Prison Rape and the War on Drugs

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Prison Rape and the War on Drugs
DRC Net
March 23, 2007


Sexual assaults on prisoners is an endemic problem in America, not an isolated one, the war on drugs is making the problem worse, and drug war prisoners are among those most likely to be victimized, according to a report released Thursday. The report, "Stories from Inside: Prisoner Rape and the War on Drugs," by the human rights group Stop Prisoner Rape, calls prisoner rape "a human rights crisis of appalling magnitude."

Hard numbers are hard to come up with for a crime in which humiliation, stigma, the fear of retaliation -- and perhaps officials' fear of embarrassment or lawsuits -- inhibits reporting, but according to preliminary reports from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, which is setting up a nationwide, anonymous reporting system, 4% of prisoners reported being sexually assaulted within the last year. According to survey research cited in the report, as many as 20% of male prisoners and 25% of female prisoners have been victims of sexual assault in jail or prison. With a jail and prison population now nearing 2.3 million, the number of victims could be in the hundreds of thousands.

For male prisoners, the most common pattern is sexual assault by other male prisoners. For female prisoners, it is most often sexual assault by guards or other prison staff.

Even the reported numbers may be low, according to some experts. Dr. Terry Kupers, a psychiatrist specializing in mental health in prison and especially the mental health of prisoners who have been sexually assaulted, told Drug War Chronicle the numbers may be much higher.

"My estimate is that it is much more widespread than the statistics show," said Kupers, who has published frequently on prison rape and testified as an expert witness on behalf of prison rape victims. "I think the 20% figure is low for a couple of reasons. First, people don't report because they're afraid of the stigma. Men feel it is unmanly and won't admit it. There is also the fear of retaliation in prison, whether from staff or other prisoners. Secondly, a lot of sexual activity is not defined as rape by the participants. A young and fair male enters prison and is told by an older prisoner 'I'm going to have sex with you, and if you agree I won't beat you up and I'll protect you from other prisoners.' The young man agrees and becomes a 'willing' partner, but it's rape, it's coerced out of fear. These guys might say they're not being raped, but they are."

What happened to Chance Martin in 1973 was not pretty, but not unusual. The university-bound Indiana youth was arrested at a hotel party after another guest dropped a piece of hashish in the lobby and thrown into the Lake County Jail in Crown Point. There, he was attacked and sexually assaulted by six other inmates in an unmonitored group cell.

"'General pop' was a large cage holding about 40 men," he recounted in the report. "It was the dead of the night when I got there. My cellmates were all awaiting trial or serving county sentences. One was a blond man with a mustache whose face was beaten to a pulp -- and who kept strictly to himself. Finding me sitting hopelessly on my bunk, a trustee insisted that I join a card game to 'cheer me up.' The game only lasted three hands. It then became a demand for sex. Threats were made pointing out the example of the cellie with the battered face.

"Driving their point home, four other trustees jammed my ribs with broomsticks and mop handles. I tried to call for help. Repeatedly I had my breath beat from my lungs. Curled up on the floor, my arms protected my head. Dark memories recall being dragged to a bunk obscured by army blankets at the farthest end of the cell from the turnkey's office. One guy said, 'Now you have to give me head.' I had never even heard the term before. The scariest part was I lacked the first clue what was going to go down until it already happened. I'm glad that there were only six guys. Six is only the best of my recollection. It might have been more. I don't recall their faces, except a couple. I didn't even see most of their faces.

"There was near-zero supervision in that jail. No guard had line of sight into that cell. The guards' office was at the end of a hallway at the cellblock's end, and their TV was blaring 24/7."

From jail, Martin enlisted in the armed forces and went to Vietnam as part of a plea bargain to avoid any further time behind bars. There, he began drinking heavily and using drugs, a pattern he kept up back in the States. He suffered emotional problems and blew through three marriages. Now, he's a social justice activist in San Francisco who works in a law office by day and manages at low-income high-rise at night.

"It's been a long time and I don't get nightmares about it anymore, but I can still get panicky and I tend to fall into not trusting people," Martin told Drug War Chronicle. "I'm suspicious of hidden agendas when people are being nice. I can't form concrete interpersonal relationships. I'm not a complete basket case, but it's something that's always there," he said.

While Martin confided in friends about his rape, he didn't come out publicly until he found himself trying to explain to a San Francisco Chronicle reporter interviewing him about his homeless activism why he had ended up joining the military during Vietnam. "One of the Stop Prisoner Rape people read that and contacted me, and before you know it, I'm a survivor advocate," he laughed. "You try to create something good even out of a negative experience. This is going on every day, and I'm doing anything I can do to stop it from happening to the next person."

As a San Francisco resident, Martin is now a card-carrying medical marijuana user. "I knew when I got here I had been waiting my whole life for a place like this," he said. "I wasn't a criminal when I was smoking hash in high school and I'm not a criminal now. But for the sake of the drug war, I had my most basic human rights stripped away and was subjected to a brutal assault that left me with issues that lasted for years."

New York City resident Michael Piper wasn't raped, but was violently attacked fending off a failed attempt in jail in Tempe, Arizona, in 1974, after he was arrested for possession of a roach. The attack left him with serious head injuries, and a commitment to work for change. "My life has been challenging in many ways, and that attack was part of experiencing life for what it is," he told the Chronicle. "It's part of my motivation for speaking out. But I don't like the victim role; I don't play that," he said. "That attack increased my resilience."

It also hardened his attitude about the drug war. "Drug use is a personal choice," he said, extolling the virtues of various plants. "When we recognize we are not victims of drugs and they are not something we have to be protected from, then we can alter our environment and take responsibility for the way we live. It's a violation of natural law when a government says I can't interact with a seed that's a gift from the Creator."

Marilyn Shirley was sent to federal prison in 1998 on methamphetamine charges after a customer of her and her husband's auto repair business attempted to pay his bill with the drug. She was raped by a prison guard. In a rare turn of events, she was able to see him jailed after she kept the sweat pants she was wearing hidden in her cell for seven months.

"I didn't tell anyone at the prison except my welding boss, and I swore her to secrecy," Shirley told the Chronicle. "I didn't feel like I could trust any of them. But five minutes after I was released, I walked into the prison camp administration office and said 'Am I free?' and the lady said 'yes' and I handed her the sweat pants with his DNA on them. They called the FBI immediately and now he's doing 12 years himself."

Even with her tormentor now behind bars, it's not easy for Shirley. "I get severe panic attacks, I have to see two psychiatrists, I'm on five different kinds of medication," she said.

As with Martin and Piper, Shirley's experience has led her to speak out. "You can't just keep it bottled up inside you; it'll kill you," she said. "I spoke out because I feel like it might give other people confidence if I did. Something has to change. It's so easy to end up in prison; nowadays, it doesn't hardly take anything. It could be your wife, your kids, your mother."

"We hear stories like these from survivors from across the country on a daily basis," said Lovisa Stannow, co-executive director of Stop Prisoner Rape. "It's the most widespread and neglected human rights crisis in the country, and it's alarming on many levels," she told the Chronicle. "Prison rape is a form of torture, a human rights violation. No one should have to endure that as part of their sentence. It's also well-known that prisoners who are sexually abused suffer for years or decades from that trauma. We talk to people all the time who years later are still unable to function."

"They suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder," said Dr. Kupers. "There is an unofficial term we use, rape response syndrome. The effects of rape or sex abuse can last a life-time and be very serious and cause a lot of grief. Like in the Vietnam War, there is a lot of drinking and pot smoking, and we don't know how much of it is self-medicating. There are a lot of people affected who don't realize it," he said.

It is worse in prison, he said. "One of the things that makes it so severe for prisoners is the captivity. If you are raped, you try to do things to make yourself safe, you move away or you change houses, but when you're in prison, you can't do that. At worst, you are held in sexual captivity, where you are made into another prisoner's woman or punk, a repetitive hell of sexual abuse."

"We chose to highlight the role of the drug war in this because we felt the link hadn't been made," said Stop Prisoner Rape's Stannow. "Because of the war on drugs, we have seen a very dramatic swelling of the prison population, with half a million incarcerated on drug charges and hundreds of thousands more for drug-related offenses. The prisons are overcrowded, and that sets the stage for sexual violence. And a lot of nonviolent drug offenders fit the profile of inmates targeted for sexual violence -- young, nonviolent, inexperienced when it comes to prison life -- and are very much in danger."

It doesn't have to be that way. Changes can and should be made both in institutional policies within the prisons and in the US approach to drug policy in general, said Stannow.

"Sexual violence in prison is largely a management problem. In a well-run prison, you don't have rampant sexual violence," she pointed out. "One thing that needs to be done immediately is to make sure our prisons and jails are safe, so inmates don't get assaulted. Corrections officials can do this with proper classification and housing, and by taking immediate action when someone has been assaulted. They can also ensure that abused inmates receive counseling and access to medical care. There is a lot that can be done at the institutional level," she said.

Changing policies inside prisons is critical, Stannow argued. "We receive hundreds of letters a year from survivors, and one in four comes from Texas," she said. "On the other hand, some places, like the San Francisco County Jail, have very good policies in place to address prisoner rape and sexual violence. There are vast differences between prisons and prison systems across the country, and we are concerned about states where we receive a very large number of complaints," she said.

"But we also need to reduce the incarceration rate for people convicted of nonviolent drug offenses," Stannow continued. "We need to take treatment and diversion programs seriously and not automatically send everyone to prison."

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They didn't even mention the spread of HIV that goes on because of these instances. Not only can you get raped and traumatised, but you also have a high likelihood of contarcting HIV, something no amount of therapy can fix.

I know alot of people who have gone to prison, and none of them will speak a word of their time there. Tells you something about how bad it is.
 
3 said:
They didn't even mention the spread of HIV that goes on because of these instances. Not only can you get raped and traumatised, but you also have a high likelihood of contarcting HIV, something no amount of therapy can fix.

I always think about this. I want to see a study about how many people contract aids from getting raped in prison. That would be some front page news.
 
^^"Well who cares if a buncha black dudes get AIDS, right? 8(

(That was extreme sarcasm if u cant tell)

Thats why you dont hear about that type of shit....I hate to say it and i aint wanna sound racist or whatever but i think that alot of white people really dont care. I aint said ALL, just alot. The rich ones, the upper class ones, and the ones who never had a son daughter cousin mother or father or friend go to prison. AIDS affects everyone but yet some pepole still see it as "a black problem" that dont apply to them, like somehow "Its none of my business", the same way they would pass up the hair relaxing kit in the beauty store, like its unneccassary and not relevant to them. just like the classic "Starving kids in africa" or child workers in india and china. "well, it dont affect me, so who cares." I can bet you money that if suddenly everything got switched around, and the white women and white men of america were locked up in prison and contracting HIV and AIDS at the same rate as black people, it would be a national epidemic emergency and the world would stop spinning for a second ill bet you that. 8

and its fucked up cuz everyone and anyone can get the disease, and people of all colors and ethnicities are gettin raped in prison, but alot of ppl dont see it as none of their concern and like to pretend that it dont apply to them cuz it only happens to gangbangers and poor ppl and homosexuals, etc. or whatever it is in their fucked up head.

The article is fuckin disgusting. Prison, the one stop shop for humiliation, deprivation, violence, death, and rape! People act like inmates aint human beings. peoples perception of prison is part of why shit lik this is allowed to go on becuz pepole dont give a fuck, they see criminals as pieces of shit with no morals, regardles of what crime the person did. and its so easy for their smug lil asses to say "well they did the crime they should do the time" or "Oh yea? Hes locked up for 15 years for sitting in his own basement , weighing out a gram out of his ounce which was all just a personal stash, to give to his sister as a birthday present, and his neighbor peaked thru the window and called the police on him so they arrested him for distribution? Well he shoulda thought of that before he smoked weed then!"

when prison is viewed as something that people deserve (and some do but the majority dont) and get because they had it coming to em, or becuz they are bad people, then the attitude of "Fuck them" is common and thats why no one does shit to stop prison rape or really cares about what happens to the inmates. I guess their mindset is if you think someones useless anyways why would you care if they get raped. its fucked up people take alot of the same attitude to people in prison as they do for folks on welfare and people whose homeless too, this idea that "Well whatever they did to get there is their own fault So i dont feel bad for them" and its fucked up that ppl turn a blind eye to it. Homeless? oh well he must be lazy. on welfare, she just dont wanna go to work. in prison, musta been a troublemaker, better to have him off the streets. This shit keeps goin on in cycles with no end in sight becuz it seems like the majority of americans are people with no empathy for anyone they cant understand or view as "less than'' them. or that everyone is scared to say or do somethin about it so they just let it go on.
 
are religious homophobic men concern that prison turn people into homosexual ?
or, are psychologist concern that closet homosexual turn to crime because of feeling of rejection by our mindset of religious homophobia ?

