Author Archives: Editor

Announcement of Nationally Coordinated Prisoner Workstoppage for Sept 9, 2016

Prisoners from across the United States have just released this call to action for a nationally coordinated prisoner workstoppage against prison slavery to take place on September 9th, 2016.

Get it as a zine PDF. En Espanol or mailroom friendly

This is a Call to Action Against Slavery in America

In one voice, rising from the cells of long term solitary confinement, echoed in the dormitories and cell blocks from Virginia to Oregon, we prisoners across the United States vow to finally end slavery in 2016.

On September 9th of 1971 prisoners took over and shut down Attica, New York State’s most notorious prison. On September 9th of 2016, we will begin an action to shut down prisons all across this country. We will not only demand the end to prison slavery, we will end it ourselves by ceasing to be slaves. Continue reading

Support Michigan Prisoner Food Protest

Prisoners in multiple facilities in Michigan are engaged in a coordinated refusal to participate in prison meals. They are refusing to go to the chow hall, and instead living off of purchased food in their cells. They have many complaints, about the quality and quantity of the food and the facility.

Contact the warden and ask him to meet the prisoner’s demands promptly by calling: Warden Duncan MacLaren at (906) 495-2282

Write to one of the prisoners:
Lamont Heard
252329
Kincross Correctional Facility
4533 W. Industrial Park Drive
Kincheloe, MI 49788

Full story from the Detroit Free Press here:
http://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2016/03/30/food-protest-spreads-second-state-prison-up/82431932/

A Call For Actions in Solidarity with Alabama Prison Rebels

Source https://itsgoingdown.org/call-actions-solidarity-alabama-prison-rebels/

A Call For Actions in Solidarity with Alabama Prison Rebels
March 16, 2016

“Things here are tense but festive. The C.O. and warden was stabbed…It has nothing to do with overcrowding, but with the practice of locking folks up for profit, control and subjugation. Fires were set, we got control of two cubicles, bust windows. The riot team came, shot gas, locked down, searched the dorms. Five have been shipped and two put in lockup.” ~A Prisoner at Holman Correctional

This week, prison rebels at Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore, Alabama staged two riots in three days—battling guards, building barricades, stabbing the warden, taking over sections of the prison and setting a guard station on fire. These actions come as no surprise to those who have been paying attention to the crumbling prison system in Alabama and the increasing level of radicalization of the prison population there. Continue reading

Updates on Holman Uprising

On Friday night, hundreds of prisoners took over the general population portion of Holman prison in Atmore Alabama. Read more on that and see videos made by the prisoners here.

Viewpoints from the prisoners varied, one described conditions of overcrowding, sending out pictures to accompany it: “114 Boys and Men (from teenagers to senior citizens) are allotted 2ft of personal living space with a 1ft wide locker to keep their belongings. Almost 100 feet of bunks , in 4 lines.

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Another prisoner said “It has nothing to do with overcrowding, but with the practice of locking folks up for profit, control and subjugation.” He recounted “Things here are tense but festive. The co and warden was stabbed… Fires were set, people got control of two cubicles, bust windows. The riot team came, shot gas, locked down, searched the dorms. Five have been shipped and two put in lockup.”

According to mainstream media, the Correctional Emergency Response Team had regained control of the facility by 5 am saturday morning. 5 prisoners were emergency transferred and are likely facing harsh reprisals, and new criminal charges.

8:30 the following Monday morning, March 14th, 70 prisoners took over and barricaded Continue reading

Uprising Currently Underway at Holman Prison In Alabama

Last night prisoners took over Holman prison in Alabama. At around midnight a fight between inmates escalated to include guards and even the warden. Staff fled, and the rioting prisoners have taken over general population, lighting guard towers on fire and barricading the doors.

News and video, here: http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/index.ssf/2016/03/reported_riot_fires_at_holman.html

According to rumors, the incident began when an officer responded to a fight between two prisoners with excessive force and was stabbed in response. “Then they brought the warden down and the warden got to talking crazy so they ended up stabbing the warden, and then after that all the officers ran up out of the institution, that was like 12:00, 1:00 this morning.”

