Crime Super-Max Prisons

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Maximum Security Federal Prison: ADX Supermax

By Charles Montaldo

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US Penitentiary Administrative Maximum, also known as ADX Florence, the "Alcatraz of the Rockies," and "Supermax," is a modern super-maximum security federal prison located in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains near Florence, Colorado. Opened in 1994, the ADX Supermax facility was designed to incarcerate and isolate criminals deemed as being too dangerous for the average prison system.

The all-male prison population at ADX Supermax includes inmates who experienced chronic disciplinary problems while at other prisons, those who have killed other prisoners and prison guards, gang leaders, high-profile criminals, and organized crime mobsters. It also houses criminals who could pose a threat to national security including Al-Qaeda and U.S. terrorist and spies.

The harsh conditions at ADX Supermax have earned it a place in the Guinness Book of World Records as being one of the most secure prisons in the world. From the prison design to the daily operations, ADX Supermax strives for complete control over all prisoners at all times.

Modern, sophisticated security and monitoring systems are located inside and along the outside perimeter of the prison grounds. The monolithic design of the facility makes it difficult for those unfamiliar with the facility to navigate inside the structure.

Massive guard towers, security cameras, attack dogs, laser technology, remote-controlled door systems, and pressure pads exist inside a 12-foot high razor fence that surrounds the prison grounds. Outside visitors to ADX Supermax are, for the most part, unwelcome.

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Christopher Lambert on the great movie: The Fortress

Prison Units

When inmates arrive at ADX, they are placed in one of six units depending on their criminal history. Operations, privileges, and procedures vary depending on the unit. The inmate population is housed at ADX in nine different maximum-security housing units, which are divided into six security levels listed from the most secure and restrictive to the least restrictive.


  • The Control Unit
  • The Special Housing Unit ("SHU")
  • "Range 13," an ultra-secure and isolated four-cell wing of the SHU.
  • Special Security Unit ("H" Unit) for terrorist
  • General Population Units ("Delta," "Echo," "Fox," and "Golf" Units)
  • Intermediate Unit/Transitional Units ("Joker" Unit and "Kilo" Unit) which houses prisoners entered into the "Step-Down Program" which they can earn their way out of ADX.

To be moved into the less restrictive units, inmates must maintain clear conduct for a specific time, participate in recommended programs and demonstrate a positive institutional adjustment.


Inmate Cells
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Depending on which unit they are in, prisoners spend at least 20, and as many as 24-hours per day locked alone in their cells. The cells measure seven by 12 feet and have solid walls that prevent prisoners from viewing the interiors of adjacent cells or having direct contact with prisoners in adjacent cells.1

All ADX cells have solid steel doors with a small slot. Cells in all units (other than H, Joker, and Kilo units) also have an interior barred wall with a sliding door, which together with the exterior door forms a sally port in each cell.

Each cell is furnished with a modular concrete bed, desk, and stool, and a stainless steel combination sink and toilet. Cells in all units include a shower with an automatic shut-off valve.


The beds have a thin mattress and blankets over the concrete. Each cell contains a single window, approximately 42 inches tall and four inches wide, which allows in some natural light, but which is designed to ensure that prisoners cannot see anything outside of their cells other than the building and sky.2

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Many cells, except those in the SHU, are equipped with a radio and television that offers religious and educational programming, along with some general interest and recreational programming. Inmates wishing to take advantage of the educational program at ADX Supermax do so by tuning into specific learning channels on the television in their cell. There are no group classes. Televisions often are withheld from prisoners as punishment.

Meals are delivered three times a day by guards. With few exceptions, prisoners in most ADX Supermax units are allowed out of their cells only for limited social or legal visits, some forms of medical treatment, visits to the "law library" and a few hours a week of indoor or outdoor recreation.

With the possible exception of Range 13, the Control Unit is the most secure and isolated unit currently in use at ADX. Prisoners in the Control Unit are isolated from the other prisoners at all times, even during recreation, for extended terms often lasting six years or more. Their only meaningful contact with other humans is with ADX staff members.

The compliance of Control Unit prisoners with institutional rules is assessed monthly. A prisoner is given "credit" for serving a month of his Control Unit time only if he maintains clear conduct for the entire month.

