Nycabc - Political Prisoner List - 8-8nov2013.
Nycabc - Political Prisoner List - 8-8nov2013.
Nycabc - Political Prisoner List - 8-8nov2013.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ANARCHIST MOVEMENT INDIGENOUS RESISTANCE BLACK/NEW AFRIKAN LIBERATION HACKS/INFORMATION LEAKS GREEN SCARE/EARTH LIBERATION/ANIMAL LIBERATION PUERTO RICAN INDEPENDENCE CUBAN FIVE OTHER NATIONAL LIBERATION GI/WAR RESISTERS RADICAL SELF-DEFENSE ANTI-POLICE VIRGIN ISLAND FIVE GET INVOLVED WRITE A LETTER STAYING SAFE 1 6 6 20 21 23 24 25 29 31 32 33 34 34 36
ANARCHIST MOVEMENT
Casey Brezik #1154765
Western Reception and Diagnostic Correctional Center 3401 Faraon St. Joseph, Missouri 64506
In 2010, anarchist Casey Brezik tried to assassinate the governor of Missouri. In June of 2013, he was convicted and sentenced to a dozen years on each of three counts assault and two armed criminal action charges and seven years on a second count of assault. All sentences will run concurrently. Bill Dunne #10916-086
USP Pollock Post Office Box 2099 Pollock, Louisiana 71467
Anti-authoritarian sentenced to 90 years for the attempted liberation of an anarchist prisoner in 1979. The liberation was successful, but Bill was arrested after an exchange of fire with police as they were fleeing the scene. Guillaume Constantineau
No. PAV078829-13, Aile G4 Centre de dtention Montral - Bordeaux 800, boul. Gouin Ouest Montral, QC H3L 1K7 Canada
2010 Toronto G20 protester found guilty of assaulting a peace officer, wearing a disguise with intent to commit an indictable offense and common nuisance.
Youri Couture
No. DRM510047-10, Aile GG1 Centre de dtention Montral - Bordeaux 800, boul. Gouin Ouest Montral, QC H3L 1K7 Canada
NO PHOTO AVAILABLE
2010 Toronto G20 protester found guilty of assaulting a peace officer, wearing a disguise with intent to commit an indictable offense and common nuisance. Christopher French 2012-0522081
Cook County Department of Correction Post Office Box 089002 Chicago, Illinois 60608
A NATO protester, Chris was sentenced to roughly a year in Cook County Jail after he admitted he scuffled with the Chicago Police officers who tried to arrest him during the mass demonstrations. More information: freedomforchris.wordpress.com Gerald Koch #68631-054
MCC New York 150 Park Row New York, New York 10007
Gerald Jerry Koch, a New York City anarchist and legal activist, has been subpoenaed for the second time to a federal grand jury investigating the same event. He was found in contempt of court on May 21, 2013, and is currently being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York. More information: jerryresists.net Marie Mason #04672-061
FMC Carswell Post Office Box 27137 Fort Worth, Texas 76127
Marie Mason is a mother of two, an avid community gardener, a musician, a writer, an Earth First! Organizer, an IWW member, and a volunteer for a free herbal healthcare collective. She also was an extended care assistant at a small Cincinnati school when she was arrested on March 10, 2008 by federal agents. She was convicted of involvement with a December,
1999 arson at a Michigan State University office in which GMO research was being conducted and a January, 2000 arson of logging equipment in Mesick, Michigan. Both arsons were claimed by the Earth Liberation Front. More information: supportmariemason.org Eric McDavid #16209-097
FCI Terminal Island Post Office Box 3007 San Pedro, California 90731
Eric was arrested (along with Zachary Jenson and Lauren Weiner) on January 13, 2006, as part of the governments ongoing Green Scare campaign. All three were charged with Conspiracy to damage and destroy property by fire and an explosive. His arrest was the direct result of a government informant known only as Anna who spent a year and a half drawing him in and working with the FBI to fabricate a crime and implicate Eric in it. Anna was paid over $65,000 for her work with the FBI. Eric was imprisoned for what amounts to thought-crime no actions were ever carried out. One reason for his conviction is that both Zach and Lauren turned snitch. More information: supporteric.org
Cleveland Four
Days before national May Day protests, the FBI announced the arrest of activists on terrorism charges for plotting to destroy a bridge. FBI informants and undercover agents had a heavy hand in creating the alleged plot. More information: cleveland4solidarity.org Brandon Baxter #57972-060
USP Coleman I Post Office Box 1033 Coleman, Florida 33521
Skelly* #57976-060
USP Hazelton Post Office Box 2000 Bruceton Mills, West Virginia 26525
NATO Five
Preemptively arrested on May 16th, 2012 in the lead up to anti-NATO protests in Chicago, the NATO 3 are being charged with conspiracy to commit terrorism, providing material support for terrorism and possession of an explosive incendiary device. Within days of their arrests, two other comrades were arrested independent of one another, though under similar circumstances. Their cases follow a pattern of entrapment and infiltration not uncommon in the states strategy for quelling dissent prior to mass mobilizations and demonstrations. Having finished his prison sentence, the fifth defendant was deported to his native Poland. More information: nato5support.wordpress. com Brent Betterly #2012-0519001
Cook County Department of Correction Post Office Box 089002 Chicago, Illinois 60608
Cook County Department of Correction Post Office Box 089002 Chicago, Illinois 60608
Cook County Department of Correction Post Office Box 089002 Chicago, Illinois 60608
Migs* #M36200
Tinley Park 5
Saturday May 19, 2012 five antifascists were arrested in Tinley Park, a Chicago Suburb, for allegedly assaulting a number of white-supremacist organizers. More information: tinleyparkfive.wordpress.com Cody Sutherlin M34021
Robinson Correctional Center 13423 East 1150th Avenue Robinson, Illinois 62454
Centralia Correctional Center Post Office Box 7711 Centralia, Illinois 62801
East Moline Correctional Center 100 Hillcrest Road East Moline, Illinois 61244
Taylorville Correctional Center Post Office Box 900 Taylorville, Illinois 62568
INDIGENOUS RESISTANCE
Oso Blanco* #07909-051
USP Lee Post Office Box 305 Jonesville, Virginia 24263
Indigenous rights activist serving 80 years for bank robbery, aggravated assault on the FBI, escape and firearms charges. A confidential informant reported that Oso was robbing banks in order to acquire funds to support the Zapatista rebellion in Chiapas, Mexico throughout 1998-99. More information: osoblanco.org Leonard Peltier #89637-132
USP Coleman I Post Office Box 1033 Coleman, Florida 33521
American Indian Movement (AIM) activist, serving two life sentences, having been framed for the murder of two FBI agents. More information: whoisleonardpeltier.info Luis V. Rodriguez #C33000
Salinas Valley State Prison Post Office Box 1020 Soledad, California 93960
Apache/Chicano activist framed for the murder of two cops. More information: luisvrodriguez.com
Mumia is an award winning journalist and was one of the founders of the Black Panther Party chapter in Philadelphia, PA.
