Monday, June 6, 2011

A letter from jail from Sr. Carol Gilbert OP

Jonah House <disarmnow@verizon.net>
Sun, Jun 5, 2011

This is a letter from Sr Carol Gilbert detailing the first fifteen days at
Blount County Detention Center.  Carol is a wonderful storyteller, and the
letter paints a vivid picture of her time there. Go to
http://jonahhouse.org/gilbert_2011_05_25.html.

----

May 25, 2011

Dear Friends,

   Welcome to another of America's gulags – this one in Eastern TN – the
Blount County Correctional Facility in Maryville, TN!

   This is day number 15 and I want to begin the journey with a quote from
Jarhead by Anthony Swofford and his experiences as a Marine in Operation
Desert shield. "What follows is neither true nor false but what I know."…
and heard, saw, tasted, smelled and touched.

   DAY 1. Around 7:30 p.m. we are placed in a typical holding cell with no
mattresses, 2 benches of concrete, toilet/sink combo and blanket given many
hours later.

   We are taken out one by one for processing which consists of answering
typical intake forms, fingerprints, picture and hospital type bright orange
arm bands to distinguish us from the county folks wearing blue/white
armbands, the de-liceing shower and stripped uniforms (black and white if
new; shades of grey if older (the color everything becomes) and flip flops
for shoes. The one pair of old socks, underpants and t-shirt must last until
commissary. We were supposed to get two of everything but they have run out
with 2-300 extra. So no laundry bag or crate either. We make an attempt to
sleep on the concrete slabs but it's a long night. We tell stories, laugh,
sing.

DAY 2 – Close to 8:30 a.m. we are shackled, given an indigent bag: one small
comb, 2 tiny bars of soap, 2 sample size packages of toothpaste, deodorant
and shampoo. We are handed two towels and two sheets that I'm sure at one
time were lily white.

   Carol, Ardeth and Bonnie are taken to the higher classification pod where
all federal women prisoners are held. But Jackie and Jean go next door to
the other lower classification pod – they would never keep all 5 of us
together.

   We are immediately surrounded by women offering us books, shampoo, etc.
Because the Feds pay so much to rent this space, we are to receive a bunk
and mattress which means some now go without and sleep on concrete until
other places can be found.

   The jail pod has a large day room holding 8 metal tables with a metal
stools built in. Each table holds 4 people, for a total of 32; there's one
stainless steel toilet/sink, two phones with one cement seat, one shower in
the center and a small open area. 8 cells are on the bottom floor and 8 on
the top floor. Each cell is 6 by 12 with bunk beds, toilet/sink combo, small
metal desk-stool, and a small slotted window frosted so one can't see out.
Most cells hold three women and sometimes 4. So far I have had only two
other prisoners with me. 3 is crowded!

   This jail has no TV, no newspapers one can subscribe to or magazines, no
greeting cards, no articles, no quotes from Scripture on a letter, no
puzzles, no games, no books from publishers, no, no, no, and no! They do
sell a cheap radio for $45.00 plus $10.00 for ear phones and $2.25 for a
battery. That cost means many go without.

   Twice a week we are allowed to go to a cement cage outside with a net
above to see the sky and feel the air and sun.

   Library cart comes once a week and each is allowed two books – a few good
ones.

   Commissary is on Wednesday. A stamped business envelope is $.65 -
$.21 for the envelope makes someone profit as does our liquid Fresh Mint
toothpaste from India and our 3 inch toothbrushes (1 inch brush,
2 inch handle).

   Pens are only the cartridge and make writing difficult but the women get
"vinegar bags" and use this as a tape to make them thicker.
I'll let you, the reader, research "vinegar bags".

   Lots of commissary items are "Bob Border." It would be interesting to
follow the money trail for commissary. Another distributor is Maxima Supply,
Holt, MI for hard candy.

 Our schedule is as follows:

6:00 a.m. Bright lights on
6:30 – 8:30 a.m.  Breakfast/Meds/Day Room 8:30 – 11:30 a.m.  Lockdown 11:30
– 1:30 p.m. Lunch/Meds/Day Room 1:30 – 4:30 p.m.  Lockdown
 4:30 – 8:30 p.m.   Supper/Meds/Day Room
 8:30 p.m.– 6:00 a.m.  Lockdown

   When we are in the Day room, our cells are locked. There are two stand-up
counts – around 2:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. the lights are dimmed after 10:00
p.m. count but still bright enough to read.

