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Authors: Maya Schenwar

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Since prisoners’ mail is subject to being read by staff, self-censorship is rule number one for ensuring that a letter reaches its destination. Prison officials in most states are permitted to peruse prisoners’ mail at will,
5
so any letter written to or from prison has got to be composed for multiple audiences. (Kayla once said to me, “The COs really like your letters!”) Each time I receive a letter, I wonder: which parts are really directed at me, and which parts are aimed at an anonymous third party dedicated to searching for what shouldn’t be there, what words shouldn’t be crossing the walls?

Beth Derenne, who co-coordinates the Women’s Prison Book Project, is well schooled in the endeavor of getting not only letters, but
packages
(which are even more regulated and scrutinized) across those walls. I meet up with her in December 2012, at the small, independent Minneapolis bookstore where the project is based. The volunteer-run group collects and sends books to incarcerated women, corresponding with them about what books they’d like to receive. Beth regales me with stories of failed attempts to mail books; one can never tell whether or why a book will be sent back.

“A lot of prisons don’t allow books that discuss sexual assault—so sometimes they’ll even send back classic literature,” Beth says, pointing to a copy of
The Color Purple
by Alice Walker. “This is crazy, because one fourth of incarcerated women have been sexually assaulted. But they can decide anything’s a safety risk.” She ticks off more rules from various prisons on her fingers: no LGBTQ-related books, no activity books, no Harlequin romance novels, no books involving witchcraft (including fiction).
Many of the books the women seek most are prohibited.

A few days later, Beth emails me a list that WPBP has compiled of restrictions at prisons around the country; regulations are always changing, so the project struggles to keep up. Limitations include “No blank journals,” “no outdated magazines,” and “no coloring books.”

A 2011 report from the Texas Civil Rights Project notes that prisoners in that state are permitted to receive white supremacist texts like
Mein Kampf
and the
Aryan Youth Primer
, but can’t receive some books by Henry Louis Gates, Sojourner Truth, Studs Terkel, Noam Chomsky, and Al Sharpton, on the pretext that materials containing racial slurs are prohibited—even if the “slurs” are included because they’re being critiqued.
6
The report states, “The works of some of the finest African American authors, like Richard Wright and Langston Hughes, are banned for frank discussions of race. The context of these works, however, is irrelevant to TDCJ [Texas Department of Criminal Justice] censors.” Also discussed is the banning of self-help books aimed at aiding survivors of sexual abuse in overcoming their trauma.

Sometimes, it seems, the censors just have a really bizarre sense of humor. The crowning rule on Beth’s list: “No crochet books.”

“Ah, the Phones ...”

With illiteracy, censorship, time, and effort making it tough to foster a sustainable relationship through the mail alone, phone calls are precious commodities. The first time Kayla called me from jail, I hung up two seconds in—right after hearing, “You have a collect call ...” (I was clueless, and missed the “... from an inmate at Cook County Jail; press five to accept the call.”) Since then, my family and I have navigated an ongoing maze of different phone plans, call requirements, prepayments, and other
hurdles in order to pay an absurdly large fee to a private company so we can talk to Kayla on the phone for a few minutes when she’s in prison or jail.

This is the story of millions of prisoners’ families’ attempts at communication, except that many are halted halfway through: The costs are simply too high. Family members charged $1 per minute for a call may skip the call altogether, depending on their budget (which, considering the demographics of the prison population, is bound to be very tight). A December 2013 investigation by
Prison Legal News
disclosed some of the motives behind the prices of Inmate Calling Services (ICS), the prison phone company, whose rates

are much higher than non-prison rates, in large part because prison phone companies pay “commission” kickbacks to the corrections agencies with which they contract. Such commissions are usually based on a percentage of the revenue generated from prisoners’ calls and have nothing to do with the actual cost of providing the phone service. Because ICS providers factor commission payments—which currently average 47.79% for state Departments of Corrections (DOCs)—into the phone rates they charge, the rates are artificially inflated.
7

Recently, municipal governments in Chicago and elsewhere have started cracking down and cutting fees for jail calls.
8
The FCC has taken action to reduce the costs of calls across state lines, and some states have reduced their call fees as well. Still, almost every prisoner I’ve spoken with says that costs remain an obstacle for their loved ones.

