Thursday, July 22, 2010

Inside The Twin Towers Correctional Facility: AUSCHWITZ ON BAUCHET STREET

Above the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., the following phrase is etched into the marble: "Equal Justice Under The Law." Nothing could be further from the truth; never have the American people been sold a bigger line of bullshit.

The reality is that "justice" is auctioned off to the highest bidder. Those with means may or may not intersect with it. Those without, well, they're just out of luck.

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If you're ever stupid or unlucky enough to be arrested for an alleged crime in Los Angeles County, you'd better pray that you're flush with cash. For if you're not, not only can you kiss your Sixth Amendment right to a defense good-by, but, as you cannot afford bail, your new home for the foreseeable future will be a medieval sewer known as the Twin Towers Correctional Facility located downtown right beside human destinations the likes of Chinatown, Union Station and LACMA.

The summer of 2007 was not a red letter season for me. I did something stupid, idiotic even, but only illegal in California courtesy of the same moronic and corrupt legislators responsible for our now bankrupt state.

Pa pillion had nothing on me. When I was thrown headfirst into this modern-day Devil's Island, I was in reasonably good health, weighed 226 mostly-muscular pounds, and had 20/20 vision with contact lenses despite suffering from a debilitating eye disease. Upon eviction seven months later, I barely tipped the scale at 158, was blind and had cancer. Organizations the likes of Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are wasting time and resources in Third World dictatorships as a good many of this planet's real atrocities lie right here in the good ol' U.S. of A. .

The Twin Towers Correctional Facility, 10-acres and 1.5 million square feet of Black Hole of Calcutta-like fun, is the World's Largest Jail. It is fact that convicted terrorists in Israeli prisons and our own Gitmo detainees are treated more humanely, have a far easier ride, than TTCF inmates. Fact!

In its infinite wisdom, the Los Angeles County Supervisors have entrusted the operation of this lovely landmark to its dullard Sheriff Lee Baca and his malignant minions. For all intent, it operates above the law, with policy based more on whim than national, state and county statute.

Although seemingly the creation of Franz Kafka's disturbing imagination, this nightmare is quite real, a puss-filled abscess in your very own back yard, ready to engulf you, too, if you should slip and cross the line. And believe me, it doesn't take much.

The kicker is that very few of the men incarcerated in this septic tank are guilty of anything. Their "crime" is not having enough money to post bail while awaiting mostly trumped-up charges courtesy of the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office in its never-ending quest to inflate its conviction statistics. Hell, they even give their Deputy D.A.'s cash bonuses for every poor soul they manage to convict -- of anything! Granted, some people deserve to be in prison. God knows. But most face such inflated charges that it's next to impossible not to be convicted -- of something.

Especially when the defense of those without means falls to the obscenely misnamed Office of the Public Defender. I say this because P.D.'s rarely, if ever, defend anyone. Instead, they "make deals" with the better staffed, better paid and usually smarter D.A.'s. And because no defense is provided, those deals are routinely toxic for the accused. In essence, the State of California has created a whole industry for itself by incarcerating the poor and defenseless.

I was quite different from the run-of-the-mill brain dead or crackhead or gangbanger TTCF inmate. I was older than most, was a professional writer -- a member of the Writers' Guild of America -- had a master's degree and had worked as a college and university professor for 11 years. Most men are in this phlegm pot are functionally illiterate.

My biggest crime was to be between jobs and broke while attempting to support two teenage sons with my ex-wife. That, more than any other reason, is why I was the corrupt county's guest.

And it's the same for almost everyone in there. If they could afford bail, they'd be home awaiting trail, not being abused by Ayatollah Baca's deputies and policies.

One of the first things the bastards did to me upon arrival was to cut off my longtime anti-depressant, Marplan, and a drug given to me some 10 years before following a failed sleep study, Clonopin. And I mean they cut me off at the knees.

As any pharmacist or doctor worth a damn will tell you, if an individual is to discontinue use of these medications, one must be weaned off gradually, usually over 30 days. To do otherwise can induce stroke and/or heart attack. But the sadists employed as doctors in this snake pit (almost all from primitive countries where jumping over a stick is the equivalent of passing medical school, and whom are paid as close to minimum wage as the bastard Lee Baca can get away with) could have cared less. Some even laughed when I protested. As a result, I spent my first 12 days in a nearly comatose state. I even stopped breathing and passed out twice. But after quick EKG's (and I severely doubt the nurses doing the tests knew how to work the machine) I was quickly thrown right back into my cell.

They also refused to give me my prescribed diabetes medications. It took 80 days (I counted) and three ACLU complaints for me to get two-thirds of them. But then, that's the way the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department operates this place -- any way they want to.

Before I go on, I want to say something about this blog. Originally, I intended to write a book. But, as I am on probation (another outrage!), I was advised that if I did so, I would be in violation of that probation and imprisoned. So much for the First Amendment when one is forced to endure California's corrupt legal system with no more than a do-nothing public defender as representation.

TTCF is divided into two-tiered (just like the legal system) "pods". Hundreds of them. Although designed to accommodate about 30 men, most house a minimum of 50. Inside each are numerous cells the size of closets. Most of these house four men. You would not want to turn your back on many of those guys let alone fall asleep in their presence. A select few cells hold two men. And cells are for the lucky. The rest sleep on bunks crammed wherever they can cram them on each pod's first floor.

