-Caveat Lector-

ACTS OF COURAGE IN THE FACE OF FEAR

The Family and Friends of Making the Walls Transparent
http://www.angelfire.com/fl4/fci/family.html


The DOC in Florida (indeed in most states) maintains their
secret world by
punishing not only inmates who report abuses, but will just
as quickly turn on
their own guards who try to report unprofessional behavior.
Because of the
threats and retaliation, there is a great reluctance to
speak out.

There is another group of DOC victims other than prisoners
and guards who
talk.... They are an easily forgotten group, millions
strong, who are suffering
in their world of self-imposed silence.  The families and
friends who walk on
eggshells, hoping negative attention will be not be focused
on their prisoner
are held in check by the fear of DOC retaliation on them and
their prisoner in
the form of blocked mail, transfers to remote or cruel
locations, and worse.

The families of prisoners, are more often than not shunned
by their communities,
ignored by those in power, and treated with disrespect by
the DOC.  What have
they done to warrant this distain?  They dared to continue
to Love someone the
rest of society threw away.

I want to introduce you to five courageous women who have
broken the DOC imposed
barriers to truth this week.  I urge you to support them in
their efforts,
because we can't keep calling everyone liars who go up
against those 'honest'
guards at the prisons.

Despite the efforts of DOC employees to cover up the truth,
I can see the big
picture and know that the walls really are becoming
transparent.  The only thing
slowing us down is the reluctance of good people to stand up
and tell their
stories for fear of the risks involved.

In the first story, three ladies with husbands in Columbia
CI report on being
groped while being intimately searched.  The improper search
is glossed over and
quickly dismissed in the following article.  Their husbands
have been quickly
moved and not near enough words are spent on the retaliation
that is in process
because the wives went to the press.   This is standard
coverage.  Abuse is
reported, the media calls the DOC, the DOC denies all, end
of story.  Family and
prisoner are punished so it doesn't happen again.

DOC spokeswoman Debbie Buchanan
[[EMAIL PROTECTED]]  earns her
living defending the DOC and is quite good at it.  Many of
us have learned to
see past the denials of impropriety, but many still want to
believe that DOC
personnel never lie.

The intimate search was uncalled for, all but one of the
husbands have been
moved to separate them from their families - again, and
still the public doesn't
and may never know the details.  And all of this is
foreseeable. DOC standard
behavior when truth begins to leak out is to isolate the
prisoner from the
outside, get control of the families using fear so that
other families don't
speak out.

These ladies don't even have access to the internet, so
their efforts are very
courageous.  They have no idea how much support there is
out here.  The best thing this reporter did for these ladies
is to include their
phone numbers.  They may get threatening calls from errant
guards, but if you are on your toes, they will also get many
calls of support.

Kay Lee

**************************************
CONTACT
Mrs. Griffis at 754-4169
Mrs. Hudson at 961-8757
Mrs. Montgomery at 961-9684.

http://www.lakecityreporter.com/news/stories/010405n3.html

April 5, 2001

Love behind bars presents unique challenges for inmates,
wives
By JOHN WRIGHT
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Lake City Reporter
April 5, 2001
Email this story.

LAKE CITY
Tammi Hudson, Debra Griffis and Anne Montgomery have
something in common:
They've never seen their husbands outside of prison. But the
three women all say
their marriages are as meaningful as conventional ones, if
not more so.

"We have to work double hard," said Montgomery, whose
husband, Charles H.
Montgomery, 48, is an inmate at Columbia Correctional
Institution. "That's what
makes it extra special."

Mrs. Montgomery, 56, has been visiting her husband for 10
years since they met
through her son, who was incarcerated with Montgomery. They
got married six
years ago.

Montgomery is serving a 40-year sentence for armed burglary
and kidnapping,
according to the state Department of Corrections. His
scheduled release date is
Sept. 29, 2007.

"I want to have a life with my husband before I get too
old," Mrs. Montgomery
said. "We love our men. He has made me happy. Why can't I
stand by him? I don't
care if people hate me."

The women can visit with their husbands for 12 hours a week
on Saturday and
Sunday. They hold hands and walk around the visitation park,
sit and talk, and
play hangman or cards. According to DOC regulations, they're
allowed one kiss
and hug at the beginning of each visit, and one more at the
end.