No one knows the topography of the phone-rate battle better than New Haven, Connecticut, activist Barbara Fair, who regularly
speaks out against the exorbitant fees. Barbara has seven sons (currently all in their thirties and forties), and all of them have been incarcerated at various times. Barbara has lived a breathless juggling act that revolves around the system and its barriers, paying weekly visits to multiple prisons, enduring panic attacks and sleepless nights, and working full time while taking care of the children still at home. The phone calls topped off the mountain of ever-renewing obligations: At one point, when three of her sons were in prison, Barbara’s phone bill totaled out at $400 per month. She tells me that the pileup of fees “caused me to lose phone service many times, trying to stay on top of the monthly bills.” This is an everyday occurrence in poor communities of color like Barbara’s.

Even if the money’s there, a relationship based on prison phone calls is an exercise in messy clairvoyance. The calls pop up unpredictably: prisoners don’t know when they’ll be able to use the phone, and for recipients, it’s often not possible to pick up at the time the phone rings. Even for a work-from-home family member like me, the calls are easy to miss.

When you’re able to catch one, it can be elating: your initial updates spilling out in a rush of pent-up energy, your loved one’s voice audibly lifting at the sound of yours. My calls from Kayla have usually been peppered with frantic choruses of “I love you!” and condensed bursts of affection. “You mean so much to me!” “You’re my best friend!” “You’re
my
best friend!” “I miss you!” “I miss you more!”

Yet no matter how loving or deep your conversation, its parameters—and how little you control them—are never in question. Calls are interspersed with blaring notifications that you’re on the phone with someone in prison. (“Ah, the phones,” writes Abraham Macías, “with their constant interruption that reminds
you and your loved one that they are on the phone with a ‘California inmate’!”) And they’re cut off with barely a warning, often leaving you feeling further apart than you felt before picking up the call.

No One at the Other End

Prisoners quickly learn that even when they’ve surmounted the barriers of cost and restrictions, they still may not be able to make a call—at the drop of a plate, guards can yank phone privileges. David Martinez,* serving a life sentence in Florida, described one such situation: “There was a fight in another unit, nothing to do with the rest of the compound, and the warden decided to lock us all back down,” he wrote me, a few years back. “[The warden] calls all the shots. The complex warden has taken our telephone, kept us on lockdown in our rooms for 24 hours, 7 days a week.” Kayla has experienced the same thing to a lesser degree. Often, when we don’t hear from her while she’s in prison, it’s because of a lockdown spurred by an isolated incident. Wardens may restrict telephone rights (as well as visitation) at will—there are no hearings or trials or appeals when it comes to disciplinary action inside the walls. When someone “acts up”—an action whose definition is usually at the often racist, homophobic, transphobic, politically repressive discretion of the officers—phone privileges are frequently the first to go.

All barriers aside, there’s a nearly insurmountable reason why some prisoners don’t make phone calls: There’s no one left to dial. Mauricio Rueben, a federal prisoner serving a decades-long drug sentence in Texas, ticks off his lost calls in years. His wife of seventeen years divorced him eight and a half years into his incarceration, so that connection dropped off the wires. After ten years, Mauricio says, the “out of sight, out of mind effect” set in, and
friends stopped answering his phone calls. After fifteen years, letters went unanswered, and the only way to contact anyone was by calling persistently. Twenty years in, he says, there’s no one left but his mother and two brothers—and he doesn’t call them often. “When I do call home ... I can sense my family’s hurt and discomfort of me being in here and they not being able to do anything about it,” Mauricio writes to me, adding that a necessary “state of numbness” has conquered both ends of the line. “They are willing to end the call as soon as possible [rather] than to deal with these hard feelings.”