He has struggled for justice and human rights for people of color since he was at least 14 years old ~ the age when he joined the Party. In December of 1982, Mumia, who moonlighted by driving a taxi, happened upon police who were beating his brother. During the melee, a police officer was shot and killed. Despite the fact that many people saw someone else shoot and then runaway from the scene, Mumia, in what could only be called a kangaroo court, was convicted and sentenced to death. During the summer of 1995, a death warrant was signed by Governor Tom Ridge, which sparked one of the most effective organizing efforts in defense of a political prisoner ever. Since that time, Mumia has had his death sentence overturned, but is still expected to serve the rest of his life in prison. More information: freemumia.com Sundiata Acoli* #39794-066
FCI Cumberland Post Office Box 1000 Cumberland, Maryland 21501
*Address envelope to Clark Squire.
A New York Black Panther, he endured two years of prison awaiting trial for the Panther 21 Conspiracy Case. He and his comrades were eventually acquitted on all the bogus charges. The case was historic and a classic example of police and government attempting to neutralize organizations by incarcerating their leadership. As a result of this political attack and because of the immense pressure and surveillance from the FBI and local police Sundiata, like many other Panther leaders went underground. On May 2, 1973, Sundiata Acoli, Assata Shakur and Zayd Shakur were ambushed and attacked by state troopers on the New Jersey Turnpike. Assata was wounded and Zayd was killed. During the gun battle a state trooper was shot and killed in self defense. Sundiata was tried in an environment of mass hysteria and convicted, although there was no credible evidence that he killed the trooper or had been involved in the shooting. He was sentenced to thirty years. More information: sundiataacoli.org Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin #99974-555
USP Florence ADMAX Post Office Box 8500 Florence, Colorado 81226
Formerly known as H. Rap Brown, the Imam came to prominence in the 1960s as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Justice Minister of the Black Panther Party.
He is perhaps most famous for his proclamation during that period that violence is as American as cherry pie, as well as once stating that If America dont come around, were gonna burn it down. He is currently serving a life sentence for homicide. Zolo Azania #4969
Miami Correctional Facility 3038 West 850 South Bunker Hill, Indiana 46914
Zolo Azania is a former Black Panther convicted of a 1981 bank robbery that left a Gary, Indiana cop dead. He was arrested miles away from the incident as he was walking, unarmed, down the street. The prosecution intimidated witnesses, suppressed favorable evidence, presented false eyewitness and expert testimony, and denied him the right to speak or present motions in his own behalf. Herman Bell #79-C-0262
Great Meadow Correctional Facility 11739 State Route 22 Post Office Box 51 Comstock, New York 12821-0051
Herman Bell moved to Brooklyn as a boy. He was a talented football player and won a scholarship to UC-Oakland. While in Oakland, Herman joined the Black Panther Party and became active around human rights issues in the Black community. In 1971, due to relentless FBI attacks on the Party, Herman went underground. While underground, Herman joined the Black Liberation Army, and in September of 1973 he was captured and extradited to New York on charges of having killed 2 New York City police officersa case for which other Panthers were serving time. No witnesses were able to put Herman at the scene of the crime. The first trial ended in a hung jury, but Herman was convicted at his second trial and sentenced to 25 years to life. In 1990, he earned his B.S. degree from the SUNY-New Paltz. Herman remains a prison activist, having coached sports teams inside the prison system, as well as mentoring younger prisoners. More information: freehermanbell.org
Joseph Joe-Joe Bowen is one of the many all-but-forgotten frontline soldiers in the liberation struggle. A native of Philadelphia, Joe-Joe was a young member of the 30th and Norris street gang before his incarceration politicized him. Released in 1971, his outside activism was cut short a week following his release when Joe-Joe was confronted by an officer of the notoriously brutal Philadelphia police department. The police officer was killed in the confrontation, and Bowen fled. After his capture and incarceration, Bowen became a Black Liberation Army combatant, defiant to authorities at every turn. In 1973, Joe-Joe and Philadelphia Five prisoner Fred Muhammad Burton assassinated Holmesberg prisons warden and deputy warden as well as wounded the guard commander in retaliation for intense repression against Muslim prisoners in the facility. In 1981, Bowen led a six-day standoff with authorities when he and six other captives took 39 hostages at Graterford Prison as a freedom attempt and protest of the prison conditions. Much of his time in prison has been spent in and out of control units, solitary confinement, and other means of isolating Joe-Joe from the general prison population. These include three trips to Marion Penitentiary, where he met Sundiata Acoli and other BLA members. He is legendary to many prisoners as a revolutionary. I used to teach the brothers how to turn their rage into energy and understand their situations, Bowen told the Philadelphia Inquirer in 1981. I dont threaten anybody. I dont talk to pigs. I dont drink anything I cant see through and I dont eat anything off a tray. When the time comes, Ill be ready. Veronza Bowers, Jr. 35316-136
USP Atlanta Post Office Box 150160 Atlanta, Georgia 30315
Veronza was a member of the Black Panther Party and was convicted in the murder of a U.S. Park Ranger on the word of two government informants, both of whom received reduced sentences for other crimes by the Federal prosecutors office. There were no eye-witnesses and no evidence
independent of these informants to link him to the crime. At his trial, Veronza offered alibi testimony which was not credited by the jury. Nor was testimony of two relatives of the informants who insisted that they were lying. The informants had all charges against them in this case dropped and one was given $10,000 by the government according to the prosecutors post-sentencing report. Veronza has consistently proclaimed his innocence of the crime he never committed, even at the expense of having his appeals for parole denied for which an admission of guilt and contrition is virtually required. He insists on maintaining his innocence. More information: veronza.org Muhammad Burton* AF3896
SCI Somerset 1590 Walters Mill Road Somerset, Pennsylvania 15510-0001
*Address envelope to Fred Burton.