Men sleep on steel slabs. "Mattresses" are mats (think yoga mats) so old, so frayed and so thin that newspaper would provide more support. And, as they are used again and again, god knows what diseases they carry, especially in this place which is notorious for staph infection. At the time I was thrown into this septic tank, I had already undergone one hip replacement and total reconstruction of one knee. My orthopedic surgeon had advised me that I needed yet another hip replacement, a replacement for the aforementioned knee, and back surgery. Seven months of sleeping on steel and tissue paper has ensured that I never, ever have a pain-free moment.

Each cell has its own toilet/sink combo. But those who sleep in what is humorously called the day room must share one filthy bathroom with anyone and everyone. One of the few pleasures an inmate is afforded is to flush the toilets as many times as humanly possible to cost the county as much money as humanly possible.

Showers are yet another thrill-filled experience. Each pod has one on the second floor. Although inmates shower one at a time, they can get kind of crowded when used as a place to beat someone up (these beatings are often instigated by Baca's deputies (a good percentage of whom are juiced to the max on steroids), an almost daily occurrence. An always wet, festering, germ infused bed sheet hung over the entrance is the shower curtain. Disinfectant is provided sporadically to clean the showers. More often than not, each is filled with fungus and mold.

Which brings me to jail food. Know those cellophane-wrapped burritos sold at your local mini-mart? Inmates get one of those each week, definitely the culinary highlight. Breakfast is a tiny box of generic cereal. Lunch alternates between mystery meat bologna sandwiches and peanut butter and jelly. Most dinners consist of severely overcooked noodles topped with little pencil eraser shaped "meat" topped with a toxic paste-like sauce. Fresh fruit is a rarity; fresh vegetables non-existent. The food is so vile that guys who had been to prison wax poetic for penitentiary vittles.

And forget about flossing after a meal. Or ever. It's considered contraband. If you want a toothbrush (it's 4 inches long!) and toothpaste, you must purchase them with your own money (if you have any) from the jail commissary. Few do. Many never shower, either.

For all intent, the Twin Towers Correctional Facility is an obscene warehouse for human beings who are awaiting trial or prison.

A good many of the incarcerated are guilty of whatever it is they are alleged to have done. But the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office never leaves it at that. You see, D.A.'s specialize in layering on charge upon charge -- most having absolutely nothing to with the original charge -- so they can get a conviction, inflate their statistics and get their bonus.

In my own case, a despicable, psychopathic bleached blonde Armenian Deputy D.A. notorious among bailiffs and other lawyers for wearing tight outfits to accentuate her big tits, charged me with everything but orchestrating 9/11, killing J.F.K. and kidnapping the Lindbergh Baby. I call her Stalin's Daughter, the Prom Queen of the Gulag, as she practices law as if she were still in her native U.S.S.R. As most of those in the TTCF (myself included) cannot afford good private attorneys who could chew those county employees up and spit them out, they must rely on uncaring, unmotivated and often unskilled public defenders for their defense. As a result, a good number of those bogus charges stick.

As if this weren't bad enough, the actual act of dragging inmates to court puts them through a very wearing logistical hell.

While those charged with a crime who can afford bail can wake up in their own beds and make their way to court in a human and humane manner, those in jail face a very different path.

A bastard LACSD deputy will get on the omnipresent P.A. system at about 4:00 a.m. to scream the names of those who have to appear in one of the numerous Los Angeles County Municipal or Superior Courts that day. Please keep this in mind: the courts to not open until 9:00 a.m.

Men are forced to wait in the day room until guards deem it necessary to hustle them off to breakfast. Following the morning meal, the real fun begins.

The men are marched into the basement of the old County Jail to holding cells where they will sit for hours. These cells are segregated by race: white, black and Hispanic. They haven't figured out what to do with Asians yet, so their holding cell will be dictated by a deputy's whim.

These holding cells are akin to the "Star Wars" bar. They have a maximum capacity of 36. I was in many with over 75 men squeezed inside. For hours. Complaints reach deaf ears.

Finally at about 7:00 a.m. guards shout the names of the various courts. When yours is called, you are finally released from the dirty, smelly over-filled-to-capacity holding cell to be handcuffed to three other men (at least one of whom hasn't showered in weeks; at least one who won't stop screaming about Jesus) and thrown onto a bus.

When the bus finally arrives at your courthouse, you are ushered into yet another freezing cold, segregated holding cell in the basement. Then you are strip searched, then thrown back into the cell until you are called for your appearance.

Outside the courtroom, you are locked in another holding cell. Your attorney may or may not speak to you at that time.

So, by the time you are led in handcuffs into the courtroom, you stink from the holding cells, are wearing soiled jail clothes, and are exhausted (both mentally and physically) from all you were forced to endure just to get there. This makes a wonderful impression on juries. This also marks a vast difference from those who could afford bail. These people show up in court well-rested, freshly showered and usually in a suit and tie.

Following your five minutes in front of a judge, you are thrown back into the segregated holding cell (in the whites only cells I frequented the words "nigger" and "Jew" were thrown about in practically every sentence and I witnessed many white supremacists recruiting for their cause). Finally at about 5:00 p.m. (often later) your name is finally called for a bus back to TTCF.

At this point, the procedure is reversed, including the holding cell in the jail's basement.

