Sarah Jo Pender released from solitary!

bildeAfter spending 1870 days – more than five years – in solitary confinement, Sarah has been moved to a transition dorm where she will have to earn her levels of freedom over the course of 90 days. She will have a roomate during that time.

Sarah Jo’s struggle continues, however, as she attempts to obtain a new trial due to her conviction being based on forged evidence and the testimony of a snitch who, in exchange for testifying against her, received a lenient sentence in his own trial.

Write to Sarah Jo:
Sarah Jo Pender
#953968
IWP IDOC #11
2596 N. Girls School Road
Indianapolis, IN 46214

Sarah Jo’s support site

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February Letter Writing Night for Queer Prisoners

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A monthly letter writing night for queer Indiana prisoners! Come send Valentine’s Day letters/cards to queer and trans people held captive in Indiana prisons. We will provide stamps, stationery, prisoner contacts, information on writing to prisoners, and snacks. All ages welcome.

Wednesday, February 12th
7-10 pm
118 S Rogers St
Bloomington, IN

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Westville Prisoners’ Support

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News & information on the ongoing struggle against IDOC & Aramark

https://dignityatwestville.wordpress.com/

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Love Hangover: A Dance Party Benefit for Luke

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Illegal Queers “Love Hangover” dance party on Saturday, February 15th at The Back Door (207 S. College) to help with legal fees for Luke O’Donovan, who is currently facing 100 years in prison for allegedly defending himself from a queerbashing.

If you cannot come, please consider donating to Luke’s support fund.

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Support Sarah Jo Pender

Sarah Jo Pender is currently serving a 110-year sentence for double homicide. Her conviction, based on forged evidence and the testimony of a snitch who, in exchange for testifying against her, received a lenient sentence in his own trial, has been widely disputed.

In August 2008, Sarah Jo escaped from Rockville Correctional Facility, living on the run until a neighbor snitched her out to the police a few months later.

Since being recaptured, Sarah Jo has been held in solitary confinement, in a concrete cell only 68 square feet. This punishment, which should have lasted a year, has been arbitrarily prolonged, and no date has been set for her release back into general population. In addition, other inmates in the segregation unit have been instructed not to talk to her under threat of punishment, and guards are only allowed to give her orders, and only in the presence of another guard. Sarah Jo has survived (as of January 2014) over 1850 days of brutal isolation.

Innocent or not, no one should be in prison.

PLEASE HELP SARAH JO!

Currently, Sarah and her attorney are attempting to convince Terry Curry, the prosecutor currently in charge of Sarah’s case, to support her release to general population. She is asking people to send letters of support to her lawyer, who will then forward them all to Curry. Please consider writing a letter about why you support Sarah Jo’s release. [Letters/emails should be sent by January 31, 2014]

Send support letters to:
Mr. Terry Curry, Prosecutor
c/o Wieneke Law Office
PO Box 188
Plainfield, IN 46168

Or email a letter to:
cara@wienekelaw.com

WRITE SARAH JO!

Sarah Jo Pender
#953968
IWP IDOC #11
2596 N. Girls School Road
Indianapolis, IN 46214

Helpful links:
Article about isolation units & Sarah Jo
Sarah Jo’s support site
Justice for Sarah Pender facebook

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INDIANA PRISONER SOLIDARITY: Tuesday January 14th, 8am – Emergency Call-in Day

On Monday, January 13th, Indiana prisoners being detained in Westville Correctional Facility began to refuse the nutritionally deficient, unappetizing cold sack lunches they have been forced to endure over the past several months and have issued a call for solidarity. A mass call-in, starting at 8am on Tuesday, January 14th, is being planned to put pressure on IDOC officials and Aramark Correctional Services to reinstitute hot lunch trays.

Why is this happening?

According to “official” sources, the switch to sack lunches was a 90 day test program launched in response to a prisoner’s request to increase recreation and shower time. Overlooking the absurd proposition that a prison would change its food policy based on a prisoner request for extended recreation time, the fact is that since the conversion to sack lunches, recreation and shower time have not increased, and the 90 day trial period has long since passed.

