HDSP Coronavirus Update

On Friday, June 19, 2020, Unit 9 at HDSP was placed on yet another quarantine, purportedly for somebody in the unit testing positive for Covid-19, even though all the Unit 9 inmates were tested on June 1, 2020. They are not allowing anybody in Unit 9 to make any phone calls or check the kiosk to see if they’ve gotten any emails from loved ones. Unit 9 is the worker’s unit, where I reside, and a bunch of Unit 9 inmates filed grievances about this lockdown that’s going on four months now.

We have not had any visiting, law library, or chapel for over three months now. We have been given a total of four hours of yard in the past three months. Meanwhile, they send us to work in a warehouse, about 130 of us, two days a week, 8 to 9 hours a day. And they don`t have adequate policies or procedures in place to prevent the introduction of Covid-19 into HDSP, but they make sure to keep us locked down and cut off from our loved ones. No yard means no exercise means poor physical and mental health which means when we all get Covid-19 in here, it will kill more of us and all the quicker. HDSP is the only prison in Nevada here they are doing this. End of report.

What Cost Justice?

The pursuit of justice comes in many forms. One of those forms is the civil lawsuit to vindicate rights that have been violated, to seek a remedy for one person harming another. To that end, I have been pursuing a lawsuit for about four years now, against guards who violated my rights about six years ago. Most of those guards have retired, so the AG won’t represent them, and I must serve them before I can proceed. Because I`m an inmate, neither the Court nor the AG will give me those defendant’s addresses, instead placing their last known addresses under seal with the court so the U.S. Marshal can serve them. If the U.S. Marshal can’t serve them based on these secret addresses filed by the AG, I have no way of investigating to find their new addresses based on the old addresses.

What really shocked me when I got the Process Receipt and Return was how much the U.S. Marshals Service charges for serving a summons. Did you know they pay themselves $65 an hour? Then they charge for the miles travelled, as well. So, to serve one defendant, a U.S. Marshal took six hours, travelled 120 miles, and charged $586.20 for service on that one defendant. I have ten defendants that need to be served, so do the math on that one. I`m an indigent inmate, so those charges get taxed to the U.S. taxpayer. Though I`m sure whatever damages I`m awarded at the conclusion of the case will be used to pay that. It seems to me it’s a ridiculous amount to pay for what’s supposed to be a government service. I guess if you want a high-paying job you can get rich off by delivering papers every day, become a U.S. Marshal.

What Is Justice?

This is a question I mull over often, and it’s a question that goes to the heart of my appeal to get my life without parole sentence changed to a sentence allowing an opportunity for parole. The whole purpose of our “Justice System” is to achieve a fair, balanced, impartial justice for all parties that benefits society the most. A prison sentence’s length is set to achieve the goal of punishing the offender, rehabilitating the offender, and deterring both the offender and other parties from committing the same crime in the future. These are the stated goals and purpose of sentencing as delineated by the Supreme Court.  That said, a life without sentence is not something that is useful for anyone convicted of a crime they would never repeat in their lives. While those are the stated goals of sentencing, the reality is that states (and the federal government) constantly change sentences for various crimes based on financial concerns and overall crime levels. Sadly, financial concerns trump all else, and when money is short, sentences get shorter, too.

The considerations that shape prosecution and sentencing decisions in average, everyday cases are completely different than the considerations in high profile cases. A high-profile case eliminates the usual ethical and moral concerns that guide a detective’s decisions, a prosecutor’s decisions. They cater to the whims of the mob instead of the interest of justice. Judges are not immune to this, either, as some revel in the limelight and attention a high-profile case focuses on them.

One of my less supportive readers recently sent some hate mail filled with the same old tired cliches (“rot in hell”, etc.) that have been thrown my way over twenty years now. Strangely enough, shit like that still hurts my feelings. I went to great pains to show, with concrete evidence, the ways in which the detectives and prosecutors in my case have lied and deceived over the years. This reader’s response was, “It doesn’t matter that you’re not a racist.” This person completely misses the point. Trying to paint me as a racist by falsifying evidence was only one example of how the prosecution lied and deceived, and how they continue to lie and deceive. If they were, and are, willing to falsify evidence on that front—in order to deceive both the courts and the public—then what else have they falsified that I haven’t discovered yet? That’s the point, dear reader.

Let’s examine some recent cases, nationally and locally, to get a feel for what justice is in practice. I`ve been sentenced to life without for a crime I committed in high school while blacked out, with my sober best friend beside me, with no physical evidence at the crime scene tying me to the crime. A cop with years of experience and training is convicted of murdering a black teen, and he’s sentenced to fifteen years in prison (he’ll probably get paroled in under ten). A white female cop—full adult, trained by the state—breaks into a black man’s apartment, shoots him dead, says she thought she was in her own apartment, and gets charged with manslaughter instead of murder. In Las Vegas, a cop—again, full adult, fully trained—kills a man with an illegal choke-hold, going against his training. The grand jury doesn’t indict him for any crime. Why? Because the D.A. leads the grand jury, manipulates the whole process to get the desired outcome. The D.A. doesn’t care about truth or justice: they care only about winning via convictions. The D.A. relies on the police to get convictions, so they won’t jeopardize the relationship by charging a cop with murder after a cop kills someone illegally.

So, what is justice? What is a fair a sentence? What should be considered in making those determinations? Something to think about.

Winning at all costs

“Paint me as a villain”- Childish Gambino

“Just as quick as you rise, just as quick as you could fall.”-Logic

Throughout all the proceedings in my case, many lies have been told and perpetuated, from the time of the first news reports up until today. Having already been convicted and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole, it was easier to let the lies lie and just fade from the public consciousness. A part of me always knew that no matter what I did, I would be used by government officials to further their own political aims, or by newspaper editors to sell papers and get hits on their website. I knew there would be people continuously smutting up my name for their own various reasons. Separating the truth from the lies was unimportant to those people, and while people knowing the truth was important to me, I knew I could never convince people—the general public—that lies formed the heart of the State’s case against me. So, my thinking went, why even try?

The easier thing to do would be to give up. Just live a quiet life in prison, live off the State the rest of my life, and never try to contribute anything to society or humanity. By trying to get out of prison, trying to use everything I have to contribute to society and make a positive impact on the world, I open myself up to public ridicule and humiliation, as well as the threat of physical violence against my person. I could take the path of least resistance, then turn my back on the world, and never contribute anything to the world. The right thing is rarely the easy thing. I truly believe I have much to contribute—mentally, physically, and emotionally—to the world as a whole, and to my family and friends. More so, I owe an eternal debt that can be better repaid out there than in here.

One thing I’ve learned about district attorneys and the attorney general lawyers in Nevada over the years is that they do not care about right or wrong, and they don`t care about the truth: they only care about winning, and they will do whatever it takes to win, at all costs. My case is bad enough without using lies to make it seem or sound even worse than it is, yet the D.A. continues to do that. To lay out all the lies will take a while, so it’s not going to all fit in this one post. Wherever it’s available, I will use documentary evidence to show the truth.

One of the original lies propagated by the police detectives and the D.A. was that there was surveillance video that showed me entering the women’s restroom, following Sherrice in there. They perpetuated that lie because it fit their narrative they tried to spin (and successfully spun) of my being the one and only clearly guilty party. The actual fact and truth is that the surveillance camera did not show the entrance to the women’s bathroom. It actually only showed the area leading to both the men’s and women’s bathroom, with no way of knowing which bathroom any given person was entering or exiting. Click Here to see the grand jury transcript explaining this. Grand Jury Transcript pages, 51 (lines 19-25) to 52 (lines 1-4). I point this out because this was one of many lies propagated in order to ensure I not only looked as guilty as possible, but also to make sure Dave Cash was protected so that it would make it easier to get a conviction on me, and me alone. Anything that called into question my guilt, or pointed toward Dave Cash being guilty of anything, would be buried by the police and D.A., or outright lied about. The lies by the D.A. and police multiplied over the course of the case, and that habit of lying to inflame the public to keep focus off the truth for the sake of maintaining their narrative and keeping me in prison until I die continues to this day. They want to win, and the truth doesn’t matter to them.

Which brings us to today, and the judge’s denial of my writ of habeas corpus, and the lies the judge is propagating at the behest of the unethical D.A. There are a plethora of them, but I`m focusing on two specific issues today. The first lie by the judge that I`m countering is that this was a well thought out, planned, premeditated crime against Sherrice on my part. Nothing could be further from the truth. When Dave invited me out to Las Vegas with him and his dad that weekend, I had been tweaking (smoking and snorting meth) for about two months at that point. I’d stopped going to class for the most part and was pretty much failing all the classes I’d been getting A’s and B’s in just a few months before. I’d been prescribed Dexedrine a few days prior and had been on a meth-fueled runner of no sleep for about five days. So even though I needed sleep, I wanted to go to Vegas with Dave, and thought I could pop a few extra Dexedrines to stay awake.

I thought we would head to Vegas, where we would be able to party—drinking, gambling, hitting the strip clubs, and hooking up with some college chics or some hookers. My plan was to get shitfaced to the point of oblivion and forget my problems. See, I was a suicidal, self-destructive, self-centered, self-loathing asshole punk kid. I self-medicated my depression while doing anything and everything to impress and shock my peers. I desperately wanted to be loved and liked by my peers, to the point of my own destruction.

It was in this thrill-seeking, self-destructive frame of mind that I went with Dave. The detectives and D.A. made, and make, every attempt to paint me as a sober, full-grown man at the time, to paint me as a predator whose sole purpose was to seek out a victim. They try to make it sound like I went to a videogame arcade full of children, looking for a victim. The actual truth is that I had no clue Dave’s dad would want to stop at the State Line on our way to Vegas, and when he did, Dave and I went looking for things to do. We wanted to party, but there wasn’t much going on at State Line at one in the morning. Yeah, there’s a fact the D.A., detectives, and the media like to bury: this crime occurred at around three to four o’ clock in the morning. This wasn’t during the day: it was in the middle of the night. Logically, if someone is looking for kids to victimize, are they out at three in the morning when there are no kids around? No, of course not. They would be trolling schools or playgrounds during the daytime.

So, I popped a bunch of Dexedrine and immediately started drinking when we got to State Line. I drank a whiskey & coke, a daquiri, and four or five beers. In the past, I had blacked out from drinking alcohol and mixing it with pills, and from just alcohol by itself. I hadn’t been drinking much the past couple of months, because I was tweaking all the time, so my tolerance was low. I was probably about 135 pounds at the time, too. It was the first time I had mixed alcohol with Dexedrine, and I had no clue what the effect on me would be, and I didn`t really care. A part of me hoped it would kill me.

Dave and I tried to hang out on the casino floor and in the bar, but we got kicked off the casino floor because we were, by laws, minors. We wandered between multiple casinos, looking for things to do, a couple of 18-year-old boys wandering aimlessly in the middle of the night. I had a fake ID, so I kept drinking, until we ended up in the arcade at the Primadonna.

I went into that arcade to play videogames. I wasn’t in there looking for kids to victimize, or for anyone to hurt. The last things I remembered before blacking out were hitting on some Asian high school girl (remember that I was still in high school), flicking my lit cigarette butts randomly around the arcade, and urinating on one of the videogame machines. When flirting with the Asian girl, I told her I was from Long Beach, what high school I went to, and my name. I also showed her my tongue and nipple piercings. What kind of person planning and premeditating a crime makes a drunken spectacle of himself at the crime scene and tells everyone who he is and where he’s from? Not even the stupidest criminal planning and premeditating something would do that. And who would be so stupid as to plan a crime at a casino where there are surveillance cameras everywhere? Nobody. I don`t know what happened that night, what snapped inside of my mind or why. I don`t know what actually happened in that bathroom.

What I do know are all the factors that caused me to lose control of my own mind and body. I was always trying to lose control at that age. Though I had blacked out a few times before that night, I had never physically harmed anyone during any of my blackouts. Now, as an adult, an actual full-grown man, I always maintain control of myself. I don`t let my emotions control me, and I stay away from drugs and alcohol. No matter what the situation, I always try to think things through and never do anything impulsively. Even to this day, I am shocked that I was ever capable of such violence, but now I understand that every human being is capable of violence, and one must be self-aware to avoid violence.

The point is, this was not a premeditated crime. It was not planned or thought out in advance. It was a convergence of factors all at the same place and time. Had even one of the factors been different, this never would have happened. I wish with all my heart that this had never happened, but we can’t change the past, no matter how much we want to, for better or worse. Which brings me to the second lie from the D.A., propagated by the judge, that I want to address: their labeling me a racist.

Let me be 100% clear: I am not a racist. I do not judge any person based on their race or the color of their skin. I judge based on the content of a person’s character. My best friend in prison is black, and my wife is Mexican. I love them and would lay down my life for them. My best friend is Andre Breland, #43088, so you can look him up and see for yourselves. He is a good man who made a series of bad choices when he was younger, leading to a tragedy, and now he’s serving life without the possibility of parole. I pray he gets a second chance out in the world, and he may. He deserves it. I spent more than five years living in a cell with him, so he probably knows me better than anyone except my wife.

Here’s my history with race. I grew up in Long Beach, California, probably one of the most multiethnic cities in the world. I lived there during the riots of 1992, when race was a major issue. When I was about ten years old, my parents sponsored a black man for parole from prison, named George Johnson. He had been convicted of murder in SoCal and paroled to our house after serving about twenty years in prison. I don`t know how my parents knew George, but I remember him being very kind, going shopping with him during the holidays, and sharing a bathroom with him while he lived with us.

The first girl I ever French-kissed was a black girl named Stormy Jenkins, when I was in sixth grade. That was at a birthday party at Bolsa Chica beach. My first girlfriend was a Mexican girl named Melinda Ojeda, in eighth grade. My first year and a half of high school was spent at Los Alamitos, the stereotypical Orange County all-white high school. My best friends there were a couple of white guys and a Mexican, and we were inseparable. As a teenager, I was a complete idiot, doing the stupidest things—and saying the stupidest things—to make people laugh, to get their attention, to get them to like me. My friends and I grew up watching Saturday Night Live skits by the likes of Eddie Murphy, before we understood the concepts of satire and irony. Those skits—some of them, anyhow—were racist as fuck. But we only saw the hilarity of the skits and emulated accordingly. Sure, we would say shit to make each other and other kids laugh, and to shock for the sake of shocking, but we weren’t racist. I don`t think any kid can really be a racist: they haven’t had the chance to be exposed to other cultures, and so they are susceptible to believing the stupidest shit out of pure ignorance.

Halfway through my sophomore year of high school, I moved to Singapore, where I lived for a year. My best friends over there were British, Canadian, Indian, and Turkish. My girlfriends were Indian, Chinese, white, and Malaysian. When I moved back to the Long Beach, halfway through my junior year, I went to Woodrow Wilson High School, which was the opposite of Los Alamitos. At Los Al, I had been part of the white majority. At Wilson, I was the minority, as whites were just a small part of the overall population. It was during the next year that I met the worst influences in my life: Dave Cash and Agnes Lee. My best friends at Wilson were all white, and I kind of lost touch with my friends from Los Al (though we still hung out and partied together from time to time). A topic of conversation among my Wilson friends was that we were the minority there, but I wouldn`t say that any of them were racist, except Dave, though we would all say stupid shit from time to time. My girlfriends during that period were Cambodian, white, Mexican, and Korean. Ironically, my Korean girlfriend was pretty racist.

When I was eighteen, I had no moral courage. I would go along with whoever I was around at the moment, right or wrong. I was the kid who would jump off a bridge if my friends told me to, and I literally did one time (the Second Street Bridge in Long Beach, with about a forty-foot drop to water below). Regardless of my moral weakness as a kid, I was not a racist. From the very start of this case, the detectives and the D.A. tried to infuse this crime with a racial animus. After my arrest, many lies were told about me, but the racial thing was something that the D.A. pinned on me after the fact, based on their own inventions, as well as pinning comments made by Dave onto me.

Dave was smart. Even though he and I had already agreed that I would take all the blame for the crime and I would protect him by not implicating him, he made sure to contact our friends to brag about what happened, and to tell them it was me who had committed the crime. Though once I was arrested and he had locked in an immunity deal to testify against me, he bragged to friends that he had committed the crime, at least in part. However, any involvement on Dave’s part didn`t fit the simple narrative the D.A. was pitching in order to convict me. There was no physical evidence at the crime scene tying me to the crime, and the physical evidence at the crime scene did not match the false confession police got me to give, nor did it match Dave’s statements. Yeah, there were fingerprints and hair at the crime scene, but none of them matched me.

The Las Vegas detectives and D.A.’s directed the FBI on this case, turning over evidence to them after I was convicted, instead of safeguarding that evidence. One of those pieces of evidence was a sexual assault evidence collection kit containing hair evidence. The hair in the kit wasn’t mine. Whose was it? Click Here to see documentary proof of the existence of this evidence. Dave Cash said he stood on the toilet seat in the bathroom stall next to the one where Sherrice was sexually assaulted and murdered, that he looked over the top of the stall and saw me in there with Sherrice. The police dusted the toilet seat for footprints: there were none. Here’s the police report.

But I digress. The focus here is the lies about the race stuff. My best friends at Wilson were Dave Cash, Justin Ware, and Jordan Wheeler. Another friend of ours was James Trujillo, who was more just a guy we partied with, getting drunk and high with, and who was friends with one of the chics I was friends with from Los Al. Within a day or two of my being arrested, detectives interviewed these guys. I`m including the pertinent parts of the interview transcripts below.

James said I would make off-color remarks about other races. But when asked if he ever heard me say anything racist, he couldn`t state anything specific. The truth is, Dave was the one who would make racist comments, using racial epithets regularly, not me. But because I was always with Dave, James put that on me. However, when asked if I told him I committed this crime because of race, he said I did not. Trujillo transcript here. Jordan told detectives that he asked me why I committed the crime and I said, “I don`t know.” Wheeler transcript here. Justin Ware was also interviewed and asked if I made negative comments about minority groups and if I was a racist, and he said no. When asked if race had anything to do with Sherrice’s death based on his discussions with me and Dave, Justin said no. Ware transcript here.

During the Grand Jury proceedings, Dave’s ex-girlfriend, Aleana Garcia, was questioned under oath. She testified about Dave bragging about taking part in the crime. She also testified that Dave was very racist and he broke up with her because she was Mexican. Transcript here.

It’s against this backdrop that the D.A. was pushing any angle they could to get a conviction and the death penalty against me. I think at this point in our history as a society, we all know that police detectives and district attorneys are manipulators and liars. Their case against me wasn’t as strong as they made it out to be, so they falsified evidence by writing a memo, sending it to themselves, and saying that witnesses stated I made remarks that I most certainly did not make. The D.A. sent this memo to itself on June 3,1998, more than a year after I was arrested, after multiple interviews of witnesses by police detectives and the D.A. Copy of D.A. memo here. In the Kinko’s parking lot, Dave did all the talking. I sure as hell didn`t confess to James Trujillo, much less make this statement. Whether James Trujillo and Jordan Wheeler actually made these statements to the D.A., or the D.A. made this up, I don`t know. What really irks me is that the judge for my appeal, in his Order denying my appeal, stated these lies whose only basis for existence is in a memo from the D.A. to itself, as facts, saying that I said these things when I unequivocally did not.

Now here’s where things get interesting. Here’s an FBI memo stating that during the Las Vegas D.A.’s third trip to interview witnesses in preparation for trail (their June 3, 1998 interviews), a witness told them Cash made racial slur comments. The names are redacted, but you can tell which names go where based on the sizes of the redacted spaces. So, Trujillo or Wheeler (or both) said that Dave was the one spouting racial slurs (a year later, after multiple interviews where they said I did not make any racial comments after the crime). Dave made racial slur comments after the crime, then the D.A. sent itself a memo attributing Dave’s comments to me, and twenty years later the D.A. presents these lies to the judge as facts, and the judge regurgitates them as fact when they are actually lies. And, yes, I will be raising this in court and demanding that the record be corrected. I will no longer sit silently while I am slandered.

I don`t often talk about the things I do to help people in here because I don`t help people for recognition. However, this post has taken me a couple weeks to get to in part because I’ve been helping a few guys out, and who I’ve been helping goes to the heart of the false statements against me. I’ve spent a lot of time learning the law in here, and though I have no formal training, 99% of the dudes in here have zero knowledge of the law, so I can use what I’ve learned to help them. When someone asks me for help, I help them, regardless of race, nationality, sexual orientated, crime, religious beliefs, or political beliefs. Right now I`m helping a black guy research and attack the illegal computation of time for his sentence, a white guy the prison refuses to treat for his Hep C (I`m helping him pursue an injunction), and I`m helping a friend of mine, Rasta, prepare for his parole and release in the next four months.

As you might have guessed, Rasta is black, and a Rastafarian. He has some anger and emotional control issues, so I’ve helped him understand his own psychology, so he won’t revert to violence when in any given situation that causes him mental or emotional distress. Like a lot of guys in here, he’s a good person who made mistakes, and has paid for them, with addiction, drugs, and lack of control over one’s self being major contributing factors. Rasta and I have spent a lot of time discussing history, religion, race, forgiveness, the criminal justice system, and a myriad of other things. He recently gave me a priceless gift of a poem that he wrote for me. Here’s the poem, and a picture of Rasta, a man I`m proud to call my friend. The poem touched me deeply because being forgiven, and redeeming myself, for my past is a big deal to me.

When I first got to prison, my time would have been a lot easier if I had joined a white gang, but that shit’s not for me. That’s not who I was, and that’s not who I am. I was painfully aware of how my weakness in the face of peer pressure led to such a horrible outcome. It probably would have been easier on me, too, if I hadn’t befriended blacks, Hispanics, and Asians in addition to whites. The truth is, even if it had been easier, it still wouldn`t have been that much easier. Let there be no illusions: I have been punished for the past 21 years, for the whole of my adult life, and I’ve been punished worse than any other prisoner in this state. My notoriety has followed me this whole time, with both guards and inmates treating me like shit regardless of who I am at the time. I’ve been almost murdered, choked out until losing consciousness with the thought that I was going to die. I’ve been assaulted, harassed, conspired against, kept from the privileges every other inmate had. I’ve had to spent 21 years looking over my shoulder, constantly wondering if today is the day I`ll be murdered. So, yeah, my life has been hell for the last 21 years.

Regardless, I try to do good things, make a positive impact, help others wherever and whenever I can. The people closest to me, in here and out there, see who I am, that who I was as a boy is not who I am as a man. Maybe one day the rest of the world will see it, too.

Before I go, here’s something I support. Check it out: Erasethehate.org.

 

Surreal Trip to Court

It’s been an interesting week, to say the least. A few days ago, I had an evidentiary hearing in Las Vegas to determine if my prison sentence of life without the possibility of parole is cruel and unusual punishment since I was a teenager at the time of the crime. My hearing was at 9 a.m. on Thursday, so a guard told me–on Wednesday night at 9:30–to be ready for court at 3 a.m. the next morning. One of my favorite shows–The Expanse–was on until ten, so I didn`t actually shut everything off to sleep until ten. Then I ended up laying awake for about another hour before falling asleep. I woke up around two, went back to sleep, then got up at 2:30.

Usually when you go to court from HDSP, you have to roll up all your property, then put it on a cart and drag it about a mile uphill to be stored while you’re gone. After over twenty years of incarceration, I have a shitload of property. So rolling everything up is a major pain in the ass. Fortunately for me, the guards that night weren’t tripping on me leaving all my stuff in the cell. So I had enough time to brush my teeth, wash my face, make my bed, and drink some coffee before they opened my door at 2:55 a.m.

I haven’t been outside at night in years, so that was the first surreal moment of the day–the first of many. I stood outside for about fifteen minutes, watching clouds flit by across the almost-full moon, a beautiful sight. Breathing in the warm night air and just enjoying the inherent sense of freedom in being outside without any other inmates (save for one other guy who was on his way to the same spot I was, but for his job of cleaning that area) or guards around. The “S&E” (“Search and Escort”) guard showed up and escorted us across the prison to the intake and transport building.

Once up there, I was placed in a holding cell with an overweight, black transsexual on hormones but still sporting a beard, named Angel. Angel was going to court for a battery on an officer charge. Another inmate got put in the holding cell with us a few minutes later. I forgot his name, but he was getting released that morning, placed on parole with a stay at Siegel Suites being paid for by indigent funding. He had done about six months in prison before being granted his parole, and all he could talk about was getting a cigarette and going down to Boulder highway to find a female to have sex with. Guaranteed he’ll be violating parole and back in here again with 45 days. He’ll be doing dope with a Boulder highway hooker within the first week, and the dope will lead to any crime to finance the next sack. Getting a job and becoming a productive member of society were the furthest things from that dude’s mind.

I don`t know how long I sat in that little room without a toilet or sink, but I watched the sun come up. Breakfast was four slices of bread, four slices of cheese, two mustard packs, and an apple. We had to take off our prison blues and put them in storage bins (except for the guy getting released–he stayed in his state-issued blues). When it was time to go, we got stripped out and put on orange clothes. Some guys got jumpsuits, some guys got pants & shirts (I was part of the latter group).We got put in belly chains and leg shackles, then about a dozen of us got packed into a white van like sardines. There was a metal & plexiglass partition between the guards in the driver & passenger seats and the inmates piled in the back, so if shit jumps off with the inmates, there’s nothing the guards can do to stop it. So a motherfucker has to be prepared at all times.

When we finally got on the road, the acceleration was initially discomfiting, seeing as how I hadn’t been in a van like that in quite some time. Once we were on the highway, I alternated between keeping an eye on the inmates around me and soaking in the sights of everything outside of the window. At first it was nothing but cars and desert landscapes, but it wasn’t long before buildings, homes, and billboards started popping up. Another surreal moment was when I was looking at all the cars and every one of them seemed brand new, not to mention the strangeness of how many of those SUV crossovers there were (you know, the ones that look like souped-up, futuristic station wagons). It seemed like half the cars on the road were crossovers.

I saw my first Starbucks, Panera Bread, and smartphones in person, as well as my first digital billboards. The world definitely looks hella different than it did when I was last out there. It’s a trip to be so far removed from reality for so long. So much can change in twenty years, and everyone living out there in the world doesn’t even notice the changes. I’ve stayed on top of everything as much as possible, especially technology, but seeing things on tv and in magazines is no substitute for seeing them in person.

Though I’d been in court and jail in Vegas before, I hadn’t been down there since, I believe, 2000. As far as I can tell, it’s a completely new courthouse building, and it’s definitely a new underground holding area for everyone waiting to go to court. It’s a byzantine maze of hallways, holding cells, and elevators. Being in the holding area with hundreds of county jail inmates was so completely different than the usual prison surroundings; I found myself wondering about each of the people going to court that day. I could see in their faces, and their slow, shuffling walks, that these were people living lives of quiet desperation. How different is that from any of us at any given time? I think about all the guys in here, and each day is a life of quiet desperation in prison. Is it different in the free world?

The Clark County Detention Center uniforms are still the exact same as when I was last there. Blue v-neck shirts and blue pajama-like pants. Metro uniforms are the same, too. Waiting in a small hallway with a plexiglass door, my eyes roved over all the people, cops and inmates alike, trying to calm my mind of the anxiety induced by the pending hearing, a hearing that will literally determine my life.

As I stood there, a county jail inmate in a holding cell across the central room waved me down. I ignored him because I don`t know anyone in county jail. He kept waving, though, so I looked closer and realized it actually was someone I knew–a friend from prison who had been paroled about six months earlier, been violated (i.e. found to have violated the terms of his parole and had his parole revoked as a result), then had his parole reinstated a month earlier. On the one hand, seeing Casey in jail made me sad, but on the other hand, seeing a familiar face was comforting. He signed me about his travails, using prison sign language, a rudimentary form of sign language. Then he got placed right in front of my plexiglass door so we spent some time talking. He had been violated again, and caught new charges (fraud and burglary), and had been in county for about a month. So I`ll be seeing him again soon. He was really sucked up, so I know the meth was the cause of his problems. It sucks because I see it happen so much, and no matter what I say to guys like Casey about staying away from the dope and leading better lives, there are no addiction and drug-prevention programs down here to help. Though I have been able to help some guys over the years, my counseling can’t overcome the addition these guys suffer from. At least I’ve helped a few, and that’s better than nothing.

It wasn’t long after they took Casey away for his date with destiny that the transport guards came and got me, leading me to another elevator and then a holding cell behind the courtroom. The toilet in there worked, but the sink didn`t, so as thirsty as I was, there was nothing to drink. The cell was filthy, smelling like piss and funk, so I just paced back and forth while waiting an indeterminate amount of time. Usually the transport guards from the prison just drop you off and let the jail personnel and court bailiffs oversee your custody and supervision, but my transport officers were the ones to escort me to the courtroom, and they ended up staying in there for my while hearing.  You would think maybe it was because I`m life without and they felt extra precautions were necessary. Nope. They just wanted to be there because of the notoriety attached to the proceedings. Notoriety feels like being a rare animal in a zoo, with everybody elbowing and positioning to get a look, not even caring or considering that the person they are ogling is a human being with actual feelings.

I was anxious about the hearing, being in a courtroom again, having my fate decided by a judge who doesn’t even know me. When the guard got me out of the holding cell, he walked in front of me to open the door to the courtroom, and I followed him in. I didn`t even cross the threshold before the sound of the camera hit me. Click-click-click-click-click. A hundred pictures taken in ten seconds by a high-powered camera with a telephoto lens from less than thirty feet away. As soon as I heard that sound, my stomach clenched, and my mind tensed. I fucking hate that sound. Let me tell you why since most of you have not had the misfortune to be the object of negative media obsession (yes, I say obsession, because the LVRJ coverage of me has been obsessive).

When I was first going to court decades ago, there would be a bunch of cameras and reporters in the courtroom every time I was set to appear- both still cameras and video cameras. The relentless click and whir of cameras would begin as soon as they saw me coming. They would take upwards of a thousand pictures of me, waiting for any change in my facial features to snap a couple dozen pics in a few seconds, hoping to catch one shot where I looked menacing, scary, or glaring, even though it was a trick of the light and the angle.

After combing through all those pics, the photographer or editor would choose the worst picture they could find, a picture to fit their narrative of making me the personification of evil. The next day I would see the picture, or pictures, in the paper and shake my head in disbelief at how they curated those pics. I would ignore the cameras when I was in court, and they would invariably catch me in one frame where I was in the middle of responding to something someone had said, and it would look like a sneer or smirk. The total manipulation of perception was a point of extreme frustration for me during those months.

So, when I heard that old sound greeting me at the door, I focused on keeping my face relaxed so it wouldn`t show my utter contempt for the camera and  the inevitable negative spin from the RJ. I clenched my asshole instead of clenching my jaw, thus keeping my countenance impassive. From what I’ve heard from friends and family–and a couple of guards, as well–the photographer wasn’t able to capture any “evil”-looking pics. I have no doubt that if they had captured any, they would have published them. I`m surprised they didn`t doctor them to make me appear sinister. I`m grateful that they didn`t. They were able to capture me giving a wave & nod of reassurance to my wife and family, which I tried to be discreet about.

