Tag Archives: Federal prisons

Almost Half Of Federal Prisoners Held For Drug Crimes

3 Jan

By Nicole Flatow

Although the overall U.S. prison population declined slightly in 2011, the federal prison population continued to rise, with rates of drug and immigration offenders that eclipse those held for violent crimes. While only 8 percent of federal prisoners were sentenced for violent crimes in 2011, almost half of federal inmates – 48 percent – were in prison for drug crimes, according to Department of Justice statistics. Another 11 percent were held for immigration offenses – one of the largest-growing segments of the prison population.

These numbers reflect the impact of the aggressive U.S. “War on Drugs,” a major contributor to the United States’ standing as the number one jailer in the world. Overall declines in U.S. prisons of 0.9 percent are attributable to state prisons, as some states have been moved by budget crises to adopt innovative reforms, and some jurisdictions have moved toward decriminalizing minor drug offenses.

But federal drug law remains draconian, with harsh mandatory minimum sentences for sometimes minor nonviolent roles in drug deals.

Continue Reading @ Think Progress

Report: BOP Rarely Seeks ‘Compassionate’ Release

6 Dec

 

Photo by danielfoster437, via Flickr

The Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) rarely seeks early release for prisoners facing imminent death or serious incapacitation, according to a report released today by the advocacy groups Human Rights Watch and Families Against Mandatory Minimums.

In 1984, Congress gave federal courts authority to grant early release — also referred to as “compassionate release” — for “extraordinary and compelling” reasons, but only when a motion to do so has been submitted by the BOP.

The BOP has averaged about two dozen such motions each year since 1992, according to the study. The BOP requires prisoners to be within 12 months of death or irrevocably incapacitated in order to be considered for compassionate release; prisoners do not have the right to challenge BOP decisions in court.

The report’s authors recommend that the BOP bring early release motions to court whenever a prisoner can present “extraordinary and compelling” reasons for release, “regardless of whether bureau officials believe early release is warranted.”

Read the study HERE.

Via The Crime Report

Too Many Prisoners

5 Aug

New York Times

The Sunday Review

Editorial

The Justice Department in its recent annual report on federal sentencing issues wisely acknowledged that public safety can be maximized without maximizing prison spending. As it noted, the growing federal prison population, now more than 218,000 inmates, and a prison budget of almost $6.2 billion are “incompatible with a balanced crime policy and are unsustainable.”

The department calls for reforms “to make our public safety expenditures smarter and more productive.” Yet it fails to address sentencing changes that should be made, which would significantly reduce the problem of overincarceration in federal prisons.

Last fall, the United States Sentencing Commission issued a comprehensive report that said mandatory minimum sentences are often “excessively severe,” especially for people convicted of drug-trafficking offenses, who make up more than 75 percent of those given such sentences. Mandatory minimums have contributed in the last 20 years to the near tripling of federal prisoners, with more than half the prisoners now in for drug crimes.

There is no good evidence that long mandatory sentences deter crime. There is very good evidence that older prisoners (45 and up) are the least dangerous and that many should be released.

The Justice Department report does not mention mandatory minimum sentences or their major contribution to overincarceration in federal prisons. And it fails to urge Congress to make repealing mandatory minimums a high priority, as it should. It does not mention releasing older prisoners, which the Federal Bureau of Prisons has the power to do.

Nor does it mention adjusting its own policies on drug cases so it would put away fewer offenders not considered dangerous. About 25,000 people were convicted of federal drug offenses last year, almost the same number as during the Bush administration in 2008 — a substantial proportion in low-level roles of drug trafficking, according to the Sentencing Commission.

The department sensibly calls for more cost-effective prison policies, but that would require reconsideration of the basic purpose of punishment. The unsustainable federal prison budget and the rising inmate population reflect the country’s long, wasteful embrace of retribution. Both numbers are higher than they need to be for public safety.

Via @ The New York Times

 

‘Terrible Tommy’ spends 27 years in Colo. SHU

2 Mar

Tommy Silverstein has spent more time than any other inmate in ad seg

By Stephanie Chen
CNN.com

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_nVSrF0LLSCk/SmaiUjuWbtI/AAAAAAAAA4k/3JyuW-hmJbQ/s400/thomas_silverstein.gif

FLORENCE, Colo. — Tommy Silverstein has been held in a Supermax Special Housing Unit for the past 27 years, longer than anyone else in the federal prison system, his lawyers say.

He is locked up at the high-security prison in Florence, Colorado, known as Supermax. The lights are always on. Guards who slip him food through a slot in his cell door usually ignore him. A few times a week, he is permitted to exercise in the recreation room — alone. Visits with his family and his lawyers are conducted through Plexiglas.

Silverstein’s isolation is the result of an unusual no-human-contact order issued by a judge in 1983, after he murdered a guard at the federal prison in Marion, Illinois. Marion was known at the time as the most rigorous confinement in the federal prison system.

Silverstein has referred to his solitary existence as “a slow, constant peeling of the skin.”

His attorneys, who are affiliated with the University of Denver, filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Bureau of Prisons in 2007, alleging that the such prison conditions violate the cruel and unusual punishment clause of the Eighth Amendment. The lawsuit, filed in the federal district court of Colorado, is awaiting trial.

At Supermax, Silverstein, 58, practices yoga and meditates in his cell. He might catch an episode of “the Sopranos” or a reality show on the black-and-white TV in his cell. It’s his only way to see the outside world.

Recently, he’s learned to crochet, and he fills much of his time writing letters.

