Tag Archive for prison

Get on the Bus!

Recently, although it’s been around since 1999, I discovered a marvelous family-protecting organization called Get on the Bus.  They make sure that children don’t lose contact with their parents who are in prison.  That’s a lot of kids–200,000 CA kids have a parent who is incarcerated, 1.5 + million kids in the U.S.

Get on the Bus brings groups of kids and their caregivers to share a day with Mom or Dad.  They provide free transportation, a travel bag, a photo with their parent, and food for the day.  When they’re on their way home each child is given a teddy bear and a note from the parent.

This is great for families, who often fall away after a person is in prison a year.  It removes the fear of visiting a prison and encourages those who can visit on their own to do so.  It helps keep inmates in touch with family and the Outside, making reintegrating into society once released easier and more possible, thus lessening the chance of being a repeat offender.

Read more about Get on the Bus at their website.  Then, if you don’t live in CA, see about getting a similar program going in your state.   It’s a win-win for everyone.

Innocent Man is Released but Imprisoned

Imagine this: You’ve been totally cleared of murder after spending 21 years in prison.  Your state lets you out but makes you–a legally and actually innocent person–wear an ankle monitor and keep you on the books as a murderer.  That’s what’s happening to an Illinois man, Tyrone Hood.

Read a short summary of the situation, in his own words.  For more details, click on the links he gives you.  Then do something to help this man who is caught in an unjust system.  On the page giving his summary, at change.org, is a place where you can sign a petition to free him totally.  Politicians respond to pressure.

If this can happen to him, it can happen to any of us accused of any crime.

 

 

What’s an American Worth?

Let’s look at value.  There’s much controversy over the prisoner trade to get Bowe Bergdahl back home after spending five years in Taliban captivity.  Of course, there would be less brouhaha if elections weren’t coming up.  But let’s set aside the politics, the “what-ifs,” and “should-haves” for awhile and ask what I think is an important question: How many Taliban members does it take to equal one American?  The answer, obviously, is five, making a single American pretty valuable.

Take that, Taliban!

Prison Cell-Phone Business

Don’t believe that the kidnapping of Frank Arthur Janssen, a prosecutor’s father, was orchestrated via cell phone from prison?  How is it possible for inmates to get their hands on and use cell phones, anyway?  http://people.howstuffworks.com/prison-telecommunication3.htm describes the widespread problem and lack of solutions.  It’s an interesting read.

However, the article glosses over the role of prison guards.  As a person who has visited and written to state prison inmates for many years, I hear things from the mouths of those who live it.  I’ve been told again and again how some guards run a cell-phone business.  A guard brings in a phone and charger, sells it to Joe in cell D222.  After awhile, there’s a search of Joe’s cell and the phone is confiscated.  Then, that phone is sold to Sam in cell 114.  And so it goes.  What, the prisoner is going to complain to the warden that a guard stole his illegal cell phone?  I don’t think so.

Cell phones are a lucrative business for cell phone companies and for unscrupulous prison guards.

 

 

New Life in a Hostile World

Today, I watched a person begin a new life.  I first knew him when he was in my high school English class, far more interested in the girl sitting next to him than in the heroine of the novel I was trying to teach.  Now, after many years in prison, he is free again.  The first thing he did was to thank God for his freedom.  Then he went to the cemetery to visit loved ones whose funerals he couldn’t attend.  He arrived at my house around 11:30 to thank my husband and me for never losing faith in him and keeping in touch..and to play with the dog, which he’d longed to do for a long time.  After a short visit he was off to Los Angeles to his temporary home with the sisters at The Francisco Homes.

He spent his time Inside finishing his B.A. and taking other correspondence courses in Bible and theology.  He was active in his Chapel and refused to take part in any violence, including declining to strike back either the time he was stabbed or the time he was beaten.  He made it a point to help other inmates and to be a peacemaker between races.  In short, he spent his years growing up, trying to atone for his crime, and learning to be a responsible, caring adult.

Is he a saint?  Of course not.  He did something bad, and he served the time the judge gave him.  When family and friends dropped off, as they almost always do after a year or so, he made new ones through letters.  Those of us in contact with him saw the changes he made, all for the good.

The point is, he’ll have a hard time out here, adjusting to technology that is new to him, making new friends who can get over their fear of ex-cons to get to know him, recovering from sticker-shock when he shops, getting a permanent place to live, getting a job, living a free, law abiding life.

People like him are often shunned by our society.  They’re feared, looked down on, avoided.  We certainly don’t want our kids around them, even if their crime was not related to children or sex.  But why?  All of us have experienced the good luck of getting away with speeding, hit-and-run (not sticking around when scratching a car), theft (absent-mindedly not paying for something in the basket), disturbing the peace, tax fraud (fudging on tax returns)—all sorts of things.  These people may have done worse, but, unlike us, they got caught.  Now we pass judgment on them that’s worse than the court imposed.  We forget that they, too, are part of our human family and, as such, their lives have worth, especially those who are working hard at doing right.

I wish my friend luck, because he’ll need it.  For the rest of us, I wish expressions of patience, compassion, and, yes, a little basic Golden-Rule love.

 

 

Thoughtful Thursday: Schools and Prisons

“He who opens a school door, closes a prison.”  (Victor Hugo)

[Now, about those state budget allocations….]

 

 

Misguided Pope

There’s something wrong with the new Pope.  On Holy Thursday he intends to leave the beautiful church provided for him and go to a youth prison for the traditional Mass and foot-washing.  He actually thinks that prisoners are people! And doesn’t he realize that kids are of no value until they’re adults?  I don’t know about Pope Francis’ misguided actions.  After all, he’s the shepherd of his people, who may very well take his example to heart and think that all human life is to be respected.  Then where will we be?!