Despite my consternation of the camera’s presence, I kept my focus on the proceedings, taking notes as the expert witness gave his testimony. The whole hearing lasted about an hour-and-a-half, and the witness, Dr. Steinberg, explained that the brain of the 18-year-old is just as underdeveloped as the brain of the 17-year-old. This is an important distinction, as it shows that the science in both neurological and psychological development of teenagers does not support the arbitrary numerical cutoff of 18 for legal protection for teenagers. This has far-reaching implications, not only in the field of criminal justice and sentencing teenagers, but also in the political arena of gun sales to teenagers, smoking, etc. For too long, the true adults of America have failed their youth, taking advantage of them and using them for their own means and ends, to the detriment of those youth. We, as a country, need to take the science into account when shaping laws, in every part of society. I`ll have Des post Dr. Steinberg’s Declaration here, and once we get it from the court, a copy of the transcript of his testimony at my hearing.

After the hearing, I was escorted back into the holding cell downstairs, during which my transport officers joked about the hearing. One asked the other, “What do you think the decision will be?” to which the other responded, “You tell me: you were sitting closer to the judge,” and then they both laughed. They spoke to each other as if I wasn’t even there, which is actually pretty typical of guard and inmate interactions. I don`t know if  there was any ill-will underlying their conviviality with one another, but they were always courteous and respectful when speaking to me, so I presume no ill-will. Another downside of infamy is that you can’t always tell what people’s intentions toward you are, and you have to temper paranoia while still remaining realistic.

Instead of being placed back in the holding area with the plexiglass door, I was taken to a room with a row of smell steel cages and placed in one. The energy drained from me as I sat on a steel stool and laid my head down on a steel countertop, my hands still cuffed to the belly chain, and my feet still shackled. I don`t know how long I rested like that before they brought my tranny buddy, Angel, to sit in the cage next to me. He/she had taken a plea bargain for a gross misdemeanor, with a ninety-day sentence he/she would serve at the same time as the current prison term he/she was serving (which was like 12 to 36 months). Strange to think of sentences of days and months instead of years and decades. Such strange stuff is surreality made of where time is elastic and indefinite, yet simultaneously finite, where one man’s reality is another’s unreality.

We spent a few more minutes down there until the guards pulled us out, rejoined us with the other eight or so prisoners, shuffled us through the endless corridors of human fallibility, and put us all in a van with a new set of transport officers. As we pulled out of the darkness of the garage and into the bright sunlight of a Vegas day, I tried to memorize every visual, knowing that this may very well be the last time I am in a city in my lifetime, the last time I ever set eyes on anything outside of prison. Cars, people, stores, casinos, freeways, billboards, and stoplights. I imagined myself standing on the same corner as the pedestrians I was looking at, what it would be like to actually be free and do something as simple as cross the street.

The ride back seemed to go a lot faster than the ride to Vegas and before I knew it I was back in prison, back in my blues. I got stuck waiting in a holding cell for about an hour before I was finally able to walk back. I went straight to work, got about an hour of work in, then went back to my cell and sat in bed, processing the day’s events. I was emotionally hung over the next day, just drained from everything, but I recovered fairly quickly. Luckily, I have the love and support of my wifey, my family and my friends. Now it’s the waiting game to see what the judge decides, followed by appeals to higher courts. Hope springs eternal.

 

DISGUSTING

We’re all desolation angels striving to survive in a chaotic world. Sparrows caught in downdrafts, furiously beating our wings to stay aloft, sometimes plummeting senselessly to the unforgiving ground below, sometimes soaring above it all, soaring to new heights heretofore unimagined.

That was something I wrote recently–just popped into my head. I think it’s a pretty fair assessment. You’re probably wondering about the title, and the fact that it has nothing to do with the passage above. Well, the title comes from a prosaic piece of hate mail I received shortly after the LVRJ article about my case ran. Hopefully I can get it scanned and posted here. It’s an anonymous card from someone saying they are so sorry to have read that I am still alive and married, followed by “DISGUSTING.” The emphasis on “disgusting” actually made me laugh. It used to be something like this would hurt my feelings because I’d so desperately want everyone–even weirdos like the one who sent this postcard to me–to know that I was not the monster the media made me out to be. It took me a long time to realize that people are going to believe what they want to believe, regardless of what the actual truth is. So, to my dear weirdo: I`m so very sorry to disappoint you, but thank you for caring so much. I subscribe to the golden rule, so I wish you all the best and hope you find some comfort in your random missives to strangers. If you need a friend, feel free to send me your address next time and I’d be happy to correspond with you.

My dear weirdo ended his/her missive with this line: “There is no telling how many other female children would have met the same fate had it not been for Det Ramos.” Oddly enough, this line made me wonder if this was in fact Ramos sending me this card. It wouldn`t susprise me. A lot of times I`m struck by the utter surreality of not only my own life but life in general. Life is full of strange juxtapositions, and I am one of those juxtapositions. People like this dear weirdo think I am some soulless monster, but the truth is that I am an extremely empathetic person always looking to make the world a better place. This person’s statement makes me ask them: how many other female children have met the same fate because of Detective Ramos? Maybe they should ask Ramos. He knows the part he played in making sure Dave Cash went free twenty years ago.

I recently read an article about “The Leftovers” in The Atlantic, and a line caught my eye: Incomprehensible violence and the tragedy that follows, the implication goes, inject a surreal dimension into existence. That is so true. We as humans, when faced with that surrealness, seek to smooth down that bubble threatening to break the surface of our reality, seek to rationalize and simplify the often inexplicable. Even when an explanation is to be had, if it’s too complex–or has too many conflicting contracts and juxtapositions that can’t be boiled down to one line–people generally gravitate toward the more simple explanation regardless of how true it is. Such is my surreality.

Anyway, a friend recently asked a really good question after reading one of my last couple of posts: why do I believe I was ever in that bathroom stall at all? The fact of the matter is that I don`t know if I was ever in there at all, but I can’t claim that because I have no memory of being there or not being there. Looking back, it’s really messed up how I was manipulated by the detectives and then Leslie Abramson and the people surrounding me at the time. At this point, though, it’s all moot. All I can hope is that Dave Cash has led a legally upright life and become a better person so as not to inflict any harm on anyone else in this world, that Sherrice’s family has found peace, and that I might be given at least the opportunity for a second chance outside of prison walls and concerting wire. Hope springs eternal. No matter what, I`ll always strive to do good and be a better man today than I was yesterday. After I conclude my lawsuit against the state and its more corrupt prison employees up North, I`ll start getting all my discovery sent in and share all the actual physical evidence from my case(or lack thereof) here. The cost of all that copying and postage is too prohibitive at this point.

I did want to clarify one thing from my last couple of posts: I am not anti-government or anti-police. It occurred to me that my decrying the pro-government and pro-police stance and bias of the LVRJ in its reporting might be misconstrued as anti-government and anti-police stance on my part. I am in fact all for government and police that operate as intended, as protectors of the people instead of their oppressors. I am staunchly anti-corruption when it comes to all  government agents and anyone in positions of power. There are many public servants who strive to do good, to uphold the oaths they have sworn, and those people should be commended and celebrated(whether they be police, attorneys, administrators, prison guards, or any other public servant). However, institutions and individuals in positions of power should not be blindly venerated and deified, especially not by the last bastion of protection against those institutions and individuals when they become corrupt–the media.

Believe it or not, that concludes this post. I know, right? It’s almost unbelievably short for my rambling ass. The next few posts may seem a bit disjointed because they were actually written a couple of months ago, but didn`t get posted because of all the stuff going on the past couple months. I`ll have my wifey post them in rapid succession so we can get up to date, then I`ll follow with new posts starting again in the next couple of weeks. I hope everyone out there is having a safe and happy Summer. Yeah, you too, weirdo. Or should I say, “Have a DISGUSTING Summer.” ? Heh. For real, though, all humor aside: be good to eachother.

HateMail

Government for the people?

Soundtrack for this post: Rage Against the Machine.

