UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Most Restrictive Alternative: The Origins, Functions, Control, and Ethical Implications of the Supermax Prison, 1976 - 2010 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cj970ps Author Reiter, Keramet A. Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California The Most Restrictive Alternative: The Origins, Functions, Control, and Ethical Implications of the Supermax Prison, 1976 - 2010 By Keramet A. Reiter A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Jurisprudence and Social Policy in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in Charge: Professor Franklin E. Zimring, Chair Professor Jonathon Simon Professor Marianne Constable Professor David Sklansky Spring 2012 Abstract The Most Restrictive Alternative: The Origins, Functions, Control, and Ethical Implications of the Supermax Prison, 1976 - 2010 by Keramet A. Reiter Doctor of Philosophy in Jurisprudence and Social Policy University of California, Berkeley Professor Franklin E. Zimring, Chair Concrete, steel, artificial light, complete technological automation, near-complete sensory deprivation, and total isolation – these are the basic conditions of supermaximum security prisons in the United States. “Supermax” prisoners remain alone twenty-three to twenty-four hours a day, under fluorescent lights that are never turned off. Meals arrive through a small slot in an automated cell door. Prisoners have little to no human contact for months, years, or even decades at a time, save brief interactions with correctional officers, who place hand, ankle, and waist cuffs on each prisoner before removing him from his cell. Prisoners only leave their cells four or five times per week, for showers or for brief, solitary exercise periods in “dog runs” – concrete pens with roofs at least partially open to natural light. In sum, supermax prisons across the United States detain thousands in long-term solitary confinement, under conditions of extreme sensory deprivation. They are prisons within prisons, confining the prisoners correctional administrators deem a threat to the general prison population. Arizona opened the first supermax, in 1986, and California opened the second, in 1989. Over the subsequent ten years, almost every state, along with the federal prison system, either built a supermax or retrofitted an existing facility to create a supermax unit. This dissertation examines the birth of the supermax in Arizona and California, and the spread of the institutional innovation across the United States. The research presented here draws on three major categories of data: archival materials, including legal decisions and case files, local news reporting, and legislative records; oral history interviews with more than thirty key informants, including correctional administrators, legal professionals, architects, and former prisoners; and quantitative data maintained by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. This is the first study specifically focused on unearthing the administrative and political processes that underwrote the supermax. The dissertation begins with an overview of the idea of solitary confinement and the term “supermax,” leading to a working definition of supermaxes as institutions that are: bounded in time, administratively overseen, characterized by extremely restrictive conditions, and large in both scale of beds and durations of confinement. Chapter Two uses this definition to create a working list of supermax institutions in the United States. Chapter Three frames supermaxes as a product of mass incarceration, and introduces the core region (the Sunbelt) and core case study (California) on which 1 the dissertation will focus. Chapters Four through Six document how and why correctional administrators decided to build California’s first supermax, Pelican Bay State Prison. These chapters trace how socio-political changes in the 1970s – including structural changes to sentencing laws; race-based social organizing, both in and out of prison; and increasing judicial attention to prisons – paved the way for the supermax innovation in the 1980s. Chapter Four argues that critical power shifts between the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government left a power vacuum, which correctional administrators quickly filled, in part through building supermaxes. Chapter Five describes the legislative process that nominally underwrote the supermax, and argues that California legislators ceded both planning and moral authority to state correctional administrators. Chapter Six describes the processes of architectural design and technological innovation that created the physical supermaxes themselves. Chapters Seven though Nine explore the implications of the administrative origins of the supermax. These chapters document how the institution has never had a clearly articulated purpose (Chapter Seven), and how it has been operated in contradiction to its articulated goals (Chapters Eight and Nine). Chapter Eight shows that supermaxes have detained prisoners for decades longer than intended, and have disproportionately impacted minority prisoners. Chapter Nine argues that courts have largely deferred to correctional administrators’ claims about the necessity of the supermax, even though little empirical evidence exists to support these claims. Together, these chapters demonstrate that correctional bureaucrats not only made the initial supermax design decisions in California, but also progressively concentrated their power over supermax prisoners through hyper-automated buildings and internal prison classification procedures. Chapter Ten further explores the relationship between supermaxes and the federal judiciary, arguing that federal court decisions setting minimum conditions and standards for prisons in the 1970s and 1980s shaped the supermax innovation that followed. The conformity of supermaxes to these minimum constitutional standards has rendered the institutions resistant to legal challenges. The Conclusion discusses the implications of recent supermax-related trends, including prisoner protests about conditions of confinement, and state-based movements to reduce supermax populations. In sum, because supermaxes manifest, both physically and legally, the outer limits of non-death penalty punishment policy, they are critical for understanding both U.S. prison expansion, and the impacts of U.S. tough-on-crime policies. 