The women say they know their husbands have made mistakes,
but everybody
deserves another chance.

"All inmates aren't bad," Hudson said. "They do straighten
up."
Hudson, 38, said she met her husband, Roger W. Hudson, also
38, through Sheila
Woods' "Have a Friend" club, which runs in the Examiner
newspaper.
"I just wanted a friend to write to," she said. "We just got
closer and closer."

They met last April and were married Dec. 9. Hudson, who
used to live in Ormond
Beach, moved here so she wouldn't have to drive so far to
visit her husband, who
is serving a 40-year sentence for burglary, robbery,
kidnapping and attempted
sexual battery. His scheduled release date is Dec. 28, 2015,
according to the
DOC.

Mrs. Griffis, 44, and her husband, Roy A. Griffis, 36, have
been married 21 Z2
years. They met in November 1996, when he was a cellmate of
her son's in the
Okaloosa County jail. He was sent to prison in March 1998.
Mrs. Griffis also
moved to Lake City so she could be closer to her husband.

"I've followed him all the way," she said.

Griffis is serving a 15-year sentence for burglary and
assault, according to the
DOC. His scheduled release date is Jan. 24, 2004.

Mrs. Griffis, who was married once before for 19 years, said
she isn't afraid
that Griffis will leave her once he gets out.

"I'm confident that it's going to work," she said. "I know
he loves me with
everything in his heart."

Although they love their husbands and enjoy their marriages,
the three women say
it's difficult being married to someone in prison.

"The wives outside of the prison have to stick together,"
Mrs. Griffis said. "If
they know you're associated with anyone who's incarcerated,
they don't want
anything to do with you."

"We're all one family," Mrs. Montgomery added. "We're all
going through the same
thing."

The three women recently complained that they were
improperly searched by guards
in the visitation park at Columbia Correctional Institution.
In letters to the
DOC inspector general's office, they said they were patted
down in the groin
area and forced to shake out their bras.

"We read the letters," DOC spokeswoman Debbie Buchanan said.
"There's nothing in
those letters that was improper.

"You can't imagine how much contraband you can find in those
areas. There was
not an improper search."

Last week, Griffis and Hudson were transferred to prisons in
the Panhandle.
Their wives believe the transfers were retaliation for their
complaints.

"It just seems like the more we try, the more things go
against us," Mrs. Hudson
said. "There's something wrong with this system."

Mrs. Griffis said she can't afford to move again and will
have to drive to visit
her husband. She hasn't heard from him in 21Z2 weeks.

"It's rough not knowing if he's OK," she said. "They've
broken the connection
that my husband and I had."

The three women said they're interested in starting a local
support group for
people whose relatives are incarcerated. Call Mrs. Griffis
at 754-4169, Mrs.
Hudson at 961-8757 or Mrs. Montgomery at 961-9684.

Copyright © 192001, Lake City Reporter.

Letters to the Editor
The Palm Beach Post
West Palm Beach, FL

***********************
The next two ladies also have people in prison, and should
serve
as inspiration to those who have so much they need to say.
Kay Lee

*********************************************

To Whom It May Concern

The trial of the guards who beat Frank Valdes to death at
Florida State Prison
July 17, 1999 is scheduled to take place July 16, 2001 at
the Bradford County
Courthouse in Starke, Florida.

A letter writing campaign is currently underway to Judge
Larry Turner at the
Bradford County Courthouse to move the trial out of Starke.
There are nine prisons in Bradford County. Residents there
are directly or
indirectly dependent on the Department of Corrections.
Nonaligned souls are
vulnerable to intimidation by guards.

Wanda Valdes, Frank's widow, has received threatening phone
calls. On March 31,
2001 at 4:00 a.m. The caller said, "Just listen, do not come
to Frank's trial or
we will blow your head off. You are not welcome up here, you
are a troublemaker.
Do you understand?"

Wanda, intimately acquainted with prison sounds, recognized
the background as
coming from "inside." Even though Wanda has been told not be
present at the
trial, she will attend it.

Threats on her life are one more reason the trial should be
moved out of the
northern region of Florida.

Submitted by: Elaine Ruth Pope (561) 962-8559
6218 Santa Donna
West Palm Beach, FL 33415
and
Carol Strick (561) 689-1597
Whitehall Drive Apt. 101
West Palm Beach, FL 33405






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