Showing posts with label Mississippi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mississippi. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Pardon restrictions mulled - Ex-governor: Proposals take away incentive for inmates to change

Leslie Carlton Smith wants to coach his 6-year-old son's soccer team, chaperone him at Boy Scouts events and take him hunting.

But until former Gov. Haley Barbour pardoned Smith, 46, last week, the Biloxi man could not be the dad he wanted to be because of a felony conviction from his teens.

"It's hard to tell a 6-year-old why I can't do some of things his friend's dads can," Smith said Monday. "It's a little embarrassing for me."  Read more...

Monday, August 9, 2010

Mississippi's Corrections Reform: How America's reddest state -- and most notorious prison -- became a model of corrections reform

In January 2002, Margaret Winter, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU) National Prison Project, received a letter from Willie Russell, an inmate on Mississippi's death row.

"I am on a hunger strike to the death," the letter began. In highly idiosyncratic language, the letter then described conditions at the facility where death row was housed, Unit 32.

Unit 32 was one of seven prisons located on Mississippi's fabled penal institution, Parchman Farm. As described by Russell, it was also a lot like hell. Inmates were locked in permanent solitary confinement. In the summer, the cells were ovens, with no fans or air circulation. Russell's was even worse: He was in a special "punishment" cell with a solid, unvented Plexiglas door. The cells were also sewers, thanks to a design flaw in cellblock toilets that often flushed excrement from one cell into the next. Prisoners were allowed outside -- to pace or sit alone in metal cages -- just two or three times a week. Inside was a perpetual dusk: One always-on light fixture provided inadequate light for reading but enough light to make it hard to sleep.  Read more...