2 To anyone who has lived or worked inside an American prison i Table of Contents Acknowledgements........................................................................................................................ vi I. Introduction & Methods .............................................................................................................. 1 A. Chapter-by-Chapter Outline................................................................................................... 8 B. Sources and Methods: Tracing Bureaucratic Innovation ..................................................... 10 1. Archives ............................................................................................................................ 10 2. Interviews.......................................................................................................................... 11 3. Corrections Data ............................................................................................................... 12 4. Case Law and Local Media Analysis................................................................................ 13 II. What Exactly Is a “Supermax”?............................................................................................... 16 A. The Origins of the Term “Supermax”.................................................................................. 16 B. Defining the Supermax......................................................................................................... 20 C. Is Solitary Confinement the Defining Characteristic of Supermaxes? ................................ 24 D. A Brief Overview of American Uses of Solitary Confinement........................................... 29 E. Re-Defining the Supermax................................................................................................... 37 F. Labeling and Categorizing Supermaxes ............................................................................... 42 III. Mass Incarceration in the United States, the Sunbelt, and California .................................... 47 A. The National Context of Mass Incarceration ....................................................................... 47 B. The Sunbelt Context of Punitiveness ................................................................................... 50 C. The California Context of Local Innovation........................................................................ 53 IV. The Path to Pelican Bay.......................................................................................................... 55 A. California’s First Prisons: From Exile to Rehabilitation and Back Again, 1850-1970 ....... 56 B. Racial Tensions, Violent Outbreaks, and Political Turning Points, 1970-1980 .................. 57 C. Legislative Assertions of Power and the Determinate Sentencing Act of 1976 .................. 62 D. Correctional Assertions
Recommended publications
  • An Ethnomethodological Investigation of Time in a Prison Clyde Brewster
    THE WNIVERSITY OF CALGARY Doing Time : An Ethnomethodological Investigation of Time in a Prison by Clyde Brewster Freeman III A TIESIS SUMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF OUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY CALGARY, ALBERTA JULY, 1997 O Clyde Brewster Freeman III 1997 National Library Bibliothèque nationale 1*1 ofCrnada du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisitions et Bibliographie Services seMces bibliographiques 395 Wellington Street 395, me Wellington Ottawa ON K1A ON4 Oüawa ON K1A ON4 Canada Canada The author has granted a non- L'auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive licence aiiowing the exclusive permettant à la National Library of Canada to Bibliothèque nationale du Canada de reproduce, loan, distribute or se1 reproduire, prêter, disûi'buer ou copies of this thesis in microfom, vendre des copies de cette thèse sous paper or electronic formats. la forme de microfiche/nIm, de reproduction sur papier ou sur format électronique. The author retains ownership of the L'auteur conserve la propriété du copyright in this thesis. Neither the droit d'auteur qui protège cette thèse. thesis nor substantial extracts fiom it Ni la thèse ni des extraits substantiels may be printed or otherwise de celle-ci ne doivent être imprimés reproduced without the author' s ou autrement reproduits sans son permission. autorisation. ABSTRACT This thesis examines how inmates "do time" by making temporal phenomena available through conversation. The study combines techniques of ethnomethodology and ethnography to analyse time-talk occurring in the natural language of prison inmates. The thesis argues that (a) an analysis of doing time is informative of the temporal dimensions of everyday life in the prison and (b) ethnomethodology would benefit from being attentive to time.
