Friday, November 20, 2009
It is time for this abuse and foolishness to stop!
I have corresponded with Mr. Redman in the past. His crime was terrible, but he deserved better than what he got from Ely State Prison and E. K. McDaniels, warden of that sump hole prison. Mr. Redman's treatment is pervasive throughout the Nevada Prison System, and there are many examples to show this treatment is extensive. Revert back for a moment to the Report of Doctor Noel on Ely State Prison's medical treatment of prisoners--that were left to literally rot to death, because the prison's medical staff, and the warden, refused to give medication to prisoners.
Tim Redman was a young man when his crime was committed and received no help while in prison. Tim needed psychiatric help, not murdered by the hands of his keepers. His death was calculated and preventable. This is what Nevada has to look forward to today and in the future: "Murdered in Nevada's prisons by Nevada Department of Corrections guards and administrators".
Nevada's Department of Correction, their employees and their director is beyond disgraceful--they are pathetic, and Nevada's voters are permitting this behavior to continue. Aren't we all so proud? OK, Nevadan's, remember this: "Paybacks are a bitch".
The picture we display of Mr. Redman, where the side of his face is torn off, was obtained by Ms. Mercedes Maharis, of the Spartacus Project of Nevada--from the district court in Ely, Nevada. This photo was labeled by Warden, E.K. McDaniels, of Ely State Prison: as "a trophy photograph".
Way to go State of Nevada! Aren't we the proud Nevada Citizens to have such great wardens and employees of the Department of Corrections? One could almost wonder how these men, Nevada's correctional guards and wardens, treat their wives and families--couldn't one? We know how they treat Nevada's prisoners.
Does any citizen believe this type treatment towards prisoners is going to make them safer from the prisoners scheduled for release--when they are released from prison, with $20.00 in their pockets to start their lives over? Wake up Nevadan's--this is your tax dollars going down into the pockets of the Department of Correction's pay checks. You are not getting a good return on your dollars.
The harsh reality of life is the example you see everyday. Do you want this same treatment the prisoners receive from Nevada's prisons to be brought home to your parents, grand parent and/or children, and possibly--YOU? Only you can stop this abuse, before it is at your door step, thanks to the department of corrections. You might want to think about this for a minute--it is just a heart beat away. It is time to get this Idiot Governor to wake up to the reality of what is being done to Nevada's prisoners by way of "Legal Rehabilitation". He needs to fire the entire department of correction's administrators and many guards, and start over with decent human beings as "keepers of Nevada's errant ones". If not, do not expect things to get better and your tax dollars going to more deserving programs.
It is time for this abuse and foolishness to stop!
Donald Hinton. Sr., Director
Spartacus Project of Nevada
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
To: All state-paid-parasitic-public-administrators & legislators, and the silent free press
This article by the Spartacus Project of Nevada was originally published on MaketheWallsTransparent.org here, on August 22nd, 2009.
For the record, in my opinion, you are cowards. To make my point, I will address a couple items that should have you poor feeble-minded parasites howling with anger at our state correctional administrators, including the governor and the prison commissioners.
In High Desert State Prison, I have an affidavit in my possession stating the bad behavior of one Officer W, who indulges in illegal and destructive cell searches–by tearing up legal materials needed for court or appeals of the prisoners, and the destruction of anything he deems wrongly possessed–example: Family photographs, some of departed family, friends and loved ones. Purchases from the prisoner canteen. Apparently, this destructive asshole does so with the permission of his superiors and the complete lack of concern from the warden. This type of stupidity is conducive of the destructive burning of prisons, by inmates that can’t take the abuse anylonger–and it looks to many on the outside that this is what the Nevada Department of Corrections is aiming to have happen, because this type behavior continues at all Nevada Prisons.
Additionally, I have affidavits from Lovelock Prison stating the very same abuses from Officer, B, D, and T, for their destructive cell searches. Coupled with threats of hole time for infractions that never happened, or would ever happen, and demanding prisoners help these officers plant illegal devices in cells of the officer’s appointed victims. This agressive and abusive and illegal behavior by guards is a threat to all inmates living under these conditions. It could cost some prisoners their lives.
Let’s continue to look at Lovelock, Nevada, (A medium security Prison) and a warden who has his head under his ass, who permits officer B, officer D & officer T to threaten prisoners to plant knives in other prisoner’s cells, or else these prisoners will suffer these scum officers wrath. A very large offense to the victims of this outrage, and years in the hole, and the denial of any chance of parole–because there is no leadership in this prison, and none is ever going to emerge.
Hell, if anyone believes the director of prisons, one Howard Skolnut, oops director, Howard skolnik, is any type leader–has their head in the same place Lovelock’s Warden, Jack Palmer, has his head. This secret society of prisons conditions is appalling and needs change.
Yesterday, August 18th, 2009 a prisoner who has had enough of this out in the open abuse, reported to a case worker, the abuses that were occurring and have been occurring at Lovelock, State Prison, This prisoner was assurred by said caseworker that he would make this concern to the Warden in the morning of the 19th of August, 2009. Personally! On the morning of the 19th of August, 2009, the case worker spoke to the informative prisoner and stated. “The warden was informed and the men wanting to expose this abuse would be spoken to by the warden and the investigative branch of the prison system”.
This never happen, but the caseworker and the officer involved, one officer B was observed being spoken to by the case worker in his office for approximately 15 minutes.
As of 6:00PM on this date 19th of August, 2009, nothing has been asked of the Lovelock prisoners, nor has the officer been removed from the prison. The three above named officers, and possibly, other officers, may not be fired due to their union contract, but they should be placed outside of the prison to never be in contact with any prisoner in the future–ever again!
Let me tie this abusive behavior together, so the public may be more fully aware. Officer B is awaiting a call to become a police officer, expecting this call in about a month. He then, comes in contact with the general public. Won’t all you fun loving public haters of prison inmates love having a man who manufactures evidence against someone that is totally innocent. What if it is against your grandchildren? Your children? Your parents? Maybe, even–yourself? How does that feel?
Think you may want to be come interested in solving a problem by becoming active in prison reform? Why not? With Officer B on the prowl out side of your homes–you might be in the very prison cells I ‘m speaking of tonight.
Oh, yes, Officer B is 23 years old.
Where are the news outlets in this state that have an ounce of integrity and courage enough to help rid Nevada of this dirty organization. Where are the men of the past like Hank Greenspun, or Michael O’Callanhan? Men who would never let this happen and continue to happen–if they were aware!
I’d call on our government officials, but those gutless varmits are part of the problem. Look at the legislators–a bigger bunch of cowards never lived. Protecting their rich friends, and nothing more. And, of course, themselves! Look to the university law school or the journalistic classes and their professors. Not likely. Their silence is part of the problem.
Nevada have you no pride to defend a group of people that are abused? Never let me hear this country speak of Civil Rights Abuses of other countries. Folks, you have your own Abu Ghraid, Guantanamo Bay, Russia’s Gulags, and Iran, China and Iraqi right under your noses and are afraid to look and see what you see, and correct it.
What has this country become? IS IT REALLY A NATION OF COWARDS?
Donald Hinton, Sr.
Director, Spartacus Project of Nevada
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Las Vegas Sun: Prison chief: 7 staff members accused of felonies (plus comments of the Spartacus Project)
From: Las Vegas Sun
Prison chief: 7 staff members accused of felonies
By Cy Ryan
Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009 | 3:31 p.m.
CARSON CITY – Inmates in the Nevada state prison system aren’t the only ones who have had brushes with the law.
There have been seven felony arrests of prison staff in recent months. One of the officers was charged with armed robbery and attempted assault on a law enforcement officer. That alleged offense occurred in Nye County.
Howard Skolnik, director of the state Department of Corrections, said he has a “serious problem” in Clark County where 29 correctional officers have been terminated. He said these were both probation and full-time officers.
“There’s 180,000 hours worth of training going out the window,” Skolnik told a Thursday meeting of the Advisory Commission on the Administration of Justice. “There are weaknesses in doing our background checks."
The commission, at its first meeting since the Legislature, elected Assemblyman William Horne, D-Las Vegas, as chairman succeeding Chief Justice James Hardesty. Horne said one of the priorities of the commission this time will be victims’ rights.
The commission re-elected Attorney General Catherine Masto as chairwoman of the subcommittee on victims of crime, and Sen. David Parks, D-Las Vegas, as selected chairman of the subcommittee on Juvenile Justice.
Skolnik told the commission there was a “pattern” of inmates who are released from the prison in Susanville, Calif., ending up in Reno. He said some of those freed from prison in Los Angeles will travel to Las Vegas.
“I suspect they will have an impact on us,” he said.
