The Gray Box: An investigative look at solitary confinement
A few weeks ago, on the fifteenth anniversary of his first day
in prison, Osiel Rodriguez set about cleaning the 87 square feet he
inhabits at ADX, a federal mass isolation facility in Colorado.
“I got it in my head to destroy all my photographs,” he writes in a
letter to me. “I spent some five hours ripping each one to pieces. No
one was safe. I did not save one of my mother, father, sisters. Who are
those people anyway?”
Such is the logic of the gray box, of sitting year after year in solitude.
Whether Rodriguez had psychological problems when he robbed a bank,
burglarized a pawn shop and stole some guns at age 22, or whether mental
illness set in during the eight years he has spent in seclusion since
trying to walk out of a federal penitentiary in Florida – it’s academic.
What’s true now is that he’s sick, literally, of being alone, as are
scores of other prisoners in extreme isolation.
Among the misperceptions about solitary confinement is that it’s used
only on the most violent inmates, and only for a few weeks or months.
In fact, an estimated 80,000 Americans — many with no record of violence
either inside or outside prison — are living in seclusion. They stay
there for years, even decades. What this means, generally, is 23 hours a
day in a cell the size of two queen-sized mattresses, with a single
hour in an exercise cage, also alone. Some prisoners aren’t allowed
visits or phone calls. Some have no TV or radio. Some never lay eyes on
each other. And some go years without fresh air or sunlight.
“One time I kept a single green leaf alive
for a few weeks. I had grasshopper for a pet. I made a guitar out of
milk cartons, and it played quite well. I have done a thousand and one
things to replicate ordinary life, but these too are now gone.”
Solitary is a place where the slightest details can mean the world.
Things like whether you can see a patch of grass or only sky outside
your window – if you’re lucky enough to have a window. Or whether the
guy who occupies cells before you in rotation has a habit of smearing
feces on the wall. Are the lights on 24/7? Is there a clock or calendar
to mark time? If you scream, could anyone hear you?
In the warp of time and space where Rodriguez lives, the system not
only has stripped him of any real human contact, but also made it
unbearable to be reminded of a reality that has become all too unreal.
It’s ripping him apart.
“Looking at photos of the free world caused me so much pain that I
just couldn’t do it any more,” writes Rodriguez, 36. “Time and these
conditions are breaking me down.”
This is what our prisons are doing to people in the name of safety. This is how deeply we’re burying them.
* * *
I got my first letter from solitary in 2008 while working as a
newspaper columnist in Colorado. Mark Jordan — then at ADX on
convictions for bank robbery and a prison murder – wrote asking me to
cover a trial in which he’d be arguing for access to reading materials
that seemed a reasonable way to cope inside a concrete box. The Federal
Bureau of Prisons had banned, for instance, D.H. Lawrence’s Sons and
Lovers and Anaïs Nin’s books, which Jordan had already ordered. Officers
in the mailroom wouldn’t pass along his issues of The New Yorker,
either, because some of the cartoons depict nude figures.
Intrigued, I went to hear Jordan represent himself in federal court
by a live video feed from prison. Though he was shackled as he made his
case, his arguments were as skilled as those of the most seasoned trial
attorneys I had seen. He lost.
Solitary confinement slipped from my mind after I covered Jordan’s
case and moved on to my next deadline. But the subject became a
preoccupation months later while I was hospitalized for septic
pneumonia, with an “ISOLATION” sign outside my door. Partly it was the
stale air in my hospital room and the view of a brick wall out my
window. Partly it was the anxiety of losing my autonomy and voice. I’d
lie there pressing a buzzer to get a glass of water or to have my tubes
unhooked so I could get out of bed, and nobody would answer. I’d buzz
and buzz again, complaining bitterly once nurses finally showed up. I’d
see them roll their eyes and hear them dissing me in the hallway. Being
sick wasn’t as bad as being stuck. I remember thinking about Jordan and
wondering how people who were imprisoned in solitary were able to
survive it. It occurred to me then that isolation – the non-medical,
punitive, indefinite kind – could crack you in about a week.
Powerlessness is its own centrifugal force.
