Archive | September, 2011

John Grisham on Grappling with Race, the Death Penalty; and Lawyers ‘Polluting Their Own Profession’

25 Sep

Cover of "The Confession: A Novel"

Cover of The Confession: A Novel

By Allen Pusey

John Grisham isn’t certain what’s happened to the image of lawyers in the five decades since To Kill A Mockingbird was published. But he’s fairly sure that his readers might not want to read about a lawyer who closely resembles the book’s iconic hero, Atticus Finch.

“Here’s the truth,” says Grisham. “There are a lot of small-town lawyers who are honest and hardworking. They do their jobs and serve their community—writing wills, teaching Sunday school, serving in the local legislature. But nobody wants to read about that.”

“They want to read about the lawyer that lies to his client, steals all the money, fakes his own death and flies to Brazil. They want to read about a hard-working young lawyer who gets an offer at a law firm that on the surface is respectable, but turns out to be controlled by the mob.”

Grisham, who was awarded the inaugural Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, believes that Mockingbird deserves its place in the pantheon of American literature for its graceful narrative alone. The book’s broader issues of race and justice endure, he said, but it’s the voice of that narrative that sets it apart.

“When I first read it many years ago, that’s what I marveled at: Harper Lee’s superb storytelling. It was truly unique. Honestly, what I see in myself is nothing more than a pretty good storyteller.”

Grisham, a former trial lawyer, was being modest. With the 1989 publication of his first novel, A Time To Kill, followed by The Firm shortly thereafter, he managed to launch a writing career that all but invented the literary industry known as the legal thriller. At 56, he has written 25 novels, all but four of them involving lawyers and the law. Nine of his novels have been made into feature films—including an offbeat comedy called Christmas with the Kranks. His latest book, The Litigators is scheduled for publication in October.

Grisham was awarded the Harper Lee Prize for The Confession, his 2010 novel about a small town lawyer’s star-crossed efforts to stop the scheduled execution in Texas of a local football hero convicted of murder. The prize is sponsored by the University of Alabama Law School and the ABA Journal. It will be awarded annually for a book-length work of fiction “that best exemplifies the role of lawyers in society, and their power to effect change.”

Judges for the contest included: novelists Linda Fairstein and David Baldacci, Jeffrey Toobin of CNN and the New Yorker, Morris Dees of the Southern Poverty Law Center, and former ABA president Robert J. Grey, Jr.

In an interview with the ABA Journal, Grisham said he is troubled by the continuing effect that race has on the fundamental fairness of the judicial system. The cynical enforcement of the death penalty portrayed in The Confession is based on several different Texas death penalty cases. But while the problems of racism may have become more nuanced, he says, the problem of unequal justice is fundamentally the same as it was for Tom Robinson, whose fictional Depression-era trial was portrayed in To Kill A Mockingbird.

“Some things have not changed. We see it all the time. It begins with the investigation and the treatment of suspects. A black suspect is simply treated differently from a white suspect,” Grisham says. “Then they are tried in a system populated by white prosecutors and white judges and all-white juries. And that’s not much different from the trial 75 years ago of Tom Robinson.”

“Fortunately, with the use of DNA, we are beginning to recognize that there have been wrongful convictions. We’re finally taking a long look and trying to determine what is wrong.”

Though he has written extensively about the death penalty, including a nonfiction book on an Oklahoma death penalty case, his personal opposition to capital punishment was not instinctive.

“I grew up in a very conservative, Baptist environment. You heard it from the pulpit, in the classroom, around the town that the Vietnam War was a good thing. There were people who protested and burned their draft cards. We hated those people. We knew that America would always be white, and that integration was a bad thing, and that it could be stopped. Likewise, there were certain things—like capital punishment—that were biblical in their origins. That’s how I grew up, and it took quite a while for me to flip.”

Grisham said he finally began to question when researching one of his books. He recalls talking to a death row prison chaplain about the final words of the condemned men he counseled, their last-minute conversions, their final meals and thoughts. They chatted for a while, when the chaplain grew thoughtful.