But Bernard Curtis, chief of the state Division of Parole and Probation, said Nevada transports several hundred more out of state than Nevada receives from other states.
Skolnik told the commission that the prison system is about 300 inmates below what was budgeted.
He said he hopes to know within 90 days about plans to lease the closed-down Southern Nevada Correctional Center in Clark County to a firm called Geo for $2.5 million a year.
He said Geo wants to do some cosmetic and upgrades but he wants to make sure the state can take back the prison within 180 days if there is a major increase in the number of inmates.
##
Comments by Spartacus Project:
11/14/09 at 12:49 a.m
To All concerned:
Some of these comments are right on! Others not so much.
First: To be a correctional Guard means you need psychiatric help. Nothing short of a very sick parasite would place himself/herself in a prison setting 8 to 12 hours on a daily basis.
Second: For this sick and weak person who needs a uniform to become an authoritative figure, who commands complete respect from people who can out think him/her at very turn, is a person who in need of his mommy. The correctional guards thinking is on the level of a first grader, and their thought process is that of an imbecile, following the idiotic rules of their administrative leaders.
Third: Most, if not all prison administrators, are in need of a good ass whipping--for their abusive restrictions on prisoners. Yeah, I know you think that's wrong, but go to some of the prison commissioner's meeting, and witness first hand the intellect of these leaders. Your children would puke on this wisdom!
Forth: Treatment by these intellectually deprived guards is what is taken to the outside when these prisoners are released. Why should that matter? It is you, the tax payer/citizen, that takes the hits of these men/women after release. The guard is still protected by other fools in their little prison womb. You are not! Maybe as a citizen you should remember that?
Lastly, as a comment of good standing: "Wouldn't you like to be a fly on the wall of one of the homes where these pathetic guards live--and witness the conversations with their families at dinner time"? It must be hysterical.
Yeah, Honey, I told this really tough guy that I run this place and you'll do whatever I tell you to do. And, after he complied, he cried like a baby--when me and my buddies beat him with our sticks and blasted him with mace. "WE" really showed this guy. You should have been there. I'd have shown you and the kids how to run a prison. And, when it was over "WE" wrote him a infraction violation, which should get him about a year in the hole. Yeah, I'm good.
And, as a personal comment, he is as good as my male pit bull that breeds his own pups!
11/14/09 at 2:39 a.m.
Sorry, I have to come back and point out the interesting comments made by the Director of Prisons. Who fails to mention that he is the responsible person who sets the policy on hiring new personnel. Shouldn't he be taking the responsibility for these failed 180,000 hours of correctional training. After all, he is the paid person on this job. In fact, $130,000.00 a year. And, as taxpayers, we, the citizens, are the payee of this failure of a man to do his job. Did I miss the point?
Now, we have the newly elected legislative chairperson, by others on the Advisory Committee, who states for all to hear this committee will only concern themselves on victims rights. Has this near sighted legislative parasite, my opinion, ever considered the word "JUSTICE"?
Why doesn't this state ever consider justice as a worthy word--when it comes to Nevada's judicial system. Nevada has many innocent persons in their prison system. If, you don't know this to be true, you shouldn't be reading this article.
Nevada's Attorney General, who represents all Nevadan's, but not really. Is a disgrace to the word justice, again--my opinion, as she also chairs some committee on Victims Rights. Think this might be a conflict of interest?
Nevada's bums have found a real place to collect their salaries--and condemn many innocent people to a life of incarceration and slavery, all in the name of safety for Nevadan's citizens. And, if you believe that, I've got a bridge in Brooklyn. Nevada's prison system is nothing but job security for prison administrators and guards--all at the taxpayer's expense.
As a question: "Do you readers think it is just a joke that the OATH KEEPER'S have chartered up"? If, you are not familiar with this group of military and police seekers of Justice--you need to investigate them, and learn for yourselves what they are all about. Only you make the difference.
As a last comment on the prison commissioner's and the treatment of Nevada prisoners--listen to this: Nevada Prisoner's are fed on a daily diet of $1.27 a day. That is all inclusive for three meals. In some prisons in Nevada that is daily sack meals. And, locked down 24/7 for years. However, the feeding of the horses in this prison setting is $2.50 daily.
Still proud of your Nevada Prison System and their treatment of Nevada's prisoners? Someday, these men and women will be, once again, your salesmen, your landscapers, your car washers. your builders, your garage mechanics, your painters and your neighbors. Next time one of these men, or women, smash your face in--or kill your son or daughter, remember this is the type treatment he or she received while in prison and learned by example from our Nevada administrators and guards.
Maybe, it is time to rid ourselves of these pathetic parasites, and start over in our hiring process of decent human beings, who have a clear understanding of what is needed to correct human behavior--properly!
11/14/09 at 3:15 a.m.
To All Concerned:
Just for a minute, let's consider the guards at Lovelock State Prison, who have been conducting themselves in a disgraceful manner--by demanding prisoners place, in other prisoner's cells, contraband and knives--so said guards could find and charge said prisoners for this phony crime. This "alleged crime" could cost this prisoner years in the hole, or a lost parole date, or even a new sentence by a court.
This is what we pay our prison administrators to supervise. These guards are felons, and they act as felons. They need to be in a cell as well as some of Nevada's other prisoners. In fact, I'm going to help these felon guards get that needed cell.
I have made aware the prison administrators of this behavior. I succeeded in only getting the prisoners involved, who refused to participate in this felony behavior, transferred to another state institution, and placed in the hole for 60 days. At my constant nagging about disgraceful behavior by administrators, the men were transferred back to Lovelock--exonerated of any wrong doing, but the guards were not sanctioned. They are prancing around as though they are exempted from wrong doing.
I couldn't get an article in the news papers or the TV stations of this felony behavior, but maybe this comment will help get it out that there is a cover up at our prisons--at the highest level.
For the record: I finally went to the Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney General and the FBI. I have an appointment with the FBI on Monday for the filing of a complaint on these guards and the administrators. It will be filed under Public Corruption. What I couldn't get the Nevada Prison System to clean up--the Federal Government will do for them, and possibly, charge the prison administrators, too.
The point here is this: Nevada Prison Administrators piss off other parents--and let's rock! All of us will not place our heads under your feet.
Shame on our Nevada's News Media for being so cowardly in helping to stop the felony behavior of our parasitic guards and prison administrators, by ducking this issue. Has the State of Nevada paid for your silence? Just asking? I know how it appears to me!
Prison chief: 7 staff members accused of felonies
By Cy Ryan
Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009 | 3:31 p.m.
CARSON CITY – Inmates in the Nevada state prison system aren’t the only ones who have had brushes with the law.
There have been seven felony arrests of prison staff in recent months. One of the officers was charged with armed robbery and attempted assault on a law enforcement officer. That alleged offense occurred in Nye County.
Howard Skolnik, director of the state Department of Corrections, said he has a “serious problem” in Clark County where 29 correctional officers have been terminated. He said these were both probation and full-time officers.
“There’s 180,000 hours worth of training going out the window,” Skolnik told a Thursday meeting of the Advisory Commission on the Administration of Justice. “There are weaknesses in doing our background checks."
The commission, at its first meeting since the Legislature, elected Assemblyman William Horne, D-Las Vegas, as chairman succeeding Chief Justice James Hardesty. Horne said one of the priorities of the commission this time will be victims’ rights.
The commission re-elected Attorney General Catherine Masto as chairwoman of the subcommittee on victims of crime, and Sen. David Parks, D-Las Vegas, as selected chairman of the subcommittee on Juvenile Justice.
Skolnik told the commission there was a “pattern” of inmates who are released from the prison in Susanville, Calif., ending up in Reno. He said some of those freed from prison in Los Angeles will travel to Las Vegas.
“I suspect they will have an impact on us,” he said.
But Bernard Curtis, chief of the state Division of Parole and Probation, said Nevada transports several hundred more out of state than Nevada receives from other states.
Skolnik told the commission that the prison system is about 300 inmates below what was budgeted.
He said he hopes to know within 90 days about plans to lease the closed-down Southern Nevada Correctional Center in Clark County to a firm called Geo for $2.5 million a year.
He said Geo wants to do some cosmetic and upgrades but he wants to make sure the state can take back the prison within 180 days if there is a major increase in the number of inmates.
##
Comments by Spartacus Project:
11/14/09 at 12:49 a.m
To All concerned:
Some of these comments are right on! Others not so much.
First: To be a correctional Guard means you need psychiatric help. Nothing short of a very sick parasite would place himself/herself in a prison setting 8 to 12 hours on a daily basis.
