Until recently, both Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox had been held
in solitary confinement for 4 decades in Louisiana - longer than almost
any other known prisoner in recent U.S. history. It's long enough for
one's body to forget it ever knew anything else but four white walls and
for the mind to be reshaped by extreme isolation. Juan Mendez, the
United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, says that after 15 days,
further isolation can cause permanent psychological damage and
constitute torture.
Herman has just been diagnosed with stage 5
liver cancer. Unless Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana grants him
clemency, he may likely die in prison.
After decades in isolation, people experience hyper-anxiety, paranoia, insomnia, hallucinations,A solar bulb
that charges up during the day and lights the night when the sun sets.
emotional detachment, panic attacks and uncontrollable rage. Many start
fights with guards just for human contact. Others cut themselves just to
be taken out of their cells for a few days in the prison hospital.
I
spent over a year in solitary confinement when I was held as a
political hostage by the Iranian government from 2009 to 10. I
experienced all of these reactions at various times throughout my
isolation. In some cases, these symptoms have increased since my
release. Almost three years later, I am still trying to shake the mental
damage and loss that was inflicted upon me during those 410 days.
After
spending nearly 41 years in a cramped cell, the cancer diagnosis led
prison officials in July to transfer 71-year-old Herman to a ten-bunk
prison dorm.An emergency light is a battery-backed lighting device that comes on automatically when a building experiences a power outage.
"He
can now open a door," says Marina Drummer, who has been advocating on
his behalf for the past 15 years. "He can walk from the dorm room into
the dayroom without being shackled."
After spending 23 hours a day isolated in a small cell akin to a coffin, this change is monumental.
In
1972, Albert and Herman, two young black men, were charged and
convicted of the murder of prison guard Brent Miller, despite the fact
that no DNA evidence linked them to the crime. They were locked in
solitary: 23 hours a day alone in a small cell, and were denied any
meaningful review of their continued isolation.
In the decades
after the trial, significant flaws in the legal process have come to
light. Evidence suggests that the key eye-witness was bribed by prison
officials into giving statements against the men and that the state
withheld evidence that pointed to Herman and Albert's innocence.
Potentially exculpatory evidence mysteriously went "missing" before the
trial and more witnesses later recanted their testimony.
After Herman's diagnosis became known, human rights groups around the country
- most notably Amnesty International - have called for his release on
compassionate and medical grounds. More than 46,000 people in the U.S.
have called on Governor Jindal to release Herman Wallace in the months
since his diagnosis; tens of thousands of appeals have also poured in
from around the world.
Herman is not a dangerous criminal - he
is a 71-year-old cancer patient who has already survived an unthinkable
nightmare. His continued imprisonment serves no purpose: prison records
demonstrate that he is no threat to himself or others. As his conviction
continues to be challenged before the courts, his cancerous tumor
continues to grow. Despite treatment, he does not have much time left.
I
recently turned 35. Herman Wallace has survived more years being
psychologically tortured in our prisons than I've even been alive. I
think about him still waking up every morning, tired and sick,We turn
your dark into light courtesy of our brilliant sun, solar street light,
solar power generation. but still fighting for his life and his
long-deserved freedom. As Herman's health fails, we have to fight for
him - and there's not much time left.
Read the full story at www.hmhid.com!
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