Black Flag 216 index
POLITICAL PRISONERS OF WAR COALITION (PPWC)
Michigan Prisoners Lost Major Property Issue
by Ali Khalid Abdullah
Michigan prisoners have been fighting a lawsuit in the Ingham County
Circuit Court under the case title Cain v. MDOC for the past 12 or
so years. This case was presided over by judge James Raymond Cain
and was later turned into a class action case involving all of
MichiganŐs prisoners.
The case involved prisoners litigating the MDOC regarding the
restricting and taking of property from them that the MDOC had
initially allowed them to have. In the past the case has won some
victories but recently the court has ruled against he prisoners in
many respects. As a result of a recent Court Order ruling, prisoners
have been further restricted regarding what they can have in their
possession.
Several prisons have already begun the massive shakedowns by
ordering prisoners to pack all their belongings (including
state-issued clothing not allowed to be taken form the prison during
transfers, i.e., extra state pants, shirts, and pyjamas) into one
duffel bag and /or personal foot locker (if they have one), or into
two small containers which are supposed to be equal to one foot
locker or container when they are transferred but will be placed in
a separate box), radios, tape players, personal clothing, books ,
shoes and etc., and all else that dies not fit into the duffel bag
and/or personal foot locker or the two containers which then they
have to choose to either donate, have destroyed or sent home at the
MDOCŐs expense. These items are considered contraband.
Prisoners in Michigan who have gone through this procedure have been
stripped of hooded sweatshirts and sweaters, all clothing that is
black or grey, and they have been limited to one coat and jacket
(with the pack-up officers determining what was the jacket or coat),
3 pairs of shoes, non-black or grey baseball caps and knit caps, one
pair of fingernail clippers, and so on. Items such as sewing
machines or clothing that was sewed up or patched were not allowed.
Appliances that werenŐt numbered with the prisonerŐs number
correctly on them were destroyed, donated or sent out at the
prisonerŐs expense. Wallets, coffee cups (once sold by the MDOC were
considered contraband. Finished hobbycraft items were no longer
allowed to remain in prison...and the story goes on and on.
On September 24, 1998, at the Carson City Correctional Facility aka
O.T.F. (where I was recently housed), prisonkkkrats began to
shakedown one housing unit per day. First, second and third shift
officers volunteered for this undertaking which was to last until
October 5th when the entire process at that facility was to be
finished. Reports have come in from other prisoners across the state
that the wardens of various prisons had completely locked down the
entire prisons for this massive shakedown. some wardens (because
each warden has his own autonomy to a degree regarding what he will
allow in his facility) have been running ram-shod over prisonersŐ
personal items, taking away a lot of possessions. Just as at Carson
City, while one pack-up team allows prisoners to have certain
things, another pack-up team will deny other prisoners the same
items. There is no consistency in the process. I see these
manoeuvres as a tool the prisons are using to create hardships and
bad feelings among the prisoner-class, as the prisonkkkrats are good
at the 2divide and conquerÓ tactics among the unconscious and
unpoliticised prisoners.
We welcome all comrades out there to share their opinions on this
matter and to let us know what you think. You can contact us at:
Raze The Walls! 2351 College Station Road, Box 532, Athens, GA
30605; or write to R. NaŐil Partee # 162558, P.O. Box 480999, New
Haven, MI 48048; or you can write directly to Ali Khalid Abdullah,
Saginaw Correctional Facility, 9625 Pierce Road, Freeland, MI 48623.
In the trenches... October 1998.