Frederick Burton is an innocent man who has diligently attempted to prove his innocence to the courts for the past 37 years. Prior to his incarceration, Fred worked for a phone company, was a well respected member of his community and his wife was preparing to have twins, his third and fourth child. In 1970, Fred was accused and then convicted of participating in the planning of the murder of Philadelphia police officers. While the plan was allegedly to blow up a police station, what occurred was that a police officer was shot and killed allegedly by members of a radical group called the Revolutionaries. Marshall Eddie Conway #116469
Patuxentl Institution Post Office Box 700 Jessup, Maryland 20794
In 1970, Marshall Eddie Conway was Minister of Defense of the Baltimore chapter of the Black Panther Party. He was also employed by the United States Postal Service. Unbeknownst to Conway, some of the founding members of the Baltimore chapter were undercover officers with the Baltimore Police Department, who reported daily on his activities in the chapter. At the same time, the Federal Bureau of Investigation began its own investigation of Conway, recording his whereabouts, contacting his employers at the Post Office and maintaining liaison with the Baltimore Police
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Department. On April 23, 1970, a Baltimore Police officer was shot and killed. Later that night, another officer named Nolan was fired upon by an unapprehended Black male. Two men arrested at the scene of the first shooting were allegedly associates of members of the Baltimore BPP chapter. Because of this, the police attributed both incidents to the BPP. Not surprisingly, Nolan then claimed that a picture of Conway, a well-known BPP member, resembled the unapprehended shooter. The next day, Conway was arrested while working at the Post office. He was charged with both the homicide and the attempted homicide of Nolan. More information: freeeddieconway.org Chip Fitzgerald* #B-27527
Kern Valley State Prison Post Office Box 5104 Delano, California 93216
Romaine Chip Fitzgerald, born and raised in Compton, California, joined the Southern California Chapter of the Black Panther Party in early 1969 as a teenager who had just been released from the California Youth Authority. In September of that year, as a dedicated member of the Party, Chip was arrested in connection with a police shoot-out and tried for assault on police and related charges, including the murder of a security guard. He was sentenced to death. More information: freechip.org Robert Seth Hayes #74-A-2280
Sullivan Correctional Facility Post Office Box 116 Fallsburg, New York 12733-0116
After the assassination of Martin Luther King and the social upheaval which followed it, Robert Seth Hayes joined the Black Panther Party, working in the Partys free medical clinics and free breakfast programs. Like many other activists, Seth was forced underground by FBI and police repression of the Panther movement. Once underground, Seth joined the Black Liberation Army. In 1973, following a shootout with police, Seth was arrested and convicted of the murder
of a New York City police officer, and, while maintaining his innocence to this day, sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. Imprisoned for nearly forty years, Seth has long since served his sentence. Seth first came up for parole in 1998, but prison officials have refused to release him, focusing on his involvement with the Black Panther Party and his knowledge as to the whereabouts of Assata Shakur and not his conduct while imprisoned. While in prison, Seth has worked as a librarian, pre release advisor, and AIDS councilor, mentoring younger prisoners and continuing to struggle for his people. More information: kersplebedeb.com/sethhayes Sekou Kambui* #113058
Bibb Correctional Facility 565 Bibb Lane Brent, Alabama 35034
Sekou Cinque T.M. Kambui is a New Afrikan political prisoner currently serving two consecutive life sentences for crimes he did not commit. Sekou has already spent twenty years of his life behind bars on trumped up charges of murdering two white men in Alabama in 1975. Sekou is of Afrikan and Cherokee heritage, born on September 6, 1948 in Gadsden, Alabama. He was raised by his mother, grandparents and aunt in Detroit, Harlem, New York, and Birmingham, Alabama, respectively. Throughout the 1960s, Sekou participated in the Civil Rights movement, organizing youth for participating in demonstrations and marches across Alabama and providing security for meetings of the Southern Christian Leadership Council (SCLC), Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), and the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Sekou is a paralegal professional and has been an active jailhouse lawyer and prisoners rights activist for more than 20 years. Sekou became affiliated with the Black Panther Party in 1967 in Chicago and New York. While in Detroit, he became a member of the Republic of New Afrika, before returning to Birmingham. Back in Alabama, Sekou coordinated community organization activity with the Alabama Black Liberation Front, the Inmates for Action (IFA) Defense Committee and the Afro- American Peoples Party in the mid 1970s. Sekou was also a soldier in the Black Liberation Army (BLA) during these years before his capture. On January 2, 1975, Sekou was captured in north
Birmingham for allegedly running a yield sign and/or speeding. During this stop, a 9mm pistol was found in the car lying between the front seats. Subsequent investigation by police on the scene discovered that the pistol was listed as stolen during a Tuscaloosa, Alabama murder. More information: j.mp/SekouKambui Maliki Shakur Latine # 81-A-4469
Clinton Correctional Facility Post Office Box 2000 Dannemora, New York 12929
In his early years, Maliki Shakur Latine joined the Nation of Islam and began confronting societys oppressive forces. By 1969, Maliki joined the Black Panther Party. The discipline was not as rigid as in the Nation, but it contained the basic elements of discipline Maliki sees as essential to any effective revolutionary organization. Maliki began taking political education classes and transforming the theoretical ideals of the Panthers into daily practice. Like many Panthers targeted by the U.S. government, Maliki found himself behind prison bars. Upon his release, Maliki found that government repression forced many Panthers underground. Maliki followed suit and spent eight years as a Black Liberation Army soldier. On July 3rd, 1979, NYPD pulled over a car they suspected stolen. Approaching the car, guns drawn, the cops opened fire. All four occupants escaped, though one of them, and one cop, were injured. Prosecutors claimed fingerprint evidence against Maliki and a codefendant, but no eye witnesses could place him at the scene. Following a clear pattern in cases regarding Panthers, Maliki was found guilty, sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. He has consistently been denied parole, primarily due to his past political affiliations. More information: j.mp/MalikiLatine Ruchell Magee* #A92051
California State Prison D-5 #113 Post Office Box 4670 Los Angeles County Lancaster, California 93539
*Address card/letter to Cinque.
Ruchell Cinque Magee is the longest held political prisoner in the U.S., having been locked up since 1963. Politicized in prison, he
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later participated in the Marin Countyh Courthouse Rebellion, the attempted liberation of political prisoner Johnathan Jackson. He has worked tirelessly as a jailhouse lawyer, working on his own case and helping many other prisoners win their freedom. Abdul Majid #83-A-0483
Elmira Correctional Facility Post Office Box 500 1879 Davis Street Elmira, New York 14902-050
In 1968, Abdul Majid joined the Black Panther Party, having been previously active with the Grass Roots Advisory Council. Abdul was involved in many of the community-based projects of the BPP including the free health clinic and free breakfast for children program. After the Party was destroyed by the U.S. government, Abdul continued his political work as a paralegal with Bronx Legal Services. On April 16th, 1981 a van was pulled over by NYPD. Two occupants exited the van and fired upon the copsone was killed, the other injured. Despite claims by the police that the van was pulled over for connections to burglaries, the folder of suspects circulated by the cops exclusively consisted of former Panthers, not burglary suspects. Abdul and his co-defendant, Bashir Hameed were arrested and tried three times. The first trial ended in a hung jury. The second trial was declared a mistrial by the judge immediately after the jury rendered a decision that acquitted Bashir on the murder charge. At a third trial, the state finally got its way Abdul was convicted of murder and sentenced to 33 years to life. Jalil Muntaqim* #77-A-4283
Attica Correctional Facility Post Office Box 149 Attica, New York 14011-0149
*Address envelope to Anthony Bottom.