Inmate Life
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For at least the first three years, ADX inmates remain isolated inside their cells on an average of 23 hours a day, including during meals. Inmates in the more secure cells have remote-controlled doors that lead to walkways, called dog runs, which open into a private recreation pen. The pen referred to as the "empty swimming pool," is a concrete area with skylights, which inmates go to alone. There they can take about 10 steps in either direction or walk around thirty feet in a circle.

Because of the inability for prisoners to see prison grounds from inside their cells or the recreation pen, it is nearly impossible for them to know where their cell is located inside the facility. The prison was designed this way to deter prison breakouts.

Special Administrative Measures

Many of the inmates are under Special Administrative Measures (SAM) to prevent the dissemination either of classified information that could endanger the national security or of other information that could lead to acts of violence and terrorism.

Prison officials monitor and censor all inmate activity including all mail that is received, books, magazines and newspapers, phone calls and face-to-face visits. Phone calls are limited to one monitored 15-minute phone call per month.2
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If prisoners adapt to the rules of ADX, they are permitted to have more exercise time, additional phone privileges and more television programming. The opposite is true if prisoners fail to adapt.

Inmate Disputes

In 2006, Olympic Park Bomber, Eric Rudolph contacted the Gazette of Colorado Springs through a series of letters describing the conditions at ADX Supermax as one meant to, "inflict misery and pain."

"It is a closed-off world designed to isolate inmates from social and environmental stimuli, with the ultimate purpose of causing mental illness and chronic physical conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, and arthritis," he wrote in one letter."

Hunger Strikes

Throughout the prison's history, inmates have gone on hunger strikes to protest the harsh treatment that they receive. This is particularly true of foreign terrorists; by 2007, over 900 incidents of force-feeding of the striking prisoners had been documented.

Suicide

In May 2012, the family of Jose Martin Vega filed a lawsuit against the United States District Court for the District of Colorado alleging that Vega committed suicide while incarcerated at ADX Supermax because he was deprived of treatment for his mental illness.

On June 18, 2012, a class-action lawsuit, "Bacote v. Federal Bureau of Prisons," was filed alleging that the U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) was mistreating mentally ill prisoners at ADX Supermax. Eleven prisoners filed the case on behalf of all mentally ill prisoners at the facility.3 In December 2012, Michael Bacote asked to withdraw from the case. As a result, the first-named plaintiff is now Harold Cunningham, and the case name is now "Cunningham v. Federal Bureau of Prisons" or "Cunningham v. BOP."

The complaint alleges that despite the BOP's own written policies, excluding the mentally ill from ADX Supermax because of its severe conditions, the BOP frequently assigns prisoners with mental illness there because of a deficient evaluation and screening process. Then, according to the complaint, mentally ill prisoners housed at ADX Supermax are denied constitutionally adequate treatment and services.

According to the complaint
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Some prisoners mutilate their bodies with razors, shards of glass, sharpened chicken bones, writing utensils and whatever other objects they can obtain. Others swallow razor blades, nail clippers, broken glass, and other dangerous objects.

Many engage in fits of screaming and ranting for hours on end. Others carry on delusional conversations with the voices they hear in their heads, oblivious to reality and the danger that such behavior might pose to them and to anyone who interacts with them.

Still, others spread feces and other waste throughout their cells, throw it at the correctional staff and otherwise create health hazards at ADX. Suicide attempts are common; many have been successful."

Escape artist Richard Lee McNair wrote to a journalist from his cell in 2009 to say:
"Thank God for prisons [...] There are some very sick people in here... Animals you would never want living near your family or the public in general. I don't know how corrections staff deal with it. They get spit on, s*** on, abused and I have seen them risk their lives and save a prisoner many times."

Cunningham v. BOP was settled between the parties on Dec. 29, 2016: the terms apply to all the plaintiffs as well as present and future inmates with mental illness. The terms include the creation and revision of policies governing mental health diagnosis and treatment; the creation or improvement in mental health facilities; the creation of areas for tele-psychiatry and mental health counseling in all units; the screening of inmates prior to, after, and during incarceration; the availability of psychotropic drugs as needed and regular visits by mental health professionals; and ensuring that the use of force, restraints and discipline are applied appropriately to inmates.

