It's
common for many whites to equate locked up with "guilty,"
it's just that those who do shouldn't be given oversight
of a county lock-up. Yet this is what seems to be
going on in Buffalo NY regarding their Sheriff Tim
Howard. There are those who question whether or not
he can distinguish between County Jail and State Penitentiary.
New York State no longer has a death penalty, but
it seems to have found a suitable replacement in the
open arms of Howard's jails.
As
of just last Thursday (5/18) they mistakenly released
a third inmate, confusing a man named Paris Williams
(an alleged car thief) with James Williams (Trespassing)
whom was actually the one scheduled for release. Considering
their mistaken release of a sexual offender-Rasheed Milton-who allegedly raped a woman during the
short time he was out, one wonders if the jail is
run by a bunch of jerk-offs? Sadly errantly-freed
inmates and other hijinks are
the least of Erie County Holding Center's problems,
there have been at least 13 inmates who died in their
custody who's families probably wished had escaped.
They were all just coincidentally ruled suicides;
Eden Baez, Patrick Chadwick, Lester J. Foster, Joanne
Jesse, Christian Johns, Keith John, Jeremy Kiekbush,
John Marinaccio,
Adam Murr,
Michael Scioli, Rakim Scriven,
Carmelo Torres, Trevell Walker.
It
all starts with a culture of insensitivity that begins
with opinions on how people should be treated while
locked up, mix in some US-intelligence-style psychological
warfare, and you got death. In spite of these highly
suspect losses of life, I have learned more from some
who "attempted suicide" than from those
already ruled as such. Martha Mitchel for example
lives a half-hour away in Batavia but
she was arrested here and is on record as attempting
suicide on 1/21/10. Robert A. Crowley was alleged
to have attempted suicide and his family wasn't notified
for two days. Some time ago deputies were filmed beating
inmate Marquez Mack. Crowley is considered bipolar
(ECHC says 10-12% of their inmates are mentally ill).
My question here is which party shows real evidence
of brain-damage, the inmates or the overseers?
This
brings me back to the subject of Howard, he spins
reform into a language that only blue-collar-white
Buffalo can sympathize with. And then there's another
head case named Cheryl Green formerly of the Erie
County Attorney's Office under former county executive
Chris Collins. She is well-known for having blocked
a Department of Justice (DOJ) investigation into the deaths a few years ago. She opposed
the formation of a citizen's watchdog group to investigate
ECHC, only to request to be on that same board she
so passionately opposed back on 11/19/10; the day
the Citizen's Panel for Jail Oversight was created
(Solely for
the purpose that she can oppose their ideas. Buffalo
is full of blockers). In the fall of '09 the DOJ filed
suit against the facility based on it's 50-page report.
Howard had enough temerity to say the DOJ actions
were an abuse of power. I can't make this stuff up,
he has lots of quotes revolving around his theme of
the DOJ and activists "wants Erie County to provide
prisoners the equivalent of a hotel room." His
link of prisoner to hotel room is a game he runs on
the local big media and taxpayers that works like
a charm.
Buffalo
needs a Sheriff Howard like it needs another blizzard.
It already ranks high on most polls relating to bad
economy, racism, and education. Just recently I was
emailed a list of the "Ten Worst Cities in America
for Black Men Not Working; No Local of National Plan
to Change This-Percentage of employed, working-age
(16-64) black males in these cities:" Can you
guess where Buffalo ranks? Number two (2) right behind
Detroit (Milwaukee and Cleveland follow respectively).
Jails
of course are generally far from underfunded. Just
the mere suggestion of the phrase "new jail"
automatically trains into a flood of dollars with
little-or-no legislative opposition (Unlike a downtown
football stadium) in poor economic areas like Buffalo.
Would it make sense to ask if jail suicides affect
or attract government funding? The Buffalo News article
by Matthew Spina mentioned
a finding by a National Commission on Correctional Healthcare
that says ECHC offers too many ways for inmates to
hang themselves (or be hanged, my words). Karima
Amin was on
that same Citizen's Panel as Green and is the founder
of Prisoners
Are People Too (PRP2), I was able to be
at one of their board meetings a few weeks back where
they too voted overwhelmingly for the new position
of Ombudsman (and to pay for it using "community
funds.") to advocate for the safety of the inmates.
If
you think that I am somehow implying that I suspect
murder in at least some of these cases then you are
correct. It is impossible for so many people, mostly
from between 2003 to 2012 to suddenly feel suicidal
at a rate that exceeds Rikers Island,
LA County, and Chicago's Cook County Jails and State
Prisons. Unless there is something paranormal going
on, murder is the only answer. Amin and Aminah
(Johnson) of Push Buffalo are my latest guests on
my talk show dealing with ECHC; "Policy & Prejudice." Johnson's
son was an inmate there.
In
Max and Supermax prisons,
death rows are at least official whether you agree
with it or not. The convict learns he's going to be
there when the verdict is read or at the sentencing.
The deaths here are not a product full-blown out of
nothing, when you stop nonsense you stop policy.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist Chris Stevenson is a syndicated columnist,
his articles also appear on his blog; the Buffalo Bullet.
Follow him on Twitter @pointblank009) and Facebook (pointblank009). Support his petition to permanently Abolish the Death Penalty in the
US the Troy Davis Bill, HR92111. Click here to contact Mr. Stevenson.
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