Jalil became affiliated with the Black Panther Party at age 18. Less than 2 months before his 20th birthday he was captured with Albert Nuh Washington in a midnight shootout with San Francisco police. He was subsequently charged with a host of revolutionary activities including the assassination of two police in New York City. It is for this that he is currently serving a 25 years to life sentence in New York State. His case is known as the New York 3 case as his co-defendants include Nuh and Herman Bell. He was also implicated in the San Francisco 8 case, and pled
Sekou was forced into hiding in 1969 when he and twenty other Black Panther Party members were wrongly charged with criminal conspiracy in the NY Panther 21 case. Several months later, while still underground, he traveled to Algeria to establish an international chapter of the Black Panther Party. Later, Sekou became an activist in the New Afrikan Independence Movement and a member of the Black Liberation Army. On October 23, 1981, Sekou and Mtyari Shabaka Sundiata were ambushed by the NYC police and FBI agents. The police murdered Mtyari. Sekou was eventually captured, tortured, and eventually charged with the liberation of Assata Shakur and the expropriation of money from an armored car. Sekou was convicted of two federal charges under the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organization (RICO) Act and was sentence to forty years imprisonment and a $50,000 fine. He was also convicted of six state counts of attempted murder steaming form the defense of himself and Mtyari during the police attack in 1981. For this he was sentenced to concurrent life sentences. More information: sekouodinga.com Ronald Reed #2195311
Minnesota Correctional Facility-Oak Park Heights 5329 Osgood Avenue North Stillwater, Minnesota 55082-1117
Ronald Reed, a former member of the Black United Front, was convicted of the 1970 shooting of a St. Paul police officer. Twenty-five years after the killing, Reed was arrested and convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first degree-murder. He is serving Life in prison. Reed is a former 60s civil rights activist. In 1969, Reed was also among the students at St. Paul Central High School who demanded black history courses and organized actions against racist teachers. He was also instrumental in helping to integrate college campuses in Minnesota. During this period, Reed began to look toward revolutionary theory and began to engage in political street theater with other young black revolutionaries in the city of St. Paul. More information: j.mp/RonaldReed 15
Kamau Sadiki is a former member of the Black Panther Party and was convicted of a 30-year old murder case of a Fulton County Police Officer found shot to death in his car outside a service station. More information: freekamau.org Dr. Mutulu Shakur #83205-012
USP Victorville Post Office Box 3900 Adelanto, California 92301
In 1987 Dr. Shakur was sentenced to 60 years imprisonment for his role in the Black Liberation Movement. In March 1982, Dr. Shakur and 10 others were indicted by a federal grand jury under a set of U.S. conspiracy laws called Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization (RICO) laws. These conspiracy laws were ostensibly developed to aid the government in its prosecution of organized crime figures; however, they have been used with varying degrees of success against revolutionary organizations. Dr. Shakur was charged with conspiracy and participation in the Black Liberation Army, a group that carried out actual and attempted expropriations from several banks. Eight incidents were alleged to have occurred between December 1976 to October 1981. In addition, he was charged with participation in the 1979 prison escape of Assata Shakur, who is now in exile in Cuba. After five years underground, Dr. Shakur was arrested on February 12, 1986. While he was on the street, Dr. Shakur challenged the use of methadone as a tool of recovery for addicts. He believed in natural remedies instead and, based on those beliefs, founded the Black Acupuncture Advisory Association of North America. Many people credit Shakur with saving their lives. Dr. Shakur has worked to free political prisoners and to expose government abuses against political organizers. While in prison, he has struggled to create peace between rival gangs. More information: mutulushakur.com
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A dedicated community activist and founding member of the Philadelphia based organization Black Unity Council, which eventually merged with the Black Panther Party (1969). In 1970, along with 5 others, Maroon was accused of attacking a police station, which resulted in an officer being killed. This attack was said to have been carried out in response to the rampant police brutality in the Black community. For 18 months Maroon functioned underground as a soldier in the Black Liberation Army. In 1972 he was captured. Twice he escapedonce in 1977 and again 1980, but both times he was recaptured and today he is held in a control unit in Pennsylvania where he is serving multiple life sentences. More information: russellmaroonshoats.wordpress.com Gary Tyler #84156
Louisiana State Penitentiary ASH-4 Angola, Louisiana 70712
On 7 October 1974 students at Destrehan High School, St Charles Parish, Louisiana, were sent home earlier than usual due to racial disturbances during the day. As the buses carrying black students back to their homes were leaving the school they were attacked by a group of 100 to 200 white people throwing stones and bottles at the buses. Shots were allegedly fired from inside the bus and one person was killed. Gary Tyler, after complaining about police harassment of other Black students, was put inside a police car and eventually arrested. Police thoroughly searched the bus and found no weapon. It was not until days later that cops allegedly found a .45 caliber pistol in the seat where Tyler was sitting. This was enough evidence to convict Tyler. More information: freegarytyler.com
Angola Three
The Angola 3 are three black liberationists that while inside prison, contact with members of the Black Panthers led to the creation of a prison chapter of the Black Panther Party in 1971. The men then organized prisoners to build a movement within the walls to
desegregate the prison, to end systematic rape and violence, for better living conditions, and worked as jailhouse lawyers helping prisoners file legal papers. They organized multiple strikes and sit-ins for better conditions. Woodfox and Wallace were convicted of the 1972 stabbing murder of 23-year-old prison guard Brent Miller. The third member of the Angola 3, Robert King Wilkerson, has been released. On October 4th, 2013, due to complications from late stage liver cancer, Herman Wallace died. He died a free man after spending an unimaginable 41 years in solitary confinement. A federal judge ruled that he be released a mere three days before his death. More information: angola3.org Shaka Cinque* #72148 David Wade Correctional Center - N1A 670 Bell Hill Road Homer, Louisiana 71040
*Address envelope to Albert Woodfox.