The BOP to Access of Its Solitary Confinement Practices

In February 2013 the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) agreed to a comprehensive and independent assessment of its use of solitary confinement in the nation’s federal prisons. The first-ever review of federal segregation policies comes after a hearing in 2012 on the human rights, fiscal and public safety consequences of solitary confinement. The assessment will be conducted by the National Institute of Corrections.
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POW: Prisioners of war, for Nes



https://www.thoughtco.com/adx-supermax-overview-972970
 
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How the Murders of Two Correctional Officers Led to the Creation of the Only 'Supermax' Prison in the U.S.
ELENA FERRARIN

The “supermax” U.S. Penitentiary Administrative Maximum, also known as ADX Florence, in Colorado, holds the most dangerous federal prisoners: gang leaders, those who’ve murdered fellow prisoners or prison guards, high-profile criminals, those who could pose a threat to national security and more.

ADX Florence opened in 1994 as the result of the 1983 murders of two corrections officers at the hands of convicts Thomas Silverstein and Clayton Fountain. The murders also resulted in the immediate use of isolation and solitary confinement to punish prisoners.

In his book, No Human Contact, former reporter Pete Earley examines what happens to prisoners in isolation and solitary confinement, and whether such methods can lead to rehabilitation.

Earley met Silverstein in prison in 1987 and the two communicated until Silverstein’s death in 2019. Earley never met Fountain, who died in 2014. He relied on criminologist David Ward and Father W. Paul Jones, who served as Fountain’s spiritual adviser, to tell Fountain’s story.

A&E True Crime spoke with Earley about what life is like for inmates in supermax prisons, whether preventing criminals from having contact with others leads to rehabilitation and whether Silverstein and Fountain evolved.

Why were Silverstein and Fountain in prison?
Fountain was sent to prison for murdering his commanding officer in the Marine Corps, then in prison he murdered three prisoners. Silverstein was sent to prison for bank robbery, then was convicted of murdering a prisoner—the court later overturned that. Then he murdered another prisoner.

Both were associated with the white supremacy gang Aryan Brotherhood. Silverstein was a ‘shot caller,’ while Fountain was an associate who had not yet gotten full membership.

In October 1983, they separately murdered two correctional officers on the same cellblock in the federal penitentiary in Marion, Illinois.

What happened in the wake of the murders?
Immediately after the murders, the Federal Bureau of Prisons separated them. Fountain went to the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, and Silverstein went to the United States Penitentiary in Atlanta, Georgia. The Bureau of Prisons came up with a draconian punishment: isolation for the first nine months.

What did that look like?
Both men were stripped down to their boxer shorts, placed in cells painted in white, with a toilet, sink and mattress, with the lights on 24 hours a day and a solid steel door. They were not granted any contact with the outside world: no books, magazines, TV, radio or letters from their families. Their only contact were prison officers who did not talk to them.

What happened after nine months?
The prison guards discovered that you cannot control another person if you take everything away from them.

Silverstein would not give back his food tray [to the guards], and you can’t deny food to prisoners. So, as a guard, do you want to get into that cell and fight with him? Or would you rather give him art supplies or letters as an incentive for good behavior? It’s all about control.

After that, Silverstein was held in isolation for about 30 years, far away from other prisoners, in his own special cell, only seeing the guards. Fountain was in a cell, away from everyone else, for 21 years.

How did they handle that?
Silverstein practiced mind travel. He would sit and remember in great detail incidents of his life that were pleasurable. He also would do pushups and sit-ups. He asked for a Bible and eventually, one was slipped through his cell. He was largely illiterate, but taught himself to read and write by reading the Bible, and later became a Buddhist.

He later found purpose in life through correspondence and through his artwork. Silverstein survived on hate—he was not going to let the Bureau of Prisons destroy him.

Fountain, when he was granted privileges, took educational courses and got a degree. He had girlfriends and became very religious. Before he died, the Catholic Church was going to accept him as a Trappist monk and he was going to practice silence.

What were the repercussions of the murders they committed?
There were dramatic changes [to prison procedures] because of Fountain and Silverstein. [From then on] when a guy was taken out of his cell, you had to have three officers, handcuffs and a belly chain.

Eventually there was the first supermax prison. The Bureau of Prisons has six levels of prisoners [based on severity of the crime], and [then] Federal Bureau of Prisons Director Norman Carlson believed the prisoners in levels 5 and 6, the murderers, killers and predators, were professional prisoners. He also believed that prisons are not responsible for rehabilitation.