* * *
Plenty of corrections officers might tell you that offenders doing
time in solitary don’t deserve the roofs over their heads or the meals
shoved through their food slots. To be sure, many of these prisoners
have done heinous, unforgivable things for which we lock them up
tightly. Just how tightly is no small question. Yet, as a matter of
public policy, the question hardly comes up. Compared to how much we as a
nation have debated capital punishment, a sentence served by a small
fraction of the incarcerated, we barely discuss how severely we’re
willing to punish nearly everyone else.
“When the door is locked against the prisoner, we do not think about
what is behind it,” Supreme Court Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy once
said.
Solitary confinement started in the U.S. as a morally progressive
social experiment in the 1820s by Quakers, who wanted lawmakers to
replace mutilations, amputations and the death penalty with
rehabilitation. The hope was that long periods of introspection would
help criminals repent.
After touring a Pennsylvania prison in the 1840s, Charles Dickens
described prolonged isolation as a “slow and daily tampering with the
mysteries of the brain immeasurably worse than any torture of the body.”
He also wrote, “There is a depth of terrible endurance in it which none
but the sufferers themselves can fathom.”
Some of his contemporaries shared that view. “It devours the victims
incessantly and unmercifully,” Alexis de Tocqueville reported from a
prison in New York in the 1820s. “It does not reform, it kills.”
Most prisons suspended the practice in the mid- to late-1800s once it
became clear the theory didn’t work. The U.S. Supreme Court punctuated
that point in 1890 when it freed a Colorado man who had been sentenced
to death for killing his wife, recognizing the psychological harm
isolation had caused him.
“This matter of solitary confinement is not … a mere unimportant
regulation as to the safe-keeping of the prisoner,” the court ruled in
the case of James Medley. “A considerable number of the prisoners fell,
after even a short confinement, into a semi-fatuous condition, from
which it was next to impossible to arouse them, while those who stood
the ordeal better were not generally reformed, and in most cases did not
recover sufficient mental activity to be of any subsequent service to
the community.”
“To be,” writes sociologist Joan Martel, “one has to be somewhere.”
Solitary confinement was largely unused for about a century until
October 1983 when, in separate incidents, inmates killed two guards in
one day at the U.S. Penitentiary in Marion, Ill., which had replaced
Alcatraz as home to the most dangerous federal convicts. The prison went
into lockdown for the next 23 years, setting the model for dozens of
state and federal supermaxes – prisons designed specifically for mass
isolation — that since have been built in the name of officer safety.
“Never again,” promised Reagan-era shock doctrinarians who set out at
great cost to crack down on prison violence.
“Whole prisons have been built, people have gotten funding for
supermax facilities based on the act of a single (inmate),” says Michael
Randle, former director of the Illinois Department of Corrections.
Administered by corrections officials, not judges, solitary
confinement is a punishment beyond incarceration, removing prisoners not
only from the rest of society, but also from each other and staff. It’s
now practiced routinely in federal penitentiaries, state prisons and
local jails under a number of bureaucratic labels: “lockdown,”
“protective custody,” “strip cells,” “control units,” “security housing
units,” “special management units” and “administrative segregation.”
Federal justice officials say the different classifications prevent them
from keeping track of how many people are being isolated. What is
acknowledged even in official records is that the vast majority are men
and that rates of pre-existing mental illness exceed the
higher-than-average levels in general prison populations.
Prisoners who have assaulted staff often get sent straight to
solitary. Those who have killed other inmates or escaped from prison —
or attempted to — also take priority. Corrections officials eager to
please officers’ unions and weary of public criticism tend to place
difficult prisoners in solitary as an easy default.
“These become career decisions that administrators have to struggle
with, knowing if a person does kill again, that you basically will get
massacred in the media, massacred by the opposition, massacred by your
governor’s party,” Randle says. “These are determinations that can make
or break your career.”
Meantime, an analysis of prison budgets by the Urban Institute shows
that taxpayers are shelling out about $75,000 a year to house a single
prisoner in solitary confinement – more than twice as much as spent
housing prisoners in general population. Staffing is more expensive
because two or more officers usually are required to escort prisoners
any time they leave their cells, and because the cooking and cleaning
work, which in other prisons would be performed by inmates, must be done
by paid staff. As a rule, prisoners in isolation aren’t allowed to
work.