An anti-government populist wave washed Donald Trump up onto the White House lawn, which is ironic because the Donald is for the regular American like ISIS is for democracy. To the people who voted for Trump: do you realize he is a billionaire whose almost every action has been for the benefit of fellow billionaires, and he doesn’t give a fuck about you or your lot in life? Now don`t get me wrong: I`m pro-business and all for smaller government, but I`m also hyper-aware of the plight of the average American. A lot of white males (and females, too, but more the males in this instance) feel like they’ve missed out on the economic recovery of the past eight years, and a few of those white males blame minorities–particularly Mexicans–for their own economic malaise. So racism comes to the surface and parades itself as nationalism. Sadly, those same people indoctrinated with racist views and beliefs don`t realize the racism is just a tool to keep them focused on–and fighting against–other people of limited financial means, and to keep them from seeing the true source of their oppression: the top 1%(aka Donald Trump). Sorry, guys: you were sold a bogus bill of goods and now you’re going to be grist for the mill to make the Trumpster richer. Make America great again? Nope. Make the top 1% richer (again). By the way, guys, unless you’re Native American, you’re all descended from immigrants.

Up until a few years ago, as envisioned by our Founders who bled for us, our intellectual property system (patents, trademarks, and copyrights) was a “first to invent” system, meaning that if you were the first to invent something, it was your intellectual property. If some deep-pocketed corporation saw your invention, stole it, and spent the thousands of dollars it takes to secure a legally solid patent, you had the recourse of being able to sue that corporation, prove you invented it first, and be given the financial value of that invention. Well, Congress, in their ever-loving quest to make the rich richer and fuck the little guy more, switched America to a “first to file” system. Now it doesn’t matter if you are the first to invent something. A corporation can steal your invention, patent it, and–bam–you just lost all your intellectual property. All because after hundreds of years, Congress switched us to a first to file system. If you can’t afford thousands for a patent, your invention isn’t yours. Thankfully copyrights are still a first to invent system.

That’s bad enough, because now Google can steal your ideas (because no doubt every modern inventor uses Google to research inventions) by having one of their deep-learning artificial intelligence algorithms store and study every little thing you do on your computer, laptop, and/or smartphone. But, hey, the government wouldn`t let a company enslave us like that, oppress us like that, would they? Maybe not before, but now elections are bought. “Before what?” you ask. Citizens United. What’s that, you ask? Well, about two years ago the U.S. Supreme Court gave billionaires carte blanche to spend as much as they want to control elections, in the name of “free speech”. Wouldn`t want to impinge on the billionaires of the world and their freedom of speech. That fundamental and cataclysmic shift in campaign finance law was decided in the Citizens United case. Now if you don`t have the money, your voice won’t be heard. All you will hear and read–on tv, in newspapers, on the radio, and on the internet–is what the billionaires want you to hear and read.

Now here’s how the Trumpster and his fellow billionaires (here’s looking at you, Koch brothers), and the Supreme Court deference to those billionaires’ freedom of speech, are about to seriously fuck my freedom of speech–and thus my ire at the current state of affairs. Trump put a Republican named Ajit Pai in charge of the FCC. How does that affect my freedom of speech, you ask? Well, today every American out there on the streets takes for granted the fact that they can pick up their phones and make unlimited calls to any other American for free. Wanna gab for two hours with your buddy in New York? Free. Calls made in prison? Far from free.

When I first came to prison about twenty years ago, it cost about $30 to make one single fifteen-minute call to California. Yes, $2 a minute (at least) for a call from Nevada to California. It wasn’t until about a year ago, when the FCC voted to cap prison phone rates that calls dropped to about eleven cents a minute. Still far from free, but affordable. Hell, affordable is a stretch, but it’s better than $2 a minute. It took about twenty years of petitioning and legal battles to finally get the FCC to act on the issue. The billionaires and their phone companies who like to profit off of the weakest and poorest of society immediately filed legal challenges to that rate cap on prison calls. God forbid they make only 11 cents a minute off of inmates and their familiar instead of some higher amount. By the way, the typical market forces wherein competition would lower prices over time don`t apply to the prison industrial complex because it’s a pay-to-play system. Every dollar scraped off the backs of prisoners’ friends and families has a percentage of it kicked back to the prison and its administrators. Whoever offers the biggest kickback gets the contract. What does it matter if you’re kicking back 60% of every dollar when you can charge whatever you want because you have a (literally) captive market and no legal limits on price-gouging?

So, the FCC finally capped the rates and the billionaires and their lackeys filed their legal challenges. Trump got elected, Trump put another billionaire’s lackey in charge of the FCC, and–drumroll, please–the FCC suddenly stopped defending their rate cap in court. Now the FCC is on the side of the billionaire phone companies, and non-profits and civic-minded lawyers have to protect and defend the FCC’s rate cap against the FCC. If (or more likely when) the prison phone rate caps are eliminated, I won’t be able to call my family and friends as much as I do now, extremely curtailing my freedom of speech. But the billionaires can buy elections under the guise of making sure their freedom of speech isn`t infringed upon. At what point do those billionaires become tyrants? At what point does the tree of liberty need to be watered again? Again, don`t get me wrong: I have nothing against billionaires. Hell, I aspire to become one. But when those billionaires buy elections in order to oppress the middle and lower classes, they are abusing the power their wealth gives them, and when the government consists of billionaire lackeys instead of duly elected representatives of the people, something’s gotta give. Like Rage said: Know your enemy.

Obviously the whole phone rate thing affects me directly, but it’s not yet so obvious how the first to file patent system affects me. That’s because I haven’t posted my inventions yet. I have over a hundred pages of inventions, business models, and business ideas from the last sixteen years, and I`m going to post every one of them here. Right now I am working on getting one of my inventions patented: lucky for me, I have an awesome, generous cousin who is helping me with that. If not for him, I would never be able to get a patent filed due to the prohibitive cost. When I post each of my inventions, I`ll be giving away my intellectual property for free. A lot of my inventions that may have been wholly unique and original at the time were invented and/or marketed by others between then and now. Some of the ideas, no matter when I invented them, have not been thought of or produced by anyone yet. However, as I truly believe inventions inexorably make the world a better place, if anyone uses any of my ideas and gets them to market, I`ll be glad, regardless of remuneration.

Alright, rant’s over. My next post will be some of my inventions. Until next time, then, keep your eyes open and don`t eat the pabulum they feed you: it’s soylent green.

Battle Against Corruption: finally a victory

As I’ve talked about in this blog before, corruption is systemic at Lovelock Correctional Center and I was a victim of that corruption. I have been battling against that corruption in the court system for the past few years. I don`t need to rehash everything here, so suffice to say I had to file a brief with the Ninth Circuit because the U.S. District Court dismissed all of my civil claims against Lovelock and NDOC (Nevada Department of Corrections). The Ninth Circuit just issued a judgement in my favor, stating that my rights were in fact violated and kicked it back down to the lower court for further proceedings. For anyone who wants to read the actual order, click below.

I`m going to be extremely busy with this over the next couple of months, so I may not be posting as frequently as before. Then again, I was a bit slow with my posts anyway, wasn’t I? It’s nice to see a little bit of justice from time to time. Persistence pays off. Never give up, never surrender.

15-16147

Jeremy Strohmeyer v. K. Belanger

Solitary Confinement

Hello again. Long time no talk. I wonder what you’ve been up to, how your summer is going. Despite the circumstances, summer is still something to look forward to in here (assuming you’re not in solitary, in which case it’s hella depressing). A friend of my wife’s is curious about solitary confinement and what it’s like. I`ll endeavor to explain it as best as I can, using my recent stint there as the starting point. I refer to solitary as a prison within a prison, because that’s essentially what it is. A lot of guys refer to it as hell. To me, it’s definitely the ninth circle of hell (I`m pretty sure that’s the bottom circle in Dante’s hell). Even as I think back to that time in solitary, more than a year removed, I feel the bands tightening around my heart, a constriction of the chest. That’s the anxiety creeping in again. Some may scoff at the concept of solitary causing PTSD, but let me assure you: that shit will fuck you up.

