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BlackInk17 Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
Hi There,

Man can keep your body in bars for any decisions that you make for good or bad but your soul and your mind those always can fly apart.

Evelyn Marcano

Posted on Untitled by Otis Lee Rodgers Untitled
BlackInk17 Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
Dear Patrick:

Sometimes people that have the freedom never look for the love of God. They think they have the freedom to chose between good or bad, take the easy or the hard way of doing thinks in life and they never have the time to thank for the things we have in life to our Creator. You are Bless because even on a place fill of bad energy and so much anger you open your heart to meet Jesus Christ. I hope your letter works as an inspirations to other that have meet Jesus and to understand that no matter were you are or who you were you always have the change to meet Jesus and be a new creature. God loves us no matter what and always bring light to our lives. God Bless You Patrick and always keep the faith.
Evelyn Marcano

Posted on Hope Within by Patrick Rathsack Hope Within
Lindapolk Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
I really enjoyed reading your recommendations for prison reform and wondered if you would like an opportunity to write something a little different. My husband, Andy, and I are writing a book about the institutionalized (legal) prejudice against people with felony convictions. For example, Andy was given a life-without sentence as the result of felonists trying to keep us apart, and after a 6 year court battle, he has been out for almost 10 years. Our federal case is Dixon, William v Holland, 1999 or 2000.

Now that it is more difficult for some folks to make money from racism, sexism, and the other "isms" a small group of people who have grown powerful and wealthy by getting the masses to abuse one segment of society have turned their attention to felons in the last 30/40 years. It is now legal to discriminate against felons before and after their incarceration. We call this discrimination, "felonism". Since coining the term, we see its negative effects in every part of our society. It is considered acceptable to laugh about people being raped in prison because they are felons. Children with incarcerated parents refuse to cooperate with school staff because they parallel the CO's and prison staff who separate them from their parents. Cooperating with a teacher would be a betrayal of their incarcerated parent. New laws are being created daily to oppress people with felony convictions, and society does not even realize how they have been duped into believing all felons are dangerous people. Our goals are to eliminate institutional felonism, prevent generational incarceration, and have all prisons turned into healing centers.

Andy and I are writing a book, "Felonism: Hating in Plain Sight" Most of the book will be real-life stories about exact ways in which felonism has affected people's lives, but those using it and those receiving felonism. You are welcome to share events from your life that have been generated by people who discount you as a human being based on the fact that you have a felony. While we cannot pay you for your submission, we can publish your name and contact information so that more people will know about your situation and possibly keep in contact. Since you appear to be a solutions oriented person, I'd love it if you could write about changes that you see could help overcome felonism.

You are welcome to share this request for submissions with others. We may not put everyone in the book, but we will use as many stories as possible either in the book or on a blog. Nothing will be published without a consent form being signed, which I will send after editing each submission. Submissions can be mailed to P. O. Box 128071, Nashville, TN 37212 or emailed to this address, but I would prefer emails at felonism@gmail.com.
I hope to hear from you soon.

Sincerely,
Linda Polk

Posted on Mindful Living by Daniel Labbe Mindful Living
Lindapolk Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
Third & last installment:
The manner in which PDOC uses solitary confinement often discriminates against
prisoners with 8MI/ID: PDOC often unnecessarily and inappropriately places prisoners in
solitary confinement because they have SMIIID. Isolating prisoners on the basis of their
SMIIID without adequate justification constitutes impermissible discrimination and
unjustifiably denies them access to services and progrmns provided to most other prisoners.
PDOC has failed to make reasonable modifications to its policies, procedures, and practices
to meet the needs ofprisoners with SMIIID in the most integrated setting appropriate to their
needs and consistent with legitimate safety requirements. Instead, it has routinely elected to
segregate these prisoners urmecessarily in its solitary confinement units.
PDOC's solitary confinement practices violate the Eighth Amendment's prohibition
against "cruel and unusual punishments." Embodying "broad and idealistic concepts of dignity,
and thus are assigned to PDOC's second category indeed have SMI. We also identified other prisoners with SMI
who are left offpDOC's active mental health roster entirely.
3 civilized standards, humanity, and decency," Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97,102 (1976), the
Amendment prohibits officials from disregarding conditions of confinement that subj ect
prisoners to an excessive risk ofharm. Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 843 (1994). PDOC's
use of a harsh fmID of solitary confinement for extended periods of time on hundreds of

I haven't take time to read this word for word, but what I scanned looked important for Inmate Advisers to know.

