>From Attica to Pelican Bay 
http://www.truth-out.org/attica-pelican-bay/1316278700 


Saturday 17 September 2011 
by: Michael Ratner 




Forty years ago, on September 9th, 1971, prisoners protesting medieval 
conditions rebelled at Attica, a maximum-security prison in upstate New York. 
Four days later the state launched a violent assault on the prisoners that left 
ten hostages and twenty-nine inmates dead. Both the uprising and its bloody 
suppression should serve as a warning about our country’s rush towards 
incarceration and the brutality of our prisons. 

For me, the story of Attica is also a story about justice—the importance of 
fighting for it, especially for disfavored people, even against terrible odds. 
I began working at the Center for Constitutional Rights two days prior to 
Attica’s uprising, and within days joined with lawyers from the National 
Lawyers Guild, who fought to defend the prisoners and hold the state 
responsible. The justice we sought was sometimes deferred, often denied, and 
occasionally won over nearly three decades. 

>From one perspective, we failed. The legitimate complaints of the 
>inmates—their “demands” including such basic human rights as access to 
>adequate food and medical treatment, religious freedom, and an end to 
>segregation—remain unfulfilled at Attica and elsewhere. Not a single state 
>official was ever prosecuted for his role in the killing, wounding and beating 
>of Attica’s prisoners during and after the uprising. 

>From another perspective, we succeeded. Under duress, then-Governor Carey shut 
>down all of the prosecutions of Attica’s inmates for their part in the 
>rebellion, and pardoned those convicted. Though he ignored the recommendations 
>of the commission he had appointed, which included looking at the conduct of 
>state officials, the state ultimately was forced to pay. In a civil damage 
>cases that took twenty-seven years, Elizabeth Fink and other Guild lawyers 
>eventually won a twelve million dollar settlement on behalf of Attica’s 
>inmates. 

Our greatest victory may be the establishment of a more accurate historical 
record. In 1971, the papers were filled with false reports about how the 
inmates had killed the hostages, slitting their throats and castrating some. 
The only criminal investigations they were concerned with involved allegations 
against the inmates, which involved charges ranging from assault to murder, and 
resulted in sixty-two serious indictments. While the press was evading the real 
story, I was interviewing inmates in the prison’s hospital ward. My main memory 
is one of shock — shock at seeing almost crippled black and Latino men lying 
there recounting stories of near escapes, bullet wounds, and the famous 
gauntlet that many were forced to run —stripped naked — over broken glass while 
guards beat them with clubs. 

Today, “Attica” is synonymous with racism and prisoner abuse. The record now 
shows that over 2,200 inmates, 63 percent of whom were black or Latino, were 
held in a facility meant to hold 1,200 and patrolled by 383 guards, all white. 
It’s now a given that physical as well as mental abuse and racism were common. 

We would do well to heed Attica’s lessons. America’s prison population is now 
almost 10 times larger and still filled with the same people who suffered 
Attica’s overcrowded, subhuman conditions — mostly low-income black and Latino 
men. In fact, the United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world 
— 743 per 100,000 as of 2009. That’s about 20 percent higher than any other 
nation. While Americans represent only 5 percent of the world's population, 
one-quarter of the world's inmates are incarcerated here. 

Conditions in US prisons remain far too like the ones that contributed to the 
uprising at Attica and its brutal suppression. Just this past May, the US 
Supreme Court deemed conditions in California’s overcrowded prisons bad enough 
to constitute a violation of the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual 
punishment. Six weeks later, prisoners in Pelican Bay’s “Security Housing Unit” 
went on a hunger strike to protest being confined in cement cells with metal 
doors for more than twenty-two hours a day, with no real access to natural 
light or human contact. 

Forty years ago, Attica forced some unpleasant truths into the spotlight. That 
most jailors and officials are white, while most incarcerated people and 
scapegoats are people of color. That institutional power all too often prevails 
over civil and constitutional rights, especially for the most vulnerable among 
us. That people stripped of their humanness will eventually rise up. These are 
lessons we ignore at our peril. 




. 

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