He has two Web sites being run by advocates and family friends: http://www.tommysilverstein.bravehost.com and tommysilverstein.blogspot.com.

One of the sites includes examples of Silverstein’s prison artwork and writing, providing a glimpse into a life of isolation. Blue-toned drawings show hands trapped behind bars. Black-and-white ones starkly show cage-like conditions.

“It’s almost more humane to kill someone immediately than it is to intentionally bury a man alive,” he wrote in a 2008 letter to a friend.

Psychologists who have studied the effects of solitary confinement find that the lack of social interaction can cause severe anxiety and depression. Some inmates in solitary have committed suicide.

Eyes like a ‘wild person’
His sister, Sydney McMurray, came from California to Colorado to visit him a year ago. She said he seemed exhausted, with eyes like a “wild person.”

“Relax, Tommy,” she told him through the thick Plexiglas. “It’s OK.”

She hopes Silverstein will someday find peace. She says she draws solace from the legend of Bodhi Dharma, a monk who, according to some accounts, retreated to a cave to meditate alone for nine years.

“They say you come back crazy or come back wise,” McMurray says. “Tommy’s always been a strong guy, and I think this has made him wiser.”

McMurray says she believes her brother has changed, and she knows he has suffered from reading his letters.

CNN attempted to contact Silverstein by mail, but he did not respond. Access to him is limited. To date, only one journalist has interviewed him, in 1988.

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons says “solitary confinement,” a term widely used by prison advocacy groups and attorneys, doesn’t exist in federal prisons. Instead, authorities call the isolated cells where inmates are housed the SHU: special housing units.

U.S. Bureau of Prisons spokesman Edmond Ross estimates that on any given day, 11,150 of the 200,000 federal inmates are kept in special housing units. The reasons for confinement vary from protecting a witness to disciplinary measures.

In the U.S., the practice dates to the 1820s, when Quakers believed that complete isolation forced prisoners to repent. But in 1890, the Supreme Court ruled that confinement had disastrous mental effects, causing inmates to go insane and become violent.

‘Worse than death row’
“At times, it was worse than death row. At least death row had privileges,” Robert Hillary King said.

King is one of the Angola 3, a trio of Louisiana inmates who were locked away in solitary confinement in the 1970s. Two of the three men were accused of stabbing a corrections officer.

King, who was never charged with the killing, won his freedom in 2001 after a series of appeals. He had spent 29 years in solitary confinement in the state prison system. The other two members of the Angola 3 are still being held in isolation.

For Silverstein, his adult life behind bars began in 1978. He was a 26-year-old Californian with a heroin addiction when he was handed a 15-year sentence for robberies he committed with his father.

Two years later, Silverstein was convicted of murder for the first time: the slaying of a fellow inmate in a Kansas prison.

He was moved to a maximum-security prison in Marion, Illinois. His murder conviction was overturned while he was there.

At about the same time, he was rumored to be part of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang and was targeted by other inmates, according to his former attorney Daniel Manville, who now practices in Michigan.

Silverstein was convicted of murdering two Marion inmates.

But it was the highly publicized 1983 murder of prison guard Merle Clutts that led to Silverstein’s unusual no-contact order. Silverstein fatally stabbed the 51-year-old.

CNN could not find family members of the two inmates Silverstein killed or any members of Clutts’ family. His wife is deceased.

Clutts, who had worked for the federal prison system for 19 years, is remembered fondly by corrections workers and friends in an online memorial page maintained by a nonprofit called Officer Down Memorial Page Inc.

One fellow corrections officer wrote: “You are a hero because you did not give in to inmates or let them intimidate you in any way. You were attacked by some animal who should have gotten the death penalty, but instead still [exists] in our world.”

Deeming Silverstein a hazard, authorities transferred him to a federal prison in Atlanta, Georgia, where he was confined in a 6-by-7-foot cell, legal documents show. The living space was cramped for Silverstein, who is more than 6 feet tall. Bright lights lit the cell 24 hours a day, and surveillance cameras scrutinized him.

He became known as Terrible Tommy.

‘The Silverstein suite’
In 1987, a group of Cuban inmates rioted and took control of the prison. They freed Silverstein and then traded him back to prison authorities in hopes of lightening their sentences.

Silverstein was then shipped to Leavenworth, Kansas. Once again, prison officials kept him isolated, this time alone in the basement. Authorities nicknamed his cell the Silverstein suite.

Leavenworth’s conditions were an upgrade, although legal documents allege that rats infested his cell at one point. The cell space increased to 9 feet by 16 feet, court documents say.

The isolation offered Silverstein a chance to focus on his artwork, a hobby since childhood, his sister says. Art became therapy and his way of communicating his harsh conditions to the outside world.

Silverstein’s final move came in 2005 to Supermax, the most secure federal prison in the U.S. He remains there today, along with Unabomber Ted Kaczynski and a long list of other well-known criminals.

Silverstein isn’t trying to deny his responsibility for the three prison murders, nor is he trying to get out of prison, his lawyers say. He is remorseful, and two decades of good behavior should allow him to join the general prison population, they say.

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons declined to comment on Silverstein’s behavioral history.

In 2008, he was moved to less isolated living conditions. Although he is still alone and still has no contact with other people, his cell is now next to others, says his lawyer, Laura Rovner.

“He’s holding up extremely well,” said Paul Wright, an editor at Prison Legal News who has corresponded with Silverstein by letters over the past decade. “I think that for 95 percent of the population, they would have gone stark raving mad years and decades ago.”

check out some of  Tommy’s beautiful artwork  here

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