Abraham Macías talks of fellow prisoners who have phone privileges, but no one to call. “There are guys in here that haven’t had a phone call in 20 years,” he says. In order to reach out, prisoners must retain some vestige of connection with someone who’ll accept the call on the other end. They must be able to identify specific people on the outside who are still in their lives—people with whom the ties are strong enough, the relationship copacetic enough, and the money, well,
there
enough to pick up the phone. An endeavor to reach out to new people on the outside—to cast out a line into the unseen larger world—can become a monumental quest. The line has simply gone dead.

“How Do I Compete with Facebook?”

Ironically, over the past thirty years’ incarceration boom, another boom has taken place—in communication technology. The world has exploded with a dizzying swarm of new ways to connect. Yet for many who are locked up, the prison door feels even more tightly shut. It’s a murky equation: Society has evolved to a place where, no matter how far you are from home, you can connect with your loved ones in seconds—if you’ve got the resources. But in order to maintain the prison—an institution that not only isolates,
but also
subtracts
people from society—prisoners must be not only removed from their communities but also cut off from the maze of intricate networks by which contemporary humans exchange information and emotion.

And so, while many on the outside move on from letters and phone calls to social media, email, Skype, texts, and whatever comes next, some incarcerated people still can’t get their hands on an electronic typewriter. Kayla talks about prisoners who haven’t touched a computer—ever. Not all incarcerated people experience technological restrictions in the same way: Federal prisoners and a slowly growing number of state prisoners are able to receive (and sometimes send) emails, for a fee. Like phone services, these limited email systems are operated by private companies and are subject to close surveillance.
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Access to the Internet itself—beyond email—is prohibited.

The ban makes intergenerational contact especially tricky. “Having a teenage daughter ... how do I compete with texting, Facebook and Twitter?” Abraham writes to me. He now hears from his daughter three or four times per year. “I write in hopes to develop some kind of relationship, but I can’t compete with the instant reply that kids are used to these days. The only thing to do is hope my daughter reads my letters and knows my love for her is unconditional.” Abraham acknowledges that aside from his daughter, an Internet connection wouldn’t improve his family relations: Most of his relatives don’t have regular access to a computer.

To be sure, efforts that strain at the seams of this disconnect have existed and evolved since the dawn of the Internet: Many prisoners’ families and outside allies have started up blogs, websites, and Facebook accounts in their names to rally support for them and to give their words an audience. A few sites publish prisoners’
blogs for a broader readership, including Between the Bars, where any prisoner can send entries to be scanned or transcribed and posted, and the Sylvia Rivera Law Project’s blog, which regularly shares uncensored posts sent in by members of the project’s Prisoner Advisory Committee. These types of outlets provide incarcerated people with vital ties to the networked world. Still, they must depend on prison postal mail and the gatekeepers that process it to bring their words to the web.

When I ask Alex Friedmann, the managing editor of
Prison Legal News
and associate director of the Human Rights Defense Center, for the forecast regarding the ongoing Internet ban, he doesn’t predict any changes on the horizon. Alex, who spent ten years in prison and jail himself before his careers in journalism and activism, rattles off a list of logical explanations. “The purported reason is due to security; prison officials don’t want prisoners googling ‘improvised prison weapons’ or ‘how to escape in five easy steps,’ or bringing up the blueprints from the prison where they’re confined,” Alex says. “Other concerns involve searching for contact info to intimidate or threaten witnesses, or coordinate gang activity or other illicit acts via the Internet. More likely, though, is that prison officials don’t want prisoners to be viewing porn sites.” Is this deprivation simply about punishment, or does it aim to restrict specific thoughts and behaviors, stultifying the possibilities of fantasy-based, “virtual” sexual connection, just as physical connections with those outside are severed?

BOOK: Locked Down, Locked Out
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