Meals -

Breakfast - 2 biscuits, Jelly, Sweet, watery Oatmeal, Carton of Milk, Coffee
(the only exception is Tuesday when Cheerios replaces Oatmeal)

Lunch - Peanut Butter Sandwich – one week Bologna-Mustard Sandwich –
alternate weeks 1 small bag plain Frito Lays' Chips 1 cup water

Supper - Pinto Beans, Corn Bread, Cole Slaw, Mashed Potatoes/ Peas/ Green
Beans (one of these three) Jello or Package of Teddy Grahams

Every other night they will serve one or the other of the food - Iceberg
salad or Noodle dish, Mashed or French Fried potatoes Jello or Teddy Grahams

The phone calls are from a company called City Telephone Coin and expensive.
A study should be done on phone companies to jails and prison – who profits!
A 15 minute limit and the call could be over $20.00

DAY 9 – All seven of us met in an intake holding cell for Mass with Fr.
Brent Sheldon and Deacon Juan Hernandez from Holy Fatima in Alroa.
Maryville has no Catholic church as the Catholic population in TN is 2% 
This was the first time I ever went to mass in a holding cell and in leg
shackles. (This jail has a practice of putting leg shackles on when moving
outside the block no matter how short the distance.) What a gift to receive
the Eucharist in this setting. It was here we learned we are not getting our
mail. They claim we are getting too much and they don't know how they will
handle it.

DAY 10 – I was taken out for my PSI (pre-sentencing investigation) report so
both probation and my attorney were present. It appears we will be taken
from here and moved to a holding facility in Ocilla, GA until sentencing
which looks like late September.


DAY 11 – Most of the women are here on drug charges of some kind. The drug
of choice in this area is prescription drugs. The city is filled with these
so called "pain clinics." this is also a holding facility for women going to
TN state prison. Because of such over-crowding in the 3 state women's
facilities, women can be held here for years! Both of my cell mates are poor
and had terrible childhoods – drugs, alcoholism, lack of education, early
pregnancies. Their stories and tears are like so many others in here and
across the country. We are warehouses with no real help and one wonders how
the cycle can end.

They believe God sent us to them as angels. A 70 year old LPN has been
locked up here for three years for killing her abusive husband and trial
date is now set for late August.  A disturbed, mentally ill woman here for
19 months awaiting her trip to state prison. The unique feature for us is
that the women are all white! We understand the men's blocks have lots of
Hispanics from immigration and some blacks.

DAY 12 – We were taken in shackles, down the hall to medical for our T
tests. A great time to visit with Jackie and Jean. We were able to sing Jean
an early Happy Birthday as she turned 84 a few days later.

Our cell block was put on full lock-down at lunch. This means we are in our
cells 23 hours a day with one cell out at a time for one hour.

There was no fight but things were getting a little tense with a mentally
ill woman and a few other women who haven't yet learned how to respond in a
nonviolent way. We do not know how long, but the rumor is two weeks. That
makes for a long day and so most of these young women learn the art of
sleeping – such a waste! The hardest part is that I don't get to talk to
Ardeth and Bonnie! Sometimes the entire block has been locked down for as
long as 3 months or more.

DAY 13 -  Today was our first serving of FRUIT since arriving! A small
serving of mandarin oranges never looked or tasted so good. It's the little
things we appreciate.

DAY 14 – My first visit was from 7 – 8 p.m. through plexiglass with a phone.
Four local peacemakers caught me up to date. These folks are doing the real
work - SUPPORT Visits are 1 hour a week and your day and time of visit is
determined by your cell number. Starting at 8:a.m. and the last visit is 8
p.m. This can make it difficult for someone who works and has the visit
during their work hours. I heard on my visit that Sr. Mary Dennis has a
sentencing date of September 21st.

DAY 15 – The day is just beginning and our cell is brighter so we know the
sun is shining even though we can't see it. Some final thoughts as I close
out these first two weeks.I'm learning about the South with their biscuits
and gravy, the accents, the country music, the new words for grandma and
grandpa of mamow and popow, the missing or no teeth and the Body Farm. The
University of TN is home to an anthropology Research Facility (The Body
Farm). The founder and an author have written a series of fiction and
non-fiction on the farm. I read Body of Betrayal (novel) which takes place
at Y-12, Oakridge.

There are some women who talk about the cancers, the class action suits, the
deaths from exposure of relatives and friends at Y-12. I'm reminded once
again how simple life can be, how little we need to survive. That grace is
given when I see these women live this day by day and keep a sense of sanity
after months and/or years in this place.The effects of a country that
continues to spend billions on bombs and prisons can be seen, felt, heard,
touched and smelled in this space.  We are well and long to hear of your
stories these past weeks. My gratitude, love, prayers and support.

Courage
Carol Gilbert,O.P.

No comments: