Just remember the Soviet GULag.
"Because there's a lot of money in imprisoning children, just as there is a lot of money in planetary destruction. This is just one more version of the "obedience at home" mentality required to maintaining an empire in decline."
-- Guy McPherson
Kids
in solitary confinement: America's official child abuse
Thousands
of teenagers, some as young as 14 or 15, are routinely subjected by
US prisons to this psychological torture
10
October, 2012
Molly
J said of her time in solitary confinement:
"[I
felt] doomed, like I was being banished … Like you have the plague
or that you are the worst thing on earth. Like you are set apart
[from] everything else. I guess [I wanted to] feel like I was part of
the human race – not like some animal."
Molly
was just 16 years old when she was placed in isolation in an adult
jail in Michigan. She described her cell as being "a box":
"There
was a bed – the slab. It was concrete … There was a stainless
steel toilet/sink combo … The door was solid, without a food slot
or window … There was no window at all."
Molly
remained in solitary for several months, locked down alone in her
cell for at least 22 hours a day.
No
other nation in the developed world routinely tortures its children
in this manner. And torture is indeed the word brought to mind by a
shocking report released today by Human Rights Watch and the American
Civil Liberties Union. Growing Up Locked Down documents, for the
first time, the widespread use of solitary confinement on youth under
the age of 18 in prisons and jails across the country, and the deep
and permanent harm it causes to kids caught up in the adult criminal
justice system.
Ian
Kysel, author of the 141-page report, interviewed or corresponded
with more than 125 young people who had spent time in solitary as
children in 19 states. To cope with endless hours of extreme
isolation, sensory deprivation and crippling loneliness, Kysel
learned that some children made up imaginary friends or played games
in their heads. Some hid under the covers and tried to sleep as much
as possible, while others found they could not sleep at all.
"Being
in isolation to me felt like I was on an island all alone dying a
slow death from the inside out," a California teen wrote in a
letter to Human Rights Watch.
One
young woman, who spent three months in solitary in Florida when she
was 15, described becoming a "cutter" while in isolation:
"I
like to take staples and carve letters and stuff in my arm … Each
letter means something to me. It is something I had lost."
She
started by carving into her arm the first letter of her mother's
name. Another girl who cut herself in solitary said, "because it
was the only release of my pain."
In
fact, solitary confinement has been shown to cause severe pain and
psychological damage to the tens of thousands of adults who endure it
every day in American prisons. On children, the report states, the
practice has a "distinct and particularly profound impact."
Because of "the special vulnerability and needs of adolescents,
solitary confinement can be a particularly cruel and harmful practice
when applied to them." This is all the more true because for
many of these kids, "developmental immaturity is compounded by
mental disabilities and histories of trauma, abuse, and neglect."
Yet,
prisons and jails commonly use isolation as punishment for violating
prison rules, including both violent and nonviolent infractions. One
boy who entered a Colorado jail at age 15 said the guards doled out
stints in solitary for crimes that would, in any other setting, be
deemed normal adolescent behavior:
"15
days for not making the bed; 15 days for not keeping the cell door
open; 20 or 25 days for being in someone else's cell."
On
Rikers Island in New York City, more than 14% of adolescents between
16 and 18 spent some period in "disciplinary segregation".
This despite the fact that nearly half of all adolescents on Rikers
have been found to have a "diagnosed mental disorder".
Other
kids are isolated as a form of "protective custody",
because they are vulnerable to physical or sexual abuse. Even though
they are being locked down "for their own good", many
receive no educational or rehabilitative programming while in
solitary, and some are barred from seeing their families.
Still,
other children are placed in solitary confinement for "treatment"
purposes, especially after threatening or attempting suicide – even
though isolation has been shown to sharply increase the risk that
prisoners will take their own lives.
"There
is nothing to do so you start talking to yourself and getting lost in
your own little world. It is crushing," said Paul K, who
spent 60 days in solitary when he was 14.
"You
get depressed and wonder if it is even worth living. Your thoughts
turn over to the more death-oriented side of life."
No
one knows precisely how many children live in these conditions, since
many state and local correctional systems do not keep such data. But
the overall rate of solitary confinement in American prisons is
thought to be between 3% and 5%, and anecdotal evidence suggests
that, in some systems, children may be isolated at even higher rates
than adults. Given that nearly 100,000 youth under the age of 18 pass
through adult prisons and jails annually, there exists the staggering
possibility that thousands of children are spending time in solitary
confinement each year.
Liz
Ryan, who directs the Campaign for Youth Justice, points out that 20
states have laws requiring that juveniles be kept apart from adult
prisoners. Yet most of the nation's 3,000 jails lack dedicated
facilities for children – leaving them with no alternative but to
place kids in solitary. A majority of people in jail are there
awaiting trial, which means many children in solitary have not even
been convicted of a crime.
In
addition, Ryan said, "A kid could be held in jail not because
there is a risk to public safety, but because they don't have the
resources to make bail." So the racial and class disparities
endemic to the criminal justice system are likely reflected in the
population of children languishing in isolation. Ian Kysel said in an
interview:
"I
think one of the greatest impediments to change is trying to unravel
the policy issue that is at the root of this problem: a criminal
justice system that treats kids as if adults without providing
resources or guidelines for their care,"
For
this reason, Human Rights Watch and the American Civil Liberties
Union recommend that state and the federal governments "prohibit
the housing of adolescents with adults, or in jails and prisons
designed to house adults". However, "regardless of how they
are charged and held," Kysel says unequivocally:
"We
need to ban the solitary confinement of young people across the
board. There is simply no reason that a child or adolescent ever
needs to be held in a cell, alone, for 22 let alone 24 hours at a
stretch."
For
this to happen, though, the American public will need to accept what
numerous international bodies have already concluded – that
solitary confinement is cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, and
clearly rises to the level of torture when levied against vulnerable
populations, including children.
"If
my story can stop another kid from coming" to solitary
confinement, one Florida teen wrote, then, "Hopefully my pain
serve[s] some purpose."
•
Editor's note: this
article originally referred to the Campaign for the Fair Sentencing
of Youth; this was amended to the Campaign for Youth Justice at 10am
(ET) on 12 October 2012

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