Second: For this sick and weak person who needs a uniform to become an authoritative figure, who commands complete respect from people who can out think him/her at very turn, is a person who in need of his mommy. The correctional guards thinking is on the level of a first grader, and their thought process is that of an imbecile, following the idiotic rules of their administrative leaders.
Third: Most, if not all prison administrators, are in need of a good ass whipping--for their abusive restrictions on prisoners. Yeah, I know you think that's wrong, but go to some of the prison commissioner's meeting, and witness first hand the intellect of these leaders. Your children would puke on this wisdom!
Forth: Treatment by these intellectually deprived guards is what is taken to the outside when these prisoners are released. Why should that matter? It is you, the tax payer/citizen, that takes the hits of these men/women after release. The guard is still protected by other fools in their little prison womb. You are not! Maybe as a citizen you should remember that?
Lastly, as a comment of good standing: "Wouldn't you like to be a fly on the wall of one of the homes where these pathetic guards live--and witness the conversations with their families at dinner time"? It must be hysterical.
Yeah, Honey, I told this really tough guy that I run this place and you'll do whatever I tell you to do. And, after he complied, he cried like a baby--when me and my buddies beat him with our sticks and blasted him with mace. "WE" really showed this guy. You should have been there. I'd have shown you and the kids how to run a prison. And, when it was over "WE" wrote him a infraction violation, which should get him about a year in the hole. Yeah, I'm good.
And, as a personal comment, he is as good as my male pit bull that breeds his own pups!
11/14/09 at 2:39 a.m.
Sorry, I have to come back and point out the interesting comments made by the Director of Prisons. Who fails to mention that he is the responsible person who sets the policy on hiring new personnel. Shouldn't he be taking the responsibility for these failed 180,000 hours of correctional training. After all, he is the paid person on this job. In fact, $130,000.00 a year. And, as taxpayers, we, the citizens, are the payee of this failure of a man to do his job. Did I miss the point?
Now, we have the newly elected legislative chairperson, by others on the Advisory Committee, who states for all to hear this committee will only concern themselves on victims rights. Has this near sighted legislative parasite, my opinion, ever considered the word "JUSTICE"?
Why doesn't this state ever consider justice as a worthy word--when it comes to Nevada's judicial system. Nevada has many innocent persons in their prison system. If, you don't know this to be true, you shouldn't be reading this article.
Nevada's Attorney General, who represents all Nevadan's, but not really. Is a disgrace to the word justice, again--my opinion, as she also chairs some committee on Victims Rights. Think this might be a conflict of interest?
Nevada's bums have found a real place to collect their salaries--and condemn many innocent people to a life of incarceration and slavery, all in the name of safety for Nevadan's citizens. And, if you believe that, I've got a bridge in Brooklyn. Nevada's prison system is nothing but job security for prison administrators and guards--all at the taxpayer's expense.
As a question: "Do you readers think it is just a joke that the OATH KEEPER'S have chartered up"? If, you are not familiar with this group of military and police seekers of Justice--you need to investigate them, and learn for yourselves what they are all about. Only you make the difference.
As a last comment on the prison commissioner's and the treatment of Nevada prisoners--listen to this: Nevada Prisoner's are fed on a daily diet of $1.27 a day. That is all inclusive for three meals. In some prisons in Nevada that is daily sack meals. And, locked down 24/7 for years. However, the feeding of the horses in this prison setting is $2.50 daily.
Still proud of your Nevada Prison System and their treatment of Nevada's prisoners? Someday, these men and women will be, once again, your salesmen, your landscapers, your car washers. your builders, your garage mechanics, your painters and your neighbors. Next time one of these men, or women, smash your face in--or kill your son or daughter, remember this is the type treatment he or she received while in prison and learned by example from our Nevada administrators and guards.
Maybe, it is time to rid ourselves of these pathetic parasites, and start over in our hiring process of decent human beings, who have a clear understanding of what is needed to correct human behavior--properly!
11/14/09 at 3:15 a.m.
To All Concerned:
Just for a minute, let's consider the guards at Lovelock State Prison, who have been conducting themselves in a disgraceful manner--by demanding prisoners place, in other prisoner's cells, contraband and knives--so said guards could find and charge said prisoners for this phony crime. This "alleged crime" could cost this prisoner years in the hole, or a lost parole date, or even a new sentence by a court.
This is what we pay our prison administrators to supervise. These guards are felons, and they act as felons. They need to be in a cell as well as some of Nevada's other prisoners. In fact, I'm going to help these felon guards get that needed cell.
I have made aware the prison administrators of this behavior. I succeeded in only getting the prisoners involved, who refused to participate in this felony behavior, transferred to another state institution, and placed in the hole for 60 days. At my constant nagging about disgraceful behavior by administrators, the men were transferred back to Lovelock--exonerated of any wrong doing, but the guards were not sanctioned. They are prancing around as though they are exempted from wrong doing.
I couldn't get an article in the news papers or the TV stations of this felony behavior, but maybe this comment will help get it out that there is a cover up at our prisons--at the highest level.
For the record: I finally went to the Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney General and the FBI. I have an appointment with the FBI on Monday for the filing of a complaint on these guards and the administrators. It will be filed under Public Corruption. What I couldn't get the Nevada Prison System to clean up--the Federal Government will do for them, and possibly, charge the prison administrators, too.
The point here is this: Nevada Prison Administrators piss off other parents--and let's rock! All of us will not place our heads under your feet.
Shame on our Nevada's News Media for being so cowardly in helping to stop the felony behavior of our parasitic guards and prison administrators, by ducking this issue. Has the State of Nevada paid for your silence? Just asking? I know how it appears to me!
Monday, November 2, 2009
Conditions at SDCC (2008)
This is a letter from an inmate at Southern Desert Correctional Center (SDCC), Indian Springs, NV, about the deteriorating conditions there:
September 12, 2008
To: Mr. Donald Hinton Spartacus Project
Dear Don:
I am writing to make you aware of what is happening at Southern Desert Correctional Center (SDCC), Indian Springs, NV, with the hope that you can confront the appropriate authorities and politicians to improve our situation. You may already be aware of some of these things, and some are specific to SDCC where our living conditions have steadily deteriorated at the direction of Warden Brian Williams and his assistants.
1. Parole hearings are now being conducted in absentia and almost no one is being paroled, and certainly not one year prior to expiration as directed by legislature. The system is clogged up as ever and they are just perpetuating the problem by not paroling people, as they will just have to see them again in a year or two. The absentia hearings are taking place many months after the eligibility dates, but the dumps are effective from the late hearing date, not the original eligibility date.
2. Good time credit is still not being given day for day. They are giving 6 credits per month instead of 10 days, or 12 credits instead of 20 days, depending on the circumstances.
3. Overcrowding has become a real problem at SDCC since they built two new housing units, adding 500 more inmates to the yard with no additional support services, resulting
in:
a. Culinary being so busy trying to keep up that it takes hours to feed all the inmates.
They have even resorted to handing out sack lunches at breakfast to try to keep up. The quality and quantity of food has been cut, I guess to try to save on road costs, leaving hungry inmates.
b. An overwhelmed Medical department with one doctor, one dentist, and an eye doctor that comes in one or two days a month, to service 2.300 inmates… They were already besieged before adding the extra inmates, now it is completely out-of-hand having to wait months on end for an appointment.
c. The Education department was not large enough to handle the amount of inmates before the new housing units were added, now it too is completely overwhelmed with people having to wait forever to get into a class. Vocational students who have their high school diploma but need additional training, such as computers, have no hope of getting a class.
d. Visiting times have been cut substantially because they don't have enough room to accommodate everyone. Someone wanting to visit has to make an appointment a week in advance and can only visit for a morning or afternoon, not the entire day. People are not allowed to use the visiting patio anymore, further diminishing the amount of visitors that can be accommodated. People are being denied visits because there is not enough room.
e. Yard Time bas been reduced significantly since Brian Williams took over. The yard used to be open to each unit as they were released for chow. Now the yard is not opened until all units have been fed, and considering the extra time it now takes to feed a11 these inmates, we get less than half the yard time we used to get. They have also reduced the number of days that each unit gets yard time to cut down on the amount of inmates on the yard at any one time, again a result of the overpopulation. Inmates are also being made late to class and their programming activities because the yard does not open on time.
4. Convenience Bed Moves are no longer allowed, so if eel1mates are not getting along, the only alternative is to go to the hole. This policy results in violence and makes living conditions unbearable in certain conditions. Convenience bed moves were accommodated until Brian Williams got here.
5. Outcounts so that inmates can remain at their job during the 11 :15 a.m. count time instead of having to return to their unit has been eliminated, wasting valuable work time and putting a strain on free staff and the inmate workers because they can't keep up with their workload. 1 to 1-1/2 hours a day is being wasted.