Posted on In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7 by Richard Stevenson In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7
Lindapolk Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
continuation of same report:
2 conditions that prisoners with SMI face while in solitalY confinement are harsh. They are
routinely confined to their cells for 23 hours a day; denied adequate mental health care; and
subjected to punitive behavior modification plans, forced idleness and loneliness, unsettling
noise and stench, harassment by correctional officers, and the excessive use of full-body
restraints.
• The manner in which PDOC uses solitary confinement on prisoners with 8MI results in
serious harm: PDOC uses isolation on prisoners with SMI in a way that exacerbates their
mental illness and leads to serious psychological and physiological harms. Indeed, our
expert-consultants interviewed and reviewed the records ofmore than two dozen prisoners
whom they concluded were seriously harmed by solitm'y confinement in various ways,
including severe mental deterioration, psychotic decompensation, and acts of self-harm. For
instance, even though only a small fraction of the prisoners at the prisons we toured were
housed in solitary confinement units, most ofthe suicide attempts occurred in those units.
Specifically, more than 70% of the documented suicide attempts between January 1, 2012
and May 31,2013 occurred in the solitary confinement units.
• Numerous systemic deficiencies contribute to PDOC's extensive use of solitary
confinement on prisoners with 8M!: PDOC routinely resorts to using prolonged solitary
confinement on those with SMI primarily because systemic deficiencies interfere with its
ability to provide adequate mental health treahnent. When we initiated our investigation in
May, prisoners with SMI were placed in solitm'y confinement at twice the rate ofprisoners
without SM!. Too often, instead ofproviding appropriate mental health care, PDOC's
response to mental illness is to warehouse vulnerable prisoners in solitmy confinement cells.
• The manner in which PDOC uses solitary confinement also harms prisoners with ID:
PDOC uses solitmy confmement on a significant number ofprisoners with ID, as defmed
below. Prisoners with ID are especially susceptible to the hmmful effects ofPDOC's use of
solitary confinement They have limited coping mechanisms mld their mental health is prone
to deteriorating when subjected to the stressors present in PDOC's solitary confinement
units. We believe PDOC is not adequately addressing such concelllS.

Posted on In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7 by Richard Stevenson In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7
Lindapolk Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
this is part of a Justice Report on PA prisons put out 2/24/14. I thought you might want a look. due to limited space, i had to chop it up. The mistakes were already in the report.
I. SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
PDOC has begun reforming the way in which it uses solitmy confmement on prisoners
with SMIIID. In recent months, PDOC has implemented new procedures for the disciplinary
process. It has also implemented new protocols for the treatment of prisoners with SMI in
certain specialized housing units. These reforms have led to a reduction in the nmnber of
prisoners with SMI subjected to solitary confinement. Moreover, PDOC is in the process of
drafting policies geared towm'd fhrther reducing the number of prisoners with SMIIID housed in
isolation units and improving mental health care for prisoners with SM!. While the
Commonwealth has made impOliant improvements, much more work needs to be done to ensure
sustained compliance with the mandates of the Constitution and the ADA. Below we summarize
our factual detelminations and our ongoing concems:
• The manner in which PDOC snbjects prisoners with SMI to prolonged periods of
solitary confinement involves conditions that are often unjustifiably harsh and in which
these prisoners routinely have difficulty obtaining adequate mental health care: In the
one-year period between May 2012 and May 2013, PDOC confined more than 1,000
prisoners on its active mental health roster in solitary confinement for more than 90 days.3
Nearly 250 of those prisoners were in solitary for more than a year. There are still roughly
liS prisoners PDOC identifies as having SMI who are in solitary. Our expert-consultants
have concluded that the liS number grossly understates the number ofprisoners with SMI
currently subjected to solitary confinement, estimating that there are hundreds more.4 The
2 In making these findings, the Department of Justice does not intend to suggest that every use of solitary
confinement on persons with SMIIID is a per se violation of the Eighth Amendment or the ADA.
3 PDOC separates its active mental health roster into two categories: (1) those prisoners designated as having "the
most serious need for mental health services;" and (2) those designated as having a ~'present mental health need."
4 PDOC has newly revised its active mental health roster. It designates only those in the first category as having
SM!. However, after reviewing medical records and interviewing prisoners, we and our expert-consultants in
mental health have concluded that a very significant number ofthe prisoners cU!'rently designated as not having SM!