“He looked at me and asked, ‘Do you think that Jesus would approve of what we do here?’ I thought for a moment and answered, ‘No.’ He said, ‘That’s why this is wrong.’ ”

“I still have moments when I read about a particular ghastly crime, when I believe in [capital punishment], and I struggle with that,” Grisham said. “But then I read about cases of actual innocence, like the [capital case] I wrote about in Oklahoma, where this kid—a white kid—got chewed up by his own hometown.”

“I imagine what the real killer is thinking, when he reads that someone else has been arrested. He even goes to the trial and watches thinking, ‘Boy, these cops are stupid. They’ve got the wrong guy.’ He watches as they bring in the trumped-up confession and a bunch of fake evidence and an expert to back it up, and a jailhouse snitch to testify against him. They’ve got a whole checklist, and they just check it off. And even when they are confronted with absolute evidence, they’re just willing to let him die.”

Continue Reading @ ABA Journal

Texas – where you can still be given the death penalty even if you didn’t kill anyone

25 Sep

Kate Morris

 

In the state of Texas, if you come into our state, and you kill one of our children, you kill a police officer, you are involved with another crime and you kill one of our citizens, you will face the ultimate justice in the state of Texas – and that is, you will be executed.”

These were the words of Texas Governor Rick Perry at last week’s Republican presidential debate – words which were met with applause from an audience clearly impressed by his rhetorical grandeur.

But – even if you accept Perry’s retributive logic – what if you hadn’t killed anyone? What if you had been present at a murder, and the guy you were with actually admitted to pulling the trigger? And the same guy, who pleaded guilty to personally shooting the two victims, was given a life sentence? Bizarrely, you can still be sentenced to death – as was the case with Steven Woods, whose execution last week marked the 235th authorized by Governor Perry.

What Perry failed to mention in his response to the debate moderator was that in Texas, under something called the ‘Law of Parties’, you can still be given the death penalty even if you didn’t kill anyone. This law, contained within the state’s Penal Code, allows Texas to execute people who never pulled the trigger and who might have been only peripherally involved in the crime. This was how Steven Woods was landed with a death sentence. He was convicted for murder despite the fact that his co-defendant, Marcus Rhodes, pleaded guilty to personally shooting the two victims. Steven was present at the scene, but he was never accused of being the shooter. Yet Rhodes escaped with a life sentence and Steven was executed.

The US Supreme Court has previously held that imposing the death penalty on someone who did not ‘himself kill, attempt to kill, or intend to kill’ violates the US Constitution – specifically, the due process clause and the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Yet Texas makes use of a subsequent exception for those who had ‘major personal involvement’ and displayed a ‘reckless indifference to human life’ to ensure that someone can be held criminally responsible for the acts of another. This law makes a mockery of the claim, often put forward by proponents of capital punishment, that the death penalty is reserved for the worst criminals and the most heinous crimes.

Interestingly, the only death penalty sentence that Rick Perry has ever commuted (save for a number of cases in which he was required to grant clemency by judicial rulings) was that of Kenneth Foster in 2007, who was convicted under the Law of Parties and sentenced to death for being the getaway driver in a fatal robbery. Perry urged the Texas legislature to look into the Law of Parties at the time, but it still hasn’t been reformed – and now Steven Woods has paid with his life for a crime everyone accepts he didn’t commit. As he said in his last words: “You’re not about to witness an execution. You are about to witness a murder. I am strapped down for something Marcus Rhodes did. I never killed anybody, never. Justice has let me down. Somebody completely screwed this up.”

What’s more, Steven was on the brink of receiving diplomatic assistance from the Armenian Government, on the basis that he was entitled to Armenian citizenship. The country’s Ministry of Justice sent Perry a letter asking for a thirty-day stay of execution, arguing that they needed time to recognise his nationality and provide him with the consular assistance he was entitled to under international law. Perry ignored their plea for clemency, just as he infamously snubbed the clemency pleas of the Mexican Government in the case of Mexican national Humberto Leal Garcia in July.