    [Show full text]
  • Maureen Smith (612) 373-7507 Public Hearing on the Composition
    UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Vol. VIII No. 1 January 11, 1978 1\ ·vw:cl\iy intern::Ji bulictin serving all campuses Editor: Maureen Smith (612) 373-7507 Public hearing on the composition of a faculty collective bargaining unit on the TC campus will be the first agenda item at the regents' Committee of the Whole meeting Friday at 8:30a.m. in the regents' room, Morrill i~ll, Minneapolis. Anyone who wishes to appear is asked to call (612) 373-0080 and to prepare a written statement. Central question is whether the bargaining unit should include department heads, county extension agents, librarians, and others who may be classified as either faculty or management. Budget principles for 1978-79 and a report on capital requests before the legislature are also on the agenda. Physical Plant and Investments Committee will discuss purchasing procedures, energy conservation policy, and a proposed long-term lease for the West Bank People's Center, which is housed in aU-owned church building in mnneapolis. National tribute dinner for Sen. Hubert llumphrey Dec. 2 netted more than $1 million for the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. Total of $5.7 million that has now been raised includes $1 million each from businessmen Curtis Carlson and Dwayne Andreas and more than $3,000 in nickels and dimes from school children. Senate Consultative Committee will meet Jan. 12 at 12:30 p.m. in Room 625 in the Campus Club in Minneapolis. Other winter quarter meetings are scheduled for Feb. 2, Feb. 9 (on the Harris campus), and r.tarch 9.
    [Show full text]
  • Case 5:15-Cv-00041-MTT-CHW Document 73 Filed 03/11/17 Page 1 of 72
    Case 5:15-cv-00041-MTT-CHW Document 73 Filed 03/11/17 Page 1 of 72 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF GEORGIA MACON DIVISION ________________________________ ) TIMOTHY GUMM, on behalf of ) himself and a class of similarly ) situated persons, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) CIVIL ACTION v. ) ) NO. 5:15-CV-41-MTT-CHW TIMOTHY WARD, Assistant ) Commissioner, Georgia Department ) SECOND AMENDED of Corrections, ) COMPLAINT ) RICKY MYRICK, Assistant ) CLASS ACTION Commissioner, Georgia Department ) of Corrections, ) JURY TRIAL DEMANDED ) STEVE UPTON, Director of Field ) Operations, Georgia Department of ) Corrections, ) ) RICK JACOBS, Former Director of ) Facilities Operations, Georgia ) Department of Corrections, ) ) RANDY TILLMAN, Former Director ) of Facilities Operations, Georgia ) Department of Corrections, ) ) ERIC SELLERS, Warden, Georgia ) Diagnostic & Classification Prison, ) ) BRUCE CHATMAN, Former Warden, ) Georgia Diagnostic & Classification ) Prison, ) ) Case 5:15-cv-00041-MTT-CHW Document 73 Filed 03/11/17 Page 2 of 72 MICHAEL CANNON, Superintendent, ) Special Management Unit, ) ) RODNEY MCCLOUD, Former ) Superintendent, Special Management ) Unit, ) ) WILLIAM POWELL, Deputy Warden ) of Security, Special Management Unit, ) ) JUNE BISHOP, Former Deputy ) Warden of Security, Special ) Management Unit, ) ) RUFUS LOGAN, Former Unit ) Manager, Special Management Unit, ) ) DWAIN WILLIAMS, Chief of ) Security, Special Management Unit, ) ) MARGARET WASHINGTON, ) Former Food Service Director, ) Georgia Diagnostic & Classification ) Prison, ) ) Defendants. ) ________________________________ ) SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT Plaintiff Timothy Gumm respectfully files this amended complaint for damages and declaratory and injunctive relief on behalf of himself and a class of similarly situated prisoners. In support thereof, Gumm alleges the following: 2 Case 5:15-cv-00041-MTT-CHW Document 73 Filed 03/11/17 Page 3 of 72 INTRODUCTION 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Katharina Jehle*
    LEGISLATING “LEGITIMATE” VICTIMS: HOW THE “JAILHOUSE EXCLUSION” DENIES INMATES THE PROTECTION OF CALIFORNIA’S RAPE SHIELD STATUTE Katharina Jehle* The passage of rape shield statutes protecting victims’ privacy in the 1970s and 1980s changed how the law treats rape victims. However, this rape reform movement gives us the legacy of a puzzling exclusion from California’s rape shield statute for sexual assaults that occur in jail or prison. While sensitive questions about sexual history are off-limits when other victims testify, inmates do not have this protection. Yet since the California Legislature passed what it nicknamed the “jailhouse exclusion” in 1981, society and the law have recognized the existence and impact of prison rape. The jailhouse exclusion is an example of how prison rape survivors face barriers reminiscent of the barriers that all rape victims faced fifty years ago. Since the jailhouse exclusion is perplexing and is incompatible with the rape shield statute’s purpose of protecting victims, this article’s first focus is to tell the story of its origins. It then discusses its impact, especially in light of subsequent legal developments to prevent prison rape, and calls for the California Legislature to repeal it. It is important to reconsider the jailhouse exclusion because of its message: while most rape victims are spared questions about their past sexual history—questions that have no bearing on consent—it is OK to put an inmate-victim on trial. There are enough barriers to eliminating prison rape; it is time to remove this one from the California Evidence Code. * Deputy District Attorney at the Napa County District Attorney’s Office; J.D., University of California, Berkeley, School of Law, 2014; B.S., The College of William and Mary, 2008.