Men are forced to endure yet another invasive strip search (the deputies go out of their way to make this as humiliating as possible) then have two burritos thrown at them before being escorted back to their pod. It is normally between 8:00 and 9:00 p.m. (marking a 14 hour ordeal!) before finally returning to your cell.

I had to go through this hell 19 times -- for the most part, because the uncaring and inept public defender couldn't get it together for it to have been otherwise ...

The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution proclaims that "In a criminal prosecution, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have the assistance of counsel for his defense." No mention is made about how much the accused can afford to pay a legitimate defense attorney.

Like everything else in Los Angeles County's criminal justice system, this definition is stretched to such absurd limits that the amendment is almost unrecognizable. When the Office of the Public Defender is factored in, 99.9% of the amendment's intended meaning is bleached away.

In jail, Public Defenders are referred to as "dump trucks". I was in contact with several thousand men during my seven months in paradise, almost all of whom were "represented" by P.D.'s. I found one --ONE-- who had a single good word to say about theirs.

In my particular case (and it was really no different than anyone else's) I was "represented" by a numbnuts who couldn't find his own ass with both hands, MapQuest and a searchlight. He came to the jail to talk to me on one occasion. But before 10 words could be exchanged, the bastard deputies proclaimed a lockdown; the weasel fled, never to return.

In an effort to give him the facts of my case, I wrote seven long, detailed letters to him. Although he insisted that he had read them all, when I questioned him as to their contents, he didn't have a clue. This was the first of many lies he spit into my face.

Despite telephone calls from my family to both him and his supervisor complaining that I was receiving no defense whatsoever, this bastard steadfastly refused to life a single finger in my defense. For example, he couldn't even tell me precisely what I was charged with or what evidence was held against me. I'd love to give out his name. But fear of "violating probation " keeps me from doing so.

As I knew I'd probably get the death penalty with this guy in my corner if I went to trial, I was forced to make an open plea to the judge, was charged with countless felonies for "crimes" that are no more than misdemeanors (if that) in 49 other states and others that were nothing more than figments of the bleached blonde bitch D.A.'s sick imagination, was forced to spend six months in a "mental facility", and serve three years probation. The biggest mistake I made was in not representing myself.

This guy couldn't even get me out of jail. My family finally hired a real lawyer to do that. But the damage had been done and I was forced to live with the fruits of the Public Defender's (lack of) labor. Upon discharge, the "mental facility" I was thrown into was a Skid Row shithole for crackheads scraped off the sidewalks even though I did not use drugs or drink. It was far worse than jail.

I was diagnosed with an eye disease, Keratoconus, when I was 21 years of age. By the time of my incarceration, I had undergone two cornea transplants in each eye, a trauma-related cataract surgery in my left. Although the vision in my left eye was 20/20 with a hard, gas-permeable contact lens, I had no vision in my right, the result of a cataract that was scheduled to be removed two weeks after my arrest.

Since 1977, the care of my eyes was entrusted to the brilliant doctors at UCLA's Jules Stein Eye Institute. My problem was so severe that this was the only facility west of Baltimore's Johns Hopkins Eye Clinic that could make heads or tails of it.

My ophthalmologist had me on one drop of a steroid medication, Pred Forte, in my left eye each day. My Jules Stein optometrist insisted that I use very specific solutions for my contact lenses as to do otherwise would result in medical damage to my already fragile eyes.

To see a doctor while a resident of Los Angeles County's Devil's Island is no easy feat. First, one must put his name on a nurse's list to be triaged. It can take up to three weeks to be called to see a nurse.

When I say nurse, I used the term loosely. As with Twin Tower doctors, most are from countries that have just discovered the wheel and are deficient in both English and medical acumen. And, as with the county doctors, their primary function is to deny, rather than to provide care.

Four weeks had elapsed by the time I was finally called to visit the jail's ophthalmologist. I shouldn't have bothered. The doctor refused to give me Pred Forte, refused to give me the proper contact lens solutions, and refused to send me to Jules Stein for cataract surgery and to repair the other damage I was experiencing.

As a result, the vision in the one eye I could see with deteriorated hour by excruciating hour, day by maddening day. And there wasn't a damn thing I could do about it.

The only thing my piece-of-shit public defender ever did for me was to obtain court orders --four of them-- dictating that the jail must give me the proper eye medications and that I must be taken to UCLA.

But Sheriff Lee Baca and his Twin Towers Correctional Facility operates above the law and chose to ignore each and every one of these court orders. They also turned the other way when the ACLU complaints I managed to obtain arrived. As a result, by the time the judge finally had me released, I was blind. One deputy sheriff told me that that was god wanted and that it was his job to facilitate the Lord.

I have had three surgeries since; my vision is still sketchy at best. On principle alone, I attempted to sue Baca and the county. But our legal system is such that I have yet to find a single lawyer to take my case. A Los Angeles County Bar Association representative told me off the record that this is because there is not enough money in it for them to bother.

In addition to my eye problems, I developed an inner ear infection while in jail. It got so bad that the room spun each time I reclined on my steel slab. It took three weeks to see a doctor. He looked at my ear for some three seconds, snarled that nothing was wrong, then shouted that I had to return to my cell.

But the infection persisted. Three weeks later I returned to the doctor. Same thing. By this time I had lost about 50% of the hearing in that ear, now a permanent condition.