6. Door calls have been instituted where inmates can only enter or leave their housing unit during a ten minute time span on the hour and half hour. Inmates are being made late for appointments and other obligations, and if they have to leave work to get their latmdry or store purchases, they have to wait to get in and out oftheir unit to put their things in their cell, making them lose more worklprogramming time. To make matters more diffieult, some guards are not keeping to tbe established door eaU sehedule and only open them when and if they feellike it.
7. The Package Program where inmate's families could order clothing and food items for them twice a year has been eliminated. Clothing items have also been eliminated from the inmate store, so no clothing can be purchased at all. This is only going to cost the state more money having to provide clothing that most inmates used to buy. There are also rumors that they are going to put all inmates in jumpsuits, which will cause a rebellion as many will not tolerate this humiliation.
8. The Inmate Store and Coffee Shop have both been forced to substantially cut down the food items available for purchase. Inmates that can afford it buy most of their food from the stores because the culinary food is so horrible. Now that is being restricted which will make the prison food costs increase unnecessarily.
9. Inmate jobs are very hard to get because there are not enough of them, and more are being eliminated, instead of trying to create them. This results in longer prison sentences because inmates have no way of earning the good time credit. All night time porter jobs were recently eliminated, putting dozens of inmates out of work.
10. A new camp is under construction outside the fence of SDCC, at the same time as the state is having budget problems and supposedly were to cut out all new construction. I wonder if the taxpayers are aware of this.
I hope that you can find an opportunity to address these subjects at the appropriate level so that our quality of living and parole issues can improve. Thank you for your efforts on our behalf.
Sincerely,
(an inmate at SDCC)
P.O. Box 208,
Indian Springs, NV 89070
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Letter to Judge James Hardesty and the Advisory Commission on the Administration of Justice Carson City, NV
SPARTACUS PROJECT OF NEVADA
DONALD HINTON, DIRECTOR
March 16, 2008
To: Judge James Hardesty
Advisory Commission on the Administration of Justice, Carson City, Nevada
Re: Judiciary, Prison & Parole Abuse
Judge Hardesty, Chairman:
I hope this letter holds some interest for you, because as of this writing, I think you are doing a good job of bringing forth the problems within our state for prison & parole abuse and corrections. There is a great need to have these problems resolved. This State's application for corrections & sentencing. is without conscience, as to the treatment of human beings labeled felons. Once these labeled felons are sentenced to within the walls of our prison system-a secret society takes over & places outrageous conditions on these men & women. Conditions you could not live with & neither could the masters in charge. The master's rule with complete domination with little intelligence to guide them, except that which is told tor them to do, in the treatment of the convicted persons in front of them. The idea that they should think before action is taken, in each & every case-is beyond them. As a Tax-payer, I'm offended and so should each & every tax-payer in the State of Nevada. Present company not excluded. Hopefully, this committee gets to the meat of the problem & isn't just fluff, as many committees are.
From the arrest, to the newspapers covering the incidents with one-sided coverage of guilt, to the district attorney's overcharging, to the judge's who have so little time to dispense honest justice to someone who had a public defender, to the prosecutor's bias statements of theory~ it any wonder that Nevada has so many prisoners? It appears to me, and others, that this court system in Nevada is just another joke, fabricated to keep connected persons employed. "Myself, and others, view this state's justice as shooting fish in a barrel, and then, calling themselves sportsmen." I suggest in Nevada, as well as in other state's treatment of prisoners, do not take pride in the abuse ot prisoners in this country. It is shameful and I suggest, this committee knows that to be true.
There must be change for better treatment of prisoners & shorter sentences, using intelligent ideas 10 get the proper treatment in place. Enough of Directors of Prison's, who have had inmates shove guns down their throats in other state's institutions, and then, Nevada Governor's believe they are the best qualified to warehouse men & women any place in the world, including Nevada, and knowingly allow them to state-for the newspapers to print-that they believe all inmates are RATS. This is a biased opinion given to the public for self grandizement, and wrong. Where is it written that those who live in Nevada & work the judicial system & the legislature, are so moral that we can keep-men & women in prison for long periods of time to appease the whoremasters of whorehouses & the great gambling institutions-to show the world that we are worthy of their spent dollars in the whorehouses and gambling joints in this state. For the record, damned few of us share in those profit dollars taken in by our best profit makers. How foolish is the Nevada Tax-Payer to allow an institution to tell us how much they wilt pay in taxes? To me, it just shows how easily Nevadan's can.be lead to believe anything - stated to them by those that rule and lobby this state to death. That in itself, is another story-and disgraceful. It certainly isn't fair to the hard working men & women in Nevada. Nor, are the Department of Corrections, & the judicial systems in Nevada-fair to their citizen tax-payers! ENOUGH! ENOUGH!
Let's look at Director of Prisons, Howard Skolnik's system of justice. A few now, more later:
He has not allowed the newspapers to be delivered to High Desert State Prison at $12.00 a month. In favor of mailed into the prison at $40.00 a month. Were the guards stealing inmate's newspapers?
He has allowed his warden at High Desert State Prison to deny shaving equipment to all in Administrative Segregation. Why, because one person may have made a crude, and ineffectual, weapon? If that is the case, get rid of all the weapon-rocks on the HDSP yard. Is this reasonable or punitive or stupid? The inmates have been shaving with throw-away razors for years. Why now?
Why is this prison system, in all the years it has operated, not made better arrangements for protective custody inmates, other than locking them up 24 hours a day? Three showers a week? Limited reading, in fact, no library. No legal library. No schooling-for any reason! Little human contact. No television unless you can afford one or an administrator will agree to loan you a confiscated television set-taken from another inmate for some reason or other. No expense to the state. All this good treatment for cooperating with state officials or the courts! How sweet is that? You believe that is good treatment? Why don't you try it for three days, and then, tell me what you think? Surely, you wouldn't expect someone else to be a better man, or woman, than you-would you? Then, I want you to think about this-as all you will see for possibly years, is four blank walls, and a steel door. Don't ask someone else to do what you can't do. After all, we're Americans. We don't do these things to our own! Maybe in China, or Asia, or Afghanistan, but not to our own men and women of America! How proud are we now? Don't you feel safer knowing that cooperating inmates are locked down 24/7 within a padlocked cell? I certainly do!
Then, I want you to think about the men, or women, that are thrown into Administration Segregation, for an infraction of some prison rule. Many, for long periods of time-or even years. Do you think they had some type of court hearing? Of course, they did. It is called a Kangaroo Court. They are going to the hole because the budget has set aside 25% for such administrative action. And, you bet, NDOC is never going to let the budget fall. Next year, they can hire more guards, & administrators, to see them through the hard times. And, let us not forget the $$ raises & benefits for this dangerous job. NDOC must be rewarded for keeping their meticulous records on these dangerous inmates. And, of course, to ask tor a larger budget tor the coming years. TAX-PAYERS EAT IT AGAIN!
Let's speak to the dental & medical needs of inmates. Does non-existent have any meaning to you? That is pretty much the extent of medical and dental. Teeth needing fillings-are pulled. Almost unheard of to get a filling. Ad Seg inmates have no way of getting to the doctor-if the prison has a doctor. Many times they do not. After the "KlTE" has been sent to the doctor, it is unknown how many days they will wait for the nurse to determine your need to see the doctor, or if, indeed, you do ever get to see the doctor. Most times it is a wait of about a week. Most illness has passed-by that time. Thank God, for the body to heal itself. Dental is another story. Ever have a tooth ache? Not pleasant-is it. Happens every day in prison, but no relief will ever come. Most times, because there is no dentist, or he is so overcome with patients that even asking is a joke. A very painful joke! As a convicted felon-the State of Nevada is obligated to keep this man, or woman, not only safe from harm, but to provide him, or her, with the necessities of food, cleanliness, and good health. NOT IN NEVADA. WHY IS THAT? Is medical & dental monies needed for overtime or bonus pay?
It isn't being property used in Nevada's prisons for inmate care. If any committee member thinks this is a ''too bad" scenario-exchange your insurance. Please, exchange your insurance for you, and your family, to the Nevada Prison Care Plan. Laugh all the way to the cemetery. See Exibit No. 1. Ask to interview Robin Jones. #93575. Ask to interview Robert Rieger, #96299. On health & death.
Let's talk about the cemetery. Let's talk about John Leone. John Leone died at HDSP. He died in July or August of 2007. He reported to his cell as sick, and asked the officer to let him to see the nurse, and ultimately to see the doctor. Mr. Leone went into his cell and waited until he felt he could no longer wait for the guard to call tor medical help. With the entire unit witnessing the seeking of help by Mr. Leone-he continued to be ignored. The unit became involved and started calling the guard, listed as Officer Kennedy, who was on duty and continued to ignore Mr. Leone's call tor help. The official cause of death was suicide. To the inmates that witnessed the entire scene-it was institutional, negligent homicide. See exhibit No. 2.
