Friday, December 31, 2010

Georgia Prison System Retaliates Against Prisoners Involved in Historic Protest

From Our Friends at the US Human Rights Network and the Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners’ Rights:
The Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners’ Rights learned that on or about December 16, Terrance Bryant Dean was severely beaten by guards at Macon State Prison where he was incarcerated. The Coalition asserts this brutal beating was not isolated and was a retaliatory act carried out by the Department of Corrections (DOC) against non-violent striking inmates. The Coalition was formed to support the interests and agenda of thousands of Georgia prisoners who staged a peaceful protest and work strike initiated in early December.

The Coalition is concerned about continued violent retaliation against the multiracial group of prisoners who staged a peaceful protest to be paid for their labor, for educational opportunities, access to family members, an end to cruel and unusual punishments, and other human rights. The eight-day strike, begun in early December, involved united prison populations at various prisons, including Hays, Smith, Telfair and Macon State Prisons.

Dean’s mother, Mrs. Willie Maude Dean, stated that since she learned from inmates that her son had been beaten, she has been given no information about his condition or whereabouts by the DOC, and that she and Dean’s sisters, Wendy Johnson and Natasha Montgomery, have been denied access to him since they discovered he was hospitalized at Atlanta Medical Center.

It was around the same time of this beating that the Coalition was meeting with the DOC making the demand that a Coalition fact-finding delegation be provided access to certain prisons to investigate conditions inside.

The DOC acceded to provide such access to a Coalition delegation—starting at Macon State Prison. However, even as the delegation visited Macon State, the DOC was apparently covering-up Dean’s reported retaliatory beating there by several CERT (Correctional Emergency Response Team) Team members, who witnesses reported restrained Dean after an alleged altercation with a guard, dragged him from his cell in handcuffs and leg irons, removed him to the prison gym and beat him unconscious. The beating remained unreported by the DOC even though the Coalition specifically raised questions about reports of retaliatory beatings and about the status and whereabouts of 37—or more—men the DOC identified as strike “conspirators.”

Mrs. Dean told Coalition leaders last night that when she asked Macon State Warden McLaughlin where was her son, based on concerns raised by prisoner reports he had been beaten nearly to death, McLaughlin told her he was “in the hole,” or, an isolation cell. In fact, Mr. Dean was already in the hospital.

The Coalition is raising concerns about the potential cover up of an attempted murder and the refusal, to date, of the prison to identify the missing 37 or more inmates deemed “conspirators” by the DOC. The Coalition is calling for the DOC and other state officials to sit down with the inmates to start a process to realize the inmates’ human rights.

The Coalition, which has grown into an entity of thousands of supporters and hundreds of organizations across the U.S. and internationally, includes the NAACP, the Nation of Islam, the ACLU, the U.S. Human Rights Network, All of Us or None, The Ordinary People Society and many others, and is co-chaired by Dubose and author-activist Elaine Brown.

A Coalition fact-finding delegation visited Macon State Prison on December 20 and was visiting Smith State Prison yesterday, December 29th, when the Coalition uncovered facts about Mr. Dean’s reported, brutal beating. The Coalition is planning to release a full report of its investigations and prison visits once the investigations are completed.

Family members and Coalition members, including NAACP Georgia State Conference President Ed Dubose and Georgia ACLU Legal Director Chara Jackson, will attempt to see the beaten prisoner today at Atlanta Medical Center.

Photo Above: Young prisoner Rodriques Dukes in solitary confinement at Georgia's Hays State Prison.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

wow. where is the governor? rather these men are inmates or not they are human beings and the DOC does not have a right to beat these men for stagin a non violent movement

SickupandFed said...

You seem to forget, these folk have no rights. Or at least that's what they want us to believe.

Unknown said...

i have worked at the prison in question and let me say this... the officers that work at that prison are dedicated officers who go through hell and put their lives on the line to make sure that these inmates stay locked from the rest of the community!!!! and yes inmates are human beings but as far as them wanting to be paid for their work and benefits NO WAY, because it only costs the inmates 5 dollars to see a doctor outside the prison walls.. and if they need major surgery it still only cost them 5 dollars and the tax payers are left to pick up the rest of the tab.... now that to me is unfair knowing that the tax payers are paying for their food, housing, and medical!!! the inmates need more strict rules and regulations put against them that are within their human rights!! but as far as a non violent movement guess again..... there is always violence when it comes to inmates TRUST ME i know... they alway have an alternative motive when they stage things like this!! i spent 2 years at the prison in question and if people knew what the officers had to go through in a 8 hour shift some would be demanding that the officers have better pay and better protection for them selves!!!!!

CHANGING THE CD said...

I think that in the year 2011 who thinks they have the right to beat another human being under the auspice of it being corrective behavioral tactics? We are talking about a human...not an animal. Whether he committed a crime or not, he is still a human and deserving of basic human rights described in our Constitution. The behavior of these prison guards are deplorable and as with anyone else who commits a crime, they ought be punished. Hey I have an idea? Why don't we drag them out of their homes and beat them...does that sound familiar?? These officers have power issues that they play out at work because they cannot do it at home. There are biases and superiority issues that they need counseling to deal with. I end by saying who polices the police. David you should change jobs...before this insanity rubs off.

Anonymous said...

changing the cd..........this is for you. how would you feel if while working your job. you spent 12 hours a day wondering if someone had a hit on you? how would you feel if you were never guaranteed on going home? all of ya'll inmate loving people talk all of this talk. but you do it while sitting in your nice little home behing your computer screen. but yourself in the line of fire. but until you all do. just stay at your home and let real men and women protect you.