"The war on drugs is a monopoly benefitting corrupt government and encouraging organized crime... these days they're both the same though." - Jack Byron Gordon III

Annual drug deaths:
tobacco: 395,000,
alcohol: 125,000;
'legal drugs': 38,000,
illegal drug overdoses: 5,200,
marijuana, 0.
Considering government subsidies of tobacco, just what is our government protecting us from in the drug war? -William A. Turnbow

"Anyway, no drug, not even alcohol, causes the fundamental ills of society. If we're looking for the source of our troubles, we shouldn't test people for drugs, we should test them for stupidity, ignorance, greed and love of power." -P.J. O'Rourke

"Did you know America ranks the lowest in education but the highest in drug use? It's nice to be number one, but we can fix that. All we need to do is start the war on education. If it's anywhere near as successful as our war on drugs, in no time we'll all be hooked on phonics." -Leighann Lord
 
If people are in jail for drug crimes, and there is a war on drugs does that men that people being imprisoned for drug crimes are Prisoners of War?
 
^^^

Yes, if you smoke weed, you're an enemy combatant. And that give other enemy combatants and guards the right to rape you.
 
At least after getting raped a bunch and having the big dude squirt hiv in 'em they stop committing crimes, having been "scared strait", and return to society fully reformed.
 
HottButtaz said:
At least after getting raped a bunch and having the big dude squirt hiv in 'em they stop committing crimes, having been "scared strait", and return to society fully reformed.
Well that just isn't reality. In fact, I would say that anyone that emerges from State imposed imprisonment and contracts a terminal illness, will do so with far more disregard for the State and its Rules.
 
i think they should be clear on those anti-drug grampapanda video
"Yes, if you smoke weed, you're an enemy combatant. And that give other enemy combatants and guards the right to rape you" - gloggawogga

they could do the same with irak
1% of the world is owning your butt, if your from irak, the usa, or wherever, we dont care, we do what we want, so fuck off bitches before its your turn
 
lacey k said:
^^"Well who cares if a buncha black dudes get AIDS, right? 8(

(That was extreme sarcasm if u cant tell)

Thats why you dont hear about that type of shit....I hate to say it and i aint wanna sound racist or whatever but i think that alot of white people really dont care. I aint said ALL, just alot. The rich ones, the upper class ones, and the ones who never had a son daughter cousin mother or father or friend go to prison. AIDS affects everyone but yet some pepole still see it as "a black problem" that dont apply to them, like somehow "Its none of my business", the same way they would pass up the hair relaxing kit in the beauty store, like its unneccassary and not relevant to them. just like the classic "Starving kids in africa" or child workers in india and china. "well, it dont affect me, so who cares." I can bet you money that if suddenly everything got switched around, and the white women and white men of america were locked up in prison and contracting HIV and AIDS at the same rate as black people, it would be a national epidemic emergency and the world would stop spinning for a second ill bet you that. 8

I was from an upper-class white family, and if it makes any difference my group of friends never viewed the AIDS/HIV problem as a "black problem." Strangely enough I've only heard the idea off of the TV and from "older" generations (usually someone of a minority). The problem was always a "gay thing." When I picture prison rape it's usually a skinhead type, probably from something out of Oz or whatever prison shows there are. I realize you said not all people are like that, but that has been my personal experience.

I would agree with you in that many many people really don't care about the problem, but not because of a racial standpoint. I'd guess that the majority of upper-class people (regardless of race) aren't worried about going to prison and so they put it off as nothing because they don't plan on being in that situation - So why worry, right?

Black this, white that, who gives a fuck since it's all just a way to classify/categorize. Race isn't as much of a deciding factor as people make it out to be (but of course there are exceptions). Although it'd be a lot easier to blame it on that.

It's all so confusing. 8(
 
Considering that a large proportion of those incarcerated as "raw material" in America's prison industry are nonviolent drug offenders, it begs the question why are nonviolent people being put in cages with violent animals?

The answer is simple. Since most drug crimes are consensual activities, they are difficult to enforce without a system of informants.

And it's easy to be recruited as an informant when a DEA agent is hissing in your ear about "being fucked up the ass by Bubba for the next 30 years."
 
tobala said:
Considering that a large proportion of those incarcerated as "raw material" in America's prison industry are nonviolent drug offenders, it begs the question why are nonviolent people being put in cages with violent animals?

People are just people, and classifying anyone as an "animal" only propagates the situations that drove them to that behavior in the first place. :\
 
^^^^ Can you think of any other ways to absolve the responsibility of a person who takes a gun and blows someone's head off for a little bit of money?
 
tobala said:
^^^^ Can you think of any other ways to absolve the responsibility of a person who takes a gun and blows someone's head off for a little bit of money?
Why would you absolve someone of the responsibility of such an act?
 
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