4,645! Disregard for Boricua Life Continues

By Marie Torres

Beginning on September 22nd, 2017, a modern colony of the “greatest country of the world” went into complete darkness with no connection to the rest of the world. The small island of Borinquen (Puerto Rico) with its 3.4 million citizens suffered in isolation while Hurricane Maria ravaged the entire country, slowly traveling at about 10 km per hour. As category 5 storm, Maria was the most intense storm the island has experienced in over 100 years. It was not until day 4 or 5 that the millions of anxious Boricuas living in the states were able to hear any information about their loved ones on the island. This powerful storm wreaked havoc on the island, but the real atrocity has been the lack of U.S. response to help its colony.

In the months following the hurricane, the daily reality for Boricuas on the island and those in the diaspora has been horrendous. Since the storm, Boricuas have been crying out from help: jobs, money, food, water, medications. Yet, massive shutdowns and lack of supplies left hundreds to die in hospitals. Some Boricuas literally suffocated to death for lack of oxygen tanks, others have died for lack of common medicines, and countless other have been lost to diseases linked to lack of proper sanitation. Over the past 7 months, the average Boricua suffered 84 days without electricity, 60 days without access to drinking water, and more than 40 days without cell phone communication. Many in the interior regions and poor working class towns have suffered the most as they have been completely forgotten about by supply distributions. There have also been massive school closures, pension cuts, job loss, and austerity measures. These conditions have resulted in 300% increases in calls to Puerto Rican suicide hotlines, and a massive increase in suicides and reports of depression. Boricuas are desperately fighting to survive, but they are also crying out for liberation.

While the U.S. Federal Government’s official report only recognized 64 deaths related to the hurricane, the truth is that 4,645 Boricuas have been murdered since the hurricane, according to a study funded by Harvard as well as the accounts of Boricuas struggling on the island . We must be clear about this discrepancy: 4,645 Boricuas died because of US Government negligence and outright racism. Amerikkka will only say that 64 died as direct results of the storm which means they only count the Boricuas who drowned, got caught in mudslides, or were fatally hit with debris in order to maintain their innocence for the 4,581 lives that have been lost. Many are identifying this for what it is: a state-sponsored mass killing and disaster capitalism at its finest.

On June 1st, thousands of Boricuas gathered at the capital to collectively mourn the deaths of their beloved brothers and sisters. Thousands of pairs of shoes of those passed were placed in front of the capitol building with signs that read “ GENOCIDE” and “Decolonize this place.” Just June 18th, a proposal made by Cuba was presented to the UN for Puerto Rican Independence. While this is the 37th proposal given to the UN for Boricua Liberation, it shows that Boricuas will never stop fighting. ¡Que Viva Borinquen Libre!

Free Immigrant Children, Free Families

On June 19, 150 people blocked Convention Center Boulevard where Attorney General Jeff Sessions was speaking. Protesters demanded the release of immigrant families. This protest was called by the New Orleans Peoples’ Assembly and the Congress of Day Laborers.

By Shera Phillips

Children are being ripped away from their parents and forcibly taken to concentration camps. It is estimated 10,000 children are now imprisoned.  Trump has said “Immigrants aren’t people. They are animals”. He, his counterparts and their policies blatantly demonstrate their lack of respect for human life. This is how slaveowners justified the genocide against enslaved people in the U.S.

A tidal wave of protests has swept the country against this policy. So Trump issued an executive order that seemed to stop this. That’s a deception. The order calls for building prisons for 20,000 families on military bases; the indefinite imprisonment of families, and no date or plan for family reunification.  On June 19 Trump went to court to ask that the current law banning children from being incarcerated more than 20 days be lifted for immigrants and that these prisons be exempted from current minimal standards for child incarceration, minimal stands that include education and recreation time. ICE admits not knowing where 1,500 children are.

The “Justice” department has repeatedly denied public access to see the conditions which already exist in these for-profit prisons.  U.S. Congress member Jeff Merkley’s multiple attempts to enter the Bronxville, Tx “detention center”, a repurposed Walmart with blackened windows, have repeatedly been denied and he was forced off the property. 

Children, one of the most defenseless groups, can barely stand being away from their parents while they use the restroom, yet they are being kidnapped, held in cages and sleeping on concrete floors. We can only imagine what other traumatizing events they are enduring. The Huffington Post reports that these children are being given psychiatric drugs. 

The fact that we’ve allowed our government to commit atrocities that are reminiscent of previous egregious acts against humanity is shameful and unfathomable. We should be outraged! There should be demonstrations happening all over this country demanding these children be returned to their parents immediately. Many of the immigrants in our country find themselves in circumstances that render them all but paralyzed and we need to stand with and for them. 

As the great Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would say, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere”. This monstrosity of justice is taking place every day on our very own soil as we sit idly by consumed with the latest in pop culture. We are a mesmerized, hypnotized audience watching our government perform a magic show of illusions and disappearing acts that we are funding.