The truth is more likely to be found in the bottom line and Aramark’s business history. In 2005, Aramark Correctional Services (ACS) signed a quarter billion dollar, ten year contract with the Indiana Department of Corrections to provide meals for inmates. Since then, Indiana DOC has saved more than $11 million a year, spending approximately $1.19 per meal/per prisoner.  In other states these savings have been achieved as a result of skimping on food portions and quality. In Florida, an audit of ACS found the company was cutting costs/increasing profits by cutting portions on meals. In Kentucky, similar skimping on portions coupled with a decrease in the quality of food led to food riots in 2009. During the investigation that followed, Aramark refused to provide Kentucky auditors with access to its records, making a claim to their proprietary rights and confidentiality.

Here in Indiana, prisoners are reporting a reduction in portions in everything from peanut butter portions to chicken patties, in the discontinuation of fresh fruit in disciplinary units, and in the replacement of meat with pasta covered in “liquid gravy” or chili composed of “pink slime.” To complicate matters, and make accountability more difficult, different Indiana prisons, and different areas within those prisons, are all receiving different portions and meals. This is Aramark’s mark of business as usual. Let’s let them know we are watching.

On Tuesday, let’s show solidarity and inundate IDOC Commissioner Bruce Lemmon (317) 232-5171 and Aramark Correctional Services (800) 777-7090 with phone calls demanding the return of hot lunch trays for Indiana prisoners.

Write indianaprisonersolidarity@gmail.com with questions or solidarity reports.

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Three new zines posted

We’ve redesigned three health/harm reduction guides to make them more readable and to aid in their distribution to people in prison. Feel free to do whatever you want with them, and please send them to people in prison who may need such resources.

Keeping Fit: A Prisoners’ Guide to Syringe Care
A prison-specific guide to taking care of needles and reducing the risks associated with needle use. Very useful resource for IV drug users and those taking hormones in prison.
Taking Care of Your Body and Mind: A Guide to Safer Cutting
Not prison-specific. A useful guide to harm reduction for cutting, and a list of alternatives.
The TIP Guide to Hormones and Self-Injection
Not prison-specific. A step-by-step guide to injecting hormones.

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January Letter Writing Night for Queer Prisoners

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A monthly letter writing night for queer Indiana prisoners! Come send greetings for the new year to queer and trans people held captive in Indiana prisons. We will provide stamps, stationery, prisoner contacts, information on writing to prisoners, and snacks. All ages welcome.

Wednesday, January 8th
7-10 pm
118 S Rogers St
Bloomington, IN

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December Letter Writing Night for Queer Prisoners

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Another of our monthly letter writing nights for queer Indiana prisoners! Come send holiday greetings to queers behind bars! We will provide stamps, stationery, prisoner contacts, information on writing to prisoners, and snacks. All ages welcome.

Wednesday, December 11th
7-10 pm
118 S Rogers St
Bloomington, IN

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Indiana QPS response to Indiana Daily Student article on Trans Day of Remembrance

(This year’s Transgender Day of Remembrance in Bloomington was full with queer anarchist counter-information, marching, queering of public space, and a noise demonstration at the jail. Two people involved in Indiana Queer Prisoner Solidarity gave speeches at the event, speaking against the police, prisons, capitalism, and the gendered order. The following day, Indiana Daily Student published an article by Matt Bloom, which summarized our speeches as “advocating against violence.” The following is a response.)

We would like to respond to Matt Bloom’s article from November 21, “A life of authenticity.”

The article grossly mischaracterizes the speeches we gave at the event as part of Indiana Queer Prisoner Solidarity. Bloom states that our speeches “advocat[ed] against violence.” Nothing could be further from the truth. Both speeches given by members of Indiana Queer Prisoner Solidarity described, in ways both personal and political, the structural violence done to queer and gender-variant individuals. We, as trans and queer people, know this violence intimately and, yes, we oppose and resist it at every opportunity.

We are not, however, “against violence.” We are against the violence which those in power (the police, the prison authorities, the wealthy) use against oppressed people (poor people, people of color, trans people). We are not opposed to the violence of the oppressed against those who control, exploit, imprison, and murder them. Our speeches made this point very clear. Matt Bloom’s article put our words into a moral framework we oppose. To quote Bernadine Dohrn: “There’s no way to be committed to non-violence in the middle of the most violence society that history has ever created. We’re not committed to non-violence in any way.”

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