🚨The cruelty continues. What the Texas snow & power outages mean for incarcerated people. Just in from a man caged pretrial in Harris County:
"We don't have any running water anymore. No drinking water. Rations are now half measures. Tensions are running high here."
"We got 3 oz of some mashed potato something last night. This morning around 4:30 we got a one ounce packet of PB and a small muffin and a small carton of milk. They said they are out of bread."
Yesterday, this same man shared people were sleeping on the ground. Harris County Jail flat out denied it.
His response: "Well they are lying. I am counting right now. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 are sleeping on the floor. They can come up and check all the 5th floor pods from A to E."
"There are folks on the floor in almost every pod. Two sleeping in the day room right now! They have cameras in here. Someone can pull video right? There are 67 of us using 4 toilets. It's bad."
"Jailers are going on 24 hours 36 hours straight without shift change. I am worried about them. No communication from them. When we ask about the water they either don't answer or say 'You shouldn't have fucking gotten locked up.'"
"God bless y'all. I know it's bad out there. We got TV working here so we know it's bad out there. Strange how the things you don't expect to work, work. But then essential stuff that should work, doesn't! How does that make any sense? Please be safe. Thank you for listening."
Yesterday, I posted a thread detailing the horrors in Harris County Jail. The jail spent the day denying the conditions being reported from inside from people caged there. Wish they had spent the day trying to solve the situation instead.
If you’re moved to help, please visit @TxJailProject. They are a trusted & extraordinary organization. Work closely with them. Since yesterday, deposited $1500 on commissary. Please give here: donorbox.org/texasjailproje…
UPDATE: More updates coming in from those inside in different areas of Harris County Jail: "24 men and 3 toilets which are all backed up. They put plastic bags on them to cover up the smell. We desperately need chemicals and cleaning supplies. It's filthy! And it's very cold."
"We badly need chemicals to flush and clean the toilets. We got individual buckets in the pod now. In the morning they come once early to put diluted chemical in the bucket and one late night along with 6 rolls of toilet paper for 24 men."
"Today bc of backed up toilets were out of cleaning chemical in the bucket. We have to put a plastic bag & try to force it down. We need chemicals & water. No water in showers or sinks. It stinks. Never got enough cleaning supplies & drying materials for Covid but now its worse!"
More info from local organizer: "Couple of medically compromised men. Terrified. One has a nephrostomy bag to drain his kidneys. Mom has to buy & bring bags to jail. Thats not happening right now. Another has type 1 diabetes. Food delays & rationing affecting his sugar levels."
More info from local organizer: "Another man had Covid real bad in May. Then heart attack. Now his lungs are messed up bad. Needs stents. Won't give him Medical records. Been in there over 29 months. Court reset 22 times."
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🗳️ ✔️Friends & family keep reaching out, asking who should be the next Manhattan DA. Here's how to start narrowing down.
Each of these (👇) candidates were identified by NY public defenders as posing the least risk of harm to the people of NY. Tomorrow night, they'll debate.
The purpose of the debate is to help voters with decarceral priorities distinguish between candidates whose platforms may seem very similar to someone who is not intimately familiar with the criminal punishment system.
Five Boro Defenders (@5BoroDefenders), a volunteer group of NYC public defenders, will be hosting a debate (not a forum!) between the four Manhattan District Attorney candidates whose platforms represent the greatest departure from the policies of current Manhattan DA Cy Vance.
🚨 Across the country, courts are using COVID as excuse to perpetuate cruelty. Example: Trials suspended bc of claimed concern for jurors. Jailed awaiting trial indefinitely. But no concern for grand jurors forced to continue charging & caging people. More:taibbi.substack.com/p/s-t-public-d…
"Trials were suspended. This left a lot of people who couldn’t afford bail in a purgatory-like state of open-ended detention. However, official concern for jury safety seemed limited. Police continued to arrest people & prosecutors continued to use grand juries to indict."
“Speedy trial rules only worked in one direction. Officials basically said: 'Bc we’re still arresting people at same rates & need to keep prosecuting, we’re just going to have jurors risk their lives in a way we said we really cared about, to have them vote on new indictments.”
🚨What the Texas snow & power outages mean for incarcerated people. Just in from a man caged pretrial in Harris County:
"No power since Sunday night/early Monday. We didnt get dinner last night. Its freezing. They put on a movie instead of dinner. How does that make any sense?
“We asked for extra blankets. They said no. We got a PB & J at 4:30 a.m. today. Not sure if we will get any lunch. Commissary orders go in on Thursday for Friday delivery. No hot water either.”
Can you please deposit some funds so we can buy food? We'll be praying for y'all. I know it's bad out there too."
The cruelty with which we allow our leaders to treat human beings who happen to be incarcerated is constant & perpetual in this country. In a pandemic. In the cold.
Another view: Note: I’m not thinking of one definition here. Of course abolition is “relating to the fundamental nature of something.” But so many disparage abolition as “radical” i.e. extreme, crazy, irrational. And I’m like “NO. What we have now is all those things.”
Bail arguments, motions, oral arguments, hearings. Judges don’t know, follow, or care about the law. Prosecutors are willing to take advantage of it. And mandatory minimums, withheld evidence, & pretrial detention coerces people to plead before trial. When theres a jury. A shot.
But defenders still fight. And still win. Most times wins aren’t “Justice.” It’s power of repetition of argument in front of same judges. Introducing those in power to the people they oppress. Not just a RAP sheet or words on a page. Defenders make it harder to be brutal & cruel.
READ THIS: Meet Cassandra. Her husband Nick died in a Chicago jail from COVID. She called for help 132 times. In this powerful essay, she *slams "so-called 'progressive' leaders praised for their pandemic response," but indifferent to those they cage. More:currentaffairs.org/2021/02/covid-…
"When the coronavirus seeped into the facility, Nick was sleeping in a dormitory with 50 others, including those w/ COVID. No ability to social distance. Denied even basic sanitary products, like sanitizer or a mask. Nick had to use his shirt to cover his nose and mouth."
"I started calling Tom Dart, the beloved Democratic sheriff. Who runs the jail—moldy; infested w/ mice, cockroaches, & COVID; filled w/ predominantly Black & brown people—that killed Nick. To make sure he knew about the cramped quarters. I wanted him to help. I never heard back."