Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2011 09:21:10 -0400
Subject: California's Prison System: The Living Hell in Pelican Bay Prison



California's Prison System
The Living Hell in Pelican Bay Prison

by Li Onesto

<http://www.globalresearch.ca/>Global Research, June 21, 2011

Crescent City is far north in California, about 
20 miles from the Oregon border. In 1989, 275 
acres of dense forest near there were chopped 
down to build the $277.5 million Pelican Bay 
State Prison (PBSP). Today, more than 3,000 
people are locked up in this prison, infamous for 
its inhumane conditions and extreme abuse.

More than 1,000 prisoners at PBSP are locked up 
in an X-shaped cluster of white buildings set 
apart by electrified fences and barren ground. 
This is the Security Housing Unit (SHU), a 
supermax control facility where prisoners are 
subjected to sensory deprivation, isolation and brutality.

Many prisoners in the Pelican Bay SHU, and their 
lawyers, have bravely fought to expose the 
torture that is going on. They have written 
letters and articles, and filed lawsuits. Against 
heavy repression and censorship they have 
struggled to connect with people on the outside 
who are fighting for the rights of prisoners.

Dehumanizing Sensory Deprivation and Isolation


Solitary confinement is a hidden world within the 
larger hidden world of the prison system, and 
prisoners in solitary are an invisible and 
dehumanized minority within the larger population 
of prison inmates in general—who also remain 
remarkably invisible and dehumanized...

—Solitary Watch, an information clearinghouse on solitary confinement

If you are in the SHU at Pelican Bay Prison you 
face two extremes: minimum human contact and maximum sensory deprivation.


Think about everything that makes you human, that 
keeps you physically and mentally alive, that 
connects you with the world and other people, 
that gives you a reason to live, to love, to 
learn and think. All this is what the SHU tries to extinguish.

If you get put in the SHU you’re locked up in a 
small, windowless concrete cell for 23 hours a 
day, without any face-to-face contact with 
another human being, not even a guard. You may or 
may not be allowed reading material. You get only 
one hour outside the cell, by yourself, in a 
small indoor space. You never see sunlight or a 
blade of grass. Whenever you leave your cell 
you’re handcuffed and shackled, hands-to-waist, ankle-to-ankle.


Many mentally ill prisoners are put in the SHU at 
Pelican Bay. And the SHU literally drives many 
prisoners crazy. What does this mean? There is 
evidence that long-term isolation can alter brain 
chemistry and produce psychopathologies, 
including panic attacks, depression, inability to 
concentrate, memory loss, aggression, 
self-mutilation, and various forms of psychosis. 
These things occur as a result of other forms of 
confinement. But they happen at a considerably 
higher rate to prisoners subjected to long-term 
isolation. And there are prisoners in the Pelican 
Bay SHU who have been suffering this form of 
torture for 20, 30 or even 40 years.1

These crimes against prisoners also carry over to 
their families. Prison officials purposely 
prevent prisoners in the SHU from having physical 
contact with their loved ones. A prisoner in the 
PBSP SHU isn’t even allowed to take a photo of 
himself to send to his family. No phone calls are permitted.

If you live in San Francisco and have a son, a 
husband, or a father at Pelican Bay, you have to 
drive 370 miles to see them. If you live in Los 
Angeles the drive is 750 miles. And when you get 
there, you’re only allowed to visit for one and a 
half hours through thick glass, no touching.


Brutality Aimed at Breaking Bones and Spirit


The prison population in the U.S. has 
skyrocketed—from 500,000 in 1980 to more than 2.3 
million today. In California 33 new prisons were 
built between 1984 and 2005 (12 prisons had been 
constructed in the state in the previous 132 
years). Human rights groups in the U.S. and 
internationally have documented the inhumane 
conditions of this mass incarceration. And 
recently the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that 
conditions in California prisons constitute “cruel and unusual punishment.” 2

Indeed if you look at the brutal conditions in 
U.S. prisons, which have been clearly documented, 
it becomes clear that the prison system in this 
country is not about helping prisoners or even 
treating them like human beings. And for decades 
now, there hasn’t even been the pretense of 
prisons being about “rehabilitation.”