At the Republican presidential debate last week, the moderator asked Perry whether he struggled to sleep at night with the idea that any of those people could have been innocent. Perry replied, “I’ve never struggled with that at all.  The state of Texas has a very thoughtful, a very clear process in place.” Unfortunately, the sad litany of executions that Perry has presided over has shown time and again that this is far from the case. With three more highly controversial executions scheduled in Texas over the next seven days, it remains to be seen whether Perry will continue with his unabated disregard for due process and the rule of law. One thing is for sure: although Rick Perry might not have a problem sleeping at night, the thought we are potentially witnessing the governing style of a future president sure makes it hard for the rest of us.

Via @ Repieve

William Rivers Pitt | Class Warfare My Ass

25 Sep

by: William Rivers Pitt, Truthout | Op-Ed

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican presidential candidate, speaks at the Florida P5 Faith and Freedom Coalition Kick-Off event at the Rosen Centre Hotel in Orlando, Florida, September 22, 2011. (Chip Litherland / The New York Times)

I have to live for others and not for myself: that’s middle-class morality.

- George Bernard Shaw

I have been saying this for years upon years, but it bears repeating: the most awesome, fearsome, and effective weapon in the arsenal of the modern Republican Party is their total, utter and complete lack of shame.

That weapon – the ability to say or do anything, literally anything, even as it flies in the face of on-the-record comments made just the day before, or contradicts thousands of votes cast in congresses past – is the equivalent of a battlefield-deployed tactical nuclear weapon. It clears the field, but good, and if everything is ashes in the aftermath, so be it. So long as effective spin makes the news cycle, it’s a victory for them, and screw the people who get hurt.

The GOP wins when that is the contest, and that is all they care about…and the awful irony comes when the very people getting screwed are up on their feet cheering after the deal goes down, because “their team” won the day.

Watching these recent GOP debates has cracked me up for any number of reasons, but nothing can top watching those millionaires square off in an attempt to prove who among them is the most “folksy,” the most in tune with the working stiff. Mitt Romney, whose personal fortune roars deep into nine figures on the left of the decimal, actually claimed he was a middle class guy during a recent campaign appearance.

Ah, yes, the irony again…just think, if people banking nine figures of personal wealth were actually considered middle class, all of our problems would be solved, right?

Or something.

Which brings us to the subject of “class warfare.” The term has been a favorite broadside of the right-bent rich-people-first set going on forty years now, and in times past has always reaped them rich rhetorical benefits. We’re a classless society here in America, don’tcha know, so accusations of “class warfare” have all too often sent lily-livered liberal-leaning politicians scuttling for the exits, for the apology, for the eventual retreat.

Oh no, it isn’t class warfare, this is only fair…which earned, invariably, a reply of “CLASS WARFARE SOCIALISM WHAAARGARBLE”…which, in turn, earned another hasty retreat instead of a proper and just reply.

Which is, should have always been, and should now be: kiss my ass, you leech, you bloodsucker, you greedy whore, you war profiteering glutton, you disgrace, you betrayer of America.

Oh, I know the argument. I know it as well as the spit I leave on the sidewalk when there is a bad taste in my mouth. The rich are better than us, they are the ones making the jobs, they have earned their esteemed position through a Randian process of natural economic selection, etc…except for the sneaky fact that a large number of these “business titans” inherited their wealth, and today increase their wealth not through hard work, but through favorable interest rates and even more favorable tax rates on money that is already in the bank.

The top-earning businesses in America today, across the board, are wallowing in record profits, and yet somehow hiring is stagnated. Why is that?

Continue Reading @ Truthout

A tale of 2 inmates in California’s Security Housing Units

16 Sep

Michael Montgomery

California Department of Corrections and RehabilitationPelican Bay State Prison Inmate Arturo Castellanos

 

One man was a petty thief mistakenly identified as a player in a violent Latino prison gang. The other was a convicted murderer whose numerous assaults behind bars and continuing influence on the streets earned him a reputation as a ruthless gang leader.