After Fountain and Silverstein murdered the corrections officers, punishment became part of the Bureau of Prisons. The idea was, ‘If you act up, we are going to send you to supermax, and you have to earn your way out.’

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For PS2

What is life like for prisoners in supermax?
Prisoners in solitary confinement have a TV in their cells and get letters. If they flush the toilet, they can yell to each other [through the toilet] to communicate, and they can also pass notes to each other.

There are also prisoners in isolation in an area called Range 13, where Silverstein was kept, which is like a dungeon. There is a big argument in the mental health community about whether isolation causes permanent mental health damage. Silverstein was incredibly mentally strong but had moments when he considered suicide.

What about Fountain?
[Criminologist] Ward talks about how Fountain preferred isolation. He never grew up with friends and, in the prison environment, he was always worried about someone attacking him. So having a solid door and being isolated didn’t bother him. He could do his studies; they gave him access to classes and a priest would come by to talk to him.

[Former Bureau of Prisons Director] Carlson described Silverstein and Fountain as being part of ‘a very small subset of the federal inmate population that shows absolutely no concern for human life.’ Do you agree with that?
I would phrase it as, ‘There is a subset who has no qualms about killing someone else when it serves their purpose.’

Silverstein said murder is a serious subject and you don’t do it without a reason. These guys in prison who kill [said they] had a specific reason: either they were being threatened, or they wanted to intimidate someone, or they had a grudge. Carlson’s quote makes it sound like they got up in the morning and decided to kill someone.

Does preventing criminals from having contact with others lead to rehabilitation?
I never give up faith, but the recidivism rate is about 60 percent. [Editor’s note: analysts for the Texas Legislative Budget Board found in 2015 that prisoners released after solitary confinement are rearrested at a 25 percent higher rate than those released from the overall prison system].

I think isolation and solitary confinement is not intended to rehabilitate people; it’s intended to control their behavior. It’s about fear and intimidation. I also think Silverstein and Fountain were so damaged in their youth—both came from highly abusive families—that the only way they would stop doing what they did is old age.

So how should prisons deal with such inmates?
Part of the reason I wrote the book was to raise questions about that—and I don’t have the answer. How do you control someone who is willing to kill? I know that Carlson’s view was to isolate them, so they can’t hurt staff and others.

Do you think Fountain and Silverstein evolved as human beings?
I like to say they found purpose in their lives. Silverstein survived by hate—he hated the Bureau of Prisons—although that doesn’t mean he wasn’t capable of love. We became friends over those 33 years.

Fountain took the opposite route: he became incredibly religious and he asked for forgiveness. Those in the corrections system believe neither man reformed.

Did you find Silverstein to be a liar at any point?
No. He wanted to be taken seriously. He appreciated my books but said they were too pro-corrections.

When prisoners get violent, they can get ‘four-pointed’: tied to a slab, chained, each limb extended. He said to me, ‘You write about that, but you have never lived that. You have never sat there, dying of thirst and hunger, urinating and peeing on yourself, having bugs crawl over you, mice crawl over you, a fly crawl up your nose. Just the inhumanity…'”

So, what are you going to do with these violent prisoners? Personally, I don’t think four-pointing is humane, but I also have never had prisoners throw urine and feces in my face. I never had a prisoner try to stab me. I’ve been so close to it that I see both sides.

https://www.aetv.com/real-crime/supermax-prison



 
Timeline: Solitary Confinement in U.S. Prisons
July 26, 20067:52 PM ET
Laura Sullivan

An overview of key moments in the history of solitary confinement.

1829 - The first experiment in solitary confinement in the United States begins at the Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia. It is based on a Quaker belief that prisoners isolated in stone cells with only a Bible would use the time to repent, pray and find introspection. But many of the inmates go insane, commit suicide, or are no longer able to function in society, and the practice is slowly abandoned during the following decades.
Eastern-State-Penitentary-2021.jpg

The Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, where the first American experiment in solitary confinement took place.

1890 - In an opinion concerning the effects of solitary confinement on inmates housed in Philadelphia (Re: Medley, 134 U.S. 160), U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Freeman Miller finds, "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, and others became violently insane; others still, committed suicide; 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."