It was only after being hospitalized after release that I learned what was really going on. I was diagnosed with Wallenstrom Macroglobulinemia, a rare, incurable and terminal cancer of the blood centered in the bone marrow which compromises the immune system. I have been told that if not for the incredible stress I had experienced, the cancer would not have developed. I was also told that jail doctors should have suspected that I had a non-Hodgkin's lymphoma because of my 70 pound weight loss and the ear infection that would not heal.

My case is far from unique. In my pod alone, a good person with a severe heart condition, another with constant infection because of a colostomy bag and yet another with AIDS were treated with as much disdain as I experienced.

Violence is rampant in the Twin Towers. Although not often blatant, it's always there. Interestingly, the worst I ever witnessed occurred in a courthouse holding cell, not in the jail, itself. And it was instigated by the miserable sheriff's deputies guarding the place.

Unbeknown st to any of the 50 plus men crammed into the whites only holding cell (meant to hold about 20), an alleged serial rapist/killer was in our midst. Unbeknown st until the door was unlocked and opened and a deputy threw in the California section of that day's Los Angeles Times.

One of the articles (accompanied by a photograph) was about this guy. It was read and passed around. Within minutes, the guy was beaten to within an inch of his life (it didn't matter that he probably deserved it). It was only then that the bastard guards dragged him out and threw him into an isolation cell (instead of taking him to a hospital).

As for me, I experienced more violence at the hands of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department than I did from other inmates. One reason for this is that when I was first thrown in, I was still strong, still had vision and had studied martial arts for many years. I had three incidents the first week that all ended with a single Hapkido technique. From that point to the remainder of my seven months in hell, I was referred to as Mister.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies were another story. The worst of several incidents occurred because the jail, in its infinite wisdom, insisted on handing out sleeping pills between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. This wouldn't be a big deal (I mean, come on, exactly what is someone missing in this pig sty by going to sleep early?) but for the fact that at 10:00 each night, all inmates had to be up, dressed and standing for "head count".

Because of this, many inmates, myself included, "cheeked" the pills (faked swallowing, but keeping the tablet in a cheek) to be saved until head count had concluded. But, as some assholes cheeked their meds and traded them for food and candy, the nurses (and I use the term loosely) and guards were always on cheeking patrol.

One particular night around Christmas, I had a severe case of the flu (I had asked for a flu shot months earlier and was laughed at by TTCF doctors). As a result, I did a sloppy cheeking job and was caught.

One particularly vile and sadistic deputy dragged me out of the pod, threw me against a cement wall, handcuffed my hands and arms behind my back and dragged me into the floor's recreation area (in actuality a big room with a cage instead of bricks acting as walls). There, he grabbed me by the hair and time after time after time slammed by head into the steel cage. Each time the psychotic bastard did so, he screamed, "WHY ARE YOU MAKING ME DO THIS TO YOU?"

When he finally had his fill of fun, he threw me to the floor, shackled me to the cage and left me there -- all night. (It should be noted that in jail, only short sleeves are allowed; it was in the low 40's that evening). Because of the flu, I vomited and defecated all over myself numerous times (and the rights groups scream about Guantanamo!), By the time yet another asshole came to get me I was in such bad shape that they had no choice but to take me to the TTCF's hospital. (One has to be next to death before deputies will do that. It should be further noted that it took SIX Third World nurses a half hour to administer the IV prescribed for my dehydration. From my wrist to my shoulder, I was black and blue for two weeks).

A word about the deputies. Anyone who enlists with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department has to serve two years in TTCF before allowed to patrol the streets. Why these morons don't sign up with the LAPD, CHP or a suburban police department to avoid two years of guard duty is beyond me. As a result, most deputies want to be in this shithole as much as the inmates do. And day in, day out, they take it out on you. I can literally count on one hand the number of deputies I encountered with even a shred of humanity. Among inmates, it is hoped that when the sadist bastards among the deputies are finally "released" to patrol the streets like normal cops, they will summarily be shot through the heads.

Violence, the brain dead, crackhead morons and meth addicts aside, I did share the hell of this inhumane turd tank with several very nice people.

One guy who immediately comes to mind was an uneducated, yet brilliant man from South Central. This guy was much smarter than I -- he opted to defend himself, took his case in front of a jury and won! Well, almost won.

I don't know the precise specifics of his case, but the upshot is that the LAPD accused him of dropping a gun used in an alleged crime before running. As cops often do when they go to court, these guys lied, a technique used to pad personal records, garner citations, get promotions. But my man caught them in their fantasies, convinced the jury that they were full of shit, and was found not guilty. Not bad for an uneducated kid from the absolute worst part of Los Angeles.

But, as mentioned above, our legal system is so corrupt that the judge, incensed that my friend had beaten his rap (she accused him of "tricking" the jury) sent him to prison for three years -- on a probation violation! Yes. He was found to have violated his probation for a crime he was acquitted of having committed! Welcome to L.A. Law.

It should be noted that those inmates who opt to defend themselves (not a wise choice unless your only other option is the Office of the Public Defender) are virtually blindfolded and handcuffed in their quest.

To begin, the TTCF law library is anything but. There are no law books and no reference books. I had one cellmate who went pro per (that's that they call the act of acting as your own lawyer) who spent three unsuccessful months attempting to locate a copy of the U.S. Constitution!