The fact that both men were locked for years in grim, windowless isolation cells at Pelican Bay State Prison illustrates the challenge that corrections officials face as they overhaul the state’s controversial Security Housing Units.

Opened in 1989, Pelican Bay was designed to house California’s most dangerous inmates. The prison’s Security Housing Unit goes a step further, locking inmates identified as prison gang members or associates in a warren of concrete cells where the only view of the outside world is framed on small television sets. Some inmates have been housed in the units since Pelican Bay opened its gates.

Corrections officials say the lengthy confinement and extreme security measures are necessary to curb the ability of gang leaders to pass orders to subordinates in other prisons and on the streets. And they point to inmates like Arturo Castellanos to make their case.

Castellanos was convicted of murder in Los Angeles County in 1979 and sentenced to 26 years to life.  But his life of crime flourished behind bars, according to prison records.

As an inmate, Castellanos’ disciplinary record includes six stabbings and various drug violations. In 1990, he was sent to Pelican Bay’s Security Housing Unit after corrections officials identified him as a member of the Mexican Mafia prison gang.

In spite of Pelican Bay’s harsh conditions, authorities allege Castellanos continued to command gang members on the street through edicts smuggled out of prison on tiny scraps of paper known as “kites.”

According to a 2007 federal indictment, Castellanos guided a Latino street gang known as F13 as it launched a turf battle against African American rivals. The action triggered a wave of racial violence against African Americans living in the Florence-Firestone area north of Watts, according to court documents. More than 20 people were killed.

“I was just amazed that an individual who no one has seen for generations was able to control the violence and illegal criminal activity of an area that he hasn’t been to in more than three decades,” said Peter Hernandez, an assistant U.S. attorney for California’s Central District.

Federal prosecutors eventually indicted 104 suspects in the case, but not Castellanos. He already was serving a life sentence, and the government concluded it was safer to keep Castellanos in isolation and not pull him out of Pelican Bay for court hearings, which would have been required had he been indicted.

“It was important that … Castellanos not be let out, because he holds sway over gang members to do things they would otherwise not want to do,” Hernandez said.

Since 2006, Castellanos has been housed in a special section of Pelican Bay’s Security Housing Unit that is reserved for inmates deemed influential gang leaders.

But that didn’t stop him and three other inmates from organizing a three-week hunger strike to demand better conditions and changes in department policy.

During a recent media tour, Pelican Bay acting Warden Greg Lewis claimed the four hunger strike leaders, including Castellanos, were in the upper echelons of major prison gangs and continued to pose a serious security threat. Lewis said the men are “intelligent, very manipulative and possess the intellect to orchestrate what they did.”

Michael Montgomery/California Watch Ernesto Lira near his home in Planada, Calif.

 

While prisoner rights advocates concede that some inmates should be segregated from the regular prison population if they are violent or directly involved in criminal conspiracies, they say the actual number of offenders who fit that criteria is very small.

“The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation always picks the worst-case scenario and uses it as the norm,” said Carol Strickman, a staff attorney at Legal Services for Prisoners with Children.

Not all the inmates locked in the Security Housing Unit are accused of being gang bosses.

Ernesto Lira was serving a sentence for drug possession in a low-security prison when he was sent to Pelican Bay for an “indeterminate” term. Authorities contended Lira was an associate of a violent Latino group known as Nuestra Raza.

Continue Reading @ California Watch

 

 

 

Help Save Troy Davis

14 Sep

 

Troy Davis is going to be executed by the state of Georgia September 21, 2011 at 7pm…..

Troy is scheduled to die for murdering a white police officer, despite overwhelming evidence that calls into question his guilt, and repeated attempts at justice.

This is Troy’s last chance, and it’s up to us to speak out to and save Troy.

Show the Georgia Parole Board, and the world, that we stand by Troy Davis — and we believe in justice in America.

Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles at (404) 656-5651

MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD!!!