MOVE Nine
MOVE is a radical ecological movement that has been attacked by the Philadelphia Police since its inception. Nine members were convicted and sent to prison for life following a 1978 siege at their house in which one cop was killed by another cop. One of those nine, Merle Africa, died in prison after being denied medical treatment. More information: onamove.com Charles Sims Africa #AM4975
SCI Retreat 660 State Route 11 Hunlock Creek, Pennsylvania 18621
SCI Cambridge Springs 451 Fullerton Avenue Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania 16403
SCI Cambridge Springs 451 Fullerton Avenue Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania 16403
SCI Cambridge Springs 451 Fullerton Avenue Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania 16403
Nebraska Two
The Nebraska 2 were charged and convicted of the murder of Omaha Police Officer Larry Minard. Minard died when a suitcase containing dynamite exploded in a North Omaha home on August 17, 1970. Officer John Tess was also injured in the explosion. Poindexter and Rice were members of the Black Panther Party, and their case was, and continues to be, controversial. The Omaha Police withheld exculpatory evidence at trial. The two men had been targeted by the FBIs COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Program), which operated against and infiltrated anti-war and Civil Rights groups, including the Omaha Black Panthers. The US section of Amnesty International recognizes Rice and Poindexter as political prisoners. The states parole board has recommended the men for release, but political leaders have not acted on these recommendations. More information: n2pp.info
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Ed Poindexter #27767
Nebraska State Penitentiary Post Office Box 2500 Lincoln, Nebraska 68542
HACKS/INFORMATION LEAKS
Barrett Brown #45047-177
FCI Seagoville Post Office Box 9000 Seagoville, Texas 75159-9000
In the first week of October 2012, Barrett was indicted on three counts related to alleged activities or postings on popular websites such as Twitter and YouTube. On December 4, 2012 Barrett was indicted by a federal grand jury on twelve additional counts related to data from the Stratfor information leak, carried out by hackers from Anonymous and LulzSec. Despite his lack of direct involvement in the operation and stated opposition to it, he faces these charges for allegedly pasting a hyperlink online. On January 23rd, 2013 he was indicted a third time on two more counts, relating to the March 2012 FBI raid(s) on his apartment and his mothers house. More information: freebarrettbrown.org Jeremy Hammond #18729-424
MCC New York 150 Park Row New York, New York 10007
A genuinely conscious web developer, Jeremy Hammond is accused of using his computer savvy to attack conservative groups and State operators. He is being charged with providing Wikileaks the documents for their latest Stratfor release as a member of both
the Lulzsec and Anonymous hacker groups. More information: freehammond.com Chelsea Manning* 89289
1300 North Warehouse Road Fort Leavenworth, Kansas 66027-2304
*Address envelope to Bradley E. Manning.
On April 4, 2010, whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks published a classified video of a United States Apache helicopter firing on civilians in New Baghdad in 2007. In late July 2010, the U.S. Military alleged that Manning was the chief suspect in the Afghan Diaries leak of U.S. Military combat and incident reports from the occupation of Afghanistan. The Afghan Diaries is the largest collection of leaked intelligence records in U.S. history, and details what Wikileaks and others have described as countless war crimes by U.S. and NATO forces. On August 21, 2013, Pvt. Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison. More information: bradleymanning.org
Walter Bond is an Animal Liberation Front (ALF) member imprisoned for the arson of the Sheepskin Factory in Denver, Colorado, the Tandy Leather Factory & the Tiburon Restaurant in Sandy, Utah (which sold Foie Gras). He pleaded guilty and received a total of 12 years and 4 months. His anticipated release date is 3/21/2021. More information: supportwalter.org Steve Murphy #39013-177
FCI Three Rivers Post Office Box 4200 Three Rivers, Texas 78071
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(ELF) action in Pasadena, California. The action involved decommissioning a tractor and placing an incendiary device in a housing development construction site. His anticipated release date is 12/11/2013. More information: supportsteve.org Rebecca Rubin #770288
Multnomah County Detention Center 1120 SW 3rd Avenue Portland, Oregon 97204
Rebecca Rubin pleaded guilty to a series of Earth Liberation Front (ELF) actions including the arson of the Vail Ski Resort Expansion and US Forest Industries. She also participated in the liberation of horses and the arson of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Wild Horse Facilities in Litchfield, California and Burns, Oregon. She is facing between 5-7.5 years at a January 2014 sentencing. More information: http://earthfirstjournal.org/eco-prisoner-list Justin Solondz #98291-011
FCI Loretto Post Office Box 1000 Loretto, Pennsylvania 15940
Justin Solondz pleaded guilty to conspiracy and arson for his involvement in the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) arson of the University of Washingtons Center for Urban Horticulture in 2001 and the Romania Chevrolet dealership in Eugene, Oregon. Justin was imprisoned in China for three years prior to extradition. His anticipated release date is 9/23/2017. More information: http://earthfirstjournal.org/eco-prisoner-list Brian Vaillancourt#2013-0209249
Cook County Department of Corrections Post Office Box 089002 Chicago, Illinois 60608
Brian Vaillancourt was arrested in February 2013 in Chicago for allegedly trying to burn down a McDonalds. He is currently being held in the Cook County Jail on $250,000 bond and facing 30 years for attempted arson. More information: http://earthfirstjournal.org/eco-prisoner-list
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Kevin Olliff
Kevin Olliffs car was searched against the will of Kevin and his co-defendant in rural Illinois in August 2013. The police allegedly found bolt cutters, wire cutters, muriatic acid, ski masks, and camouflage clothing and asserted these items were burglary tools. There is no evidence linking him to any crime or intended crime. The Woodford county jail instituted a book ban for all prisoners and made getting vegan food difficult until outside pressure was applied to have both lifted. In early November, 2013, Kevins codefendant reached a non-cooperating plea agreement and was released on time served. Kevins trial is set for late November 2013. More information: supportkevinandtyler.com Kevin Olliff* #4565
Woodford County Jail 111 East Court Street Eureka, Illinois 61530
On May 10th, 2011, the FBI arrested Avelinos 65-year-old brother, Norberto Claudio Gonzlez on charges dating back to 1983, also related to the Wells Fargo armored truck expropriation. In poor health, Norberto is continually moved and difficult to track on the Bureau of Prisons website. He was recently sentenced to five years in federal prison. More information: prolibertadweb.org/norberto-gonzalez-claudio Oscar Lpez Rivera #87651-024
FCI Terre Haute Post Office Box 33 Terre Haute, Indiana 47808
Oscar Lpez-Rivera was born in San Sebastian, Puerto Rico on January 6, 1943. At the age of 12, he moved to Chicago with his family. He was a well-respected community activist and a prominent independence
leader for many years prior to his arrest. Oscar was one of the founders of the Rafael Cancel Miranda High School, now known as the Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos High School and the Juan Antonio Corretjer Puerto Rican Cultural Center. He was a community organizer for the Northwest Community Organization (NCO), ASSPA, ASPIRA and the 1st Congregational Church of Chicago. He helped to found FREE, (a half-way house for convicted drug addicts) and ALAS (an educational program for Latino prisoners at Stateville Prison in Illinois). He was active in various community struggles, mainly in the area of health care, employment and police brutality. He also participated in the development of the Committee to Free the Five Puerto Rican Nationalists. In 1975, he was forced underground, along with other comrades. He was captured on May 29, 1981, after 5 years of being persecuted by the FBI as one of the most feared fugitives from US justice. More information: boricuahumanrights.org Kojo Bomani Sababu* #39384-066
USP McCreary NO PHOTO AVAILABLE Post Office Box 3000 Pine Knot, Kentucky 42635
*Address envelope to Grailing Brown
One of four members of the Puerto Rican independence group FALN convicted of conspiracy in a failed 1986 attempt to free the Oscar Lopez Rivera from prison.
CUBAN FIVE
The Cuban Five are five Cuban men who are in U.S. prison, serving four life sentences and 75 years collectively, after being wrongly convicted in U.S. federal court in Miami, on June 8, 2001. The Five were falsely accused by the U.S. government of committing espionage conspiracy against the United States, and other related charges. But the Five pointed out vigorously in their defense that they were involved in monitoring the actions of Miami-based terrorist groups, in order to prevent terrorist attacks on their country of Cuba. The Fives actions were never directed at the U.S. government. They never harmed anyone nor ever possessed nor used any weapons while in the United States. For more than 40 years, anti-Cuba terrorist organizations based in Miami have engaged in countless terrorist activities against Cuba, and against anyone who advocates a normalization of relations between the U.S. and Cuba. More than 3,000 Cubans have
died as a result of these terrorists attacks. Terrorist Miami groups like Comandos F4 and Brothers to the Rescue operate with complete impunity from within the United States to attack Cubawith the knowledge and support of the FBI and CIA. Therefore, Cuba made the careful and necessary decision to send the Five Cubans to Miami to monitor the terrorists. The Cuban Five infiltrated the terrorist organizations in Miami to inform Cuba of imminent attacks. More information: freethefive.org Fernando Gonzalez* #58733-004
FCI Safford Post Office Box 9000 Safford, Arizona 85548
Gilbert was a founding member of Columbia University Students for a Democratic Society and member of The Weather Underground Organization. After eleven years underground, he was arrested in
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1981, along with members of the Black Liberation Army and other radicals, after they killed two police officers and a security guard in the course of an armored car robbery. Gilbert was tried and convicted for his part in their deaths and is now serving a 75 yearsto-life sentence for his role in the robbery. More information: j.mp/DavidGilbert_PP Alvaro Luna Hernandez #255735
Hughes Unit Route 2, Box 4400 Gatesville, Texas 76597
A community organizer from Texas. Police informants were used to monitor Alvaros organizing activites in the barrio. They were told Alvaro was typing legal papers, had many books and was working on police brutality cases in Alpine. The police knew of Alvaros history of community-based organizing and his legal skills. Alvaro was recognized nationally and internationally as the national coordiantor of the Ricardo Aldape Guerra Defense Committee, which led the struggle to free Mexican national Aldape Guerra from Texas death row after being framed by Houston police for allegedly killing a cop. Alvaros human rights work was recognized in Italy, France, Spain, Switzerland, Mexico and other countries. He was sentenced in Odessa, Texas on June 2-9, 1997 to 50 years in prison for defending himself by disarming a police officer drawing a weapon on him. The trial evidence clearly showed Alvaro was the victim of witchhunts and a police-orchestrated conspiracy to frame or eliminate him. More information: freealvaro.net Hugo Pinell #A88401
Pelican Bay State Prison Post Office Box 7500 Crescent City, California 95531
While Pinell was imprisoned in San Quentin State Prison he made contact with revolutionary prisoners such as George Jackson, one of the Soledad Brothers and W.L. Nolen. On August 21, 1971, there was a prisoner uprising in Pinells housing unit at San Quentin, led by George Jackson. On August 21, 1971, Jackson used a pistol to take over his tier in the Adjustment Center. At the end of the roughly 30 minute rebellion, guards had killed George Jackson, and two other prisoners and three guards were dead. Of the remaining prisoners in the unit, six of them, including Pinell,
were put on trial for murder and conspiracy. They were known as The San Quentin Six. Three of them were acquitted of all charges, and three were found guilty of various charges. Pinell was convicted of assault on a guard. Although Pinell was convicted of assault, and another of the San Quentin Six had a murder conviction, only Pinell remains. More information: hugopinell.org Tsutomu Shirosaki #20924-016
FCI Yazoo City Post Office Box 5000 Yazoo City, Missouri 39194
Tsutomu Shirosaki is a Japanese national imprisoned as a political prisoner in the United States. He has been accused of being a member of Japanese Red Army and participating in several attacks, including a mortar attack against a U.S. embassy. He is currently serving 30-years in a U.S Federal prison. during his college years, where Tsutomu began participating in the student movement, embracing a more left-wing philosophy. By the 1970s, Shirosaki participated in various underground activities, including a string of bank and post office robberies. These actions were fundraising activities for Japanese radical groups. But in 1971, Shirosaki was arrested in Tokyo and sentenced to ten years in prison for an attack on a Bank of Yokohama branch office. While acknowledging his radical philosophy and actions, Shirosaki maintains the assertion that he was never a member of the Japanese Red Army. Lynne Stewart #53504-054
FMC Carswell Post Office Box 27137 Fort Worth, Texas 76127
Veteran New York criminal defense attorney Lynne Stewart was sentenced to 28 months in prison in the Southern District of New York for providing material support to the Gamaa Islamiya, which is on the Bush administrations list of terrorist organizations. Stewart is counsel for Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind Sheik. In 1995, Rahman was convicted of conspiracy to bomb New York City landmarks. More information: lynnestewart.org
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Jaan was raised in Roxbury, Massachusetts and Buffalo, New York. His family immigrated to the United States from Estonia when he was a child. He is currently serving a 53 year prison sentence for his role in the bombings of United States government buildings while a member of the United Freedom Front, an American leftist group which robbed banks, bombed buildings, and attacked law enforcement officers in the 1980s. In the 1960s Laaman worked with Students for a Democratic Society, a community organization that advocated against the Vietnam War and racism. He facilitated youth development in the Black Panther Party and the Puerto Rican Young Lords street gang. In 1972 he was arrested and charged with bombing a Richard Nixon reelection headquarters building and a police station in New Hampshire and was sentenced to 20 years. However, he was released in 1978. In 1979 he and Kazi Toure helped to organize the Amandla Festival of Unity to support an end to apartheid in Southern Africa, which featured musician Bob Marley. He was eventually caught with several other members of the United Freedom Front, referred to as the Ohio 7, including leader Tom Manning in 1984. While originally charged with seditious conspiracy, Laaman was found guilty of five bombings, one attempted bombing, and criminal conspiracy, and sentenced to 53 years in prison. More information: freejaan.blogspot.com Thomas Manning #10373-016