    [Show full text]
  • Thompson Ehle Company MEP/FP, CIVIL, TSYS ENGINEERING
    Thompson Ehle Company engineering excellence for 40 years MEP/FP, CIVIL, TSYS ENGINEERING PORTFOLIO A COLLECTION OF QUALIFICATIONS AND EXPERIENCE WHO WE ARE Our History Our Philosophy Our Approach & Executive Summary Sustainable Design 1Our Capabilities Our History Founded in 1977 by W. L. Thompson, Thompson Ehle Company offers a comprehensive package of engineering services including: Mechanical Engineering Civil Engineering + Water Features Design Electrical Engineering + Lighting Design Technology Infrastructure Design Plumbing/Fire Protection Engineering Commissioning + Facility Assessment Our Philosophy Our business, consulting engineering, is a balance of art and science based on a foundation of knowledge and skills acquired through years of study and practical experience. To be successful, any Project must subscribe to total organizational loyalty. The 3-tier commitment includes: • Designing to ethical and professional standards • Providing the client with engineering solutions • Delivering a quality product on time and in budget The design approach includes planning, organization, proper staffing, effective direction, and control over the decision-making process. In order to provide proper up-front planning of a project, six planning elements must be considered and implemented at the beginning of the project. These elements must be maintained and/or adjusted as needed as the project moves through development. The six planning elements include: Establish realistic objective Budget efforts to accomplish tasks Program tasks to achieve objectives Identify and resolve constraints to design process Schedule tasks in a sequential time-frame Devise strategies to ensure profitability and success Our Approach In the TEC organization it is the Project Manager’s task to establish realistic objectives to be accomplished by the Team during the development of a project.
    [Show full text]
  • Advisory Councils 2018.Xlsx
    ADDED ON Last Update: 1/10/2018 State/Country Ad Council/Organization Location Program MOU Alabama Aliceville Federal Correctional Facility Aliceville, Alabama Kairos Women Inside Bibb Correctional Facility Brent, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Added 8.11.15 Decatur Work Release Center Decatur; Alabama Kairos Men Inside Donaldson Correctional Facility (Max/Death Row) Bessemer, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Draper Correctional Facility Elmore, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Elmore Correctional Facility Elmore, Alabama Kairos Men Inside GK Fountain Correctional Facility Atmore, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Hamilton Aged & Infirmed Hamilton, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Holman (Death Row) Correctional Facility Atmore, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Limestone Correctional Facility Harvest, Alabama Kairos Men Inside St. Clair Correctional Facility Springville, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Staton Correctional Facility Elmore, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Talladega Federal Talladega, Alabama Kairos Men Inside Tutwiler Prison for Women Wetumpka, Alabama Kairos Women Inside Was KO Alabama 1.30.17 Kairos Outside North Alabama Calera, Alabama Kairos Outside Added 11.7.16 Kairos Outside South Alabama Southern Alabama Kairos Outside Alaska Hiland Mountain Correction Center (HMCC) Eagle River, Alaska KairosWomen Inside Wildwood Correction Center (WCC) Kenai, Alaska Kairos Men Inside Arizona La Palma Correctional Center Eloy, Arizona Kairos Men Inside Added 9.18.17 Wilmot State Prison Tucson, Arizona Kairos Men Inside Added 5.21.16 Arizona State Prison - Perryville (Lumley Unit)
    [Show full text]
  • Facility Programs Table of Contents
    Facility Programs Table of Contents Subject Page Program Descriptions……………………………….………..….....…6-8 North Region Facilities…………………………………………..…..9-14 Southeast Region Facilities……………………………………..…15-19 Southwest Region Facilities……………………………….….…...20-25 2 Locations North Region Facilities Page (Lee) Arrendale State Prison……………………………..……………….….…….8 Augusta State Medical Prison………………………………………..…….………8 Baldwin State Prison…………………………………………………..…..………..9 Burruss Correctional Training Center…………………………………..…..……..9 Central State Prison……………………………………………………….…........10 Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison……………………………..…….10 Hancock State Prison……………………………………………………......…….11 (Forest) Hayes State Prison………………………………………………..