 

 

Orange County DA Tony Rauckaukas: who does he REALLY serve?

14 Sep

Good question, isnt it?  One that should be answered…..from the looks of his record, certainly is not serving the public as an elected public servant.

Hector Villagra who is the Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California had this to say:
In a nation defined by the concepts of justice, due process, and the rule of law, police must obey the law while they enforce the law. So who polices the police?

We depend on the local district attorney’s office to investigate the conduct of police officers. Now the Orange County District Attorney’s office has been called upon to investigate misconduct against Kelly Thomas, the Fullerton man who was beaten to death by six police officers last month.

Can we rely on Tony Rackauckas to police the police? His record speaks for itself.

The OC Weekly reported that as of 2004, “during Rackauckas’s 10-year reign, the DA’s office has only once pursued charges in an officer-involved shooting case (against Douglas Bates, a customs officer, in 2005)”.

There have been many more shootings—and many more officers cleared. Indeed, between January 2006 and September 2010, there were 73 officer-involved shootings in Orange County, more than half of them fatal. The DA’s office was responsible for conducting investigations into nearly all of them.

In 2007, the DA’s office cleared two Huntington Beach police officers involved in the shooting death of Ashley MacDonald, who was shot 15 times when she charged at the officers with a knife. In that case, the DA’s office upheld the Sheriff’s Department policy that if an armed suspect is less than 21 feet away, an officer who fears for his or her life is allowed to shoot to kill.

In 2009, Rackauckas’ office cleared an Anaheim officer who shot 20 year old Julian Alexander. Alexander had walked into his yard carrying a stick to investigate a commotion while his pregnant wife and in-laws slept inside. An officer shot him twice in the chest and then handcuffed him. Julian Alexander later died at a local hospital.

At that time, I was the Director of the ACLU of Southern California’s Orange County office, and I called for Rackauckas to conduct a complete and rigorous investigation of the officer’s conduct. The officer was back on duty two months later.

So we continue to question whether the DA can be relied on for an impartial investigation of Kelly Thomas’ death. The DA’s response to these concerns — that in 2008 his office filed charges against Christopher Hibbs, an Orange County sheriff’s deputy accused of tasering an armed-robbery suspect who was handcuffed in the back of his patrol car – sounds like the proverbial exception that proves the rule.

It’s time to make a change. Whether it’s having the state attorney general or the federal department of justice investigate or creating a civilian review board to investigate, we need to ensure police accountability — to make sure police officers know that they will be held responsible for their actions when they use excessive force.

50 officer shootings in 5 years have never been prosecuted.

JULIAN COLLENDER: http://justiceforjulian.freewayscollide.com/updates/

JULIAN ALEXANDER:
http://articles.latimes.com/2009/mar/18/local/me-anaheim-police-shooting18

Ashley McDonald, Jason Velarde, Antonio Saldivar:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/greenhut/rush-to-shoot.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Cho

In another recent local case, a Costa Mesa police officer admitted pulling a gun on a teenager after the officer noticed that the boy and his friends were riding their bikes without helmets. He chased the boy into the boy’s backyard and drew his gun. After the boy’s dog came to defend him, the officer shot the dog 15 times. The city paid the family a large sum of money, but the police department insists the officer’s behavior was correct police policy. That’s perhaps the scariest part of this whole disreputable incident.
http://www.thefreemanonline.org/featured/the-militarization-of-american-police/

She is a thorn in the side of the Anaheim Police Department.  At least, that’s what she has been told.

Theresa Smith is the mother of Caesar Cruz, a 35-year-old Fullerton resident who was shot by Anaheim police officers in a Wal-Mart parking lot in 2009. Cruz was married for 12 years and had five sons.

Frustrated with the lack of information from authorities regarding his death, Smith has organized and led weekly protests outside the Anaheim Police Department.

Despite protesting each week at the heavily trafficked intersection, most Orange County residents may not know who she is. She’s been there with family and supporters for over a year and a half yet Cruz’s death has long fallen off the public’s radar.