FMC Butner Post Office Box 1600 Butner, North Carolina 27509
Born to a Boston postal clerk, Thomas Tom William Manning is known for his involvement in the killing of a police officer during a routine traffic stop, and for his involvement with the United Freedom Front (UFF) who bombed a series of US military and commercial institutes in the 1970s and early 1980s. As a youth, he shined shoes and raised pigeons, before finding work as a stock boy. He joined the US Military in 1963, and the following year was stationed at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba before being transferred off to spend the following year in the Vietnam War. Some time shortly after 1965, he
was sentenced by a Massachusetts state court to five years in prison for armed robbery and assault, serving the last ten months in Massachusetts Correctional Institution - Cedar Junction. He claims it was during these years that he became heavily politicized, through his interactions with other prisoners. After his release in 1971, he married Carol and together they produced three children, Jeremy, Tamara, and Jonathan. Together with his arrest for the bombings, Manning was also convicted for his role in killing New Jersey police officer Philip Lamonaco during a traffic stop on December 21 1981. The killings launched the largest manhunt in NJ police history and ended with the arrests of Ray Levasseur, Patricia Gross, Richard Williams, Jaan Laamnan, and Barbara Curzi on November 4th, 1984, and Manning and his wife Carol on April 24, 1985. All of them were associated with the United Freedom Front. Manning pled self defense at his trial, while defense counsel showed that Lamonaco had emptied his .357 revolver at Manning and his associates. He was sentenced on February 19, 1987 to 58 years in federal prison. More information: oocities.org/tom-manning
GI/WAR RESISTERS
Dr. Abdelhaleem Ashqar
FCI Petersburg Low Post Office Box 1000 Petersburg, Virginia 23804
Jurors acquitted Ashqar of conspiracy to commit, but he was still sentenced to 11 years and 3 months in prison for refusing to testify before a grand jury that was investigating money-laundering and non-profits funding terrorist organizations. These charges are broad sweeping and are the same types of charges brought against Rafil Dhafir. Rafil A. Dhafir #11921-052
FMC Devens Post Office Box 879 Ayer, Massachusetts 01432
Dr. Rafil A. Dhafir is an Iraqi-born American physician, who was sentenced on October 28, 2005, to 22 years in prison for violating the Iraqi sanctions by sending money to Iraq through his charity front Help the Needy, and for fraud, money laundering, tax evasion, and a variety of other nonviolent crimes.
Five other people, including his wife, had already pleaded guilty to charges in connection with the case. Dr. Dhafir is believed to be the only U.S. citizen currently imprisoned for violating the sanctions on Iraq. More information: dhafirtrial.net Shakir Hamoodi #21901-045
USP Leavenworth Post Office Box 1000 Leavenworth, Kansas 66048
Shakir agreed to a plea agreement for one count of violating 19912003 U.S. sanctions by providing personal charity for family and friends living in Iraq. He was sentenced to three years, with an expected release date in April 2015. More information: helphamoodi.org Norman Edgar Lowry Jr. KN 9758
SCI Dallas 1000 Follies Road Dallas, Pennsylvania 18612
Norman was sentenced to 1-7 years in May 2012 for his third trespass at a military recruiting office in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
The Holy Land Foundation is a Muslim charity that has provided direct humanitarian aid to Palestinian refugees and have also helped in Bosnia, Albania, Chechnya, Turkey and the United States. They have been accused of providing money to organizations linked to Hamas, something the HLF has adamantly denied. Four of the five are being held in secretive Communication Management Units (CMUs) prisons within prisons. More information: freedomtogive.com Shukri Abu-Baker #32589-177
USP Terre Haute Post Office Box 33 Terre Haute, Indiana 47808
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RADICAL SELF-DEFENSE
CeCe McDonald* #238072
Minnesota Correctional Facility - St. Cloud 2305 Minnesota Boulevard S.E. St. Cloud, Minnesota 56304
*Address envelope to Chrishaun Reed McDonald.
On June 4th, 2011, CeCe Mcdonald was a 23 year old college student who took care of some other young people, had fun with friends, and was making the most of her working-class, African-American upbringing that wasnt always kind to her as she had been born biologically male. CeCe was walking with friends to get some food when they walked past a bar. Three white folks began using racial epithets, as well as homophobic and transphobic slurs, one of which involved a reference to rape. It was then one of the folks broke a glass of liquor on McDonalds face, resulting in a complete-thickness cheek laceration which went so far as to damage her salivary glands, among other injuries. More people joined in, resulting in a dangerous brawl, in which Mr. Dean Schmitz, 47, died from a stab wound. It was stated in witness reports that he had began the verbal barrage and, along with his friends, caused the initial assault and that its not certain who
caused the fatal blow to Dean Schmitz. CeCe Mcdonald was arrested the same night on a most serious charge of Murder in the Second Degree. It was revealed upon autopsy that Schmitz had a swastika tattoo on his chest. CeCe is currently pre-trial. More information: supportcece.wordpress.com
ANTI-POLICE
Andrew Mickel V77400
San Quentin State Prison San Quentin, California 94974
On November 19, 2002, Andy Mickel shot and killed a cop named David Mobilio of the Red Bluff, California Police Department. There were no witnesses to the killing, and the crime would have gone unsolved had there not been Internet postings about the crime six days later. The postings read, Hello Everyone, my names Andy. I killed a Police Officer in Red Bluff, California in a motion to bring attention to, and halt, the police-state tactics that have come to be used throughout our country. In April 2005, Mickel was convicted of one count of first-degree murder. He was subsequently sentenced to death, and is being held on Death Row at San Quentin State Prison. Christopher John Monfort #209040021
500 Fifth Avenue Seattle, Washington 98104
Monfort is accused of waging a one-man war against the Seattle police in the fall of 2009, including the firebombing of police cars and the murder of a cop. Monfort is facing the death penalty in Washington state for his alleged actions. Since the start of court proceedings, Monfort has been very outspoken about the role of police and has consistently called on other people in the United States to confront police terror in their communities and use armed tactics to do so if necessary.
