with few healthy options available nearby without using bus fare;

"Fast Food Joints More Common in Poor, Black Neighborhoods

The high density of fast food outlets in low-income, majority black neighborhoods may contribute to the obesity epidemic, say Tulane University researchers.

"Where people live and the kinds of food available close to them is likely to affect their ability to have a healthy diet," says senior author Karen DeSalvo, chief of general internal medicine at the Tulane University School of Medicine. "We found that high-income and mostly white neighborhoods have fewer fast food outlets per square mile than lower income or mostly black neighborhoods."

read on @;
http://www.healthcentral.com/drdean/408/60975.html

Then we enter the realm of diet influencing behavior and the usually unthought out and hasty decisions that result in an individual being handed a long term prison sentence. The entire US food culture of coffee/caffiene (go faster, work harder), refined sugars (quick boost, downward crash), refined flours, and the synthetic drug culture of meth and crack cocaine influence behavior to fast reactions, when dealing with police can be life altering..

Then this environment where lower income people live is generally contributing to their desperate economic situation and need for fast, thoughtless decisions that result in criminal acts. Exploitation of prisoners for short term corporate economic gain by insulated CEOs is as heinous a crime as whatever the prisoner may have done. This exploitation of prisoners by corporations is a violation of labor law, though the GW bush/Cheney regime doesn't appear to be greatly concerned with obeying any law other than the voices in his sociopatic head..

Slave labor in California's prison industry authority (PIA);

"The type of work program run by the PIA should be considered a violation of human rights for three reasons.

First, the work done is not really voluntary as those who run the program claim. According to District Marketing Representative, Joe Sheppard, prisoners gain good time behavior for working a PIA job, sometimes as much as one day off their sentence for each day worked. Therefore, prisoners who refuse to work for the PIA or other prison-related work are stuck with sentences outrageously long to begin with thanks to Three Strikes and other "get tough" mandatory minimum sentencing laws. To say prison jobs are voluntary when refusing to work can mean much longer sentences is misleading at best.

Second, prisoners working for the PIA are paid slave wages of 30 to 95 cents an hour, leaving prisoners totally estranged from their life-activity. Prisoners putting in eight-hour days of hard work for the PIA, year in and year out, will not enjoy even a sliver of the wealth they have produced ever. Prisoners are human beings and exploitation is exploitation whether it is behind the bars of the California Men's Colony or the barbed wires of a sweatshop in Indonesia. One wonders why prison labor is a violation of human rights in China but not here. Is it because, unlike in China, all US prisoners really are guilty of terrible crimes and deserve the worst? Prisoners are people, two-thirds of whom guilty of non-violent offenses and many the victims of racial profiling, police set-ups, and a justice system severely skewed towards the rights of the rich. The recent LA Rampart Police Division scandal that began in 1998, where over 70 officers were implicated in activities such as evidence planting and over 100 criminal convictions were overturned suggests that our own criminal "injustice" system has much in common with China's.

Third, prisoners working for the PIA do not have labor rights. They do not have the right to organize and remain far out of the reach of state and federal laws regulating workplace safety. The PIA is not required to pay prisoners for holidays, provide workers' compensation, sick leave, health insurance, or any other benefits. In a recent LA Times articles, Sharon Cornu, a spokeswomen for the California Labor Federation asked, "Do they have an advocate who they can turn to if they have a problem on the job?"
"

read on @;
http://www.prisonwall.org/pia2.htm

If Pelican Bay pennetentiary is to continue operations, please reserve a bed for future war criminal GW bush. Include a neighboring cell for Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, and maybe we'll put Feith and Karl Rove on the next teir to avoid any late night strategy whispering into GW's waiting ears..

We the people of the US have a responsibilty to see that all prisoners of Pelican Bay and elsewhere are treated fairly and humanely, as stated in our Constitution. There is no need for any Pelican Bay expansion as proposed by the CDC to alleviate overcrowding. Today is the day to begin releasing any and all non-violent CDC Pelican Bay prisoners who were arrested on cannabis charges. There is no crime in smoking or handling the medicinal cannabis plants. We guarantee that this decision will give remaining prisoners and guards some breathing room and reduce tensions of overcrowding at Pelican Bay and other CDC operated prisons..

Oregon NORML list the outrageous cannabis prohibition drug laws in North America under the current GWbush/Cheney regime, instead of getting reasonable these two war criminals seek to encourage longer sentences (also taxpayer supported) for non-violent cannabis users. BTW, rapists and other violent abusers recieve equal or less sentences than non-violent cannabis users. Many returning veterans will require medical cannabis for their healing, and draconian drug laws will discourage them from getting access to a natural medicine with less side effects than petrochemically derived pharmaceutical products..

"Possession of less than one ounce of marijuana is punishable by a fine of $500 - $1,000. Possession of one ounce or more is punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Conditional discharge is possible for possession offenses. Possession of greater than 110 grams is considered a commercial drug offense and penalties are substantially greater, depending on the prior record of the offender."

read on @;
http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?wtm_view=&Group_ID=4559

Meth abuse and meth related crimes (usually burglary, other non-violent) are preventable, if only the meth trade was dealt with on the upper echelons of the heirarchal drug triangle, maybe start with the CIA corruption? Punishing working class US residents for meth addiction with harsh prison sentences is counterproductive to any healing potential..

