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Sensitive
9th June 2003, 19:45
Here is an interesting article from CounterPunch about rape in US capitalist prisons. Basically, it says 1 of 5 prisoners will get raped or sexually assualted while in prison (and remember, the US has the largest prisoner population in the world, so this A LOT of people).

Edit: Just to say, I believe the US prison population is about 2 million people now.

No Escape: Male Rape in US Prisons (http://www.counterpunch.org/coolman06092003.html)
By ALEX COOLMAN

In April of 2001, Human Rights Watch released a report called No Escape: Male Rape in U.S. Prison. The report, written by human rights lawyer (and CounterPunch contributor) Joanne Mariner, contains dozens of first-hand accounts of prisoner rape and sexual assault, stories that are both horrifying and sobering.

Some of the most frightening passages in the book, though, are not in the main body of the text. They're in the appendix, which features letters that state corrections departments coughed up after Human Rights Watch requested information about sexual assault behind bars.

In the appendix, the reader learns what these corrections departments, despite countless stories of human suffering to the contrary, are still saying about sexual assault.

From the Kentucky Department of Corrections: "These instances are very rare, (but) ... we do not maintain a central list of the disposition of these cases."

From the Alaska Department of Corrections: "We, luckily, have no need to keep statistics, as this has not been a problem."

From the Connecticut Department of Corrections: "Our department does not maintain statistics regarding inmate on inmate rape or sexual abuse primarily because it is seldom reported ...."

In state after state, the officials running the prisons disavow any knowledge of a problem that, according to the best research on the subject, affects as many as one in five male prisoners.

For that reason, and many others, No Escape is a wrenching book to read. It's also one of the most in-depth, authoritative, and comprehensive books written on the subject of prisoner rape. The book provides a review of the conditions that contribute to prisoner rape--including the growth of the American prison population in the last 20 years, the privatization of the prison industry, and the crippling of prisoners' legal rights through the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996.

No Escape also reviews some of the realities of prisoner rape that are misunderstood by the public: that victims tend to be nonviolent offenders, young people, and first-timers; that victims are sometimes subjected to repeated abuse that can last for years; and that rape victims contract diseases like HIV and often suffer from crippling depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.

All of these facts are brought to life in No Escape through the inclusion of prisoners' first-hand accounts of rape. Human Rights Watch quotes men like B.J. from Connecticut (that peaceful state where rape is "seldom reported," according to the DOC) who describes being assaulted after he was celled with a known rapist.

"I remained in shock and paralyzed in thought for two days until I was able to muster the courage to report it, this the most dreadful and horrifying experience of my life," B.J. writes.

Then there are prisoners like M.P. from Arkansas, who describes submitting to life as a sexual slave for another prisoner, and S.H., from Texas, who was rented out for sexual favors. S.H. filed five grievances, eight appeals and a federal lawsuit in an attempt to get some relief for his situation. He was denied any remedy, every step of the way.

That institutional indifference to the problem of sexual assault behind bars is documented in No Escape's final chapter, where Mariner notes that "rape occurs in U.S. prisons because corrections officials, to a surprising extent, do little to stop it from occurring."

Even simple steps that could reduce the likelihood of sexual assault--such as realistic prisoner orientation programs and careful classification of prisoners by risk of victimization--are relatively uncommon, Human Rights Watch reports. Prisoners' complaints of rape are not taken seriously and avenues of legal redress are typically blocked.

"Rape is not an inevitable consequence of prison life, but it certainly is a predictable one if little is done to prevent it and punish it," Mariner concludes.

The two years since No Escape was published have seen a major surge of advocacy to address sexual assault behind bars. No Escape was covered on the front page of the New York Times, introducing many members of the public to a reality they had never considered. Since then, publications such as the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, The Nation, Mother Jones, and The Weekly Standard have also prominently covered the issue.

No Escape has served as a powerful resource for Stop Prisoner Rape (SPR), the only national organization solely devoted to ending sexual violence behind bars. Stop Prisoner Rape had been around for more than 20 years before No Escape, but the book's authoritative documentation of the problem has proved to be a critical tool in SPR's arsenal.

Since the publication of No Escape, SPR and Human Rights Watch have worked together (along with others) to launch a listserv, sponsor a national conference, and lobby for the first-ever federal legislation to address rape in prison, known as the Prison Rape Reduction Act. In fact, No Escape was cited during Congressional hearings on the bill. The legislation, which is still pending, would authorize a study to document the extent of the problem; and create a program of standards and incentives to help corrections officials detect and prevent prisoner rape.