Arkham-Asylum.jpg

1934 - The federal government opens Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay to house the nation's worst criminals. Most inmates spend many hours outside in the yard and on required work details. But a few dozen are kept in "D Block," the prison’s solitary-confinement hallway. One cell in particular is called "The Hole" -- a room of bare concrete except for a hole in the floor. There is no light, inmates are kept naked, and bread and water is shoved through a small hole in the door. Although most inmates only spend a few days in the hole, some spend years on D Block. Conditions are better than in The Hole -- inmates have clothes and food -- but they are not permitted contact with other inmates and are rarely let out of their cells. The most famous inmate on D Block is Robert Stroud, known as the "Birdman of Alcatraz,” who spends six years there. A 1962 movie about Stroud -- and subsequent media reports on the conditions on D Block -- made solitary confinement a fixture of the American imagination for the first time.
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1983 - Two correctional officers at a Marion, Ill., prison are murdered by inmates in two separate incidents on the same day. The warden at the time puts the prison in what he calls "permanent lockdown." It is the first prison in the country to adopt 23-hour-a-day cell isolation and no communal yard time for all inmates. Inmates are no longer allowed to work, attend educational programs, or eat in a cafeteria. Within a few years, several other states also adopt permanent lockdown at existing facilities.


1989 - California builds Pelican Bay, a new prison built solely to house inmates in isolation. By most accounts, it is the first Supermax facility in the country. There is no need to build a yard, cafeteria, classrooms or shops. Inmates spend 22 1/2 hours a day inside an 8-by-10-foot cell. The other 1 1/2 hours are spent alone in a small concrete exercise pen.
rawImage.jpg


1990s - The building boom of Supermax or control-unit prisons begins. Oregon, Mississippi, Indiana, Virginia, Ohio, Wisconsin and a dozen other states all build new, free-standing, isolation units.

1994 - The U.S. Bureau of Prisons builds ADX Florence, the federal government's first and only Supermax facility, in Florence, Colo. It's known popularly as the "Alcatraz of the Rockies." It currently houses 9/11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh, Unibomber Ted Kaczynski, former FBI agent and convicted spy Robert Hanssen, Olympic Park and abortion-clinic bomber Eric Rudolph, and many others.


1995 - A federal judge finds conditions at Pelican Bay in California "may well hover on the edge of what is humanly tolerable" (Madrid v. Gomez). But he rules that there is no constitutional basis for the courts to shut down the unit or to alter it substantially. He says the court must defer to the states about how best to incarcerate offenders.

1999 - A report by the Department of Justice finds that more than 30 states are operating a Supermax-type facility with 23-hours-a-day lockdown and long-term isolation. The study finds that some states put 0.5 percent of their total inmates in this kind of facility, while other states lock up more than 20 percent of their inmates this way.

2005 - Daniel P. Mears, an associate professor at Florida State University, conducts a nationwide study and finds there are now 40 states operating Supermax or control-unit prisons, which collectively hold more than 25,000 U.S. prisoners.

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5579901

 
Depending on which unit they are in, prisoners spend at least 20, and as many as 24-hours per day locked alone in their cells.

That's it?
It should be 25 hours a day, minimum.
But not more than 30 hours a day. That's be inhumane.
 
- I read that federal prinsos are the worst for C.O's to work. Found those articles when searching suicide rates btw prisioners.
 
Sorry but in today's soft on criminals society, if you earn your way here.. I have stopped considering you a human..you truly deserve it and are lucky to not be executed
 
I approve of them and that's where some people need to be.

As long as they have the basics food, shelter with heat and A/C that is all that is required for what they have done.
 
I had this lego police set from 1993 and another one but I cannot remember what year it was.
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I am one of the biggest proponents of prison reform and do believe for profit prisons should be abolished. As per Super Max Prisons they should stay and only be used to house the worst of the worst and or individuals who have escaped from medium or lower security prisons.
 
Sorry but in today's soft on criminals society, if you earn your way here.. I have stopped considering you a human..you truly deserve it and are lucky to not be executed

I almost agree with you.

I do think we should be working towards a way of incarcerating people that doesn't drive them insane.
 