Mass incarceration in this country is about 
locking up a whole section of society—especially 
poor Black and Latino men—to whom this system 
offers no future. Prisons in the U.S. are aimed 
at punishment—degrading, dehumanizing, and 
breaking people. And the SHU at Pelican Bay is a model in doing exactly that.

For example, guards carry out brutal “cell 
extractions”—which they say are done if a 
prisoner won’t leave his cell. But prisoners in 
the SHU have said that cell extractions are 
carried out for such minor infractions as 
refusing to return a meal tray, banging on the 
cell door, or insulting a guard. This description 
of a cell extraction is corroborated not only by 
many prisoner accounts, but also by explicit 
Department of Corrections procedures:

“This is how the five-man cell extraction team 
proceeds: the first member of the team is to 
enter the cell carrying a large shield, which is 
used to push the prisoner back into a corner of 
the cell; the second member follows closely, 
wielding a special cell extraction baton, which 
is used to strike the inmate on the upper part of 
his body so that he will raise his arms in 
self-protection; thus unsteadied, the inmate is 
pulled off balance by another member of the team 
whose job is to place leg irons around his 
ankles; once downed, a fourth member of the team 
places him in handcuffs; the fifth member stands 
ready to fire a taser gun or rifle that shoots 
wooden or rubber bullets at the resistant inmate.”

After such a beating, a prisoner may be kept hog-tied in his cell for hours.

A former guard at Pelican Bay testified about how 
he was targeted by other guards because he didn’t 
go along with all the vicious brutality he was 
supposed to carry out. He said: “They called 
D-Yard SHU, ‘fluffy SHU,’ because we didn’t 
hog-tie inmates to toilets or kick them in the 
face after cell extractions... There was one 
officer in there who used to take photos of every 
shooting and decorate his office with them.” 4

Doesn’t this sound a lot like the soldiers in 
Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan who carried out 
massacres and then proudly collected body parts 
like souvenirs and posed for photos they could 
use to brag about their exploits?


The “Catch-22” of the SHU


How does a prisoner end up in the SHU? For 
exhibiting any violence. For anything prison 
officials deem “insubordination.” For 
contraband—which includes not only drugs but cell 
phones—or even having too many postage stamps. 5

Prisoners in the Pelican Bay SHU have submitted a 
Formal Complaint—“On Human Rights Violations and 
Request for Action to end over 20 years of state 
sanctioned torture to extract information from 
(or cause mental illness to) California’s Pelican 
Bay State Prison Security Housing Unit (SHU) 
Prisoners”—to the State of California lawmakers 
and the Secretary of the California Department of 
Corrections and Rehabilitation. One of the issues 
addressed in this complaint is the way many 
prisoners end up in the SHU at Pelican Bay 
because false and/or highly questionable 
“evidence” is used to accuse them of being 
active/inactive members of a prison gang. Prison 
officials say supermax facilities like the SHU 
are for the “worst of the worst.” But as the 
Formal Complaint says, “a review of these 
so-called demonized ‘worst of the worst’ PBSP-SHU 
inmates, who are party to this complaint, will 
reveal they are actually free of being guilty of 
serious rule violations for many years and zero 
illegal gang-related acts in prison.” And the 
complaint also alleges that many of those sent to 
the SHU are “those who utilize the legal system 
to challenge illegal [California Department of 
Corrections and Rehabilitation] policies and 
practices, and encourage others to do the same.”

The Formal Complaint states:

“If they want out of the SHU, they have to 
provide staff with information and be willing to 
testify on other prisoners, free citizens, 
including family members that only harms others 
and this has to be known by everyone. This is a 
Catch 22 situation—become a notorious informant 
(and thereby place yourself, possibly your 
family, at serious risk for retaliation) or die 
or become mentally ill in the SHU.”

This is called “debriefing,” which, the complaint 
goes on to explain, “requires a SHU inmate to 
provide CDCR staff with ‘sufficient verifiable 
information that will adversely impact the gang, 
other gang members and associates to the extent 
that they will never accept them back.’”