For men and women behind bars, rape remains a real threat. SPR continues to hear from prisoners every day who are being victimized--prisoners who still face the kinds of brutality documented in No Escape. SPR now offers survivors of sexual assault a range of information and referrals, the chance to post stories on its heavily trafficked website, and the opportunity to speak out through contacts with reporters and researchers.

That's a powerful legacy for a single book, but No Escape tells a powerful story. It's one we all need to understand.

(Edited by Sensitive at 1:48 pm on June 9, 2003)

Nobody
10th June 2003, 02:40
Yeah, its sad alright, espically for those petty crimenals. Steal a cd and now you're getting up the ass. Thats a pretty steep price to pay.

RedFW
10th June 2003, 10:41
Rape, whether it occurs in prison or not, is not taken seriously.

Prison rape is often portrayed comically in advertising- the picking up the soap in the prison shower scenario(Virgin Mobile) or being locked in a cell overnight with a rapist (film cliche)- which characterises it as something that is part of prision life, something often blamed upon the victim (in the Virgin Mobile advert Wycliff Jean is running away from honouring a contract he was duped into signing and it caught by the police) and normalizes it, making it seem an acceptable punishment and more of an inconvenience, one that must be put up with if one ever gets put into prison/jail than the degrading and emotionally traumatising act that it is, for both men and women.

Sabocat
10th June 2003, 13:17
Sadly, a lot of people in the U$ think that the dehumanization of prisoners is part of the punishment.

In essence even a petty criminal, being sent to a prison could in effect, be receiving a death sentence.

With more and more "private institutional" prisons being built, this situation can only get worse.

Dhul Fiqar
10th June 2003, 16:02
Excellent post RedFW, couldn´t put it better myself.

Disgustapated: you´re very right, it is a death sentance for an increasing number of people because AIDS is spreading very fast in prisons. Generally men who get singled out as a ***** can expect to have several different men ejaculate into their anus, the best way to catch aids and something many men would probably rather die than have happen to them.

And this happens up to several times in one day! There are prisoner support groups where I´ve read some truly horrible accounts of what goes on and how the authorities support and encourage it.

One especially messed up story was about this anti-Vietnam hippie protestor in the late sixties who was arrested for smoking a joint at a big anti-war rally. He was put in the worst part of the prison for a night and personally heard the guards instructing the prisoners to rape him violently.

He spent the next twelve hours being passed around and sexually assaulted in such a way that it caused him serious long-term physical harm, not to mention the unspeakable emotional cost.

I really think anyone guilty of this kind of crime should automatically receive at least ten extra years and permanently lose his chance to appear before a parole board. In some cases this is worse than murder, and no one cares...

As was said, popular culture even sends a strong pro-prisonrape message! Is it just me or is there a "you´re gonna be a ***** in prison" one of the most overused 'jokes' today? Commercials, comedies, cop shows, dramas, action films, etc., it all glorifies and justifies it as a normal part of life that people should just get over and blame themselves for.

This is especially disgusting since self-blame is one of the most destructive parts of what happens to rape victims.

Luckily for a lot of us though, this is far more prevalent in the U.S. than other western nations. One in five is an incredible figure, I doubt it comes close to that in any other fully industrialized place...

--- G.

Vinny Rafarino
11th June 2003, 04:18
I hate to break this to you but Rape is prominent in any prison...capitalist or not.

IHP
11th June 2003, 04:22
Beat me to it RAF. :)

Speaking of prisons though... Has anyone heard of that prison in Bolivia that has 1,2 - 5 star rooms? And the inmates take their families in with them. They work in the prison to pay for their room. It's full on they jacuzzis (sp.), cable TV and everything. It's also one of the safest place in the world if you want to take cocaine, because they all know what they're doing. It's hilarious I think.

--IHP

Vinny Rafarino
11th June 2003, 04:37
Almost anywhere in S America is the safest place to do charlie. (the shits fucking bang up pure too)

The only taboo place would be a fine dining establishment....At Clubs, for fuck's sake I was in Lima and everyone was just laying the shit out right at the tables...None of that sneakin' to restroom shit you have to deal with here.

(Edited by COMRADE RAF at 4:40 am on June 11, 2003)

IHP
11th June 2003, 04:41
Until some druglords monkey comes and bust your head open for stealing his drugs. :)

--IHP