In addition, anything and everything submitted to the court must be done in a certain manner, and in triplicate. As you can guess copy machines and carbon paper are non-existent. As are typewriters and word processors. Everything must be written by hand using those little, tiny pencils used to keep score when playing miniature golf.

THIS is the County of Los Angeles' version of our constitutional right to self representation.

I have received several emails asking about my case. I would like nothing better than to spell it out in detail, to mention the name and affiliation of every toxic human being I encountered. But, as I am now technically a convicted felon on probation, I no longer have enough First Amendment clout to do so. I have been advised that if I did talk about it, I will be declared in violation of that probation and sent to prison for six years. This is how our system works.

But in March, 2011, that probation will be completed. And at that time I will write about my case in excruciating detail. I will name names of every alleged human being involved and tell all about them. This includes the alleged victim -- the psychotic, drug-addicted nurse/prostitute who perjured herself every step of the way.

Each day spent inside the Twin Towers Correctional Facility is a week long. In summer, it's sweltering. In winter, freezing -- a fact made all the worse as long sleeves are not allowed. I complained to my sister about this. She in turn filed an American Civil Liberties Union complaint. One day a Lee Baca lackey called me outside the pod to talk about it. When I told him how cold my cell was he dismissed me by proclaiming that I was lying, then threatened to put me in the "hole" if I did it again.

In the entire seven months I had the misfortune to reside in this county funed and sanctioned abscess, I never saw a library book. A lifesaving friend felt so bad for me that he sent several Dickens novels my way. I read each a minimum of four times -- by putting the book a half-inch from my diseased and abused eyes.

Meals aside, TTCF inmates spend about 22 of each 24 hours inside their cell. As I mentioned, each four man cell is the size of a closet, and few inmates shower, brush their teeth. I cannot tell you how many hours I was forced to listen to accounts of the "best heroin" these guys ever had.

Once each week, trustees throw (literally) one roll of single-ply toilet paper at you to meet all of your needs. Twice each week, they throw a roll of clean clothing, including a postage stamp-size towel at you.

Which brings me to the trustees. This sewer would not be able to function without them. They are inmates, just like you, who do all "heavy lifting" inside the TTCF. The guards work them like dogs as they do everything the guards, themselves, are supposed to do. And for their trouble, these trustees are paid ... extra food; extra inedible food. These men are used and exploited. Hopefully, one day, a class-action lawsuit will be filed on their behalf.

Back to the courtroom. I cannot stress strongly enough what complete and utter pieces of shit the members of the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office are. They almost always lose cases to highly paid private attorneys. As a result, they really stick it to those who must rely on public defender dump drucks for a defense. The D.A.'s office specializes in magically turning mole hills into mountains, primarily by trumping up the charges. They also love to add a menagerie of additional charges to the one you are actually being charged with. For example, if you were arrested for a marijuana violation, the bastards will throw in jaywalking, resisting arrest (whether you did or not), lying to a police officer, dissing a police officer, littering and whatever the hell else their sick imaginations can create. Then they'll whine to the judge that you were once nabbed for shopliting when you were 14 in their quest to put you in prison. I could go on for hours. May they all painfully choke, die, burn and rot in hell.




IF ANYONE YOU LOVE OR EVEN KNOW IS EVER CHARGED WITH A CRIME IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY, IS EVER THROWN INTO ANY OF THE CESSPOOL LOS ANGELES COUNTY JAILS, PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE DO THE FOLLOWING, EVEN IF YOU MUST BEG, BORROW OR STEAL: 1) BAIL THEM OUT! NO MATTER THE COST, BAIL THEM OUT; 2) NEVER, EVER, EVER LEAVE THEIR DEFENSE TO THE OBSCENELY MISNAMED OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC DEFENDER. INSTEAD, HIRE THE MOST VICIOUS AND RABID CRIMINAL LAWYER POSSIBLE TO PROVIDE THEM WITH A DEFENSE. THEIR FUTURES AND POSSIBLY THEIR LIVES CAN DEPEND UPON IT ...

25 comments:

  1. Right on! An on-the-mark account!

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  2. I'm so sorry to hear that you suffered in this way. I'm reading this to get some information on Phil Spector, as I run the Free Phil Spector UK team. I cannot help but think our prisons in the UK are palaces in comparison, never been in one myself, but I know people who have, they've done degrees, sat bathing in the sun and had all the help they need to come off of drugs and have dentistry etc all for free. I hope you are getting the treatment to help your eyes. Perhaps now, as you could in England, have a compensation case for them to answer to! Natmcbridelockwood@blueyonder.co.uk

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  3. Too F....g bad. You DID something illegal and now you have to pay the price. By the way I wouldnt care if they kept all of these criminals in there for every. MAYBE just maybe you wont break the god damn law again.

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  4. humans against injusticeJune 16, 2009 at 1:34 AM

    last comment was stupid. This country has no moral compas anymore. We tend to believe and go along with anything that the authorities tell us. A judge tells you that your a piss of S*** and everyone agrees with him because weve been programed to not question authority in this country. You did break the law, sure, but for the majority of people who break the law it is just something really stupid that they do without thinking, and then have their own lives ruined by a system that is geared to deal with sometimes very distubred people. There are people in this nation who are evil and need to be locked away for good. But in my opinion it all stems from the fact that we live in a nation that could care less about the welfare of its citizens. And for the record, nothing will ever change until we as a nation take back our civil rights, and remove from power all the politicians who only want to make this nation more manageable. Anyone who thinks that we live in a nation of the free is kidding themselves. We live at the mercy of the system.