The warden and officer’s injuries were not fatal. There are videos circulating on social media of prisoners burning the control towers and opening all doors. “We’re tired of this shit, there’s only one way to deal with it: tear the prison down” one of the participants stated.

At around 2 am the riot squad and police arrived. They said they were waiting on daylight to move and try to restore control of the facility. At this time, people haven’t heard from the occupied portion of the prison for a few hours, but it seems the authorities have not moved in, either. Friends and family of prisoners in Holman are asking that people pray for their loved ones.

Holman’s capacity is 1002 prisoners, but it also has a segregation unit and death row, which are still under the prison’s control. Prisoners in segregation have not received their breakfast meal, four hours after it is normally distributed. General population at Holman consists of four open space dormitories, housing 114 people each, plus a 200 person annex, so there may be between 450 – 650 prisoners involved in the uprising.

Alabama DOC has been increasingly unstable in recent months, incidents of violence within the institutions have been stacking up, the federal government was on the verge of taking over the system due to poor management and budgetary shortfalls last year.

An article from Jan 2016 about ADOC’s failure to operate safe and stable prisons: http://www.eji.org/node/1198

UPDATE and more direct perspective, from elsewhere in the prison:

On Friday March 11, 2016 the anticipated powder keg erupted at Alabama’s infamous Holman Prison. Most known for housing Alabama’s Death Row and “Yellow Mama”. However, in recent years it has been the site of organized protest. In 2007, all prisoners engaged in a Hunger and Work Strike which brought about the condemnation of Dormitories and remodeling of General Population. In 2011 a Protest against Inhumane Treatment by Officers. In 2014, the FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT launched its Coordinate Protest at Holman. Now today, Alabama Prison Administrators are seeing the fruit of their labor. As on Friday night @ 11:15 p.m a simple fight between two prisoners escalated into an Officer receiving stab wounds. The prisoners requested to see the Warden and Captain. Once Warden Davenport arrived, after being disrespectful and non negotiable. Another altercation broke out in which Davenport received stab wounds. At this time all personnel vacated Geñeral Population.

It appears that officials are back in certain parts of the prison as Death Row and the Seg Annex were served breakfast at around 11:30 am. So there must have been some sense of calm. However at around 12:45 pm Several Response Team Officers could be seen running through Death Row from the Seg Annex enroute to General Population. So it appears that the unrest continu

Texas Prison Work Stoppage

REVOLUTIONARY SOLIDARITY

“We Are At a Tipping Point”

More information: https://www.facebook.com/Fts-inmateworkercommitteecounsel-1525053261122183/ closed group, request access.

The Top Five DEMANDS for Texas:

Meaningful Work Time – Applied retroactively, when our Flat Time and accrued Good/Work Time equals 100% we should be ENTITLED to Mandatory Supervision I Parole.

We want a “Presumptive Parole System” which requires the release of a Prisoner at their earliest release date, unless there are valid objective reasons not to do so. Those reasons might include poor institutional behavior or refusing to participate in programming. The nature of the crime or any other “Static Reason” (things prisoners can NOT change) would NOT be a valid reason to deny parole. Continue reading

The Free Virginia Movement (FVM) Declaration

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The Free Virginia Movement (FVM) Declaration

Our Purpose

The Free Virginia Movement (FVM) is an Inside-Out, multiracial statewide movement founded and organized by people incarcerated in Virginia prisons affiliated with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) Union and sentenced under theso-called “no parole” or “85%” law. The function and purpose of the FVM is to organize all “no parole” prisoners into one bloc or cohesive unit so that we can effectively oppose & challenge excessive sentences, long-term incarceration & mass incarceration as a result of the abolition of parole & truth-in-sentencing laws enacted by the VA General Assembly back in 1994; and unjust, inhuman & oppressive prison conditions which endangers/jeopardizes our spiritual, mental & emotional health & well-being, and which runs counter to (hinders) our growth and rehabilitative efforts in the VA Dept. of (In)Corrections.

