The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
monkey-issue-1000x50

An unprecedented crime

Mass torture in America. And how to stop it
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  November 14, 2007

Editor’s Note:This is an edited version of a speech given by Phoenix contributing writer Lance Tapley to a seminar at the National Lawyers Guild 70th Anniversary Convention in Washington, D.C., on October 31. The discussion was on how to use international treaties to advance human rights in the United States.

On Halloween, I have a true ghost story to tell: the story of 35,000 ghosts in America, the largely invisible inmates of our solitary-confinement “supermax” prisons.

What is their life like? It is torture. It is isolation, sometimes for years — 23 hours a day in a tiny cell, with the other hour in a small cage outdoors. It’s sensory deprivation — usually, no radio or TV and few books. If you are disobedient, you may suffer beatings and Mace in the face when Swat teams “extract” you to put you in a restraint chair. Feces, urine, and blood coat the cellblock walls, floors, and ceilings — splattered there by the many insane and enraged men. Guards “checking” on prisoners deprive them of sleep, and so does the usual pandemonium; like ghosts, some prisoners howl in constant agony. Inadequate food is shoved through an unsanitary slot in the door. The prisoners get poor medical and dental care; in Maine, many Supermax inmates are not allowed toothbrushes. Mental health care is a cruel joke. Medical professionals are complicit in the torture; they try to keep prisoners capable of enduring more suffering. Guards sexually humiliate prisoners and taunt suicidal ones. Rare “no contact” visits with family take place through a window and a tinny speaker. Prisoners typically are allowed one telephone call a week. There is arbitrary censorship of mail and little or no access to education and other possibilities for rehabilitation.

For two years I’ve written about the treatment of men in the Supermax unit of the Maine State Prison. “Supermax” is the informal name of a super-maximum-security “special management unit” or “control unit.” They exist in most states and the federal prison system. Most are separate prisons; they were built beginning in the 1980s to house, in principle, disruptive prisoners.

Supermax confinement is repulsive, immoral mass torture that is historically unprecedented. I would also suggest it is illegal under international law. If the American people can be brought to see these things, it will be possible to get rid of supermaxes. In the process, we will begin to calm our complex, turbulent prison madness. Instead of indulging ourselves in the fury of punishment — with the supermax as the ultimate circle of the hell we have created for prisoners — we can try rationality and rehabilitation. Before we can move to this better place, though, the public needs considerable education. The news media can provide it, but reporters need legal action to report on, and legal action could have some success in itself.

There are so many other crimes committed against prisoners that the few reform groups tend to protest them all at once. Politically, though, supermaxes are a vulnerable point. As unsympathetic as many citizens feel toward prisoners, they don’t want to be seen as torturers. And Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo have sensitized Americans to the word torture.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |   next >
Related: Lockdown, Pressure rising, Stabbed in the back, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Politics, Health and Fitness, David Fathi,  More more >
| More
1 Comments / Add Comment

Julian C. Holmes

Lance Tapley tells us how, in violation of International Law, physical and mental torture of State prisoners is conducted by Maine prison officials. Thank you Lance for your diligence in exposing this horrific scandal that others seem to avoid. Julian C. Holmes, Wayne ME
Posted: November 14 2007 at 10:59 PM
Add Comment
HTML Prohibited

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 08/10 ]   2011 National Poetry Slam  @ Cantab Lounge
[ 08/10 ]   Cinderella + MASS + John Corab  @ Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom
[ 08/10 ]   David Wax Museum  @ Prescott Park Arts Festival
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MANY TURNPIKE AUTHORITY ENABLERS STILL IN POWER  |  August 03, 2011
    Five years ago this week the Portland Phoenix published an exposé of the Maine Turnpike Authority executives' lavish lifestyle.
  •   DEMOCRATS CELEBRATE VICTORY IN THE FACE OF DEFEAT  |  July 06, 2011
    Senator Dawn Hill, of Cape Neddick, the lead Democrat on the Legislature's Appropriations Committee, which fashioned the recently passed $6-billion state budget, explained to the Phoenix why she voted to reduce income and estate taxes on the rich while also voting for cuts in help to the poor and in teacher and state-worker pensions.
  •   MENTALLY ILL INMATES NEED MORE HELP  |  June 22, 2011
    Prisoner advocates would like the new Corrections commissioner to strengthen his reform of the Maine State Prison by giving more care to the many mentally ill prisoners he is releasing from often-lengthy solitary confinement into the prison's general population.
  •   TOP PRISON OFFICIALS FIRED  |  June 15, 2011
    In a continuing shakeup at the troubled Maine State Prison, new Corrections commissioner Joseph Ponte has fired six top officials including its controversial security chief, Deputy Warden James O'Farrell.
  •   REFORM COMES TO THE SUPERMAX  |  May 25, 2011
    Less than three months into his job, Maine's new corrections commissioner Joseph Ponte has begun to dramatically reform the Maine State Prison's long-troubled solitary-confinement "supermax" unit.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2011 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group