| Magistrate:
30 years of solitary confinement may be cruel
8/28/2007,
9:20 a.m. CT
The Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - It may be constitutional to keep an inmate alone in
a tiny cell for a short time, but decades of such "terrible deprivation" are
cruel and unusual punishment, a federal magistrate says.
It was the second time U.S. Magistrate Docia Dalby has refused to recommend
throwing out a lawsuit filed by Herman "Hooks" Wallace and Albert Woodfox,
serving life for killing a prison guard, and Robert King Wilkerson, freed in
2001.
"Not only (have the courts) consistently noted the severity and terrible deprivation
associated with such confinement, it has long been the subject of research, and
even of television and movies," Dalby wrote. "It is also a matter of common sense
that three decades of extreme isolation and enforced inactivity in a space smaller
than a typical walk-in closet present the antithesis of what is necessary to
meet basic human needs."
A similar ruling in 2005 has been adopted by a judge.
In a 50-page report earlier this month, Dalby found that prison authorities
should have known that "being housed in isolation in a tiny cell for 23 hours
a day for over three decades results in serious deprivations of basic human
needs."
Chief U.S. District Judge Ralph Tyson will consider Dalby's findings in deciding
whether the 7-year-old case will continue toward trial.
Wilkerson, Wallace and Woodfox all were Black Panther Party activists. They
say they have been political prisoners at Angola because they have been continuously
confined in the lockdown unit for decades.
Wilkerson was freed in 2001 after his 1973 conviction of murdering a fellow
inmate was overturned and he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder.
Woodfox and Wallace were convicted of killing guard Brent Miller during a riot
in 1972.
All three were put in "lockdown" in 1972. Woodfox and Wallace remain there.
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