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  5. It is so ironic that it is stated that "You are innocent until PROVEN guilty". If that statement had ANY truth to it, then there would be NO reason to hold anyone as they went through their trial. However as all things seem to be "things are not always what they appear". What I would like to say is this on this subject: you suffered a horrendous experience and obviously feel very strongly about your experience (after all you have this web site) but you need to take it much farther and find someone or some agency that is willing to take on the Sherriff's Dept. so that they are forced to stop acting the way they do. I know that with the city police if they act inappropriately you can make a formal complaint against the officer(s) or department. This is actually very effective as long as people actually follow through and do not become intimidated not to do so. These complaints go into their files and can prevent them from getting promoted or if say someone tries to sue, they go to the file and see other complaints?? So there are definatly things that we can do to correct this BS, but we must start by getting involved and FOLLOWING THROUGH. If we do not, then they win. That is what they are banking on. People not following through and then they are allowed to continue their haneous behaviour. Good luck to you and your cause.

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  6. WAAAAAHHHHH! Crybaby, don't be a criminal and you don't have to worry about jail. You must be an insufferable asshole or your family would have bailed you out.
    Loser.

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  7. On the female side inmates strip and do a totally nude wiggly floor show for drooling guards.
    Elderly inmates are beaten and denied first aid and medical help when hurt.

    Sybil Brand has basement where mentally ill are placed and they lie in urine and feces.

    Sounds Nazi to me.

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  8. First off, I would like to say that you wrote a brilliant composition. It seems like everything was on point. My best friend is currently at Twin Towers, wrongfully convicted of murder, attempted murder, gang enhancement, basically life for some B.S. he didn't do. He's been in this pathetic system for nearly two years, was NOT provided effective defense by the public defender, and now, we must wait. Wait on a appeal. Pray that it goes through and get it reversed. Anyways, I am really sorry that you had to endure all this pain and unnecessary torture. My best friend has been to every county jail (Men's Central, Wayside, and both Twin Towers) He's been in and out the hole, beaten by guard, forced to go to a mental pod during winter NAKED. I have so many stories to share. If I had the money and the power, God knows what I would be able to do. Seems like that's what it comes down to. MONEY.

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  9. WAAAAAAAHHHH!!! MOMMY HELP ME!!! THE BIG MEN ARE MAKING ME SUCK THEIR DICKS! Actually I kinda like it but 10 at a time is more than my mouth can handle.

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  10. I feel your pain and frustration although the victim was my 18 year old mental ill son. He was arrested at school during a IEP reassessment. He was displaying irratic behaviour so the district called in the crisis intervention team who was accompanied by an officer. Instead of getting mental help... the officer ran his name and an incorrect warrant that the courts failed to remove out of sheer negligence came up and he was immediately a criminal, arrested and taken to twin towers. I had written proof that the warrant had been lifted 6months prior but regardless he had to endure an horrific nightmare for 9days when he was inoccent all along. He was physically, verbally and mentally abused and denied his right to go to court 3times in a row with no explantation. The judge, public defender and family waiting for him in court but he never showed and no explanation was given to us...Little did we know he was denied his right to board the bus. This violation of his civil rights prolonged his torment. The judge immediately released him when he finally made it to court and said she had every intention of doing so on the first scheduled and missed court date. This incident had a detrimental impact on my sons already impaired mental health and caused him to take a turn for the worse. This is just a brief description of all his civil violations, torture and mistreatment of the mentally handicapped citizens. To date after 2years we are still dealing with court. Why dont they just let us live our life and spend the time healing instead of preparing and fighting in court for a crime he originally should have never been sentenced for. Does anyone know where I can receive legal representaion with little to no funds. I dont want this to happen to anyone else and if nothing else my sons story, fight and day in court could possibly help avoid or minimize future victims the denial of their rights and torture from the prison personel...Please help if you can. God Bless and I will put you in my prayers. You will have victory in the sight of God! Peace

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    Replies
    1. Contact American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
      Phone: 213-977-9500, 1313 W. 8th St., Suite 200, Los Angeles, 90017.

      Delete
  11. as a mexican male my chances are really great of going there thank you for writing this article i will now prepare the next generation for the inevitable stay at twin towers

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  12. These animals -- the ones responsible for bastardizing our 4th and 6th amendment rights -- should be strung up be their genitals (if they have any) and smeared with honey before the fire ants are unleashed on them.

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  13. I have a loved one who was just placed there yesterday and unfortunately I have very little money. Do you know of any funds or any program that may assist people? Can you offer me any advice or point me in some direction that may help him? I am terrified after hearing your story! His charges are also extremely trumped up! It sounds like death would be better than what you endured. I am so sorry for your pain. This system must be torn down! This is a democracy?????