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Rev. Joy Powell was warned by the Rochester Police department that she was a target because of her speaking out against corruption. An all white jury tried her; the state provided no evidence and no eyewitnesses. Rev. Joy was not allowed to discuss her activism or say that she was a pastor. Furthermore, Judge Francis Affronti promised he was going to give her a harsh sentence because he did not like her. She was convicted and given 16 years and seven years concurrent. More information: freejoypowell.org
Golden Grove Prison RR 1 Box 9955 Kingshill, St Croix, Virgin Islands 00850
*Address envelope to Beaumont Gereau.
Malik Smith*
Golden Grove Prison RR 1 Box 9955 Kingshill, St Croix, Virgin Islands 00850
*Address envelope to Meral Smith.
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GET INVOLVED
If youre in the NYC area, come to one of our events! We host political prisoner letterwriting dinners every other Tuesday in Brooklyn (upcoming events are generally posted on the blog or you can email us to join our announcement list). We also host or co-host several other special events throughout the year, including the annual Running Down the Walls. Contact us if youd like to be added to our announcement list for upcoming events and important news, or follow us on twitter. Whether or not you live in the area, we encourage you to become an ABCF Warchest contributor. One can do so via mail or paypal (make your payment to timabcf[at]aol[dot] com) at a level of $5, $10, or $20 per month or on an ad hoc basis. Contact us for more information about this program and how to contribute. For those outside of NYC, we also are available to answer questions and generally support people in starting a prisoner support organization or ABC chapter in your area.
WRITE A LETTER
Writing a letter to a political prisoner or prisoner of war is a concrete way to support those imprisoned for their political struggles. A letter is a simple way to brighten someones day in prison by creating human interaction and communicationsomething prisons attempt to destroy. Beyond that, writing keeps prisoners connected to the communities and movements of which they are a part, allowing them to provide insights and stay up to date. Writing to prisoners is not charity, as we on the outside have as much to gain from these relationships as the prisoners. Knowing the importance of letter writing is crucial. Prisons are very lonely, isolating, and disconnected places. Any sort of bridge from the outside world is greatly appreciated. With that in mind, avoid feeling intimidated, especially about writing to someone you do not know. And if possible try and be a consistent pen pal.
What to Write
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For many, the first line of the first letter is difficult to writethere is uncertainty and intimidation that come with it. Never fret, its just a letter.
For the first letter, its best to offer an introduction, how you heard about the prisoner, a little about yourself. Tell stories, write about anything you are passionate about-movement work and community work are great topics until you have a sense of the prisoners interests outside of political organizing. And what we hear from prisoners time and time again is to include detail. Prison is so total that the details of life on the outside become distant memories. Smells, textures, sounds of the street all get grayed out behind bars. Thats not to say that you should pen a stream-of-consciousness novel. For things you should and should not remember when writing to folks, read Guidelines.
Guidelines
You cannot enclose glitter or write with glittery gel pens or puff paint pens. Some prisons do not allow cards or letters that include permanent marker, crayon, or colored pencils and it is best to check with the prisoner beforehand. That said, it is usually best to write in standard pencil or non-gel pen in blue or black ink. You cannot include articles or anything else torn out of a newspaper or magazine. However, you can print that same article from the internet or photocopy it and write your letter on the other side. You cannot include polaroid pictures (though these days, thats not much of an issue), but you can include regular photographs. Some prisoners are limited to the number of photos they can have at any given time, so again, check with the prisoner before sending a stack of photos. If mailing more than a letter, clearly write the contents of the envelope/package. Label it CONTENTS and include a full list. A couple of technical detailsmake sure you include your return address inside the letter as well as on the envelope. Its common for prisoners to receive letters without the envelope. Make sure to paginatenumber each page, such as 1 of 3, 2 of 3, et cetera. This insures that if pages of your letter dont make it to the prisoner, they will know it. Be careful about making promises and only commit to what you are certain you can do. This should go without saying, but its not a good idea to make commitments to someone you dont have a relationship with. If you cant maintain a correspondence, let them know up front. Conversely, if you want to maintain an ongoing correspondence, let them know that as well. 35
If you are writing to someone who is pre-trial, dont ask questions about their case. Discussing what a prisoner is alleged to have done can easily come back to haunt them during their trial or negotiations leading up to it. Dont valorize the person you are writing. Keep in mind that these are folks coming from the same movements and communities that you are. They arent looking for adoration, but rather to maintain correspondence. Finally, do not write anything you wouldnt want Fox News, a cop, or a judge to see. Assume that intelligence and law enforcement agencies are reading your letter. On a related note, this advice goes for any snail mail, e-mail, texting, messaging, or talking that takes place in known activist spaces or homes. This is not legal advice, just basic movement survival common sense (to review, read Staying Safe).
STAYING SAFE
You never have to, and it is never a good idea to talk to police, FBI, ICE, or any other law enforcement agent or investigator. Other than providing your name and address to a police officer who is investigating a crime, you never have to talk. You will not outsmart them by talking or sound less suspicious by talking or make things easier for yourself by talking. Anything you say will be used against you and others. If they catch you in a lie or inconsistency they can charge you with a separate crime. Say: I have nothing to say to you OR I need a lawyer present to continue this conversation. If they come to your home, workplace, or school, ask them for a card and tell them your attorney will be in contact with them. The FBI may threaten you with a grand-jury subpoena for not talking. It doesnt matter because they were probably going to subpoena you anyway and you werent going to talk anyway. If you receive a grand jury subpoena you should contact a lawyer immediately and let others in your community know. People can be held for up to six months for refusing to talk to grand juries. Even so, for our own survival, it is imperative that we take that risk and do not participate in grand juries as they are used to indict political prisoners and prisoners of war. In the federal legal system, the grand jury is used to decide whether someone should be charged (indicted) for a serious crime. The grand jury hears evidence presented by the prosecutor: the U.S. Attorney. The grand jury uses subpoenas to gather this evidence. It can subpoena documents, physical evidence, and witnesses to testify. The special
federal grand jury, created in 1970, can be used to investigate possible organized criminal activity rather than a specific crime. Currently there is more than one active grand jury in new york city. There are also more than likely informants and agent provocateurs infiltrating the anarchist community here. It is imperative that we continue our work as anarchists including the support of political prisoners and prisoners of war towards the abolition of the state, of capitalism, and of all oppression. It is also imperative that we do so in a way that is smart, strategic, and sustainable.
NYC Anarchist Black Cross is a collective focused on supporting US-held political prisoners and prisoners of war and opposing state repression against revolutionary social justice movements. We are a Support Group of the continental Anarchist Black Cross Federation. NYC ABC Post Office Box 110034 Brooklyn, New York 11211
nycabc[at]riseup[dot]net nycabc.wordpress.com facebook.com/nycabc twitter.com/nycabc
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