Good medical help with the aid of a trained correctional officer-an inmate's state prison protector. (Yeah, sure!) Now, that I know-you are informed, I'm waiting to hear the spin the NDOC will come up with to be found blameless. Oh, yeah, just like the policemen that kill citizens-they are always found to be blameless by the coroner's juries-until the federal courts find them monetarily guilty, but not state murderers. Sweet! Tax-payers bite it again! Let's try to interview all parties to this incident, instead of just correctional officers, protecting each other. Further spin on this incident is just too revolting. As committee members-try to get this one right. You are at HDSP your next meeting. Ask to interview Robin Jones. #93575 about his health and the death of Mr. Leone. You might learn something. Just don't let NDOC punish this man for speaking out to you committee members. Because, they can & will…
Let's talk about prison mail delivery. Sometimes two or three weeks late, or never delivered, or mark "return to sender". Nah, let's not, l've previously given you that information and exhibits. Do you remember which trash can you committee members threw the information?
Let's talk about inmate-paid-for-magazines-subscriptions being delivered late, and read, by officers before the delivery to the inmate-that paid for the subscription. I know, it sounds petty, but the institutional guards thrive on pettiness, except when it relates to them. Isn't it interesting that the guards demand perfection in the worst of situations? Maybe, as a tax-payer, I should demand of the guards to set an example. Better yet, what do you commissioners think? As a tax- payer, and a member of the public, I only get to watch the proceedings of this commission-l have no voice, even though I am allowed to give my comments at the end of your meetings for three to five minutes. Surely, I'm not expected to believe my input is ever going to be considered by any committee member, especially law enforcement members. Ladies & Gentlemen, I'm not that naive. But, come voter time - I'm not forgetting the results of this committee. I want reasonable change & not the same crap I've been fed by the NDOC & Parole Commissioners. Additionally, I'm not forgetting legislators & judges. If this committee, and state, cannot become aware of human and civil rights-just like in poker, it is time to fold your hand and get out. The cry for further oppression of Law & Order is over. The appointed prison & parole directors have made a fool out of this governor. Why the governor hasn't seen through this huge tax guzzling farce is disgusting & disheartening. I expected better. The Governor, if his enemies have their way-may be sitting in a prison cell some day himself. His problems are not over. Yeah; I know, it is not nice to tell the truth-and the obvious in this state-because that isn't the way this state operates. Oh-my! l never should have left the farm.
I think, I could point out many other things that are wrong with this State's policies in judicial, but you know most of them already. Why beat the bush to death for things so obvious. There is maltreatment in our courts, prisons and with the parole board. It is a disgrace to the world. It can't continue to be ignored. We, the United States, have lost face with so many other countries--it is no longer something that can be ignored.
This committee has the perfect opportunity to make changes to correct years of wrong doing by Nevada and its henchmen. Will remind you in the late 192O's, a man claiming in the name of Law & Order-that he had the way to provide the world with perfect harmony. His name, oh, yes, Adolph Hitler. I'm convinced the Law & Order slogan has frightened the citizens of Nevada sufficiently to keep Law & Order around spending foolishly my tax-dollars, but for how much longer? Sleeping giants do awaken-occasionally. We all know the saying: "You can't fool me all the time ... I think, it would be a good time to tell the truth that keeping men locked away in a cell without human contact for long periods of time-has serious consequences, upon release to the general public. You best hope they don't. change direction and go after the ones suppressing them, and have suppressed them for years. It is not a pleasant thought, but a true possibility. One I'd never like to see.
And, it is a consequence that does not need to happen-if intelligence comes to the tore, instead of forceful brutality, or business as usual. Committee members, you have a perfect chance to bring Nevada out of every No. 1 bad category that I can think of. For example: Education, home foreclosures, prison population and etc., and make it No.1 in criminal behavioral change, & rehabilitation, for the best example the world can see. It is time to take the leadership in this continuing, ruinous, criminal behavior, and show the world that Nevada can think our-selves out of this horrendous climate of bad behavior. If this committee thinks of itself as an intelligent body of men & women-and can get serious & solve this problem & not continue business as usual, & continually hoping to fill the unnecessary beds now being built at Nevada's High Desert State Prison. This committee, can and will, do it. The High Desert State Prison building project is a fool's ego.
Which brings me to AB510. That bill addresses C, D. & E felonies only. Sentences of 1 to 4 years and 1 to 5 years. Certainly, no more than 400 state inmates would qualify tor this program of release. Would you be so good as to ask the director of prisons, and the parole board chairperson, to show you, and me, where they have come up with the number of 1600 inmates that possibly could be released by this bill's passage, and the possible release of violent criminals? As they have told this committee so many times. To me, this is blantant crap, being passed along to this committee as true, but in reality is just another fear factor-these two agencies have used over the years to keep their jobs-at the expense of a Nevada tax-payer's purse. Don't let me be right, and this committee not recommend to the Governor-that these two persons be relieved of their state positions as inept & incapable.
Lastly-for this letter, interview inmates within the HDSP prison-in April, that are not plants tor your fact finding meeting. Do not let yourselves be set up as patsies, and greet good cheer inmates-that are just wonderful with the prison system. It has been done before and will be tried again-if left unchecked. Don't fallfor the old saying: "Fool me once etc…, because you have been fooled before."
Respectfully submitted.
Addendum to letter of March 16, 2008:
There are excessive charges for phone use. The new phone company, I'm told, will not honor the past purchases of phone cards of the inmates. No refunds, therefore, must use or lose. That's great, but some inmates cannot use the phone at their leisure. It is appointment only, and then, it is not a certainty. Who profits when the inmates lose? Not the inmates, nor their families and loved ones.
There are NRS listings tor 209.243, 209.246, 209.247, 209.2475-that permit the prison director to confiscate money sent to inmates by family, friends & loved ones, for any and all decisions brought forth by institutions, but there is no due process. Doesn't the Constitution of the United States guarantee me that right? Why is my money, sent to an inmate, confiscated but inmate's earned monies are not? I do not feel I should be paying tor this institutional rip-off. My money is for the exclusive use of the inmate I sent it to for necessities-not a prison without due process in place. The NRS also calls for a set amount to be determined by the NDOC Director to be safe from prison confiscation. Can this committee tell me what that amount has been determined to be?
Can this committee tell me why it takes four to six months for a prison to accept, or deny, a request tor visiting? Please, don't tell me the sad story about needing more help. Lets just ask some public prison employees to do their job, completely and quickly. This delay is ridiculous, and childish!
The allotment of $ 0.77 given tor each meal served by the Department of Corrections is completely without conscience or morality. I challenge this committee to try living on such a pitiful amount, and I ask that all committee members share an inmate meal at the prison-the day your committee meets at HDSP. Then, ask the inmates: "If this is a typical meal, or one made for your arrival?" Might learn something about deceitful departments within the State of Nevada! Maybe…
Electronic purchases are outrageous for price. I understand the 19 inch television set has gone by the way side at the women's prison. They now offer a 9" television for $200.00 No warranty after 30 days. Why, the manufacturer's warranty is one year? Music discs for CD Players are extremely high priced. The profit to the institution is over 200% to 300%. Is this rip-off really necessary? Most earned income from canteen purchases are to go to activities that all inmates can use and / or enjoy. Not to the NDOC's pocket, or their employees personal accounts. Audit this one! Possible suspected fraud here.
Case worker's mistakes are extremely callous. No error can be verified between the parole board and the prison. There is no creditability between these two agencies of the State of Nevada. Why? Both are inscripted for the protections of the state! Do Nevadans really need this pettiness with such serious concerns? Put the Parole Board and the NDOC under one control, and let’s get some integrity back into this correctional fairy tale.
STOP! The parole board's arrogance & stupidity, for reading into an inmates sentencing-charges that have been dropped or never pursued by the courts. Has this board's commissioners taken to reading crystal balls? That is not their job. The Courts, in theory, has given the correct punishment to the intended person. The parole board, with their self-righteous sword of justice, has no authority to enhance any convicted felon's charges, to meet their expectations, or second guess what the court has deemed proper. Why has the State of Nevada taken so long to recognize this outrageous behavior? Who died and made the Parole Board Commissioners GOD? They go to the bathroom with their pants down, just like every member on this commission, and myself! Why are they so special to the state of Nevada? Isn't it time Nevada woke up, and look charge of their mistakes? This behavior is disgusting!
