The public hearing and work session on the bill to limit and reduce solitary confinement (LD 1611) has been many things - inspiring, disheartening, invigorating, frustrating, empowering, and, often, very sad.
“It’s an awful thing, solitary,” U.S. Senator John McCain once wrote of his two years spent in a fifteen by 15-foot prison cell in Viet Nam. “It crushes your spirit and weakens your resistance more effectively than any other form of mistreatment.”
One moment of the hearing I that particularly moved me, was the brief testimony from one mother of a prisoner, currently being held in the Secure Management Unit that is the focus of the bill. In these units, men and women are held in a small cell, for around 23 hours each day, with 1 hour per day to recreate, outdoors, alone, in a cage, and for sporadic, non-contact visits with family and attorneys.
The woman told us how she decided to close herself in her bathroom for 23 hours with 3 books and 3 meals to experience what her son was going through. Her voice broke as she shared how difficult it was to be alone even for 1 day. We have the chance, right now in Maine, to make enact meaningful limitations and oversight to this extreme practice. CONTACT your Representative and Senator to tell them to support LD 1611's limits and oversight. LD 1611:
- Creates a more safe, humane and secure prison for prisoners, officers, and Maine communities, by reducing violence and recidivism, both inside and outside the prison walls.
- Caps the use of segregation to 45 days with the exception of certain conditions (completed or attempted acts of serious violence, escape, or sexual assault, or determination of immediate security risk)
- Bans the placement of seriously mentally ill prisoners in segregation, and requires that prisoners who begin to exhibit serious mental illness while isolated be removed from the segregation.
- Insures due process by enshrining in law fair and meaningful hearings, reviews and oversight.
“I found solitary confinement the most forbidding aspect of prison life. There is no end and no beginning; there is only one’s mind, which can begin to play tricks. Was that a dream or did it really happen? One begins to question everything.”
–Nelson Mandela, from his 1994 autobiography The Long Walk to Freedom
To CONTACT MEMBERS OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE COMMITTEE
Thank LD 1611 Sponsor (and member of the Committee)
Rep. Jim Schatz
Senator Stan Gerzofsky (Senate Chair)
3 Federal Street,
Brunswick, ME 04011
207-373-1328
Representative Anne Haskell
(House Chair)
31 Higgins Street
Portland, ME 04103
(207) 871-5808
Senator John Nutting
79 Campbell Rd
Leeds, ME 04263
207-524-3941
Senator Gerald Davis
15 Hamlin Rd
Falmouth, ME 04105
207-797-5309
Representative Stephen Hanley
67 Lincoln Avenue
Gardiner, ME 04345
(207) 582-9073
Representative Walter Wheeler
46 Rogers Road
Kittery, ME 03904
(207) 439-2693
Representative Michel Lajoie
279 Old Greene Road
Lewiston, ME 04240
(207) 783-1927
Representative Veronica Magnun
P. O. Box 37
Sandy Point, ME 04972
(207) 567-6097
Representative Richard Sykes
P. O. Box 86
Harrison, ME 04040
(207) 583-2958
Representative Chris Greeley
P. O. Box 353
Levant, ME 04456
(207) 884-6000
Representative Gary Plummer
248 Gray Road
Windham, ME 04062
(207) 892-6088
Representative David Burns
159 Dodge Road
Whiting, ME 04691
(207) 733-8856
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