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  14. LOCKED UNIVERSE COUNTY JAIL" NOVEL ABOUT STAR-CROSSED LOVE GONE BAD!! http://LcokedUniverseCountyJail.blogspot.com
    THIS NOVEL LOCKED UNIVERSE COUNTY JAIL IS ABOUT STAR CROSSED LOVE GONE BAD, A TRAGIC ROMANCE BETWEEN A DOCTOR'S SON AND A NEIGHBOR UP THE STREET FROM HIM. ALBERT WAS A MAMA'S BOY, QUIET & RESERVED, A VIRGIN. MEETING SENT THEM SPIRALING OUT OF CONTROL ON A ROUGH ROAD AFFAIR TNAT CHANGED THEIR LIVES LIVING THE LOCKED UNIVERSE GONE BAD. ANY NAMES OF REAL PEOPLE IS PURELY FICTIONAL! TOP ONLINE NOVEL TWIN TOWERS COUNTY JAIL STORY OF STAR CROSSED LOVE GONE BAD!

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  15. TWIN TOWERS COUNTY JAIL LOCKED UNIVERSE NOVEL!

    We reached County in record time. There wasn’t any traffic to delay my arrival. The building entrance was ominously scary. Everything had a gray color and looked menacing. They drove to the gate and it swung open invitingly. I walked out into the darkness and was sent right to processing.

    I was led to a chair and told to sit, handcuffs still adorning my very bruised wrists. I was then told to stand by a window where a big fat black officer ordered me to hold out my hand. He scribbled in magic marker some letters I didn’t understand, which immediately reminded me of the tattooed numbers of Jewish prisoners during the Holocaust.

    The officers that brought me in, prepared to leave, but not before the dark haired woman cop came over to me. She stared at me sitting on the chair as I asked her for the umpteenth time if she thought things would be okay for me.

    She reflected a moment, probably debating whether to say anything at all, but replied, “You look like a woman who has gone through a lot and in the end I think you’ll be okay. You’re strong and just got off track. Take care, don’t worry, everything will be okay for you, I know it.” With that last comment the officers left.

    Afterwards everything happened a bit faster. I was led to a room and told to disrobe and put on the two-piece County clothes. I quickly donned the jail clothing and before long I was in the County color of dark blue, even having to put on the ugly white sneaker shoes. I was taken to the next phase, which was much slower. By this time it was way passed 11:00 PM and I was losing hope and very scared. I had never been to County Jail before. THE REST YOU WILL HAVE TO GO TO BLOG TO READ!

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  16. LOCKED UNIVERSE COUNTY JAIL" NOVEL ABOUT STAR-CROSSED LOVE GONE BAD!!!
    THIS NOVEL LOCKED UNIVERSE COUNTY JAIL IS ABOUT STAR CROSSED LOVE GONE BAD, A TRAGIC ROMANCE BETWEEN A DOCTOR'S SON AND A NEIGHBOR UP THE STREET FROM HIM. ALBERT WAS A MAMA'S BOY, QUIET & RESERVED, A VIRGIN. MEETING SENT THEM SPIRALING OUT OF CONTROL ON A ROUGH ROAD AFFAIR TNAT CHANGED THEIR LIVES LIVING THE LOCKED UNIVERSE GONE BAD. ANY NAMES OF REAL PEOPLE IS PURELY FICTIONAL!
    TOP ONLINE NOVEL TWIN TOWERS COUNTY JAIL STORY OF STAR CROSSED LOVE GONE BAD!
    My mind whirled with visions of dropping the soap as I was led down a long florescent lit hallway and into a large elevator to a holding cell where there were at least 25 other woman waiting. I was afraid to look at anyone too long once the guards locked me in with them.

    They all seemed like girls that would slit my throat in an instant, at least at that time. Female deputies were immediately inside barking orders. Some acknowledged women who had already been through the system like old friends at a party. Except this was not a festive occasion. They asked us to straddle the steel bench and look ahead, no talking, of course, which was fine with me. I made sure I was at the end where no one was behind me. We sat a bit longer, a few of the women recognizing each other from other stints in the slammer.

    I spotted a short girl with scars all over her face. She spoke with a deep criminal voice and I didn’t want her noticing me watching. I overheard her talking to another tall gal about what to say during the medical evaluation.

    “You say that you’re very sick and taking all sorts of pills, plus you hear voices,” said the menacing looking woman.

    I took that to heart and realized that it might be easier on me if I did the same to some extent. I took account of my surroundings as the shock wore off a bit.
    After waiting there for what seemed hours, one deputy led us single file, our right shoulders always close to the wall.

    I noticed a blue stripe running to the horizon of the endless hallway, and I did my best to stay in line. I began whispering a tune that shored my fate, “My life is over, my life is done… My life’s over, this is it…”

    I sang it over and over as we walked, hands in pockets, heads down. A short, crass-looking blond woman in front of me turned around and whispered, “No, your life isn’t over!”

    I still sang it over and over. She seemed to get pissed off and told me to shut up. I did, until we reached a large freight elevator. I could hear other deputies joking, their voices echoing like boys taking a shower after a victory football game. I began crying again, until the same woman turned around and gave me a gaze that shut me up.

    “Look,” she said at a hissing whisper, “Your life is not over. Just cool out. It’ll be okay, you’ll see.”

    How could I believe her? It all took on this surreal feeling as the elevator went up. I felt a bit claustrophobic, but knew I had to get a grip. My mind flew to my times with Albert, and I tried to put myself back in the security of his room and arms, but to no avail. I was on the verge of panic when TJ’s stone cold face rose in my mind like a full moon during Halloween.

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  17. We were led out of the elevator and told to walk with hands in pockets, no talking, keeping our right shoulders to the wall the whole time. I noticed repetition was a big part of the jail system, probably instilling order among these chaotic, wayward women housed here. I had long given up the notion that any second someone would pop out and say it was all a gag, maybe a new t.v. show, but that never happened.