Orange County Register, ABC7 News and OC Weekly reported the story of her son’s death and a family vigil. In March 2010, her protests also received coverage from those media outlets. However, Smith said, she hasn’t been contacted by the media since.

There is one thing she wants to make clear to authorities: she wants justice for her son and she will not stop until she gets it.

http://fullertonstories.com/searching-for-justice-in-for-the-long-haul/

There are many more families that are seeking justice, and their cries fall upon the deaf ear of elected District Attorney Tony Rauckaukas-who panders to the police & sheriff unions while ignoring the public he was elected to serve. Join us, make your voice heard….JUSTICE for all…..

Protest Orange County DA’s Poor Record of Prosecution against LEO’s

Friday, September 16 · 3:00pm – 6:00pm
Orange County DA’s Office

401 Civic Center Drive West
Santa Ana, CA.

Fullerton Cops continually get it wrong…..

14 Sep

The Wrongful Incarceration of Manuel Martinez

 

Do not pass Go!

An alert Friend reminded us today of a story that came to light last fall and that has eerie overtones of the subsequent Veth Mam case we have previously reported. The story is told in the OC Register, here.

 

Wouldn’t hurt a fly…

The facts are simple. Even though an eye-witness ID’d another guy in a line-up, the Fullerton police arrested Emmanuel Martinez who unluckily just happened to be in the vicinity. Of course Fullerton “Officer” Miguel Siliceo told a hearing judge that he had indeed got the right guy and Martinez was locked up in the County jail for five long months awaiting the inevitable railroad job.

 

Continue Reading @ Friends for Fullerton Blog

Hank Skinner Files Motion for DNA Testing Under New Law, Asks Court to Withdraw Nov. 9 Execution Date

10 Sep

From Hank Skinner‘s attorneys:

 

(Gray County, Texas)  Attorneys for Hank Skinner filed a motion today in state district court in Gray County, Texas, to compel DNA testing of key pieces of evidence that have never been tested in his case.  The motion is filed under a new law, SB 122, which took effect on September 1, 2011. SB 122 intends to ensure that procedural barriers do not prevent prisoners from testing biological evidence that was not previously tested or could be subjected to newer testing. Mr. Skinner’s attorneys also asked the court to withdraw Mr. Skinner’s scheduled November 9 execution date to allow time for the DNA testing (the motions, which were mailed to the court on Friday, are attached).

 

“The new law was intended to make advanced DNA testing available in all cases where it can aid the truth-seeking process, and Skinner’s case falls squarely within that category,” said Sen. Rodney Ellis, co-sponsor of SB 122 which passed the Texas Legislature with overwhelming bipartisan support in May 2011.

 

The State of Texas, which for more than a decade has actively resisted Mr. Skinner’s efforts to obtain DNA testing of the evidence in his case, came within an hour of putting him to death in March 2010 before the U.S. Supreme Court stepped in to stop the execution.  The Court eventually agreed to hear Mr. Skinner’s case, and in March 2011 ruled that Mr. Skinner was entitled to seek access to the evidence for DNA testing by suing the Gray County District Attorney under a federal civil rights law.  The case returned to the federal district court in Amarillo, Texas, where a decision is pending.

 

“Texas is wrong to seek Hank Skinner’s execution without allowing for DNA testing.  The State should be leading the search for truth, instead of continuing to waste taxpayer dollars on its eleven-year-long campaign to block testing of critically important scientific evidence,” said Rob Owen, an attorney for Mr. Skinner.

 

The evidence that Mr. Skinner seeks to test, and which has never been tested, includes: a man’s windbreaker found next to the victim’s body, which had blood splatter, perspiration stains and human hairs on it, and did not belong to Mr. Skinner; two knives, at least one of which was a likely murder weapon; swabs from a rape-kit; and clothing and towels found at the crime scene.  The State’s refusal to test the evidence for DNA is particularly troubling because there is another suspect who stalked the victim, had a violent criminal history, and behaved suspiciously immediately after the crime.