For reasons of prison safety, short periods of confinement may make
sense for the most violent inmates. Yet the so-called “worst of the
worst” are, by definition, the exception rather than the rule. States
vastly overestimated the need for supermax space to contain high-risk
offenders, and have filled it with relatively low-risk prisoners, many
of whom pose no apparent risk or have no record of violence. Anyone even
loosely labeled to have ties with terrorists gets put into isolation as
a matter of course. Juveniles are secluded for what is officially
deemed to be their own protection. Mentally ill prisoners who are prone
to rage or agitation are isolated for convenience. And, all too often,
having a gang affiliation, writing grievances or cussing out a guard can
land you in solitary for the long haul. Bad behavior – or merely a
corrections officer’s allegation of it – can add years to your time in
isolation. Some prisoners have spent a decade or two asking why they’re
still there, without getting an official answer.
“These are extraordinary, I believe often needless and indefensible,
risks to take with the human psyche and spirit,” writes Craig Haney, a
psychology professor at the University of California at Santa Cruz.
Anthony Gay had a low-level assault charge in Illinois for punching
another kid, stealing a dollar from him and swiping his hat. A parole
violation on his seven-year suspended sentence ultimately landed him in a
state supermax where he has cut himself hundreds of times with shards
of glass and metal, and eats his own flesh. He has racked up a 97-year
sentence for throwing urine and feces out his food slot – behavior
that’s fairly typical for severely mentally ill prisoners in solitary.
Gay passes his time at the Tamms Correctional Center writing anyone who will receive his letters.
“I’ve been trapped for approximately nine years. The trap, like a fly
on sticky paper, aggravates and agitates me,” he writes. “America, can
you hear me? I love you America, but if you love me, please speak out
and stand up against solitary confinement.”
* * *
In months of trading letters with prisoners, and in a few dozen
interviews with men who’ve gotten out, I hear the same descriptions of
solitary: that it’s starkly sterile, unremittingly monotonous and
numbingly idle.
“I’ve been waiting like 20-something years to say all this.”
“Ninety percent of the time you hear nothing but the sound of air
from the ventilation. The silence can drive you crazy. Makes you feel as
if the world has ended but you somehow survived and are tripped,”
Jeremy Pinson writes from ADX, the crown jewel of the federal system
once described by its warden as a “clean version of hell.”
“The world outside is like another planet,” writes Jack Powers, also from ADX. “I feel like I am trapped within a disease.”
Prisoners pace their cells like caged felines at a zoo.
“I walked and walked and walked some more,” says Darrell Cannon, who
did nine years in solitary in Illinois. “I’d walk in circles – always to
the left, for some reason – for six, maybe seven hours a day.”
Almost everyone in isolation spends at least some time counting. They
count the steps they take, the cinder blocks on the walls, the tiles on
the ceiling, their sneezes and coughs, and how many times the furnace
kicks in or the plumbing sloshes.
“If I remember correctly, there are 412 holes in (the cell door). I
would count them daily,” Joe Sorrentino, now serving time in a general
population prison, recalls of his cell at Tamms. “At the back of the
cell, close to the ceiling there’s a window approx. 30 inches long and
10 inches high with a square bar going through the middle … My window
faced the tunnel, so my view for my first seven years there were of a
blue wall. For years, I wondered what other guys could see out their
windows.”
Some prisoners pass their time praying, meditating or talking to
themselves. Some read voraciously, though often they’re limited to only a
few books a month. Some take whatever enrichment classes are broadcast
over their TVs. The Bureau of Prisons has offered courses on Hitler,
Sparta, Animals of the World, Legends of the Silver Screen and Robert E.
Lee and his High Command.
Out of limited supplies, prisoners create art. They lodge bits of
sponges into ballpoint cartridges to make paintbrushes. For paint, they
mix water with Nescafe grinds or dye from candy they can buy from the
commissary. M&Ms – plain, not peanut – work best. For deep reds,
they fold red dye in with ground powder from vitamins. Navy blue takes a
three-step process mixing royal blue candy coating with blue and black
ink from pens. The color purple is best achieved from Skittles.
Prisoners strike up relationships with the critters that crawl in
through their air vents. One man used his own hairs to try to repair a
moth’s injured wing in hopes of facilitating its escape. Mohammed Saleh —
convicted of having co-conspired in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing
— lost his daily hour of outdoor recreation for three months at ADX
because he saved bread crumbs to feed blackbirds in his exercise pen.