When are NDOC, and the Parole Board's personnel & computers, ever going to get the days for credits to the inmates correct? This behavior borders on egrecious stupidity and / or complete disregard for this committee's questions. Are you certain this committee has the power to make change? So far, your questions are proper-it is the obvious circumventing of answers that baffle me. What answers? There are many more egrecious points to bring to this committee as bad behavior and disrespect to the inmates, inmates families, loved ones and tax-payers of this state. The legislature will be meeting soon for bills to be drafted for the 2009 session. Hopefully, your recommendations will be supportive of the Nevada citizen and Tax-payer to stop the abuse and the bleeding of tax-payers dollars to support this Prison Industrial Complex Disaster. Your intelligent report is important Please, do the right thing!
Lastly, where are the schools & trade information-skills the inmates can take home with them & use tor a better life tor themselves & their families-never again to return to prison, because they have a life? A prison is more than just a one way street.Tax-payers’ lives could possibly depend on your decisions. Nevada needs to wake up & smell the roses. They grow for everyone! Even me…
DONALD HINTON, DIRECTOR
March 16, 2008
To: Judge James Hardesty
Advisory Commission on the Administration of Justice, Carson City, Nevada
Re: Judiciary, Prison & Parole Abuse
Judge Hardesty, Chairman:
I hope this letter holds some interest for you, because as of this writing, I think you are doing a good job of bringing forth the problems within our state for prison & parole abuse and corrections. There is a great need to have these problems resolved. This State's application for corrections & sentencing. is without conscience, as to the treatment of human beings labeled felons. Once these labeled felons are sentenced to within the walls of our prison system-a secret society takes over & places outrageous conditions on these men & women. Conditions you could not live with & neither could the masters in charge. The master's rule with complete domination with little intelligence to guide them, except that which is told tor them to do, in the treatment of the convicted persons in front of them. The idea that they should think before action is taken, in each & every case-is beyond them. As a Tax-payer, I'm offended and so should each & every tax-payer in the State of Nevada. Present company not excluded. Hopefully, this committee gets to the meat of the problem & isn't just fluff, as many committees are.
From the arrest, to the newspapers covering the incidents with one-sided coverage of guilt, to the district attorney's overcharging, to the judge's who have so little time to dispense honest justice to someone who had a public defender, to the prosecutor's bias statements of theory~ it any wonder that Nevada has so many prisoners? It appears to me, and others, that this court system in Nevada is just another joke, fabricated to keep connected persons employed. "Myself, and others, view this state's justice as shooting fish in a barrel, and then, calling themselves sportsmen." I suggest in Nevada, as well as in other state's treatment of prisoners, do not take pride in the abuse ot prisoners in this country. It is shameful and I suggest, this committee knows that to be true.
There must be change for better treatment of prisoners & shorter sentences, using intelligent ideas 10 get the proper treatment in place. Enough of Directors of Prison's, who have had inmates shove guns down their throats in other state's institutions, and then, Nevada Governor's believe they are the best qualified to warehouse men & women any place in the world, including Nevada, and knowingly allow them to state-for the newspapers to print-that they believe all inmates are RATS. This is a biased opinion given to the public for self grandizement, and wrong. Where is it written that those who live in Nevada & work the judicial system & the legislature, are so moral that we can keep-men & women in prison for long periods of time to appease the whoremasters of whorehouses & the great gambling institutions-to show the world that we are worthy of their spent dollars in the whorehouses and gambling joints in this state. For the record, damned few of us share in those profit dollars taken in by our best profit makers. How foolish is the Nevada Tax-Payer to allow an institution to tell us how much they wilt pay in taxes? To me, it just shows how easily Nevadan's can.be lead to believe anything - stated to them by those that rule and lobby this state to death. That in itself, is another story-and disgraceful. It certainly isn't fair to the hard working men & women in Nevada. Nor, are the Department of Corrections, & the judicial systems in Nevada-fair to their citizen tax-payers! ENOUGH! ENOUGH!
Let's look at Director of Prisons, Howard Skolnik's system of justice. A few now, more later:
He has not allowed the newspapers to be delivered to High Desert State Prison at $12.00 a month. In favor of mailed into the prison at $40.00 a month. Were the guards stealing inmate's newspapers?
He has allowed his warden at High Desert State Prison to deny shaving equipment to all in Administrative Segregation. Why, because one person may have made a crude, and ineffectual, weapon? If that is the case, get rid of all the weapon-rocks on the HDSP yard. Is this reasonable or punitive or stupid? The inmates have been shaving with throw-away razors for years. Why now?
Why is this prison system, in all the years it has operated, not made better arrangements for protective custody inmates, other than locking them up 24 hours a day? Three showers a week? Limited reading, in fact, no library. No legal library. No schooling-for any reason! Little human contact. No television unless you can afford one or an administrator will agree to loan you a confiscated television set-taken from another inmate for some reason or other. No expense to the state. All this good treatment for cooperating with state officials or the courts! How sweet is that? You believe that is good treatment? Why don't you try it for three days, and then, tell me what you think? Surely, you wouldn't expect someone else to be a better man, or woman, than you-would you? Then, I want you to think about this-as all you will see for possibly years, is four blank walls, and a steel door. Don't ask someone else to do what you can't do. After all, we're Americans. We don't do these things to our own! Maybe in China, or Asia, or Afghanistan, but not to our own men and women of America! How proud are we now? Don't you feel safer knowing that cooperating inmates are locked down 24/7 within a padlocked cell? I certainly do!
Then, I want you to think about the men, or women, that are thrown into Administration Segregation, for an infraction of some prison rule. Many, for long periods of time-or even years. Do you think they had some type of court hearing? Of course, they did. It is called a Kangaroo Court. They are going to the hole because the budget has set aside 25% for such administrative action. And, you bet, NDOC is never going to let the budget fall. Next year, they can hire more guards, & administrators, to see them through the hard times. And, let us not forget the $$ raises & benefits for this dangerous job. NDOC must be rewarded for keeping their meticulous records on these dangerous inmates. And, of course, to ask tor a larger budget tor the coming years. TAX-PAYERS EAT IT AGAIN!
Let's speak to the dental & medical needs of inmates. Does non-existent have any meaning to you? That is pretty much the extent of medical and dental. Teeth needing fillings-are pulled. Almost unheard of to get a filling. Ad Seg inmates have no way of getting to the doctor-if the prison has a doctor. Many times they do not. After the "KlTE" has been sent to the doctor, it is unknown how many days they will wait for the nurse to determine your need to see the doctor, or if, indeed, you do ever get to see the doctor. Most times it is a wait of about a week. Most illness has passed-by that time. Thank God, for the body to heal itself. Dental is another story. Ever have a tooth ache? Not pleasant-is it. Happens every day in prison, but no relief will ever come. Most times, because there is no dentist, or he is so overcome with patients that even asking is a joke. A very painful joke! As a convicted felon-the State of Nevada is obligated to keep this man, or woman, not only safe from harm, but to provide him, or her, with the necessities of food, cleanliness, and good health. NOT IN NEVADA. WHY IS THAT? Is medical & dental monies needed for overtime or bonus pay?
It isn't being property used in Nevada's prisons for inmate care. If any committee member thinks this is a ''too bad" scenario-exchange your insurance. Please, exchange your insurance for you, and your family, to the Nevada Prison Care Plan. Laugh all the way to the cemetery. See Exibit No. 1. Ask to interview Robin Jones. #93575. Ask to interview Robert Rieger, #96299. On health & death.
Let's talk about the cemetery. Let's talk about John Leone. John Leone died at HDSP. He died in July or August of 2007. He reported to his cell as sick, and asked the officer to let him to see the nurse, and ultimately to see the doctor. Mr. Leone went into his cell and waited until he felt he could no longer wait for the guard to call tor medical help. With the entire unit witnessing the seeking of help by Mr. Leone-he continued to be ignored. The unit became involved and started calling the guard, listed as Officer Kennedy, who was on duty and continued to ignore Mr. Leone's call tor help. The official cause of death was suicide. To the inmates that witnessed the entire scene-it was institutional, negligent homicide. See exhibit No. 2.
Good medical help with the aid of a trained correctional officer-an inmate's state prison protector. (Yeah, sure!) Now, that I know-you are informed, I'm waiting to hear the spin the NDOC will come up with to be found blameless. Oh, yeah, just like the policemen that kill citizens-they are always found to be blameless by the coroner's juries-until the federal courts find them monetarily guilty, but not state murderers. Sweet! Tax-payers bite it again! Let's try to interview all parties to this incident, instead of just correctional officers, protecting each other. Further spin on this incident is just too revolting. As committee members-try to get this one right. You are at HDSP your next meeting. Ask to interview Robin Jones. #93575 about his health and the death of Mr. Leone. You might learn something. Just don't let NDOC punish this man for speaking out to you committee members. Because, they can & will…
Let's talk about prison mail delivery. Sometimes two or three weeks late, or never delivered, or mark "return to sender". Nah, let's not, l've previously given you that information and exhibits. Do you remember which trash can you committee members threw the information?