 

There is a powerful public consensus that DNA evidence should be tested when it is available.  More than 8 in 10 Americans believe DNA evidence is either completely or very reliable.  In Texas, 85 percent of the people believe that prisoners should have access to DNA testing if it may prove their innocence.

 

“Testing the evidence will serve the public interest by providing certainty in this case,” said Nina Morrison, staff attorney at the Innocence Project. “It’s just common sense to test the DNA evidence.”

- – - – -

The motions filed by Hank Skinner’s attorneys are available at:

Third Motion for DNA Testing

http://standdown.typepad.com/SKINNER-Third%20-Motion_for_DNA_Testing.pdf

Motion to Order the State to Comply

http://standdown.typepad.com/SKINNER-Motion_to_Order_State_to_%20Comply.pdf

Motion to Withdraw or Modify Execution Date

http://standdown.typepad.com/SKINNER-Motion_to_Withdraw_or_Modify.pdf

Kelly Thomas died of blunt force to head, records show

7 Sep

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Fullerton homeless man died of blunt force to head, records show

A mentally ill homeless man died of brain injuries due to head trauma after a violent altercation with Fullerton police officers, according to UC Irvine Medical Center records made by public by his family’s lawyer.

Kelly Thomas suffered blunt head trauma with multiple broken bones in his face and injuries to his chest in the July 5 incident at the Fullerton bus depot and was shocked with a Taser stun gun near his heart and on his back, said lawyer Garo Mardirossian.

He has filed a claim against the city of Fullerton on behalf of Thomas’ father and mother.

The immediate cause of death was listed as “brain damage” due to “head trauma” from an assault, medical records show.

No narcotics or prescription medications were found in Thomas’ body, according to medical records, Mardirossian said.

According to the attorney, Thomas suffered a shattered nose, brain trauma, smashed cheek bone, broken ribs and severe internal bleeding.

Mardirossian said “the officers repeatedly hit Thomas in the face” and they used the butt of the Taser to deliver some of those blows. He said three officers were primarily involved in the “assault.”

Thomas died after five days in the hospital when he was disconnected from life support.

Mardirossian said the beating is the only explanation for Thomas’ death given the lack of anything else in his system.

The Orange County coroner’s office has not completed its report nor provided an official cause of death, said Jim Amormino, a spokesman for the department.

 

Continue Reading @ LA TIMES

Indefinite solitary confinement persists in California prisons

6 Sep

Long abandoned by many states, the practice is a last resort for California authorities struggling to thwart gang activity and extract information from the most hardened members. Critics say it amounts to torture.

Solitary confinement

U.S. prisons typically reserve solitary confinement for inmates who commit serious offenses behind bars. In California, however, suspected gang members, even those with clean prison records, can be held in isolation indefinitely with no legal recourse. (Los Angeles Times)

 

 

By Jack Dolan, Los Angeles Times
Reporting from Sacramento—
U.S. prisons typically reserve solitary confinement for inmates who commit serious offenses behind bars. In California, however, suspected gang members — even those with clean prison records — can be held in isolation indefinitely with no legal recourse.

Indeed, hundreds have been kept for more than a decade in 8-by-10-foot cells, with virtually no human contact for nearly 23 hours per day. Dozens have spent more than two decades in solitary, according to state figures.

It’s a harsh fate even by prison standards: Under current policy, an inmate who kills a guard faces a maximum of five years of isolation.

Long abandoned by many states, the practice of indefinite solitary confinement persists in California as a last resort for prison officials struggling to thwart gang activity and extract information from the most hardened gang members.

The policy attracted international attention earlier this summer, when thousands of protesting California inmates joined a three-week hunger strike by prisoners at the state’s maximum-security lockup at Pelican Bay.

Administrators say the violent gang culture is so entrenched in state prisons that isolation is the only way to keep leaders from ordering killings, rapes and assaults on staff and other inmates.

But critics say the unending confinement amounts to torture.

Continue Reading @ LA Times
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