Center for Constitutional Rights
Prolonged Solitary Confinement at Pelican Bay is Cruel and Unusual Punishment, Torture, Lawyers Say
May 31, 2012, Oakland –
Today, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) filed a federal
lawsuit on behalf of prisoners at Pelican Bay State Prison who have
spent between 10 and 28 years in solitary confinement. The legal action
is part of a larger movement to reform inhumane conditions in California
prisons’ Security Housing Units (SHU), a movement dramatized by a 2011
hunger strike by thousands of SHU prisoners; the named plaintiffs
include hunger strikers, among them several of the principal negotiators
for the hunger strike.
The class action suit, which is being
jointly filed by CCR and several advocate and legal organizations in
California, alleges that prolonged solitary confinement violates Eight
Amendment prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment, and that
the absence of meaningful review for SHU placement violates the
prisoners’ right to due process.
“The prolonged conditions of brutal confinement
and isolation such as those at Pelican Bay have rightly been condemned
as torture by the international community,” said CCR President Jules
Lobel. “These conditions strip prisoners of their basic humanity and
cross the line between humane treatment and barbarity.” Advocates hope
that the suit will strike a blow against the increasingly routine use of
solitary confinement in American prisons.
SHU prisoners spent 22 ½ to 24 hours every day in a
cramped, concrete, windowless cell. They are denied telephone calls,
contact visits, and vocational, recreational or educational programming.
Food is often rotten and barely edible, and medical care is frequently
withheld. More than 500 Pelican Bay SHU prisoners have been isolated
under these conditions for over 10 years, more than 200 of them for over
15 years; and 78 have been isolated in the SHU for more than 20
years. Today’s suit claims that prolonged confinement under these
conditions has caused “harmful and predictable psychological
deterioration” among SHU prisoners. Solitary confinement for as little
as 15 days is now widely recognized to cause lasting psychological
damage to human beings and is analyzed under international law as
torture.
Additionally, the suit alleges that SHU prisoners are
denied any meaningful review of their SHU placement, rendering their
isolation “effectively permanent.” SHU assignment is an administrative
act, condemning prisoners to a prison within a prison; it is not part of
a person’s court-ordered sentence for his or her crime. California,
alone among all fifty states and most other jurisdictions in the world,
imposes extremely prolonged solitary confinement based merely on a
prisoner’s alleged association with a prison gang. Gang affiliation is
assessed without considering whether a prisoner has ever undertaken an
act on behalf of a gang or whether he is – or ever was – actually
involved in gang activity. Moreover, SHU assignments disproportionately
affect Latinos. The percentage of Latino prisoners in the Pelican Bay
SHU was 85% in 2011, far higher than their representation in the general
prison population, which was 41%. The only way out of SHU isolation
alive and sane is to “debrief,” to inform on other prisoners, placing
those who do so and their families in significant danger of retaliation
and providing those who are unable to debrief effectively no way out of
SHU isolation.
Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, California
Prison Focus, Siegel & Yee, and the Law Offices of Charles Carbone
are co-counsel on the case.
The case is
Ruiz v. Brown, and it seeks to amend an earlier
pro se
lawsuit filed by Pelican Bay SHU prisoners Todd Ashker and Danny
Troxell. The case is before Judge Claudia Wilken in the United States
District Court for the Northern District of California. Click
here to read the complaint.
The
Center for Constitutional Rights is dedicated to advancing and
protecting the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution and
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Founded in 1966 by attorneys
who represented civil rights movements in the South, CCR is a non-profit
legal and educational organization committed to the creative use of law
as a positive force for social change.
No comments:
Post a Comment