Young Mother Dies in Orleans Parish Jail

On May 25, Kentrell Hurst, a 36 year old mother of five, died in the Orleans Justice Center jail, marking the most recent in-custody death for the Orleans Parish Sheriff’s Office.

Hurst is the second person in the last six months to have died while on a detox protocol administered by Constant Care Solutions, a private company contracted by the OPSO to provide medical services to inmates. Though a coroner ruled that Dennis Edwards, 41, died on December 15 of natural causes, reports indicate that he died in similar circumstances to Hurst. A nurse who is suing CCS for a wrongful firing in the wake of Edwards’ death, alleged that her supervisors ignored her attempts to alert them of his dire condition. Neither Hurst nor Edwards were taken to the hospital.

Hurst and Edwards’ deaths follow last October’s deaths of Narada Mealey, 32, and Evan Sullivan, 27, from an ulcer and pulmonary edema (or “apparent natural causes”, as OPSO would have it), respectively. Mealey, a father of 6, was jailed for failing to pay court fees in connection with a misdemeanor marijuana conviction. His family reported that he had complained to his jailers about his condition yet had received no medical attention.

Citing an inmate death rate four times the national average, a recent federal monitors’ report described Orleans Parish Prison as “critically unsafe.” Those who have seen and those whose family has seen the inside of OPP know all too well the daily injustices and humiliations of prison life. Those of us on the outside must stand in solidarity with our imprisoned brothers and sisters to demand that the state honor every person’s human right to healthcare.

Who Profits From Imprisoning Immigrants?

OUR TAX DOLLARS SHOULD GO TO SCHOOLS AND HOUSING NOT PRISONS

Image of the Lasalle Detention Center in Jena, LA where more than 1,000 immigrants are detained

The Geo Group and CoreCivic (formerly Corrections Corporation of America) operate for-profit prisons and immigration detention centers for states and the federal government.

As it was put in a March 10 article for the New York Times, “The worse the news for immigrants and their lawyers, the better it has been for the two companies. When a member of the Trump administration issues a memo or executive order, gives a speech or tweets about the crackdown on immigrants, shares of the two companies rise: Since the election, CoreCivic’s stock price has climbed 120 percent, and Geo’s has gained 80 percent.”

“The deportation crackdown is doing very good things for these companies,” said Terry Dwyer, an analyst with KDP Investment Advisors.

Wall Street is drooling as the policy of indefinite imprisonment is set in place. The same is true for the mass incarceration of “citizens” for which Louisiana and New Orleans are the world’s worst abusers.

Thousands Imprisoned for Lack of Cash

By Joseph Rosen

“I was locked up because I was poor.” This is the testimony of Twanda Marshinda Brown, a single working mother of seven who spent 57 days in a Lexington County (SC) jail for failing to pay $100 a month toward traffic tickets. For thousands of poor Louisianans who have been put in jail, their experience has been much the same. The Louisiana Sheriff’s Association has recently admitted that throughout the state, at least 2,181 people have been incarcerated for more than a year without a trial. (The results of a public record request challenging the internal survey of the LA Sheriff’s Association is still pending.) In Orleans Parish Prison, 90% of inmates are currently awaiting trial; of these at least 1400 men and women, more than half find themselves in a position like Brown’s, charged with nonviolent offenses and imprisoned for no other reason that they cannot afford bail and fees.

A recent survey by the Federal Reserve revealed that 66% of Americans  would not be able to cover an emergency expense of $400. The cost of bail or a court fee represents an even greater burden for someone charged with a crime: the median annual income for an incarcerated person (calculated pre-detention) amounts to a mere $15,109. Under these conditions, many people are unjustly doomed to lengthy pre-trial detentions despite their legal right to a “speedy trial” and the legal assurance that these individuals are “presumed innocent until proven guilty in court of law.” As has always been the case in the US criminal injustice system, “equal rights” are enjoyed unequally.

“I have been struggling to find a job, and I have even more bills because I couldn’t work in jail.” Just like Brown, most people lose their jobs during their detention. Many lose their housing. Many suffer from failing health as their conditions go uncared for. Many have families that are thrown into chaos for lack of childcare. These hardships are born by the incarcerated as well as their families and communities on the outside. No one gains from these detentions except for the commercial bail bond companies, the private companies that are contracted to run these prisons, and the corporations whose executives leech profits from the legal wage theft of the imprisoned workers that they exploit.

Reform is being fought for by organizations inside and outside of the prison walls. The courts’ use of cash bail has been challenged on constitutional grounds and has been ended in some jurisdictions. Prisoners continue to mount strikes to demand their labor rights among other basic rights. Reforms to this system of mass criminalization and modern bondage can be won through struggle, but workers who know better will not let up the fight until we rid our society of those who would profit from our poverty.