Archive for the ‘Prisons’ Category

A new prison post from Shane Crum – judging others

Sunday, August 30th, 2020

“Judging others seems to be a special pastime in prisons. Staff and inmate alike pass judgment on people for the wrong reasons. Yet, they never want the maggot things they are doing to be seen by others. These staff and inmates even think of themselves higher than they should. It reminds me of high school in a way. You and another classmate both like a girl, and the only way for the other guy to be noticed is for him to poison your name and character. He has to talk bad about you just so he can shine for a second. Then his true nature comes out when everything is said and done. I usually phrase it as,” A nobody trying to be a somebody to a bunch of nobodies.”

Read the rest of his post.

Visit his web site.

Send him a note of encouragement.

Donate to his cause.

A few short prison posts from Shane Crum

Sunday, August 16th, 2020

From his blog.

This is Shane’s website.

Send him a note of encouragement.

Donate to his defense fund.

Shane Crum on COVID-19 behind bars.

Saturday, August 8th, 2020

For some time now, I have been corresponding with Shane Crum, an inmate in Marion, Ohio, whom I believe to be innocent.

Last April, a number of his emails referenced COVID 19 in Marion. He first mentioned COVID on April 1st:

“Bob, howdy again. I apologize for not responding before now. Sunday evening we got word that a staff member here tested positive for covid 19. On Monday, we went into lockdown. We still can move around our locks in the day room. We also still have access to the kiosk. Nevertheless, more inmates are in the housing unit all day, and many of them are using the kiosk more frequently. The whole thing is chaotic at best.

“What concerns me about all of this is that staff keep the inmates isolated from one another. However, they are the ones suddenly preparing our meals, washing our laundry, and roaming between the four quarantine zones. Yesterday, an officer came into the lock, emptied out our ice machine and had his entire upper body inside the ice machine. If this is going to come into this prison, they are the ones who will bring it in here, and they are taking no precautions to keep the staff from spreading it to the inmate population. It is as though they are under the impression that the inmates will have it before they will, and we will give it to them. This is all very backward.”

On April 10th:

“Bob, howdy. How are you today? I do hope you and your family are well and staying safe. The virus is currently at this institution. I have repeatedly attempted to tell staff that they will be the ones who bring it in here, and that they should be mandated to wear the masks. It took them up til last week to mandate that. The staff are still creating policies that indicate the inmates will give it to the staff and not the other way around. They have been handling our food without wearing masks, our laundry (the same), mail, and they keep coming into the block and getting ice out of our ice machine without wearing a mask, gloves or both (when the inmates should be the ones touching all these items and not staff). A virus spreads by mucus droplets that come from the mouth and nose, and through contact with that mucus. They do not seem to get it. What do you expect, I am just an inmate to them and I could never know more than they do. I do not think they realize they are liable for what happens to us. According to the Federal Courts, we are wards of the state, and they are suppose to protect us from such things. I am done ranting.”

On April 20th:

“Howdy Bob. How are you today? I am truly sorry I have not replied to your last e-mail until now. On Thursday the 16th, OSU came in and tested the entire institution. We now know 1828 inmates here have tested positive for covid 19. Needless to say, I have been a little distracted.”

And then on April 28th:

“Bob, howdy again. Well, the whole institution was tested for covid 19 on the 16th. They finally informed the inmate population on the results of those tests on the 23rd. 2100 out of approximately 2500 have tested positive here. From your e-mail, I would think you are aware of the conditions here. Anyway, I tested positive. I had a couple days where I was really down. I did not eat for three days straight. I did not have any major symptoms, so it was like being really tired with extreme headaches, and dizziness. I pulled through it without much of a problem. Most of the inmates here had similar symptoms, but some are not doing too well. From the beginning, the news reported that around 80% of the people who get infected with the virus would show mild to no symptoms. While that was promising, the other 20% where getting hospitalized and some dying. I am thankful that I did not go through what some of the other inmates are dealing with. The staff here are still running some bizarre procedures that will ensure the eventual infection of the entire population here. What I am really not understanding is that our administration has been negligent at best and O.D.R.C. continues to transfer inmates here. They keep separating the negatives from the positives, but that seems to be some sick way to ensure they will eventually infect the inmates who tested negative. The National Guard are great and efficient. Way better people than the C.O.s who work here. I keep asking them about some of these procedures the administration have put in place, and they are just as dumbfounded as I am. I wish I could tell you I am staying safe, but the staff are ensuring that is impossible for us. That is enough of the pitty party stuff.”

You can learn more about Shane by visiting his web site: https://shanecrum.org.

Please help him if you can. He would most appreciate just hearing from you: https://shanecrum.org/contact-us/.