Our Organizing Strategy

The FVM seeks to bring the entire VA prisoner-class sentenced under the “no parole” or “85%” law & outside Human Rights & Prison Advocacy Groups together across Racial, Gender, Ideological, Religious & Geographical lines—thereby creating a cross-denominational United Front unlike anything ever seen in the VA prison system. Continue reading

THE REPRESSION OF MELVIN (Bennu Hannibal Ra(y)-Sun) RAY & R.EARL(Kinetik Justice) COUNCIL

FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT :
THE REPRESSION OF MELVIN (Bennu Hannibal Ra(y)-Sun) RAY & R.EARL(Kinetik Justice) COUNCIL
CRIME: Teaching the Truth and Demanding to be treated as Human Beings
PUNISHMENT: Life in Solitary Confinement

THE FOUNDATION

From the stealing of this land and founding the United States of America, the ruling class has suppressed all voices of dissension and violently repressed any form of resistance, by those deemed the”other”(Africans, Hispanic and poor Whites). History is replete with many instances that substantiate such an assertion, but a clear example of their oppressive tactics is COINTELPRO during the height of the CIVIL RIGHTS AND BLACK POWER MOVEMENTS. Think of STOKLEY, HUEY, GEORGE, H.RAP, K’OMBOA, MAFUNDI, BRO GAMBLE and the entire I.F.A. Many of these Brothas stories are well known, but few know the struggle of Mr. Mafundi, Bro. Gamble, Johnny Harris, George Dobbins, Frank Moore and the INMATES FOR ACTION(I.F.A.) inside the Alabama prison system.

This story begins with the founding of the Alabama State Prison System and it all came to a head on January 18, 1974, at ATMORE STATE PRISON. (Google Oscar Lee Johnson v. State of Alabama, 335 So. 2d 663)As a result, the Alabama Prison System became the 1st in history to be taken over by the Federal Government, due to inhumane treatment, unsanitary living conditions and running a modified slave system. (See: Worley JAMES, et al. v. George Wallace, 4O6 F. Supp. 318)
After almost a decade and a half, the State of Alabama regained control of its economical cash cow- its Prison System. Over the next 25 years, it would return to the gulag it was before the I.F.A. Demonstration and Federal Intervention.
In the 7O’s Alabama’s oppressive and exploitative policies and practices produced the I.F.A. Some 4O yrs later, in 2O14, Alabama’s oppressive and exploitative policies and practices gave birth to the FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT.

THE SHUTDOWN
On December 31, 2O13, at 11:45 p.m. the decision was confirmed and a press release was issued-
FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT DECLARES THAT ALABAMA PRISONS ARE INHUMANE AND CONSTITUTE CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT, AND THE MEN INCARCERATED AT HOLMAN WOULD LEAD OFF THE NON-VIOLENT AND PEACEFUL PROTEST FOR CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS.

At 12:O1, a chorus of conversations erupted amongst the men in C Block, as the 1st shift kitchen workers had started off the non-violent and peaceful demonstration against mass incarceration and prison slavery by refusing to return to their jobs, where they were being forced to provide FREE LABOR in the name of corrections. This was it, the MOVEMENT had begun and HOLMAN was placed on Institutional Lockdown. Over the next couple of hours, it became clear that this was not an Ordinary Shutdown.
The ADOC had heard that we were planning a shutdown, but they didn’t know much about the details, so they didn’t pay it much attention. After all, we had shutdown before, in fact numerous of time. But what they didn’t know was that this time, we weren’t shutting down just for cookies and cakes, or weights, etc., this time, we were shutting down for our freedom. And as they would soon learn, the resistance was organized, coordinated and had a name– FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT.

By January 3, 2014, the ADOC found out that other prisons were planning to shut down, but they were hoping that those rumors were not true. That Friday evening, Melvin Ray was apprehended by St. Clair staff and placed in solitary that night, as an attempt to dissuade the men at St Clair. Then, Saturday, January 4, 2014, arrived, and all 1,300 men at St. Clair prison joined the Non-Violent and Peaceful Protests. The ADOC went into panic mode, as by then the news media had got involved; when the secretly recorded videos that had been filmed from the inside of ADOC and uploaded to YouTube and other damning eveidnece, were released. And most important to the struggle, the multi-billion dollar free-labor force had stopped working for FREE.

