July, 2007
Dear Email Friends,
This is an article written by an inmate at Chowchilla women's
prison in California.
Marie Kolasinski
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Who Are We to Judge?
by Jane Dorotik ( c/o AllianceEditor [at] Comcastnet)
Wednesday Aug 9th, 2006 12:33 PM
Ever wonder what life is like inside the California Prison System? Here
is a first hand account of the horrors of what is like in the Chowchilla
prison for women, located in the Central Valley.
I choose to define myself by my spiritual leanings, by my intentions,
not by my surroundings. I am a psychiatric nurse by education. I have worked
all my life in the health care field, the last twenty years in a leadership
senior executive capacity for mental health organizations. I am a mother,
a wife, an optimist, a nonconformist, and an animal lover. But now my surroundings
threaten to swallow me up, engulf me in a sea of despair.
Six years ago my life was blown apart in a hurricane of events that I
am just now beginning to put into some kind of perspective. My husband was
brutally murdered by an unknown assailant while he was out jogging. Four days
later, I was arrested and charged with killing my own husband - the man I
loved and lived with for over thirty years, the father of our children.
Through an ego driven trial lawyer, a seriously flawed defense strategy,
and a sequence of
judicial rulings that allowed the jury to hear less than half of the actual
evidence, I am now serving a 25 years to life sentence at Chowchilla prison.
Even to write the words "25 years to life" is unreal and chilling. It all
still seems like a terrible nightmare, except that the nightmare is the
daily existence that I wake up to. My sleeping hours, my dream world is
much safer... a kinder reality.
But I want to tell you much more than the story of the injustice done
to me, for the story is much bigger than my plight. It is a story about
society's prevailing need to find fault, to place blame somewhere, anywhere.
It is a story about our inability to recognize the wisdom of rehabilitation
as a viable consideration for troubled souls. The U.S. now incarcerates more
than 2,000,000 of its citizens. In total 6.7 million people are in jail,
in prison, or on parole: 3.1% of all U.S. adults, or 1 in 32! And the number
of women in prison is growing at a rate faster than any other group in the
U.S. Almost 1,300,000 are incarcerated for non-violent offenses. What are
we doing here? As a mental health care giver, I am horrified at the sheer
numbers of women who should be in a treatment setting instead of a prison.
It is a story I knew nothing about until I was sent here.
Here in this geographic location defining the twin prisons of Valley State
Prison (VSP) and Central California Women's Facility (CCWF) exists the largest
concentration of incarcerated women in the world: more than 7,000 women
in a few square miles. We are packed in, eight women to each small cell,
originally built to hold four. The enormous range in age, race, and temperament
exacerbates the stress of this constant crowding, noise, and regimentation.
Most incarcerated women smoke, so although smoking is supposedly forbidden
in the building, non- smokers must constantly choke on secondhand smoke.
The correctional officers (COs) tell us they don't care, nor will they group
non-smokers together in one cell.
There is never any privacy, no solitude; every day is filled with constant
bickering, screaming, and racial agitation just from the severe overcrowding.
We have to endure frequent and pointless cell searches for contraband, which
includes scotch tape, paper clips, an extra state towel, etc. We are subject
to "lockdowns" on the slightest pretext (like valley fog). We are lined
up and marched over to the dining hall for meals, and four armed COs stand
guard outside the door to make sure we don't take an extra 8- oz. carton
of milk or exit with ice in our cups. We are treated like cattle, or worse,
because cattle are generally well fed.
And what are we doing to "correct" these women? Even if we temporarily
ignore the issue of whether these women should be here, removed from society,
removed from their children, who then grow up in state systems, shuttled through
foster homes... Even if we ignore the 1,300,000 non-violent people currently
incarcerated... What are we doing with these 7,000 women? Couldn't they be
doing something productive for society? Couldn't they be learning something
of themselves, something about the patterns and choices that brought them
here? What motivates them? What feeds their souls? What contributes to their
real happiness so they may learn to work toward the betterment of themselves
and their community?
Would it surprise you to learn that even the word "rehabilitation" has
been removed from the California Department of Corrections (CDC)? Even that
fragile hope of rehabilitating a human being who may have taken a wrong turn
in life - even that illusion is gone. Don't we realize the future is a place
we are creating, not a place we are going to? What will our future look like
when we wake up and realize that we have traded educating our youth, our future
generation, for incarcerating our troubled citizens? University funding decreased
nationally by $945,000,000 while prison funding has increased by $926,000,000.
God knows I want to keep society safe as much as anyone else. Maybe more
so because I know that the person who killed my husband is still out there.
But locking away literally millions of U.S. citizens and then treating them
like animals is not the way. Haven't we recognized that placing individuals
in prison actually fosters criminal behavior instead of curbing it?