-Bob

A prison post from my friend Shane Crum

Sunday, August 2nd, 2020

https://shanecrum.org/2020/08/02/two-thoughts-from-shane/

Learn more about his case at his web site.

You can send him a message or make a donation.

 

Funeral Services for Bruce Perkins

Friday, July 24th, 2020

Carol called me this afternoon. She sounded very tired. But reconciled that Bruce was finally at rest.

She does regret Bruce not ever getting to meet so many of his friends before he left. I told her we all knew and loved Bruce, the kind man, the gentle giant, the good friend. We didn’t need to physically meet him.

We, who know the story, and how he endured, with grace, 30 years of the slings and arrows of cruel and outrageous fortune, rose above it with his dignity intact, and at least got out of the Texas hellholes for the last year of his life, —-we admire the perseverance, his courage, the integrity, his faith and trust in his Lord,—-the strength and love of Carol, his wife who stood by him all those years. Brave, tough folks.

Carol asked me to forward along the information re Bruce’s funeral service.

He’ll be waked at:

Corley Funeral Home
418 N. 13th St.
Corsicana, TX 75110

(Funeral Home Phone: 903-874-3755)

Service to begin at 2 PM, Saturday, August 1, 2020.

Frank Kane, NCRJ Clerk-Treasurer

Elsie Oscarson Update

Sunday, October 27th, 2019

[Great news from Mark Pendergrast]

Elsie Oscarson is free!

After 21 years in prison, Elsie Oscarson was finally released on September 2, 2019. She was granted a new trial, but because it would be rolling the dice one more time, she took an Alford plea, which allows her to maintain her innocence, but she must still remain on a sex offender registry, cannot be in the same room or in a park or school with anyone under seventeen years of age without another adult present, and has to abide by other restrictions. She also cannot initiate contact with her children, though they may contact her through the courts.

Despite these restrictions. Elsie is ecstatic to be free, determined to abide by all regulations, and is living with her sister in a home in northern Vermont. She looks forward to gardening, cooking, taking walks, and drinking eggnog, and eating whatever she wants. (She has already had a big steak.)

As a volunteer and former board member with the National Center for Reason and Justice, I was instrumental in investigating her case, determining her likely innocence, and helping to get her case taken on by Seth Lipschutz, her lawyer (who retired just as she was freed) for the Vermont Prisoner’s Rights division of the Defender General’s office. The NCRJ has sponsored her case for many years and is delighted that she is finally free after being imprisoned for over two decades for offenses she almost certainly did not commit. –Mark Pendergrast

More from my Friend Gunther

Wednesday, April 10th, 2019

More information about his prison transfer:

 

Life Unhindered: Uprooted and Plunked – Part II

A New Prison Post from my Friend Gunther Fiek

Sunday, March 31st, 2019

In this post, Gunther begins the story of his sudden transfer to a private prison.

https://guntherfiek.net/2019/03/31/life-unhindered-uprooted-and-plunked-part-i/

Send Bob Halsey a Birthday Card

Thursday, February 7th, 2019

Bob Halsey turns 90–or possibly 91–on February 18th. I am surprised he is still alive. He has been in bad health for years.

Bob is an innocent man who has been in prison since September of 1993.  His lawyer may obtain a compassionate release. But if that succeeds, he has no place to go. It would have to be a nursing home, if one would take him.

Bob was railroaded by many of the same characters who sent Bernard Baran to prison. Baran’s prosecutor, Dan Ford, was the trial judge. Jane Satullo was the chief interrogator of the children.

You can learn more about his case.

Here is the address for cards:

Robert C. Halsey
W-55045
POB 1218
Shirley MA 01464

The new symbol of shame: “C” for conviction

Monday, January 14th, 2019

“More than 19 million people have a felony records, and more than 100 million criminal records exist in state criminal history repositories (individuals may have a criminal record in several states). These records routinely bar individuals from obtaining employment. Even when a person is as equally qualified as another candidate for a position, research shows that employers are less likely to offer those with felony records a callback or a job than those without such a record. People of color with criminal records face an even greater employment penalty than their white counterparts.

“In other instances, entire industries seek to exclude the convicted through overbroad “ good moral character” clauses that are weaponized to deny the convicted occupational licenses in the guise of improving public health or safety. In reality, these restrictions can result in quite the opposite effect: As employment is a key factor in decreasing an individual’s chance of recidivism, restricting employment reduces public safety. Even when individuals do not return to crime, children and families of those with criminal records who are unemployed suffer from a lack of financial resources. ”

Read the editorial by Emily Mooney and Arthur Rizer in the Washington Examiner.

From Bill Dobbs and the Dobbs Wire.