There will be no expansion of the Pelican Bay prison anytime soon. The people of the north coast are tired of being taken advantage of by the CDC for suffering economic hardships of an overlogged coastal forest town and frequent tsunamis. The abuse of prison guards by CDC heirarchal structure is mostly psychological, the daily task of depriving many people of their freedom is also a hard task for our gurad's human soul's to accept. Again, alcohol and other albeit legal addiction also mask the pain and suffering of the prison guards. Other are able to emotionally detach and rationalize their position by escapist thinking based on statist propaganda theories (it's just their lot in life, they had their chance, etc..)..

Setting lower income urban people in adversarial positions with lower income rural people and then escalating tensions with the formation of ethnic/regional prison gangs (to stifle prisoner union organizing) is the tactic of the ruling class to prevent any popular organizing for equal rights, community land co-ops, equal distribution of resources, and alleviation of poverty as the root prevention of any future crimes..

The Angola Black Panthers tried to mend the rifts between prisoners during their stay in notorious Angola Pennetentiary in Louisiana;

"The Angola Panthers not only challenged the prison administration, but they also organized to end aspects of the inmate social order that hindered prisoner unity and played into the hands of the guards. The Panthers risked their lives to protect younger and weaker inmates from the rape, prostitution, and sex slavery that pervaded prison life. As Woodfox puts it, "It wasn't much help to go to the security because most of the security people were condoning that type of activity. They would benefit from it because they would get money or favors for allowing rapes to happen. Some of the guards themselves would be involved in the rapes."

The Panthers worked to mend the schism between black and white prisoners that the prison officials manipulated to their advantage, a difficult feat considering that the prisoner housing, dining halls, and worksites were still racially segregated, with privileged living arrangements and work assignments going to white prisoners. The BPP also exposed the widespread corruption of the people who ran Angola, many of whom came from families that had lived on state land and had worked at the prison for several generations. Guards often diverted food, grown by the prisoners for their own consumption, to their own families and friends or sold it in town."

read on @;
http://www.prisonradio.org/angola-three.htm

There is clearly a ruling elite than benefits financially from the racial divide in prisons and antagonisms between people of different ethnicities/cultures. Currently several individuals have occupied the most extreme position of power, an Office in Washington DC nick-named "the White House". From this isolated location the GW bush regime broadcast messages via TV/radio waves instructing the people of north america to support his "War on Terrorism" and not ask him any question when he lies to US and makes severe errors in judgement that result in many innocent Iraqi civilians dead and US soldiers coming home dead to their families. However, it is believed by this author that the Bush regime's errors in judgement are not hasty and thoughtless, instead they are premeditated acts of mass murder..

Again, like CDC prisoners and guards, many people serving in the US military are also lower income and won't have much to look forward to upon return if they become physically ill from depleted uranium exposure or mental trauma. The promises young people heard from military recruiters before they signed on to serve are often not delivered by VA upon return. Many returning US soldiers experience long term cancers induced from depelted uranium exposure. Following return to the US veterans of Iraq are told that their medical insurance doesn't cover "mental trauma" and the VA adamantly denies any risks from depeleted uranium exposure. Depleted uranium was already a known radioactive carcinogen/mutagen from Desert Storm under Bush Sr., and the current GW bush regime was repeatedly warned NOT to use Depleted Uranium in this current invasion of Iraq. Needless to say, GW bush Jr. did not heed this warning either, nor did the military brass bother to tell US soldiers stationed in either Iraq conflict about the health risks of DU exposure..

"
"Because of the chemical and radiological toxicity of DU, the small number of particles trapped in the lungs, kidneys, and bone greatly increase the risk of cancer and all other illnesses over time," Durakovic, an expert of internal contamination of radio-isotopes, said.

According to Durakovic, other symptoms associated with DU poisoning are: emotional and mental deterioration, fatigue, loss of bowel and bladder control, and numerous forms of cancer. Such symptoms are increasing showing up in Iraq 's children and among Gulf War veterans and their offspring, he said.

"Although I personally served in Operation Desert Shield as Unit Commander," Durakovic said, "my expertise of internal contamination was never used because we were never informed of the intended use of DU prior to or during the war."
"

read on @;
http://www.wagingpeace.org/articles/2004/08/15_bollyn_depleted-uranium-blamed-cancer.htm

Even today the GW bush regime annouces the urgency of US soldiers to remain in Iraq "until the job is done", meaning "until Halliburton uncovers some more oil and sells it off to China, ExxonMobil, etc.." Meanwhile US soldiers continue to be exposed to DU in tank armor and also windblown DU fragments remaining airborne in Iraq's desert duststorms..