In order to give you some perspective, I have to explain some of the different custody levels within the NDOC. I think everyone’s generally familiar with the different security-levels of prisons (i.e. minimum, medium, and maximum). Lovelock is a medium-security prison, as is High Desert. Ely is a maximum-security prison, but based on Justice Department definitions, it’s actually a supermax. Ely is pretty much a lockdown facility, meaning that almost every inmate there is locked in his cell 23 hours a day. At Lovelock & High Desert, there are general population units, protective segregation units (also known as protective custody or “P.C.”), and segregation units (administrative segregation and disciplinary segregation). PC conditions mirror GP conditions. There are two inmates to a cell, and everyone gets the same freedoms and privileges. In GP, there’s a “level” system, but detailing that is unnecessary for the purpose of describing solitary.

In both GP & PC at Lovelock, you get to be out of your cell and out of your unit with all the other inmates housed in your unit and neighboring units. At around 6 am, you get up and get to walk to a chow hall with inmates from your unit, all of you sitting at tables(four to a table) together to eat breakfast. You pick up a sack lunch at breakfast, and carry it back to the unit with you, to eat whenever you want between then and dinner. Once you’re back from breakfast, the tier is open for tier time.

“Tier” is a multifaceted word in here, acting as both a noun and a verb. The tier is the physical space all of the cells open up into, the best analogy being an apartment complex courtyard. When you exit your apartment door, it opens up onto a courtyard (if you’re in an outdoor-type apartment complex). If you’re upstairs, you have a walkway with railing, and when you look over the railing, the courtyard is down below. The tier in a prison unit is akin to the courtyard in an apartment complex. Except it’s got a roof & ceiling, and the central area has some tables (the same type of tables they have in the chow hall). Against one of the walls of the tier is a bank of three phones. The wall perpendicular to the phones has three or four showers in a row (there’s a row of showers downstairs and a row of showers upstairs). There’s also a microwave near the phones.

So, when you have tier, or you’re on tier, that means you can come out of your cell to be on the tier. Get back from breakfast and change from your blues (jeans and a button-up blue shirt) into something a little more comfortable. Some shorts & a t-shirt, or a tank top. Tier runs from after breakfast until 11:00 am. You can choose to go outside to the yard (acting as both a noun & verb, same as tier) to play soccer, football, handball, basketball, softball, or maybe even hacky-sack. Or you can work out (push-ups, pull-ups, dips, etc.) on the various workout stations that are available (the same kind of pull-up bars & stuff you might see at a public park). In between all that—or choosing not to do any of that stuff—you can socialize. Talking with other inmates, hanging out with friends, listen to music while you walk around. Despite the razor wire & fences, a man can feel somewhat free out there, socializing and playing sports like a normal human being, enjoying the warmth of the sun on your face on a summer’s day.

If you’re not the outdoorsy type, you can stay inside on the tier (or you can spend an hour on the yard then come in for a shower). You can walk around the tier, sit at a table with other guys, socialize, play cards, cook some food in the microwave, get on the phone, or lean back against a wall and watch everything going on (there are a lot of characters in prison, so there’s never a dearth of entertainment to be had from people watching). Granted, you have to watch everything going on to protect yourself as prison is a violent place at times, and guards and prison administrators rarely fulfill their duty to protect you from the violence at the hands of other inmates. If you want to shower, you can just get your shower stuff (towel, shampoo, etc.) out of your cell and hit the showers. You can shower once, twice, three times a day if you want. You’re allowed an unlimited number of phone calls, so you can stay in touch with family & friends on a daily basis, no problem.

Because all inmates can’t just move freely around the prison at all times of the day, you’re dependent on a written communication system to communicate with various prison departments using specific forms called “kites”. In a regular unit, when you have tier, you can just walk over to the downstairs office and ask the guard sitting in there for whatever forms you need. Then, when you want to submit these forms (or mail a letter), you just walk over to the mailbox and stick the kite or letter in there. If you have a medical issue, you can tell the guard in the office, or walk over to the infirmary on the days they have “sick call”. Have some property you’re waiting for, or wanting to mail out? You walk down to the property room on the “property open door call” day. You get to walk over to the gym (weights, indoor basketball, volleyball, racquetball, and handball) a few times a week and spend an hour or two in there each time. There’s also chapel at least once a week, when you can go to the chapel to worship or commune with people who share your same beliefs. And of course, you can’t forget visiting. A couple days a week(on the weekends), you can get visits from your family and friends, where you just walk over to the visiting room and sit at a table with your people, holding hands, playing games, talking, and laughing.

As you can tell, it’s a fairly normal situation, a routine filled with daily socialization and physical interactions with other human beings. You get outside for fresh air and sun for hours a day, you get daily showers, and you can get a pretty close approximation of normal daily life despite the guards and towers and fences. In addition to that, you can get food and clothing packages, and you get to order unlimited canteen once a week. Please don`t think all these things make prison fun or enjoyable. The loss of freedom and control is absolutely horrible, and none of that other shit can make up for being confined. However, that’s the “baseline” of prison.

At eleven in the morning you lock down for count. That means you go back to your cell (both you & your cellmate) and you’re locked in there while they count all the inmates in the prison to make sure they’re all still alive & still where they should be. After count clears (around noon), you get to go out for tier and yard again. You lock down again at around three, they count again, you get out again at around 4:00 to 4:30, and you can stay on the tier or go to dinner around 5-6. Tier stays open until 6:30, when they count again. That count clears around 7:00, and you’re out for tier again (you get night yard only during the summer). Lockdown for the night is around ten, at which point you are locked in your cell for the night, until breakfast again the next morning.

It’s not too bad, because you are pretty tired from running around and doing stuff all day and ready for sleep at that point. There’s something to look forward to each day.

So now that you know the “baseline” prison experience, I can tell you about solitary and you can see how it’s different, how it’s a prison within a prison. Out in the world, you have unlimited freedom. If you get sent to prison, you lose all that freedom. After a while in prison, a certain routine is established, limited freedoms enjoyed. Get sent to solitary and that limited freedom is gone, same as the unlimited freedom of the outside world is gone when you come to prison. When there is a fight, or you’re under investigation, or your safety is in jeopardy, you’re placed in Administrative Segregation (“Ad Seg”). When you are found guilty of violating prison rules or regulations, you can be sentenced to Disciplinary Segregation (“DS” or “the hole”). Now, Ad Seg and DS are usually in the same building(s), with the only differences being the ability to order canteen, and the number of phone calls you can make. Outside of that, Ad Seg is pretty much the same as DS.

On December 18th, 2012, I was placed in Ad Seg after being assaulted by another inmate. I was placed in a cell by myself, and given a mattress, a blanket, two sheets, a towel, a toothbrush & toothpaste, a bar of soap, an orange jumpsuit, and the underwear, socks & shoes I had on when I was brought over to Ad Seg. When I was brought over to Ad Seg, my hands were cuffed behind my back, and the guard escorting me uncuffed me in the cell’s doorway. Once uncuffed, the door closed behind me. I can’t even properly describe the feeling of absolute helplessness and powerlessness that washed over me in that moment. All I could do was make my bed then look around at the barren cell. It would be a few days before I got my property, so there wasn’t much to do.

This is when time takes a weird elasticity, like they say happens when you get close to a black hole. There’s no clock, no watch, no tv, no radio—no way to tell time except for light filtering through the frosted window. Even the light isn’t a great indicator at first because you have no idea which way your window is facing. Even when you can tell time again, it becomes an antagonist rather than an indicator of anything positive. Every prison runs its hole different. At Lovelock, when I was there, the hole was run by old man Vallaster and one of his kids, so they ran it the way they wanted instead of running it according to regulations and procedures.

I got to the hole after dinner, so no food was coming as darkness descended. Not that I had any appetite anyway. There were a couple of inmates yelling to each other from different cells, but I couldn’t tell who or where they were, so I didn`t interject. In each cell is a button and a little intercom. When you need to contact the guard in the control bubble, you hit the button, which causes a light on the control panel in that control bubble to light up. It’s typically frowned upon to use the intercom button for anything except emergencies (except when the guards tell you to). Depending on what cell you are in, you can see only certain parts of the tier or unit when you look out of the window in your cell door. It takes a minute to get the hang of the schedule & routine, how everything works.