In my opinion, prisons are there to keep bad people away from good people. If someone gets a life sentence, any inhumane punishment they get isn’t “to teach them a lesson” it’s to torture them psychologically until they die, which has always sat wrong with me
 
Timeline: Solitary Confinement in U.S. Prisons
July 26, 20067:52 PM ET
Laura Sullivan

An overview of key moments in the history of solitary confinement.

1829 - The first experiment in solitary confinement in the United States begins at the Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia. It is based on a Quaker belief that prisoners isolated in stone cells with only a Bible would use the time to repent, pray and find introspection. But many of the inmates go insane, commit suicide, or are no longer able to function in society, and the practice is slowly abandoned during the following decades.
Eastern-State-Penitentary-2021.jpg

The Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, where the first American experiment in solitary confinement took place.

1890 - In an opinion concerning the effects of solitary confinement on inmates housed in Philadelphia (Re: Medley, 134 U.S. 160), U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Freeman Miller finds, "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, and others became violently insane; others still, committed suicide; 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."

Arkham-Asylum.jpg

1934 - The federal government opens Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay to house the nation's worst criminals. Most inmates spend many hours outside in the yard and on required work details. But a few dozen are kept in "D Block," the prison’s solitary-confinement hallway. One cell in particular is called "The Hole" -- a room of bare concrete except for a hole in the floor. There is no light, inmates are kept naked, and bread and water is shoved through a small hole in the door. Although most inmates only spend a few days in the hole, some spend years on D Block. Conditions are better than in The Hole -- inmates have clothes and food -- but they are not permitted contact with other inmates and are rarely let out of their cells. The most famous inmate on D Block is Robert Stroud, known as the "Birdman of Alcatraz,” who spends six years there. A 1962 movie about Stroud -- and subsequent media reports on the conditions on D Block -- made solitary confinement a fixture of the American imagination for the first time.
98.jpg


1983 - Two correctional officers at a Marion, Ill., prison are murdered by inmates in two separate incidents on the same day. The warden at the time puts the prison in what he calls "permanent lockdown." It is the first prison in the country to adopt 23-hour-a-day cell isolation and no communal yard time for all inmates. Inmates are no longer allowed to work, attend educational programs, or eat in a cafeteria. Within a few years, several other states also adopt permanent lockdown at existing facilities.


1989 - California builds Pelican Bay, a new prison built solely to house inmates in isolation. By most accounts, it is the first Supermax facility in the country. There is no need to build a yard, cafeteria, classrooms or shops. Inmates spend 22 1/2 hours a day inside an 8-by-10-foot cell. The other 1 1/2 hours are spent alone in a small concrete exercise pen.
rawImage.jpg


1990s - The building boom of Supermax or control-unit prisons begins. Oregon, Mississippi, Indiana, Virginia, Ohio, Wisconsin and a dozen other states all build new, free-standing, isolation units.

1994 - The U.S. Bureau of Prisons builds ADX Florence, the federal government's first and only Supermax facility, in Florence, Colo. It's known popularly as the "Alcatraz of the Rockies." It currently houses 9/11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh, Unibomber Ted Kaczynski, former FBI agent and convicted spy Robert Hanssen, Olympic Park and abortion-clinic bomber Eric Rudolph, and many others.


1995 - A federal judge finds conditions at Pelican Bay in California "may well hover on the edge of what is humanly tolerable" (Madrid v. Gomez). But he rules that there is no constitutional basis for the courts to shut down the unit or to alter it substantially. He says the court must defer to the states about how best to incarcerate offenders.

1999 - A report by the Department of Justice finds that more than 30 states are operating a Supermax-type facility with 23-hours-a-day lockdown and long-term isolation. The study finds that some states put 0.5 percent of their total inmates in this kind of facility, while other states lock up more than 20 percent of their inmates this way.

2005 - Daniel P. Mears, an associate professor at Florida State University, conducts a nationwide study and finds there are now 40 states operating Supermax or control-unit prisons, which collectively hold more than 25,000 U.S. prisoners.

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5579901

Very educational threads, thanks for posting.
 
We need a long discussion about why certain East Asian countries don’t have the same problems we do.

Hell, in some countries the people are so organized, they form two lines on an escalator. The line on the right stands, and the line on the left ascends the steps. If you don’t see that happening in your country, that’s just the beginning of your problems.
 
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