The
imprisonment of Dean Westwood and his experience in solitary confinement in an
Oregon jail is discussed in the ACLU press release below.
Steve
____________________________________________________________________________
Thursday,
January 12, 2017 - 11:15am
First-Ever
National Report on How Solitary Confinement Harms People With Physical
Disabilities
Wheelchairs, Braille Materials, Hearing Aids,
and Other Vital Devices Are Often Denied in
Solitary
NEW YORK -
The American Civil Liberties Union published the first-ever nationwide report
documenting the special dangers of solitary confinement for people who are blind
or deaf, can’t walk without assistance, or have other physical disabilities.
Drawn from interviews and research on jail and prison practices, “Caged In: The
Devastating Harms of Solitary Confinement on People with Physical Disabilities”
shows how correctional facilities can require prisoners in solitary to go
without the devices, services, and treatment they need to perform basic human
functions and remain healthy. These deprivations violate the Americans with
Disabilities Act as well as the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and
unusual punishment.
“For people
with physical disabilities, solitary’s punishing conditions come with extra pain
and suffering,” said Jamelia Morgan, Arthur Liman fellow with the ACLU’s
National Prison Project. “Prisoners who are deaf might not have an interpreter
for weeks, if ever. Prisoners who use wheelchairs can be left on the floor,
unable to use the toilet. These conditions are dangerous and
unconscionable.”
In many
jails and prisons, people with physical disabilities are placed in solitary
because they have a disability and need protection from other prisoners, not
because they have broken a rule.
Dean
Westwood, who has quadriplegia and uses a wheelchair, was put in solitary in an
Oregon jail. “When I asked why I was being isolated and held in seclusion, I was
told that they [would] put me wherever they want whenever they want. … Simply
because I had a physical disability, I was made to endure isolation and abuse at
an indescribable level.”
Morgan
said, “Whether people with physical disabilities are in solitary for protection
or for punishment, the horrific conditions are the same, with the same risk of
permanent psychological and physical damage. Our jails and prisons must end the
cruel and inhumane practice of solitary for people with physical disabilities.
Instead, they should focus resources on providing equal and meaningful access to
critical services, such as medical and mental health treatment, as well as
greater opportunities for education and job training.”
“Caged In”
recommends reforms in jail and prison practices to meet the needs of people with
physical disabilities, change solitary conditions, and ensure that these
prisoners receive equal access to programs and services.
For
information about the ACLU’s Stop Solitary campaign:
This press
release is available here:
The
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) conserves America's original civic values
working in courts, legislatures and communities to defend and preserve the
individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in the United States
by the Constitution and the Bill of
Rights.