The first evening & night, I tried to sleep. I cried because I was worried about Des and her being worried about me when I didn`t call and out of frustration and anger. I let the depression take over and put me to sleep. The next morning the sound of tray slots opening, and general banging of trays and carts, woke me up. Each cell door has a slot in or near the middle of the door. That slot has a flap/door on it that is unlocked with a key. When the guards are serving the meals, they open up the tray slot and put the tray of food on there. At breakfast you are given your breakfast tray and a sack lunch for later. When you grab your tray off the slot where it’s balanced, the guard closes it again. I would set the tray on the sink, check it for any food stuck to the bottom of it(clean it if there was food stuck there), then sit on the edge of my bed or on the toilet, tray balanced on my knees, to eat. After I got done eating, I put the tray on the floor near the door. The guards came around about an hour later to pick up the trays.

After a couple of days I was given my property, which had been completely ransacked, with a bunch of stuff not allowed in Ad Seg removed and unauthorized. I was allowed only two of my appliances, so I chose my tv and my fan. Within a few days, I was given an Ad Seg classification hearing wherein I was notified I would remain in Ad Seg until an investigation was conducted into the physical altercation that took place. The caseworker conducting the hearing didn’t care that I had been assaulted, and nothing I said at that hearing had any effect on the final results. On December 24th, I was given a kangaroo court disciplinary hearing wherein I was found guilty of assault & battery and sentenced to two years in the hole.

It’s hard to tell what’s worse in the hole: the noise or the silence. When I was sentenced to two years DS, they came in and took all my appliances. Luckily, I had my stamps, pens, paper, and envelopes, so I could write my wife & family to let them know what was going on. It took me a few days of observation and asking questions of the guards when they walked by to figure out how things worked.

Whenever you leave your cell, there’s a routine. First, the guard or guards escorting strip you out. It’s called a strip out. When you get stripped out, you have to get completely naked and hand all your clothes to the guard through the tray slot. After the guard has examined all your clothes for contraband, you have to go through a series of motions, with the guard naming off  each motion: show me the fronts and backs of your hands, open your mouth and run your fingers along the gums, show me behind your ears, run your fingers through your hair, raise your arms and show me your pits, lift your dick, lift your balls, turn around, raise your left foot and wiggle your toes, raise your right foot and wiggle your toes, now bend over and spread your ass cheeks and cough. Yeah, that’s for real, people. Pretty humiliating, eh?  After the indignity of that little dance is over, you get to get dressed again.

Once dressed, you kinda hunch down to get your hands in the tray slot, behind you, for the guard to cuff your hands behind your back. When your hands are cuffed, the guard bangs the metal header above your door to let the other guard in the bubble know to open your door. Then the guard shackles your ankles by having you lift one foot, then the other. Once you are cuffed & shackled, you’re ready to leave the cell to go to your disciplinary hearing, or whatever. You get to shower once every three days, and luckily you don`t have to get stripped out to go to the shower. You just get cuffed & shackled, then walk over to the shower, trying not to step too large of a stride lest you rip the skin of your ankles with the shackles. It’s a challenge carrying soap & shampoo to & from the shower with your hands cuffed behind your back. It’s the same cuff & shackle routine when you’re locked in the steel cage that surrounds the shower, and when you’re let out of that cage when you’re done showering.

Technically, you’re supposed to get outside to a yard (not the same yard as GP &PC) once a day, or at least five hours a week. I was in the hole at Lovelock for about four months, and I was not given yard a single time, nor did I ever see anyone else ever get yard. The reason being that the Vallasters didn`t want to have to escort inmates out to the yard. So they didn`t. The only time I got outside was for my monthly visit.

In the hole at Lovelock (both Ad Seg and DS), you get only one visit a month, for about two hours, behind glass. When leaving your cell, you go through the usual strip out routine, except instead of having your hands cuffed behind your back, you are placed in a belly chain. That’s a chain cinched and locked around your waist, with two cuffs attached to it, so you have some limited mobility with your hands cuffed to this chain around your waist, the cuffs attached to opposite ends of the chain with little two-inch long chains between the cuffs and belly chain. Walking to visiting takes forever because the length of your stride is shortened by the shackles. I would rip the skin over my Achilles tendon every time when making that walk. Each step causes the chain between the ankle cuffs to tighten, making each cuff twist around each ankle, an endless sawing motion of metal on cotton sock, then flesh.

Anyway, when you finally get to the visiting room, you don`t get to actually go into the visiting room. Oh yeah, instead of a weekend visiting day, visiting for the hole is in the middle of the week. So, you get there, and you have to sit on a little metal stool, and then try to pick up a phone attached to the wall in front of you, contorting your body to hold the phone up to your ear & mouth with one of your hands cuffed to your side. Sometimes the guards would uncuff one of your hands, sometimes they wouldn`t. Then you would talk to your family through the phone, looking at them through a thick, dirty pane of plexiglass. Half of the time the phone wouldn`t work properly, so you end up yelling to be heard and repeating yourself endlessly. Additionally, nothing to eat or drink. Whereas a regular visit is four hours, and you get to eat a bunch of different foods from the vending machines, a behind- glass visit means you don`t get any food or drinks from the vending machines (at least in Lovelock). And the regular visit chairs are plush & padded with backs; that behind-glass stool is hell on your ass.

As you can imagine, going from four to eight, four-hour visits with physical contact each month to a single two-hour visit each month is devastating, both to you and your loved ones and to your relationships themselves. Those unlimited phone calls I had in the regular unit? Gone. In the hole you have to submit a phone request kite, and hope the guards working bring you the portable/cordless phone that day. Then you have to hope the battery is charged and the phone isn`t broken. If the gods are smiling, you actually get a working, charged phone. Then, if you’re on Ad Seg, that phone works for one single 30-minute call a week. That’s it. When you’re on DS, you get one single call a month. If the call somehow drops or disconnects, you’re burnt. Sorry, Charlie, you’ve exceeded your allowed number of calls if you try to call back, and the system won’t let you call.

When you’re on/in DS, you can’t order any food or coffee from the canteen. You can only order stamps, stationary, and hygiene. Once a week, the guards will let you hit your button and tell them what forms you want (phone kites, kites, etc.), and they’ll bring them to you. You’re completely at their mercy. There are also kites for clippers. Your ability to communicate is drastically reduced and diminished. Endless hours alone in a cell. Night turning to day turning to night again on an endless loop.

So, that was the hole in Lovelock. Solitary confinement at a medium-security prison run by corrupt individuals. You are suddenly and drastically cut off from the contact you did have with the outside world.

This post is way too long as is, so I`m going to stop here for now, and save the rest for later. In my next post I`ll talk about solitary confinement at Ely and the psychological effects of that isolation. Until next time, then, hug the ones you love and be grateful you can see them, talk to them, and have actual physical contact with them every day.

My wife’s blog

I had planned on posting my HeatSaver paper next, but decided to do a short blurb instead to point out my wife’s blog. There may be some people reading my ramblings while unaware that my wife also writes about this crazy life we’re living together. She is an awesome writer, and her bravery in putting herself out there in her blog is what inspired me, and gave me the confidence to start my own. Here’s the link: Wine.Work.Prison. I am the man I am today because of my wife (all the good parts, that is). This life is incredibly difficult at times, and I don`t think people understand the amount of pain and sacrifice that goes into being my wife, being the wife of a man who is in prison, much less a man serving a sentence of life without parole. I am in constant awe of my wife’s love and strength. So if you can, just give her a word or two of encouragement. I think we all need that from time to time—just a recognition of our efforts in the face of adversity, the battles we win(and sometimes lose)on a daily basis, the obstacles we overcome, and the things we accomplish. So, words of encouragement for my wifey, but also some words of encouragement for the people in your life that you love. It may not seem like they need that, but they do. Until next time then…