……..11 Helms (Medical) Facility…………………………………………………..……….12 (Clyde N.) Phillips State Prison…………………………………………..…….…12 Walker State Prison……………………………………………………….........…13 Washington State Prison………………………………………..………..............13 Whitworth Women’s Facility……………………………………………..………..14 3 Locations Southeast Region Facilities Page Coastal State Prison……………………………………………………………....15 Emanuel Women’s Facility………………………………………………….........15 Georgia State Prison……………………………………………………………...16 Johnson State Prison……………………………………………………………..16 Montgomery State Prison………………………………………………………...17 (Richard H.) Rogers State Prison………………………………………………..17 (Donald H.) Smith State Prison…………………………………….…………….18 Telfair State Prison………………………………………………….……………..18 Ware State Prison………………………………………………….……………...19 4 Locations Southwest Region Facilities Page (Jimmy)
    [Show full text]
  • Inside When Shortness of Breath, and Pneumonia
    Prison Legal News PUBLISHED BY THE HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENSE CENTER VOL. 31 No. 4 April 2020 ISSN 1075-7678 Dedicated to Protecting Human Rights Protect Yourself and Your Facility from COVID-19 by Michael D. Cohen, M.D. Introduction trust rumors. False information is widely ity have mild symptoms like a common circulating already. cold, including runny nose, sneezing, mild he novel coronavirus is now a Residential institutions with congregate cough and possibly some nausea, vomiting Tglobal pandemic and is widespread in living like boarding schools, mental hospitals, or diarrhea. On average, symptoms develop the United States, causing a disease called homeless shelters and prisons or jails bring about 5 days after infection, but patients COVID-19. It is likely that a majority together a large number of people into a are infectious to others starting 2 or 3 days of the population will eventually become very small space for prolonged periods of before symptoms start. infected with this virus. Here is some in- time. Communicable diseases are readily Therefore, people who are feeling formation about the coronavirus and some introduced from outside and spread more well can still be infectious and spread the thoughts about taking care of yourself and easily where people live in close quarters. virus to others. your facility during this pandemic. Rec- Coronavirus is coming to all of us in Some patients develop more severe ommendations are changing daily as the the free world. Prisons and jails will likely disease with symptoms such as fever, cough, virus spreads more widely. Try to get newer be hard hit, with rapid spread inside when shortness of breath, and pneumonia.
    [Show full text]
  • Prison Law Reform in Japan: How the Bureaucracy Was Held to Account Over the Nagoya Prison Scandal
    Volume 14 | Issue 5 | Number 4 | Article ID 4863 | Mar 01, 2016 The Asia-Pacific Journal | Japan Focus Prison Law Reform in Japan: How the Bureaucracy was Held to Account Over the Nagoya Prison Scandal Silvia Croydon Abstract: Japan's prison system is renowned Joy Hayms and Tom Murton, Accomplices for its safety and order. There has not been a to the Crime: Arkansas Prison Scandal, 1969 prison riot there in decades, and figures about escapes from and assaults at its penal facilities 'Japanese prisons are generally safe places with are far lower than in other developed nations. none of the violence or gang activity that the Such features have not gone unnoticed; foreign popular cinema associates with prison life in policy makers increasingly look to Japan for the [United States of America (USA)]', writes lessons in how to improve their own prisons. the American government on its Tōkyō Embassy website. Former American Senator Whilst various aspects of the Japanese prison Jim Webb, having visited Fuchū Prison in 1984 system have been investigated by legal experts, and talked to inmates there, holds the Japanese government agencies and human rights prison system in similarly high regard. His organizations, however, a gap remains with impression was that '[A]mericans familiar with respect to how Japanese prison policies are the horrors of Attica and New Mexico and the formulated. This article provides a study of the routine tales of brutality and homosexual rape decision-making process, focusing on the would find the orderly corridors of a Japanese political events triggered by a sequence of 2 prison mind-boggling' , and he has since keenly inmate injuries and fatalities in Nagoya Prison advocated that the US try to learn what it can following the turn of the century, which about prisons from Japan.