Let's talk about inmate-paid-for-magazines-subscriptions being delivered late, and read, by officers before the delivery to the inmate-that paid for the subscription. I know, it sounds petty, but the institutional guards thrive on pettiness, except when it relates to them. Isn't it interesting that the guards demand perfection in the worst of situations? Maybe, as a tax-payer, I should demand of the guards to set an example. Better yet, what do you commissioners think? As a tax- payer, and a member of the public, I only get to watch the proceedings of this commission-l have no voice, even though I am allowed to give my comments at the end of your meetings for three to five minutes. Surely, I'm not expected to believe my input is ever going to be considered by any committee member, especially law enforcement members. Ladies & Gentlemen, I'm not that naive. But, come voter time - I'm not forgetting the results of this committee. I want reasonable change & not the same crap I've been fed by the NDOC & Parole Commissioners. Additionally, I'm not forgetting legislators & judges. If this committee, and state, cannot become aware of human and civil rights-just like in poker, it is time to fold your hand and get out. The cry for further oppression of Law & Order is over. The appointed prison & parole directors have made a fool out of this governor. Why the governor hasn't seen through this huge tax guzzling farce is disgusting & disheartening. I expected better. The Governor, if his enemies have their way-may be sitting in a prison cell some day himself. His problems are not over. Yeah; I know, it is not nice to tell the truth-and the obvious in this state-because that isn't the way this state operates. Oh-my! l never should have left the farm.
I think, I could point out many other things that are wrong with this State's policies in judicial, but you know most of them already. Why beat the bush to death for things so obvious. There is maltreatment in our courts, prisons and with the parole board. It is a disgrace to the world. It can't continue to be ignored. We, the United States, have lost face with so many other countries--it is no longer something that can be ignored.
This committee has the perfect opportunity to make changes to correct years of wrong doing by Nevada and its henchmen. Will remind you in the late 192O's, a man claiming in the name of Law & Order-that he had the way to provide the world with perfect harmony. His name, oh, yes, Adolph Hitler. I'm convinced the Law & Order slogan has frightened the citizens of Nevada sufficiently to keep Law & Order around spending foolishly my tax-dollars, but for how much longer? Sleeping giants do awaken-occasionally. We all know the saying: "You can't fool me all the time ... I think, it would be a good time to tell the truth that keeping men locked away in a cell without human contact for long periods of time-has serious consequences, upon release to the general public. You best hope they don't. change direction and go after the ones suppressing them, and have suppressed them for years. It is not a pleasant thought, but a true possibility. One I'd never like to see.
And, it is a consequence that does not need to happen-if intelligence comes to the tore, instead of forceful brutality, or business as usual. Committee members, you have a perfect chance to bring Nevada out of every No. 1 bad category that I can think of. For example: Education, home foreclosures, prison population and etc., and make it No.1 in criminal behavioral change, & rehabilitation, for the best example the world can see. It is time to take the leadership in this continuing, ruinous, criminal behavior, and show the world that Nevada can think our-selves out of this horrendous climate of bad behavior. If this committee thinks of itself as an intelligent body of men & women-and can get serious & solve this problem & not continue business as usual, & continually hoping to fill the unnecessary beds now being built at Nevada's High Desert State Prison. This committee, can and will, do it. The High Desert State Prison building project is a fool's ego.
Which brings me to AB510. That bill addresses C, D. & E felonies only. Sentences of 1 to 4 years and 1 to 5 years. Certainly, no more than 400 state inmates would qualify tor this program of release. Would you be so good as to ask the director of prisons, and the parole board chairperson, to show you, and me, where they have come up with the number of 1600 inmates that possibly could be released by this bill's passage, and the possible release of violent criminals? As they have told this committee so many times. To me, this is blantant crap, being passed along to this committee as true, but in reality is just another fear factor-these two agencies have used over the years to keep their jobs-at the expense of a Nevada tax-payer's purse. Don't let me be right, and this committee not recommend to the Governor-that these two persons be relieved of their state positions as inept & incapable.
Lastly-for this letter, interview inmates within the HDSP prison-in April, that are not plants tor your fact finding meeting. Do not let yourselves be set up as patsies, and greet good cheer inmates-that are just wonderful with the prison system. It has been done before and will be tried again-if left unchecked. Don't fallfor the old saying: "Fool me once etc…, because you have been fooled before."
Respectfully submitted.
Addendum to letter of March 16, 2008:
There are excessive charges for phone use. The new phone company, I'm told, will not honor the past purchases of phone cards of the inmates. No refunds, therefore, must use or lose. That's great, but some inmates cannot use the phone at their leisure. It is appointment only, and then, it is not a certainty. Who profits when the inmates lose? Not the inmates, nor their families and loved ones.
There are NRS listings tor 209.243, 209.246, 209.247, 209.2475-that permit the prison director to confiscate money sent to inmates by family, friends & loved ones, for any and all decisions brought forth by institutions, but there is no due process. Doesn't the Constitution of the United States guarantee me that right? Why is my money, sent to an inmate, confiscated but inmate's earned monies are not? I do not feel I should be paying tor this institutional rip-off. My money is for the exclusive use of the inmate I sent it to for necessities-not a prison without due process in place. The NRS also calls for a set amount to be determined by the NDOC Director to be safe from prison confiscation. Can this committee tell me what that amount has been determined to be?
Can this committee tell me why it takes four to six months for a prison to accept, or deny, a request tor visiting? Please, don't tell me the sad story about needing more help. Lets just ask some public prison employees to do their job, completely and quickly. This delay is ridiculous, and childish!
The allotment of $ 0.77 given tor each meal served by the Department of Corrections is completely without conscience or morality. I challenge this committee to try living on such a pitiful amount, and I ask that all committee members share an inmate meal at the prison-the day your committee meets at HDSP. Then, ask the inmates: "If this is a typical meal, or one made for your arrival?" Might learn something about deceitful departments within the State of Nevada! Maybe…
Electronic purchases are outrageous for price. I understand the 19 inch television set has gone by the way side at the women's prison. They now offer a 9" television for $200.00 No warranty after 30 days. Why, the manufacturer's warranty is one year? Music discs for CD Players are extremely high priced. The profit to the institution is over 200% to 300%. Is this rip-off really necessary? Most earned income from canteen purchases are to go to activities that all inmates can use and / or enjoy. Not to the NDOC's pocket, or their employees personal accounts. Audit this one! Possible suspected fraud here.
Case worker's mistakes are extremely callous. No error can be verified between the parole board and the prison. There is no creditability between these two agencies of the State of Nevada. Why? Both are inscripted for the protections of the state! Do Nevadans really need this pettiness with such serious concerns? Put the Parole Board and the NDOC under one control, and let’s get some integrity back into this correctional fairy tale.
STOP! The parole board's arrogance & stupidity, for reading into an inmates sentencing-charges that have been dropped or never pursued by the courts. Has this board's commissioners taken to reading crystal balls? That is not their job. The Courts, in theory, has given the correct punishment to the intended person. The parole board, with their self-righteous sword of justice, has no authority to enhance any convicted felon's charges, to meet their expectations, or second guess what the court has deemed proper. Why has the State of Nevada taken so long to recognize this outrageous behavior? Who died and made the Parole Board Commissioners GOD? They go to the bathroom with their pants down, just like every member on this commission, and myself! Why are they so special to the state of Nevada? Isn't it time Nevada woke up, and look charge of their mistakes? This behavior is disgusting!
When are NDOC, and the Parole Board's personnel & computers, ever going to get the days for credits to the inmates correct? This behavior borders on egrecious stupidity and / or complete disregard for this committee's questions. Are you certain this committee has the power to make change? So far, your questions are proper-it is the obvious circumventing of answers that baffle me. What answers? There are many more egrecious points to bring to this committee as bad behavior and disrespect to the inmates, inmates families, loved ones and tax-payers of this state. The legislature will be meeting soon for bills to be drafted for the 2009 session. Hopefully, your recommendations will be supportive of the Nevada citizen and Tax-payer to stop the abuse and the bleeding of tax-payers dollars to support this Prison Industrial Complex Disaster. Your intelligent report is important Please, do the right thing!