The complaint goes on to say: “This makes the 
inmate (and possibly his family members) a target 
for reprisal, potentially for life ... many of 
these inmates are serving “term-to-life” 
sentences, and they have been eligible for parole 
for the last 5 to 25+ years, but they are told 
that if they want a chance to parole they have to 
debrief—period! The CDCR-PBSP-SHU policies and 
practices summarized violate both the U.S. 
Constitution and International law banning the 
use of torture and other cruel, inhumane, or 
degrading treatment or punishment as a means of 
obtaining information via coercion, and/or to 
punish for acts or suspected acts of misconduct...”

Crimes Against Humanity

Earlier this year, Laura Magnani, author of the 
American Friends Service Committee 2008 report, 
“Buried Alive: Long-Term Isolation in 
California’s Youth and Adult Prisons,” was on 
KPFK radio’s Michael Slate Show and talked about 
conditions in SHUs (interview excerpt at 
<http://revcom.us/a/237/Magnani-interview-en.html>http://revcom.us/a/237/Magnani-interview-en.html).
 
At the end of the interview Slate spoke to the 
importance of prisoners “transforming themselves 
and really becoming something different from what 
they may have been when they went in, even if 
they weren’t political prisoners there.” He 
brought up how the isolation works to rob them of 
the ability to do this, of dreaming, of taking 
part in revolutionary activity. Magnani responded:

“It’s not even just dreams, it’s actually 
punishing you for having an intellectual life, 
for actually thinking outside the box, or for 
thinking at all. So the idea of barring people’s 
access to certain kinds of thought, which is what 
censorship is, is extremely frightening. And we 
know from research that one of the best things 
that can happen to somebody doing a long prison 
sentence is for them to develop an intellectual 
life and start reading and start studying and 
start thinking for themselves. That’s a way where 
you can really create a new life for yourself, or 
you can make your life meaningful even if you 
never get out. But if you do get out, you make 
yourself a more productive member of society, 
because you have a life. You’re a thoughtful, 
educated person. What could be better? And 
instead they’re trying to really prevent that from happening.”

Crimes against the very humanity of people are 
being carried out every single day at Pelican Bay 
Prison—and in other prisons all over the USA. 
This is an intolerable outrage. And a mass and 
determined movement outside the walls is urgently 
needed to expose and demand an end to these high-tech torture chambers.

Notes

1 “Confronting Torture in U.S. Prisons: A Q&A 
With Solitary Watch” by James Ridgeway and Jean 
Casella, June 17, 2011 
(<http://www.solitarywatch.com/2011/06/17/confronting-torture-in-u-s-prisons-a-qa-with-solitary-watch/>solitarywatch.com/2011/06/17/confronting-torture-in-u-s-prisons-a-qa-with-solitary-watch/)
 


2 
“<https://mail.google.com/mail/html/compose/235/California-Prison-Ruling-en.html>Cruel
 
and Unusual Punishment in California Prisons,” Revolution #235, June 12, 2011

3 “‘Infamous Punishment’: The Psychological 
Consequences of Isolation” by Craig Haney, 
National Prison Project Journal, Spring 1994

4 “Rural Prison as Colonial Master” by Christian 
Parenti, available at: 
<http://www.pelicanbayprisonproject.org/history.htm>pelicanbayprisonproject.org/history.htm

5 Ridgeway and Casella

Li Onesto  She can be contacteed at: 
<http://us.mc1613.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=lione...@hotmail.com>lione...@gmail.com

Li Onesto is a frequent contributor to Global 
Research. 
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=listByAuthor&authorFirst=%20Li&authorName=Onesto>Global
 
Research Articles by Li Onesto





-- 
<http://www.petitionbuzz.com/petitions/jerichocointelpro>SIGN 
THE JERICHO COINTELPRO PETITION!

Free All Political Prisoners!
<mailto:nycjeri...@gmail.com>nycjeri...@gmail.com • www.jerichony.org





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