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Less than equal

 State officials, including prejudiced human-rights commissioners, block inmate complaints
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  October 2, 2009

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READ: Lance Tapley's article on gay rights in prison, "Dangerous slurs"
This story has a bias. It’s in favor of human rights for all people.

So if you think it’s proper for prison guards to call African-American inmates “niggers” and gay prisoners “fags,” then this story may not be for you. If, however, you think that prisoners deserve to be treated as human beings while they pay what the old movies call “their debt to society” — that they still have some rights despite being deprived of their freedom — then please read on.

Complaints about harassment on racial and sexual-orientation grounds within Maine’s public institutions would normally get a hearing before the Maine Human Rights Commission. An inmate at the Maine State Prison, Jonathan Dix, recently made such a complaint. He accused guards of allowing him to be called a “monkey” and “dirty nigger.”

Commission executive director Patricia Ryan and chief attorney John Gause wanted to accept Dix’s case and others like it. But for six years their gubernatorially appointed citizen commissioners, including a former prison warden, Paul Vestal — who is now the commission chairman — have blocked all inmate harassment complaints from being heard. In doing so, they have lessened prisoners' remedies against a variety of crimes such as demands for sexual favors or threats of racial violence or gay-bashing. Such misdeeds are not unknown in prison settings.

At their August 10 meeting, rejecting Ryan’s and Gause’s argument, the commissioners voted to continue to block inmate complaints. In their discussion, Vestal and Commissioner Kenneth Fredette overtly expressed prejudice against prisoners. Vestal dismissed their complaints wholesale because, he suggested, as a class of people inmates are too untrustworthy for their claims to be taken seriously.

Before 2003, prisoner human-rights complaints had been treated like those coming from any other government agency or business in Maine. But that year the commissioners accepted an argument from the attorney general’s office, then headed by Steve Rowe — who is now running for governor — that they should take away this human-rights-law avenue of redress from both state prisoners and county-jail inmates (though many of the latter haven’t even been convicted of a crime and, while awaiting trial, are presumed innocent).

Rowe’s office relied mainly on a 2002 opinion by a now-retired Maine Superior Court judge, John Atwood, a former district attorney, state commissioner of public safety, and current member of the state prison’s secretive Board of Visitors, whose chairman recently admitted the board had not been living up to its mandate to report on prison conditions (see “Secret, Co-opted, and Unaccountable” by Lance Tapley, August 13).

This year Ryan and Gause's pitch to their commissioners was that other court decisions, including those of Maine’s and Vermont’s highest courts, had trumped Atwood’s ruling. Their argument, if successful, would have restored a hearing before the commission to a broad swath of people — gays, African Americans, women, Native Americans, and other often-discriminated-against people who happen to be prisoners. The complaints had kept coming in. “We were getting concerned about some of these prison and jail cases stacking up,” Ryan said in an interview.

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Related: Corrections changes, Secret, unaccountable, and co-opted, Federal investigation requested, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Politics, Culture and Lifestyle, Satanism,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
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  •   ANTI-SOLITARY CAMPAIGN EXPANDS  |  February 03, 2010
    As the February 17 State House public hearing approaches on the bill to restrict solitary confinement at the Maine State Prison, the National Religious Campaign Against Torture (NRCAT), which sparked national debate about Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo, has announced its support.
  •   INSTEAD OF CUTS: GUTS  |  January 06, 2010
    Let’s assume, reader, that you’re concerned about economic and social justice. For those in real need — people who are poor, sick, old, mentally ill, addicted, disabled — you want decent care. You’re concerned, too, about proper funding of schools, community colleges, and university campuses.
  •   CORRECTIONS DISOBEYS ANOTHER FEDERAL COURT ORDER  |  December 16, 2009
    For decades, as it has with other court orders, the Maine Department of Corrections has apparently been breaching a 1973 federal court’s decree that forbids disciplinary solitary confinement at the Maine State Prison beyond 10 days for minor offenses, or 30 days for major ones.
  •   A MYSTERIOUS NEW INMATE DEATH  |  December 10, 2009
    Despite a scandal earlier this year over a prisoner death, state corrections officials won’t allow the Phoenix to interview a Maine State Prison inmate who has claimed in letters that prison staff abused an ailing prisoner, Victor Valdez, before Valdez died in late November.
  •   SUSPECT SPEAKS; VICTIM’S FAMILY BEGINS $1-MILLION-PLUS LAWSUIT  |  November 04, 2009
    The widow of Sheldon Weinstein, the Maine State Prison inmate who died in April several days after allegedly being beaten by inmates, has taken the first step toward filing a wrongful-death lawsuit against prison guards, Department of Corrections “policy-making personnel,” and prison medical-care providers.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

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