We are definitely not succeeding at keeping society safe; instead, we
are creating an environment of fear and conflict, hatred and power. This
prison industry is an industry gone awry - gravely compromised,
rampant with abuses and hatred. It is a terrifying breeding ground for racism,
sexism, homophobia, and dominating exploitation of other human beings. We
are warehousing people, punishing them and returning them to society worse
off than when they entered the system. The violence that then comes out of
these prisons is a much greater threat than terrorism. Keep things quiet,
don't talk about the abuses, the special treatment granted for sexual favors,
the drugs supplied by the COs. I know an inmate who for six months could
get any kind of liquor she wanted - not even repackaged to hide it. COs
covertly supply inmates with a wide array of contraband from cigarette lighters
to heroin in exchange for favors or payoffs. I know of COs who literally
reek of booze all day long, often stumbling, slurring through their work
hours. Then
they are "on leave" for several weeks. They return to work and the cycle
starts all over.
Many of the COs (and most are male in this female prison) openly humiliate
and denigrate these women and then laugh about it:
"Keep moving; you're attracting flies."
"Get your ass back in here and stop slutting around."
"Now what do you want? To put your mouth on my cigar?"
But to speak out against any of this guarantees retaliation in the ugliest
of ways. One inmate was actually brave enough to report a sexual assault
on her by staff. The incident was "investigated" and reasons were found
to issue her a "115" (disciplinary action). Her telephone privileges were
rescinded, cutting her off from her family, effectively preventing her from
seeking legal help outside the prison for the assault she suffered. This
is a horrifyingly difficult environment to try to survive in; many compromise
a great deal to assure survival.
Health care is similar to that in a third world country. Many needed diagnostic
tests, or simply a thorough assessment of symptoms, are needlessly delayed
until it is a crisis situation, in some cases until the cancer is inoperable.
Inmates are not routinely screened for Hepatitis C even though the transmission
in prison is practically epidemic and the Center for Disease Control has
requested all states to screen total prison populations for Hepatitis C infections.
The Center for Disease Control further states, "The nation's prisons are
primary incubators of the worst diseases affecting the national population."
One inmate in this yard tried for several days to access medical care
for alarming symptoms. After waiting in the clinic line for hours, she was
consistently refused care and derisively told to stop malingering and get
the wheelchair she was in back to the clinic. The next morning she was dead.
The inmates attempted CPR; the COs wouldn't touch her. You might assume
that this degraded level of care at least carries a cheap price tag, but
in fact the costs are staggering. California's starvation budget is disproportionately
burdened by this corrupt system.
I am learning so many things in here. I am learning to rise above the
stigma of being identified as a "criminal." I am learning to let go of the
anger, the anguish. When I first arrived here, I was devastated, but it
was a stunning and humbling experience to realize - these are also God's
children. We are all souls trying to find our way in life. No person has
any more or less value; no ethnicity, no occupation, no accomplishment has
any greater or less intrinsic worth. Who are we to judge? Who are we?
Certainly my perspective has been radically changed by this experience.
I am truly innocent. Yet I am not alone. According to the statistics published
in the growing Innocence Projects and the Northwestern University Law School:
anywhere from 10 to 25% of persons currently incarcerated are actually innocent
of the crime they were convicted of. In the cases its staff reviewed, Northwestern
University revealed a 60% error rate.
How can our society tolerate this error rate? What do large companies
like IBM or Microsoft tolerate as a margin of error? And they are monitoring
only machines and business processes, not the freedom of human lives. And
why is the success rate for appeals only 3% when the known error rate in convictions
is so high?
I have finally been able to let go of some of the personal sense of injustice.
It is a great
injustice... but on some level - so what? Injustices happen all the time;
people contract diseases, get hit by automobiles, suffer great tragedies.
So what? We still have to get on with life. We still all have a responsibility
to add some comfort, bring more kindness, promote integrity in our daily
lives regardless of the circumstances we find ourselves in. And in a larger
context, we all also have a responsibility to speak out against a social
wrong.
I am learning to live in the moment, to seek joy in small glimpses, to
value the wisdom of the universe despite my surroundings and the constant
fear. I am learning to look for the love and goodness in most people despite
the facade or anger they may exhibit.
I know in my heart I will eventually get out of here; the truth will come
out and it will set me free. I hope it is sooner rather than later. I hope
I win the appeal even though the statistics are so discouraging.
Maybe in the bigger picture there is a purpose in all of this. As hard
as it has been - and
continues to be - to live through the horror of this great injustice that
we impose on our fellow men, I know without a doubt that the rest of my life
is meant to be dedicated toward amending this arcane and destructive system.
So I know where my future lies. But what of the rest of these women in here?
Someone has to help them. Someone has to speak out against the atrocities.
And then everyone has to listen.
As Dostoyevsky wrote, "The degree of civilization a society exhibits is
best determined by how it treats its prisoners."
Written by: Jane Dorotik W90870 CCWF 506-26-3L, P.O. Box 1508, Chowchilla,
CA 93610-1508