Seven Days in Solitary [3/19/2017]

Our Weekly Roundup of News and Views on Solitary Confinement

by | March 19, 2017

•  Lawyers for Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who is currently held in solitary confinement in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City, have filed papers asking that their client be transferred to general population and be granted visiting privileges to speak to his wife. According to CNN, “During the week, Guzman spends 23 hours a day in a small cell with no windows. He is allowed one hour of solitary exercise in a separate cell that holds one treadmill and one stationary bicycle. It is on the way to this exercise room, as he walks by a small window, that Guzman gets a fleeting view of the outside world.”

•  “A 101-page investigation released Friday concludes that corrections officers who locked a schizophrenic inmate in a hot shower at Dade Correctional Institution and left him there for nearly two hours — until realizing he was dead — committed no crime,” reported the Miami Herald. Darren Rainey died in 2012. At the time he was being held in a form of solitary confinement for people with mental illness called a Transitional Care Unit.

•  A New Mexico bill aimed to restrict the use of solitary confinement in the state’s prisons and jails now just needs to be signed by the Governor to become law. The legislation would ban pregnant women and children from being placed in solitary confinement, and also place restricts on when people with mental illness can be placed in isolation.

•  The head of the Rhode Island Department of Corrections, A.T. Wall, has said that he does not support legislative efforts to reduce the use of solitary confinement. “If for example the amount of time that somebody can spend in a particular status is enacted in statute, then it prohibits us from responding to exigent circumstances,” he said. Lawmakers in the state are shortly expected to recommended changes to the use of isolation.

•  A federal court has ruled that a group of people locked up in Illinois “had alleged sufficient facts to prove that the extreme isolation prisoners are subjected to in solitary confinement violates the prohibition against ‘cruel and unusual punishment’ of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” The six named plaintiffs have been in solitary confinement for between 6 months and 17 years, and are seeking to have the lawsuit certified as a class action on behalf of all those facing “extreme isolation” in the state.

•  The Utah Legislature has set aside $3 million in hopes of resolving an ongoing federal lawsuit, which alleges that people with mental illness endure long periods of time in jail, sometimes in solitary confinement, because the state does not have enough hospital beds for treatment. These individuals have all been declared incompetent to stand trial and been ordered into treatment by the court.

•  The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington has brought a lawsuit against Grays Harbor County, alleging that a teenager was repeatedly held in solitary confinement between 2013 and 2016. According to a local outlet, the young man “allegedly spent a total of 75 days locked in a room or in a padded cell with little human interaction or access to his mother. During a particular eight-day stretch, he was allegedly locked in a room spattered with food and blood, with a feces-covered grate over a hole in the ground to use for a toilet.”

•  A New York man formerly incarcerated upstate has filed a lawsuit alleging he was sent to solitary confinement and locked up for an extra year after a guard planted a shank in his shoe. Thomas Ozzborn, 28, took a guilty plea on the weapons charge rather than face a possible 15-year prison term. He was released last month after prosecutors acknowledged that the corrections officer had planted weapons on someone else.

•  The Nashville Scene published an investigation into the 2010 death of Charles Jason Toll, after he was forcibly extracted from his solitary confinement cell at the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution. The reporter asks, “If Jason Toll had been diagnosed as mentally ill earlier, would he have died at the hands of guards at Riverbend?”

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3 comments

  • Jane kirkland

    My only son Jason Toll was in esolitary confinement at Riverbend prison and was killed by guards. He worsehad a mental illness but he also had feeling for other inmates that were in his shoes. The psychiatrist that he had was very hateful. I tried to call an tell her he needed to be put back on his medicine and she hung on me and would not answer the phone again. The next day he was put in solitary confinement. Which made him worse.when the guards picked on him it upset him so much he would act out. Then he would be put in the hole. This all broke my heart. He was always a very loving boy and every thing got bad starting with jail and then prison. H e never hurt anyone he robbed houses I know that is bad but he was put in cells with inmates in for murder. The night he was killed the guard had been picking on him and the guard was told to stay away from him but he did not. They said he ethrew a liquid on the guard .he was in solitary there was no way he could throw water on the guard. He went and told the head officer that he threw liquid on him and he called up a cell extraction team and they took him out to the recreation yard and killed him. They laid on top of him for 5 minutes h e kept telling them he could not breath,they all weighted 1000 pounds . He told them 13 times he could not breath. And they never stopped.i was dealing with this lawsuit for 9 years. I WAS TRYING MY BEST to get them charged with his death.it has been 15 years now and I am still grieving his death. NO one lost their job or were ever charged with his death.

    • Jean Casella and James Ridgeway

      Jane, thank you for sharing your story. We are so very sorry for your loss and for the terrible injustice suffered by you and your son. This is a powerful example of why solitary confinement must be ended.

  • bobo

    I like being alone some times.

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