Defiance can kill time in solitary. Some prisoners kick the walls or
bang their cups against their doors. Some flood their cells by clogging
their toilets with toilet paper, or break light bulbs and set their
mattresses on fire. Some write up their grievances; some sue over them;
and some sue some more on behalf of guys on their units. Those feeling
especially resistant stop eating or drinking. Brian Nelson starved
himself regularly at Tamms, where he spent 12 years in seclusion. He
once refused food and water for 40 days, he says, to try to prod the
prison to treat a guy on his unit for cancer.
“(Fasts) become addicting … You feel clean, but it’s also your body
eating your body,” says Nelson. “My last hunger strike, I was on a
gurney and there was no vital signs, and I went into shock.”
A hunger strike by 5,000 prisoners last fall shed light on solitary
confinement conditions at California’s Pelican Bay State Prison. The
strike ended when the state agreed to consider letting prisoners make
phone calls and buy calendars. Months later, no substantive changes have
been made on those modest demands. There have been reports that strike
leaders have faced disciplinary action and that three strikers have
committed suicide.
* * *
Many of us flirt with isolation. We tune out in all sorts of ways –
cranking up our headphones or holing up in little rooms to write. From
“Walden” to “Into the Wild,” generations have idealized solitude,
wondering how long we could last on our own. Fox Reality Channel’s show
“Solitary” kept contestants in voluntary round-the-clock confinement
competing for $50,000 in prize money. The goal was to be the last player
to quit by hitting the panic button. Boredom.com, a video game maker,
has virtualized lockdown with “Escape 3D: The Jail.” You can feign
confinement in the comfort of your home or office, or, thanks to a handy
smart phone app, idle in solitary on the subway or in line at the DMV.
Still, we know from all manner of solo expeditions, behavioral tests,
biological experiments and psychological studies that we’re not wired
to be alone. Early in the space age, cosmonauts training to fly Soviet
rockets were put into isolation chambers without any way of knowing how
much time was ticking by. Some gave up within hours. One, Andrian
Nikolayev, earned hero status and the nickname “Iron Man” after setting a
four-day record before pressing a buzzer to be released.
The human brain needs social contact like our lungs need air. Social
needs are so basic that they drive family structures, religions, urban
design, governments, economies and legal systems worldwide. We honor
these needs even with pets and zoo animals, generally acknowledging the
inhumanity of caging them for long periods of time alone or in tight
spaces. New federal guidelines on the use of laboratory animals require
relatively more space, sensory stimulation and environmental enrichment
than we afford people in confinement. The revised rules put forth by the
National Academy of Sciences call for significantly more square footage
to house a head of cattle, for example, than prisons provide in
solitary.
Convicts in the U.S. are not afforded such concern. We push some of
them into seclusion with little to no programmatic support, basically
giving up on them.
“Anyone who spends more than three years in a place like this is
ruined for life,” Powers writes. “Two or three hundred years from now
people will look back on this lockdown mania like we look back on the
burning of witches.”
In 2006, a bipartisan national task force convened by the Vera
Institute for Justice called for ending solitary confinement beyond
periods of about ten days. The report by the Commission on Safety and
Abuse in American Prisons found practically no benefits from supermax
conditions either for prisoners or the public. It cited studies showing
that solitary confinement impairs brain function and can cause psychosis
and serious depression. It also cited a number of reports showing that
long-term isolation doesn’t curb prison violence and makes it highly
likely that prisoners will commit more crimes when released.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, Juan Mendez, is
calling to end the use of isolation on juveniles and the mentally ill.
For everyone else, he is pushing a worldwide limit of 15 days. Mendez
personally endured three days in solitary under the rule of a junta in
Argentina – an experience he describes as “the darkest days of my life.”
So far, he has been unable to gain access to investigate state and
federal prisons in the U.S.
“Let’s just say it has been a challenge,” he says.
U.S. courts have rejected most 8th Amendment claims against
isolation, ruling that some psychological harm to certain prisoners
doesn’t make the entire practice cruel or unusual. In many cases,
corrections officials have persuaded judges that isolation is a misnomer
because prisoners glean brief interactions with guards – exchanges that
are at best perfunctory and at worst hostile, degrading and cruel.