Lastly, where are the schools & trade information-skills the inmates can take home with them & use tor a better life tor themselves & their families-never again to return to prison, because they have a life? A prison is more than just a one way street.Tax-payers’ lives could possibly depend on your decisions. Nevada needs to wake up & smell the roses. They grow for everyone! Even me…
Comments on the Prison System
If you look at the prison industry as a business, as Governor Guinn does, then it is a roaring success. One study revealed that the State of Nevada has more prisoners per capita than any other State in the Union, and more prisoners per capita than any other nation in the world. You can go to prison in Nevada for possession of a small amount of marijuana. Drug courts are not in the best interest of the prison-industrial complex. The more prisoners, the bigger the budgets for the prisons.
The State has created no incentive to see that prisoners are rehabilitated or that they are released early. The longer they stay, the fatter the budgets, and the more job security for prison personnel.
As an example, any State worker at a prison can get a printout on his retirement benefits in a relatively short period of time. Thousands of pay checks are printed and delivered in a timely manner every month. Yet, in the midst of the Computer Age, the Department of Prisons claims it does not have the resources to accurately calculate prisoners' release dates. Many prisoners remain unlawfully past their release dates. The Department does not care if prisoners stay longer than they are required under law. State workers suffer no penalty for losing a prisoners' records, or for lying to a prisoner about his release date. There is, however, a financial incentive to keep the prisoners past their release dates. No one in the prison system cares about the prisoners' legal rights.
The Legislature and the Director have created no incentives to treat prisoners humanely. Yes, the State of Nevada has a statute on the books that it makes it illegal to treat a prisoner with "willful inhumanity or oppression." NRS 212.020 was enacted by the legislature in 1866. Although there are lawsuits filed every day which alleged inhumane treatment of prisoners, there are. NO reported cases pertaining to that statute. That´s right, no cases pertain to a statute enacted 135 years ago.
Why? There are two reasons. First, public officials protect one another, not the people they are supposed to serve. Second, District Attorneys are not inclined to prosecute guards on the word of a prisoner, no matter how overwhelming the evidence of inhumanity or oppression may be. With no fear of prosecution, some guards (certainly not all) will take advantage of their immunity, and they will deliberately and sadistically harm prisoners.
Yes, prisoners have the right to represent themselves, and yes, some file frivolous lawsuits. However, many prisoners file lawsuits with merit. The State pays a cadre of Deputy Attorney Generals well to defend these lawsuits. The prisoners have little chance of success, even when the facts are clearly in the prisoners' favor. The State's priorities are clear: By dehumanizing the prisoners, the State saves money that would go to the prisoners, and the State can pay bigger salaries and more benefits to the State workers.
Calling the prison system a "correctional system" is a misnomer. No emphasis is put on correcting anybody. Again, nobody in the system has an incentive to do so. Have you ever heard of a Warden getting fired because too many of his former prisoners committed crimes after they were released? Of course not. That is because no one really believes in "correcting" prisoners. No, what drives a Warden is getting more prisoners and getting a fatter budget. The easiest place to cut the budget is with the prisoners.
Prisoners have to fight to get an extra blanket on a cold night.
The prison system does not correct prisoners. It teaches them that Might is Right. The prison makes up its own rules and changes the rules at whim. 1t is ironic, because the prisoners are supposedly being punished for violating the rule of law, yet the prison violates the rule of law every day.
The Nevada prison system is not accredited. There is no accountability, no outside scrutiny. When is the last time a judge or legislator made a surprise visit to a prison and talked to prisoners? The prisoners' families and a handful of people outside the prison system are the only ones who care about the welfare of prisoners. This not a strong constituency. There is no incentive for a legislator to get involved.
The prison system is a bureaucracy. The simple way to prove this is to try an experiment: Ask a prison official about a hot topic, such as the five deaths of prisoners in Nevada in the past three months. Almost certainly you will be referred to someone else, who will refer you to someone else. That person will "get back to you." You will write follow-up letters and get no answer. Or you will be told that it is none of your business. You will NOT get a straight honest answer that tells you the facts.
Yes, you can litigate as to civil rights. That makes little difference.
So long as the public regards prisoners as human scum, rather than as human beings "created equal", nothing will change. People will go into the prison as non-violent offenders, and become bitter people more likely to commit violent crimes. Is that what the public wants?
Proposals:
1. The public needs to demand accountability from the prisons.
2. Public officials need to make surprise visits to prisons and talk privately and confidentially to prisoners and prison personnel.
3. Create an office of prisoner ombudsman.
4. The Governor needs to emphasize civil rights and human rights rather than
just the bottom line.
5. The State of Nevada should apply for accreditation of its prisons.
6. Enact a law that prohibits and punishes prison retaliation against people who want better prisons.
Kind regards,
Spartacus Project of Nevada, in 2000.
The State has created no incentive to see that prisoners are rehabilitated or that they are released early. The longer they stay, the fatter the budgets, and the more job security for prison personnel.
As an example, any State worker at a prison can get a printout on his retirement benefits in a relatively short period of time. Thousands of pay checks are printed and delivered in a timely manner every month. Yet, in the midst of the Computer Age, the Department of Prisons claims it does not have the resources to accurately calculate prisoners' release dates. Many prisoners remain unlawfully past their release dates. The Department does not care if prisoners stay longer than they are required under law. State workers suffer no penalty for losing a prisoners' records, or for lying to a prisoner about his release date. There is, however, a financial incentive to keep the prisoners past their release dates. No one in the prison system cares about the prisoners' legal rights.
The Legislature and the Director have created no incentives to treat prisoners humanely. Yes, the State of Nevada has a statute on the books that it makes it illegal to treat a prisoner with "willful inhumanity or oppression." NRS 212.020 was enacted by the legislature in 1866. Although there are lawsuits filed every day which alleged inhumane treatment of prisoners, there are. NO reported cases pertaining to that statute. That´s right, no cases pertain to a statute enacted 135 years ago.
Why? There are two reasons. First, public officials protect one another, not the people they are supposed to serve. Second, District Attorneys are not inclined to prosecute guards on the word of a prisoner, no matter how overwhelming the evidence of inhumanity or oppression may be. With no fear of prosecution, some guards (certainly not all) will take advantage of their immunity, and they will deliberately and sadistically harm prisoners.
Yes, prisoners have the right to represent themselves, and yes, some file frivolous lawsuits. However, many prisoners file lawsuits with merit. The State pays a cadre of Deputy Attorney Generals well to defend these lawsuits. The prisoners have little chance of success, even when the facts are clearly in the prisoners' favor. The State's priorities are clear: By dehumanizing the prisoners, the State saves money that would go to the prisoners, and the State can pay bigger salaries and more benefits to the State workers.
Calling the prison system a "correctional system" is a misnomer. No emphasis is put on correcting anybody. Again, nobody in the system has an incentive to do so. Have you ever heard of a Warden getting fired because too many of his former prisoners committed crimes after they were released? Of course not. That is because no one really believes in "correcting" prisoners. No, what drives a Warden is getting more prisoners and getting a fatter budget. The easiest place to cut the budget is with the prisoners.
Prisoners have to fight to get an extra blanket on a cold night.
The prison system does not correct prisoners. It teaches them that Might is Right. The prison makes up its own rules and changes the rules at whim. 1t is ironic, because the prisoners are supposedly being punished for violating the rule of law, yet the prison violates the rule of law every day.
The Nevada prison system is not accredited. There is no accountability, no outside scrutiny. When is the last time a judge or legislator made a surprise visit to a prison and talked to prisoners? The prisoners' families and a handful of people outside the prison system are the only ones who care about the welfare of prisoners. This not a strong constituency. There is no incentive for a legislator to get involved.
The prison system is a bureaucracy. The simple way to prove this is to try an experiment: Ask a prison official about a hot topic, such as the five deaths of prisoners in Nevada in the past three months. Almost certainly you will be referred to someone else, who will refer you to someone else. That person will "get back to you." You will write follow-up letters and get no answer. Or you will be told that it is none of your business. You will NOT get a straight honest answer that tells you the facts.
Yes, you can litigate as to civil rights. That makes little difference.
So long as the public regards prisoners as human scum, rather than as human beings "created equal", nothing will change. People will go into the prison as non-violent offenders, and become bitter people more likely to commit violent crimes. Is that what the public wants?
Proposals:
1. The public needs to demand accountability from the prisons.
2. Public officials need to make surprise visits to prisons and talk privately and confidentially to prisoners and prison personnel.
3. Create an office of prisoner ombudsman.
4. The Governor needs to emphasize civil rights and human rights rather than
just the bottom line.
5. The State of Nevada should apply for accreditation of its prisons.
6. Enact a law that prohibits and punishes prison retaliation against people who want better prisons.
Kind regards,
Spartacus Project of Nevada, in 2000.
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