The Unbelievable Brutality Unleashed on Kids in For-Profit Prisons

 

Michael McIntosh couldn’t believe what he was hearing. He had come to visit his son at the Walnut Grove Youth Correctional Facility near Jackson, Miss., only to be turned away. His son wasn’t there.

“I said, ‘Well, where is he?’ They said, ‘We don’t know.’”

Thus began a search for his son Mike that lasted more than six weeks. Desperate for answers, he repeatedly called the prison and the Mississippi Department of Corrections. “I was running out of options. Nobody would give me an answer, from the warden all the way to the commissioner.”

Finally, a nurse at the prison gave him a clue: Check the area hospitals.

After more frantic phone calls, he found Mike in a hospital in Greenwood, hours away. He was shocked at what he saw. His son could barely move, let alone sit up. He couldn’t see or talk or use his right arm. “He’s got this baseball-size knot on the back of his head,” McIntosh said. “He’s got cuts all over him, bruises. He has stab wounds. The teeth in the front are broken. He’s scared out of his mind. He doesn’t have a clue where he’s at – or why.”

 

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See on www.alternet.org

New Born Babies Given No Right To Life In Prison

 

“Wichita County Texas District Attorney Maureen Shelton isn’t talking about the case. We should.

Is there any time when a human being stops being a human being because the mother is an inmate?”

 
See on blackbutterfly7.wordpress.com

9 Ways You Can Stop Mass Incarceration

  1. Vote against the war on drugs.
  2. Vote for drug treatment – not punishment.
  3. Vote against mandatory minimum sentencing. Mandatory minimum sentencing takes the sentencing power away from the judge.
  4. Spread the word about mass incarceration and The New Jim Crow.
  5. Vote for better public schools – schools for everyone – not charter schools for a few.
  6. Tell everyone that we want to be a land of opportunities, not a land of oppression.
  7. Vote to have drugs controlled by pharmacies and taxed.
  8. Get angry.
  9. Stay angry.

See on communityvillageus.blogspot.com

BREAKING NEWS: Held in Solitary Confinement for 42 Years, Judge Orders Herman Wallace’s Release

Last month The Atlantic article ‘Did the Wrong Man Spend 40 Years in Solitary Confinement?’ asked the question ‘ a sham trial in Louisiana says about the U.S. court system’. Andrew Cohen explains …

 

Community Village‘s insight:

 

Herman Wallace is dying, so he is not really free. His life is over.

 

How many European-Americans have been held in solitary confinement for anywhere near this long?

 

Solitary confinement is cruel and unusual punishment.

 

This story is further evidence that the U.S. does not apply punishment equally across racial lines.

 

In the U.S. we often hear about human rights violoations in other countries, but how often does the U.S. address our own human rights violations?

 

@getgln

See on politicalblindspot.com