They’ll also argue that prisoners shouting to each other between
cellblocks, across exercise cages or down drainpipes constitute
meaningful forms of social interaction.
In solitary, concentration wanes, revenge
fantasies fester and voices echo in people’s heads. Idiosyncrasies grow
into obsessions. Prisoner after prisoner writes of becoming enraged by
slight noises or tweaks in their routines.
* * *
For every hunger striker, jailhouse lawyer and cellblock arsonist,
there are many more people in solitary who’ve folded up quietly into
themselves.
“I became increasingly withdrawn at ADX to the point where the only
people I interacted with were the television characters on ‘Seinfeld.’ I
watched ‘Seinfeld’ four times a day. Jerry, Elaine, George and Kramer
became my best friends. I felt like part of their family. They were the
only friends I had,” Anthony McBayne wrote in a legal declaration.
Some prisoners say they forget what day, month or year it is, partly because keeping track can be too painful.
“Time is the enemy, a constant reminder that your life is being
wasted and there is no redemptive solution. Paying close attention to
time will in short order drive you to misery and despair at what you’ve
lost,” Jeremy Pinson writes.
Concentration wanes, revenge fantasies fester and voices echo in
people’s heads. Idiosyncrasies grow into obsessions about the tiniest
details of physical space. Prisoner after prisoner writes of becoming
enraged by slight noises or tweaks in their routines.
Some describe losing their senses of self, physically and
emotionally. Mirrors, if available, are stainless steel plates that
reflect only blurs. You can go years without an accurate picture of your
own aging. Basic biographical facts – your age, your birthday – can get
lost in a fog.
“This is difficult to explain, but my memories were no longer mine,”
Mark Jordan writes of his years at ADX. “I questioned whether or not I
really had a past or history at all, whether the memories were real or
false. … It was as though none of it was real. I was born into this life
of isolation and the memories not memories at all. Confabulations.”
We in the free world know who we are by interacting with each other.
We make sense of ourselves largely through our relationships. Legal
sociologist Joan Martel described the loss of identity in isolation. “To
be,” she writes, “one has to be somewhere.” Without normal grounding in
space or time, isolated prisoners lose their understanding of
themselves and their own histories.
“After 14 years, those people are strangers to me; as I must be to
them,” Osiel Rodriguez wrote about the family members whose portraits he
destroyed. “My parents will be dust if/when I ever get out of prison.
My three sisters will be in their mid-70’s to late 60’s. So what was I
doing holding on to photos of moments I was not a part of, or know
nothing about?”
In his mind, Stephen Slevin spent two months in solitary confinement
after being arrested on a drunk driving charge and booked into New
Mexico’s Doña Ana County Detention Center. In real time, it was 20
months before the charge was dropped and, ungroomed and delusional, he
was released. Those 18 months are still missing somewhere inside him, he
now says. Yesterday, a jury awarded him $22 million in damages
associated with his time in solitary.
* * *
Covering solitary is an exercise in inaccessibility.
Reporters’ visits and phone calls are out of the question.
State and county prisoners usually can be glimpsed only by their mug
shots. The federal system makes no photos available of the people it
locks up or the spaces they inhabit.
Family members can pass along information – if a prisoner chooses not to shield them from what isolation is really like.
“My philosophy is, I don’t care if you have a knife stuck in your
back, you tell your mom that you’re okay,” Sorrentino writes. “Seeing
how they looked at me on visits, handcuffed, shackled, chained to the
floor and behind glass, killed me inside.”
Prison officials don’t help much with transparency or public
accountability. They cite pending lawsuits and security risks for
refusing to be interviewed. They have scoffed when I’ve asked if they’d
consider passing a disposable camera or hand-held recorder to a man who
hasn’t been seen or heard from in years. (“What do you think we are —
bellhops at the Hyatt Regency?”) Officers are dispatched to berate
journalists, even off grounds, for aiming lenses toward their prisons.
“The inmates housed at the ADX pose the greatest threat within the
Federal Bureau of Prisons to staff, other inmates, visitors, and the
public, and may be extreme escape risks,” Warden Blake R. Davis wrote to
me. “Accordingly, permitting a film crew to take video footage of the
exterior of the institution would negatively affect the security and
orderly operation of the facility.”