For these crimes of deceit and misleading the US public into an illegal occupation and invasion of Iraq an international war crimes tribunal for the Bush regime is needed. We in the US request outside assistance (ie., Hugo Chavez) into making this need a reality. If people can stomach locking up a twenty-one year old young man for smoking cannabis in CDC's Pelican Bay than surely we can bring a deceitful oil baron responsible for mass murder and genocide of thousands in Iraq & elsewhere up on charges for misuse of Office of US Presidency for furthering his billionaire families bank account??

Lack of economic oppurtunity results in either military or prison for many lower income north americans. Throughout other locations in rural CA (Susanville, etc..), the CDC remains the sole source of economic sustanence for rural residents. If not a prison, then either a military base or toxic sweatshop factory, plantation, etc...

It certainly doesn't help Crescent City to lose their fishing staple salmon to another dam induced toxic algae/bacteria fish kill in the coastal rivers. Then after local fishing people are out of business they'll have no other choice but to work for the CDC's Pelican Bay prison sweatshop..

We desire to close CDC's Pelican Bay State Pennetentiary and resupply the people of Crescent City with a sustainable economy based on coastal forest ecosystem. No mas working in a sweatshop prison factory within north america..
by Cost to taxpayers; $608 million
The US public is paying for the so-called War on Drugs in more ways than one. The CDC's soaring prison populations from non-violent drug arrests and taxpayer subsidized corporate prison sweatshops are a few of the drains of the public trust. The benefits of decriminalization of drug use is ignored by many in the corporate media, though not by all;

Mario Menendez argues for decriminalization of drug use and investigation of drug kingpin ties with US law enforcement in his essay "Dare to Legalize" found @;

http://narconews.com/hmonth0500.html

One benefit of decriminalizing non-violent drug users is an instant reduction in prisoner populations, thus relieving overcrowding without expensive expansion plans. The CDC announced plans to expand holding capacity at Pelican Bay by construction of additional bed storage buildings, estimated cost to taxpayers, over $608 million..

"Pelican Bay is one of 10 state prisons that may be expanded as part of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation's short-term prison improvement plan. The expansion would cost approximately $608 million, according to the state's estimate.
Pelican Bay could see an additional 550 beds added to its already overcrowded facility, prison spokesman Ken Thomas said. These would be constructed within the prison's existing perimeter, he said, and 400 of those beds would be for lower to mid-level security inmates.
The remaining 150 would be for inmates in administrative segregation, the "prison within the prison" inmates go when they've broken rules.
Pelican Bay was designed to hold 2,376 inmates. Today, the prison is over capacity by 1,098 inmates, Thomas said."

read on @;
http://www.triplicate.com/news/story.cfm?story_no=2153

The costs of state prison expansion are numerous, and slavery in prison sweatshops will certainly not cover the bill. The corporations that profit from illegal prison slave labor only want to see rural communities entrapped in the web of perpetual prison building, bribing the CDC and lawmakers to arrest more young people who will be forced into below minimum wage slavery..

Joe Hallihan explains how super-max prisons have gotten their foot in the door of rural communities economies, and how the cash cow of prison slave labor keeps them there;

"Intrigued, Hallinan spent four years visiting prisons across the country, from California to the rural south. "I just kept writing," he recalls. "In hotel rooms, in airports, on the hood of my car. Writing and saying to myself: 'Oh my God, people are never going to believe this.'"

The result is Going Up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation, Hallinan's devastating examination of the 21st-century prison industry. He first glimpsed that industry's power in a Texas courtroom at the trial of Joe Boy Lambright, the first prison guard in Texas history convicted of killing an inmate. "I saw how the merger of punishment and profit was reshaping this country," Hallinan writes. "How young men like Joe Boy, who might, in another generation, have joined the army or gone to work in a factory, were now turning to prison for their livelihood. I saw job hungry towns, desperate for something to keep their young people from leaving, compete for prisons the way they once had for industries . . ."

Abandoned by heavy industry and bypassed by the electronic revolution, many failing towns in the US's mid-section and south now have a final shot at prosperity. They can become "prison hubs." Just as the Cold War bestowed military bases on grateful backwaters, so the prison boom holds out cash incentives and employment prospects to decaying towns. "The sales pitch to our town was development," explains Doug Richards, an attorney in Springfield, Vermont. Richards recently opposed the imminent construction of a 350-bed state prison outside Springfield, but concedes that the inducements were too attractive for the struggling factory town to refuse. "The state of Vermont offered a package of some $7.5 million and land for a community center. That sold it to the voters."
"

read on @;
http://www.viperrecords.com/activism/prisonbis.shtml

The entity responsible for promoting super-max prisons in economically disadvantaged rural communities is the California Prison Industry Authority;

"The Little Hoover Commission found that the PIA really did not save taxpayers any money at all. "Through the mechanism of forcing these departments to purchase from the PIA, the costs of dealing with inmates are shifted throughout the state government but are still paid by the same public-provided dollar that would cover costs if they were contained in the Department of Corrections budget."
"

read on @;
http://www.prisonactivist.org/crisis/prison-industrial.html


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