    [Show full text]
  • Alicja Dziedzic-Rawska Maria Curie-Skłodowska University Plac Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej 5, 20-031 Lublin, Poland
    LUBLIN STUDIES IN MODERN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE 40(1), 2016, HTTP://WWW.LSMLL.UMCS.LUBLIN.PL, HTTP://LSMLL.JOURNALS.UMCS.PL Alicja Dziedzic-Rawska Maria Curie-Skłodowska University Plac Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej 5, 20-031 Lublin, Poland Linguistic creativity in American prison settings ABSTRACT Prison facilities are special: they are complexes defined by a variety of parameters, whose understanding for an ordinary person is far from perfect. It may be observed that two main cultures clash in prisons: that of jailers and that of inmates. Both groups have different rules of conduct, which results in many misunderstandings and new norms of behaviour created on a daily basis. This, in turn, gives way to a constant creation of unique vocabulary specific to the institution, its inhabitants and employees. It may be said that under such conditions prison language thrives: prison slang is extremely changeable and adapts itself to the current needs of the facility. Thus, the level of linguistic creativity is tremendously high: prisoners base their vocabulary loosely on similarities between animate and inanimate beings, which leads to the development of highly figurative language. The research undertaken here focuses on linguistic creativity in American prison settings, and by doing so, draws attention to the originality and unconventionality of prison slang. Keywords: Conceptual Blending Theory; prison slang; linguistic creativity 1, Introduction Linguistic creativity has been one of the notions in the foreground of linguistic interest. A couple of decades ago it was defined as the 6682 Alicja Dziedzic-Rawska ability to produce infinitely many original utterances or sentences that are based on a limited number of lexemes and grammatical constructions (cf.
    [Show full text]
  • The Origins, Functions, Control, and Ethical Implications of the Supermax Prison, 1976 - 2010
    The Most Restrictive Alternative: The Origins, Functions, Control, and Ethical Implications of the Supermax Prison, 1976 - 2010 By Keramet A. Reiter A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Jurisprudence and Social Policy in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in Charge: Professor Franklin E. Zimring, Chair Professor Jonathon Simon Professor Marianne Constable Professor David Sklansky Spring 2012 Abstract The Most Restrictive Alternative: The Origins, Functions, Control, and Ethical Implications of the Supermax Prison, 1976 - 2010 by Keramet A. Reiter Doctor of Philosophy in Jurisprudence and Social Policy University of California, Berkeley Professor Franklin E. Zimring, Chair Concrete, steel, artificial light, complete technological automation, near-complete sensory deprivation, and total isolation – these are the basic conditions of supermaximum security prisons in the United States. “Supermax” prisoners remain alone twenty-three to twenty-four hours a day, under fluorescent lights that are never turned off. Meals arrive through a small slot in an automated cell door. Prisoners have little to no human contact for months, years, or even decades at a time, save brief interactions with correctional officers, who place hand, ankle, and waist cuffs on each prisoner before removing him from his cell. Prisoners only leave their cells four or five times per week, for showers or for brief, solitary exercise periods in “dog runs” – concrete pens with roofs at least partially open to natural light. In sum, supermax prisons across the United States detain thousands in long-term solitary confinement, under conditions of extreme sensory deprivation.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Prison Crowding
    The Politics of Prison Crowding Jeff Bleich t The dramaticgrowth in interestover prison crowding is typically regarded as simply a product of the rapid increase in prison populations and corre- sponding space shortages. Upon examination, however, it appears that many of the complaints being directed at prisons do not relate directly to increased population densities. This Comment argues that other factors have fueled the crowding debate as well. The Author suggests that the intensity of the prison crowding debate is due in part to changes in the definition of crowding, and he attempts to identify the forces responsible for this changingdefinition. He concludes that although allparticipants in prisonpolicy have an interestin relieving crowded conditions, they also rely on the underlying perception of crowding in order to accomplish their institutionalgoals. This analysissuggests severalpolicy implications. Most importantly, even as prisonpopulations fall, the perception ofprison crowd- ing may remain or become exaggerated. In addition, because the debate now focuses on crowding, the term may be used to include or mask other serious defects in the prison system. Prison managers may be misdiagnos- ing-or intentionally misstating-the sources of current prison problems because of the ease of attributingdifficulties to crowding. Accordingly, the Comment concludes, many of the programs being funded by the legisla- tures to combat crowding may be unsuccessful because they are ill-suited to the underlying problems. INTRODUCTION There may be limits [to prison capacity], but they're not like a brick wall.... [They're] more like the elastic in underwear: They just make it slightly more uncomfortable with each expansion.
    [Show full text]