Years ago, while assigned to cover Area 51 in Nevada, I had better access to a federal airbase that didn’t officially exist.
* * *
Letters from isolation are always handwritten (supermaxes don’t
provide access to computers, which some long-timers have never even
used). They arrive on government-issue loose-leaf paper in
government-issue white envelopes, often quilted with 1-cent and 5-cent
postage stamps bartered somehow between cells.
Some – especially those from prisons allowing showers only once a week — come smelling like confinement.
Certain prisoners struggle with their writing.
“Miz Greene. Weyre traped. Police help us,” reads one letter, start to finish, from a man named Paz at Pelican Bay.
Others write so well that it hurts.
“I miss being around people. I miss being able to run on the track or
walk on grass or feel the sun on my face,” reads one of Jack Powers’
letters. “One time I kept a single green leaf alive for a few weeks. And
one time I had grasshopper for a pet. And one time I made a dwarf tree
out of yarn from a green winter hat, paper and dried tea bags. I made a
guitar out of milk cartons, and it played quite well. I invented a
perfect family – mom, dad and sister – so that we could interact and
love one another. One time I wanted to take a bath, so I got into a
garbage bag and put water in it and sat there. For a while I made vases
out of toilet paper and soap and ink from a pen. I have done a thousand
and one things to replicate ordinary life, but these too are now gone.”
From solitary, I’ve received marriage proposals, tomes of legal
documents and a Christmas card crafted out of a Wortz Cheese Crackers
box. One man mailed three weeks’ worth of daily manifestos about Yahweh.
People in confinement have criticized me for my grammar and syntax,
cursed me for not writing more often and advised me to go lock myself in
my bathroom to deepen my understanding of their plight.
Some letters are angry rants. Others are full of longing.
A prisoner in Virginia wrote 16 pages on behalf of the guy howling
night and day in a cell down the hall, never once using the word “I.”
Another in Illinois wrote a regretful 22-page essay about the man he had
killed half a lifetime ago, imagining what might have happened to them
each if he hadn’t pulled the trigger.
From the cutters, I’ve been given step-by-step accounts of their
attempts to feel something, anything, in the tedium. Anthony Gay seems
to want me and all of America to understand exactly how he’s hurting
himself.
“When my anxiety becomes overwhelming … I’ll pull out my cutting
instrument, pull off my boxer shorts, sit on my toilet and cut a gash in
my thigh,” Gay writes. “If I happen to become extremely anxious, I’ll
slice my penis like a hot dog or my testicle like a tomato.”
A man who tried to hang himself in his cell asked for my help
reimbursing the state of Illinois $56 for a torn bed sheet. Attempted
suicide in solitary often is treated as a disciplinary problem.
“When I’m put on a suicide watch, I’m all alone and stripped naked
and may see a mental health staff for 3-4 minutes a day. So I wonder dam
how is this pose to help me. It don’t,” Bobby Boyd writes from Tamms.
Some prisoners recognize their mental health problems. Others write around them.
More often than I’ll ever know, my letters haven’t reached the men
I’ve mailed them to. Some have come back to me marked that they were
rejected by prisoners I’m sure didn’t reject them. Even more often,
their letters to me don’t make it past the mailroom.
Between the lines of the ones that do, most letters from solitary say
the same thing: That we’re all higher than the lowest things we’ve ever
done. For most of the so-called “worst of the worst” who bother
writing, there seems to be at least some capacity for redemption.
* * *
It’s no small thing to ask someone who has spent years without social
contact to sit and tell his story. I learned this waiting at a Kmart
café in Denver, a donut shop in Chicago and Union Station in Washington,
D.C., for men who had recently been released but didn’t show up for
interviews as they agreed. Saying no — or that they were scared to leave
home or just not up to talking — apparently didn’t seem like an option.
Some who did show up had trouble shaking my hand or looking me in the eye or crying in front of me.
“I’m gonna push through my nerves, see, because I’ve been waiting
like 20-something years to say all this,” Vincente Rodriguez told me
when we met in his living room in Chicago.
Rodriguez’s seven months in the free world haven’t been easy. Like
lots of guys, he curls up in a corner of his apartment, blinds drawn,
alone. He says he likes it that way, and it worries him.