    They deposited us into yet another holding tank with more women of all races, sizes, shapes and ages. Once settled in the ugly room with the open toilet I could not imagine using, girls began chatting loudly. Some paced, most slept on the concrete floor, and others sat together exchanging stories of why they were in. That seemed to be the question of the hour.

    I didn’t want to draw attention to myself while assessing my surroundings more closely. To the left there were two very overweight tough looking black women sitting together talking. One lay down and didn’t care that her butt crack was showing. I stared mesmerized, taking a long hard look at her ugly, spotted body. The woman’s face was pitted and scarred. I marveled at how they both were so manly looking. In fact, I would notice many mannish looking gals, some even sporting stubble of a beard. They looked like a tough bunch, but there I was immersed in them.
    Memories of Albert surfaced easily and I wept knowing that whatever we had and were growing with was now dashed into the sewer. I thought of TJ, who was the one that put me in here because of it. I ran the arrest at Albert’s house over and over in my mind, wondering why I admitted wrongdoing. If I hadn’t answered the tall officer, maybe they would have let me go and I'd be in a safe room via Albert’s father, not in a dirty jail. I cursed TJ and myself for letting it get this far. Here I was in jail for being with another man. I saw no light at the end of the tunnel as more women were added to the already overcrowded holding cell.

    Finally, I started walking the perimeter of the room really looking at people. I seemed to start to accept my fate and didn’t see them as dangerous as first thought. They all looked like they’d done a lot of bad things.

    “Yes, I did what I did, but don’t think it was warranted that I be thrown in jail,” I whispered to myself. I still hadn’t spoken to anyone directly as feelings of crushing depression over took my soul. In a span of hours I had lost my boyfriend and, my lover all because of my best friend.

    My thoughts kept flying back to the good times I shared with Albert, TJ and Krista, which was normal. In Albert’s case, I felt like Juliet being wrenched away from Romeo, except I knew I couldn’t kill myself, nor would he. In fact, I got the impression that this incident would plunge Albert back into the reclusive, lonely, solitary man he was when I first met him.

    He had one friend I knew about with the exception of a few cousins on the outskirts that Albert told me about vaguely. He didn’t have a normal social life and spent most of his free time partying, going to Grateful Dead concerts and hanging in his room building speaker components. His seemingly only friend Benny lived with his parents in a house not more than two blocks from Albert. I imagined TJ gloating and angry and doubted things would ever be the same in any area. Things spelled the end of my reactivated, long time friendship with Krista obviously.

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  18. I walked to the corner, sat down in lotus position and actually began doing a little Yoga. That’s when I noticed other ladies looking at me strangely, so I exercised and stretched, trying to feel better, like I wasn’t scared of them.

    “Hey, Blondie,” yelled the big fat black girl. “What’s that you’re doing over there?
    It’s making me nervous.” Her companion, a boyish looking black gal had fallen asleep with her head smashed between the others butt. She cracked open one eye, not even moving. It looked weird, and brought visions of lesbians attacking me in the night. She couldn’t take her steel dark gray one off of me as I did more Yoga contortions in my corner. Finally she turned her head, readjusted herself and went back to sleep. More time passed. I wandered over to another corner and sat quietly crying and looking sad. Next to me there was a pretty, longhaired comely girl, who looked no more than 18. She turned to me and asked, “Hey, you want to talk about it?”

    I gladly accepted her offer and began telling her what happened. She listened attentively and couldn’t believe TJ had the nerve to go so far, but he had, and there I was in County Jail ready to be put in a cell. She told me what went down with her, that her boyfriend had put her in jail for attacking him during an argument. She was so sweet looking and pure faced. It was hard to believe she had done anything wrong. It was then I noticed the other women drawing their attentions to us, wanting to hear more about my story again. So, I related the tale again, more women gathering closer at rapt attention, some asking poignant questions about both Albert and TJ. It was then I realized that I could take the situation and make it better for me by playing the role of the storyteller, which I was always very good at.

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  19. That was an amazing story, but what were you arrested for exactly? It had us curious as you said it would be a misdemeanor in all 49 other states, but I'm just curious as to what the "crime" was?

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  20. Stop B****ing about how horrible jail is. You put yourselves in that position when you chose to break the law. If you were a descent, law abiding citizen you wouldn't have been there to begin with. As for you comparing county jail to Auschwitz....WOW. You have some nerve. Those poor, completely innocent, people didn't commit a crime in order to be sent to a concentration camp. Asshole. Man up and deal with the consequences of your actions.

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  21. You ignorant pieces-of -shit Re the primaru reason this country leads the world in men behind bars. Good going, assholes.

    It's obvoius that your empathy gene is crippled..Sadly, so are you.

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  22. Perhaps the Bastard Baca and His Malignant Minions might get theirs after all.

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  23. For all those assholes (above) who feel that anyone in jail committed a heinous crime and deserves to be tortured in these sewers, try this on: 95% of those in the Los Angeles Country Jail and adjoining Twin Towers have not been convicted of doing ANYTHING. Their crime is to be too poor to post bail while awaiting trail.

    Some people have all the empathy of a Nazi.

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  24. New regime, same bullshit. This place IS a concentration camp.

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