Posted on In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7 by Richard Stevenson In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7
KimBerlyDay Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
R u the SAME Craig from Meriden Cinemas?

Posted on Introduction: ...and the horse you rode in on. by Craig Middlemass Introduction: ...and the horse you rode in on.
Lindapolk Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
Rich,
I tried to comment on a post you made about imagining Homeland Security could do to freeworld people what guards do to prisoners. I could not tell if my comment went through or not, so I'm repeating myself. You are welcome to reuse things you have posted as part of your chapter submission. You are very clear in your presentation and easy to read; even though your vocabulary presents you to be an educated man.

Please hone in on the fact that treating people with so low regard only makes the situation worse, for the guards as well as prisoners. Also pointing out the mis-information that is presented to justify the mistreatment is important. I am working on getting evidence that officers are trained to be felonists by policies that propagate fear among staff and promote the idea that prisoners are unworthy of kindness or consideration. If you know of any specific policy numbers (from your state or facility) fitting that description, please relay them to me. I can probably find them on the internet and use them as footnotes.

I really look forward to working with you further.
Thanks,
Linda Polk

Posted on In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #8 by Richard Stevenson In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #8
CJP Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
Thanks for writing! I finished the transcription for your post. I wish your daughter the very best.

Posted on Friends Are Few And Far Between by Robert Pezzeca Friends Are Few And Far Between
Lindapolk Posted 10 years, 8 months ago.   Favorite
Rich,
Thank you for responding when you could. There is no page limit on your submission, but I think 10 to 20 pages would be great - as long as all of it is focused on felonism. You are welcome to write out your submission instead of typing and mail it to the address in my first email. I'd be happy to repeat it if you need it. I do have one story that is only 4 pages long, but it's a great story. We hope to have the book finished by Christmas but have not set a deadline.

Since writing the request for proposals, my husband (the legal mind in the family) tells me I can't pay people for their submissions. If I'm understanding Andy, such an act puts publishers in a bind and reduces our chances of publication. I hope that will not prevent you from making a submission. It will still be good publicity for your situation and give you the right to say you have been published. We are currently reducing our income by half so that I can write and research full time, and we have no promise of making money ourselves. Andy is now driving without me, but he contributes to what I have written when he's home. Our main goals are to eliminate felonism and see prisons converted into healing centers.

If you do make a submission, and I hope you will, please make sure the focus is on felonism. It is easy to focus on corruption within the system, but if that corruption is not directly and clearly connected to felonism, we won't be able to use it in the book. We want to show how large groups of people are motivated by a small group who profit or gain power by propagating felonism and manipulating the masses. I can validate claims made by others with specific laws, criminal statistics, and historical facts. That would come at the end to support claims (assuming they are true) mentioned within a person's story. Since I have re-written my two chapters several times, I doubt submissions will be a one-step process. Only one prisoner has made a submission so far. I have made some changes and returned the edited chapter to him for his approval. We may go back and forth like that for 2 or 3 versions, so please don't be discouraged. Nothing will be printed in the book until both of us agree 100%.
Please feel free to ask questions and make comments, even if it seems we might disagree. Like the Beatles sang, we can work it out.
Hang in there,
Linda Polk

Posted on In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7 by Richard Stevenson In The Life Of A Connecticut Prisoner #7
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