Robert Felton retreats to his bedroom in Danville, Ill. His wife and
young kids wonder why he won’t hang out or cuddle in front of the TV. He
can’t bring himself to tell them that he now finds such closeness
intolerable.
These are the guys next door, the men refereeing your kids’
basketball games, the hothead in line at the Conoco who freaks when
someone brushes against him.
In the 18 months Brian Nelson has been out of solitary, he has found a
job, a girlfriend and a car. He drives when he’s anxious, and is
anxious often. Nelson curses himself when he loses his way on the
streets of Chicago, the city he knew well until age 17 when a murder
conviction landed him a 28-year sentence.
“I’m here, but I’m not here, if that makes any sense,” he says from
behind the wheel of his Jeep Compass, disoriented on the South Side.
“People ask me what hurts. I say the box, the gray box. I can feel those
walls and I can taste them every day of my life. I’m still there,
really. And I’m not sure when I’m ever gonna get out.”
Nelson — whose lawsuits from isolation improved conditions for
prisoners in Illinois — works in a law office as an advocate for
prisoners he left behind in confinement. Compared to other guys who’ve
been released, he is doing well. Yet he’s flailing. He’s facing a DUI
charge while on parole. He recently gave himself a black eye. The
experience of being interviewed on camera sent him back into a box
emotionally for weeks.
Anthony McBayne, the “Seinfeld” fan, realized after his release from
prison that he’d never recover from his years in solitary. Once faced
with social situations, he says he would speak so fast that he’d
stutter. He came to avoid people and wouldn’t look at them.
“Later on, when I did look, it was only to read their lips, as it’s
how I remember to ‘hear’ from when prisoners would talk through the
thick glass at ADX when one prisoner was in a rec cage and I was in my
cell,” reads his legal declaration. “I found myself doing this all the
time after my release and it became so annoying that I had to lie and
tell people that I was deaf and needed to read lips to hear.”
McBayne robbed a bank after his release. He’s now doing time at U.S. Penitentiary Big Sandy in Kentucky.
Joe Sorrentino, who is serving life on a murder conviction, remembers
passing time in Tamms by drawing blueprints of a house he’ll never be
able to build. All his designs included secret passages and hidden rooms
where he could go to be alone. He has since been transferred out of
solitary into a general population prison in Stateville.
“I have a huge sense of guilt for not being at Tamms,” he writes. “I
feel completely empty and purposeless now. Plus, I hate being around
people, period. I have a good cellmate, but I can’t stand being this
close to another human being. I get frustrated very easily and the
littlest things irk me. When I first arrived here, I attempted to make
contact with mental health to try to get a one-man cell. She basically
told me to ‘get over it,’ then asked if I wanted medication – which I
don’t want. What I really want, deep inside, is to go back.”
* * *
Some words are uncomfortable to write.
“Trauma” is one of them, especially when used about people who have
traumatized others. “Torture” is another. In the moral balance of crime
and punishment, the word risks discounting the suffering convicts have
brought their own victims.
Nothing is black and white in a gray box. Lines can blur between the
good guys and the bad ones. It’s far easier to label the secret police
in some foreign dictatorship as torturers than to lob the word at prison
guards in the next county.
It isn’t news that solitary confinement hurts people. Dickens, de
Tocqueville and the Supreme Court — they all knew it generations ago.
But our memory is disturbingly short. What’s considered cruel and
unusual under the 8th Amendment pivots on the “evolving standards of
decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.” Our continuing
reliance on solitary confinement as a default for difficult prisoners
raises the question of how much, if at all, we as a society have
progressed.
Jack Powers, now in his 11th year at ADX, mentions in almost all his
letters that every day is a struggle not to lose what’s left of his free
will.
“I could lie back, watch TV, eat chips and jack off all day and say
to hell with it. But I cannot because there is some force of principle
in my mind that will not allow me to do so,” he writes. “I am a voice
crying out in a place where no one can hear me. I am saying, ‘Wait! We
have it all wrong! We can do better than this!’ But maybe we cannot.
Maybe we are just stuck with what it is. Maybe I am afraid of the world
and of being human and of lacking love. Maybe we all are. Maybe this is
all we are capable of.
“I hope not. But maybe it is.”
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