Never in the History of the Alabama prison/slave system has there been such a show of Cooperation, Unity, Solidarity and Organized Protest. As some 2500 men incarcerated in Alabama’s prisons were engaging in non-violent and peaceful protests for our civil and human rights, and word of the Movement was spreading to other prisons.
On January 6th, all the prisoners at Elmore Correctional Facility joined Holman and St Clair in the Non Violent & Peaceful Protest for Human &Civil Rights. The next day-January 7th- FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT supporters and The Ordinary People s Society held a press conference on the Alabama State house steps to make the FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT declarations clear.
Over the next two weeks, Rev. Kenneth Glasgow would meet and negotiate with the ADOC Commissioner’s office, in regards to FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENTS Demands for Humane Treatment. While on the inside, the Holman Administration was plotting to stymie the progress of the Non Violent & Peaceful Protest.

On January 21st, the ADOC admitted that the system was in shambles and they would look into the prisoners claims. As a result, all prisoners agreed to end the work stoppage in a sign of cooperation.
With Melvin Ray, already in Segregation under investigation due to the Shutdown, on January 22nd, the ADOC mounted an attack on Robert Earl Council, who they had labeled the head of the FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT and the leading factor in the State wide shutdown. On February 6, 2014 the Holman Administration declared Robert Earl Council a threat to the security of the Institution and reclassified to solitary confinement, indefinitely.

April 1, 2014 the Holman Administration placed James Pleasant in Solitary Confinement for being associated with FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT.

Over 23 months later, Melvin Ray, James Pleasant and Robert Earl Council remain in Maximum Security Lock up for being affiliated with the FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT, a Non Violent and Peaceful Protest for Civil and Human Rights. A Protest that involved NO acts of Violence, NO threats of Violence and every grievance validated by outside sources.

So why are the ADOC really unjustly holding Melvin Ray, James Pleasant and Robert Earl Council in Solitary Confinement???

The New Strategy: Using Direct Economic Action to Affect Change
When determining the best strategy to challenge Mass Incarceration and Prison Slavery, its essential that we step back and take a look at the entire system. We must identify the fundamentals of what makes this system work and why this system exist. Once we thoroughly understand the underpinnings of the system of Mass Incarceration we can begin to see why the old strategies and tactics have not and will not bring about any meaningful change. Then we can begin developing a New Strategy that attacks Mass Incarceration at its core.
THE NEW STRATEGY
Just like the Institution of Chattel Slavery, Mass Incarceration is in essence an Economic System which uses human beings as its nuts and bolts. Therefore, our new approach must be Economical and must be focused on the factors of production- the people being forced into this slave labor.
From this viewpoint we organize work stoppages at prisons with economic industries which are operated by slave labor. The impact of a work stoppage is immediate and significant, as production is shutdown and profit margins plummet. Experience has shown us that this approach is more effective than Hunger Strikes , Marching and Writing letters combined. As those strategies only bring publicity and lip service, while work stoppages shut the economic system down and bring the shakers and movers to the prison for negotiations.
That’s where the EDUCATION,  REHABILITATION AND RE ENTRY PREPAREDNESS FREEDOM BILL comes in.

Free Alabama Movement Selected Readings Series

Get Wise! Knowledge is Power!

A Matter of Black Lives, and other articles.

In Memoriam, Joe Hill

US Education Reform and the Maintenance of White Supremacy Through Structural Violence

These pamphlets are brought to you at no cost for educational purposes as part of the Free Alabama Movement selected reading series. Printed and distributed by the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee in solidarity with the Free Alabama Movement.

For more information, Contact Free Alabama Movement:
Antonia Brooks 256 783 1044,
Latosha Scott 334 322 8989,
Website: Freealabamamovement.com,
Facebook group: Free Alabama Movement,
Twitter @FREEALAMOVEMENT,
Email: freealabamamovement@gmail.com – Freemississippimovement@gmail.com ,
Blog: Sankofa4fam.wordpress.com,
Mail: FREE ALABAMA MOVEMENT, P.O. Box 186, New Market, AL 35761 – USA, Newsletter: Sankofam,
Internet Radio: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/freealabamamovement ,
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC88hK0WZ7PKGaTMPpLMTA_w