

STEP INTO THE NIGHTMARE
by Standing Deer
I know something about consuming High Security corrections. I spent some
years in the Control Unit at Marion, Illinois--the prototype of later High
Security/Control Unit/Adjustment Center/Ad Seg/Administrative Maximum/Special
Handling Unit, man-made, hell-on-earth nightmares. I was sent to USP Marion
in 1976 after being convicted of bank robbery. While there, I watched men's
minds deteriorate and dissolve into madness. I nearly crossed that line
myself.
What do these severe terms of confinement do to the minds of the men? Does
living in a cage smaller than your bathroom with constant harassment from
guards reduce men to sniveling, quivering jellyfish-like the parole board
wants-or are some of these prisoners harboring a seething rage, a hatred
and lust for revenge so deep that citizens will have to pay with their lives
when these men get out? The justification for the death penalty in some
minds is "At least they can't kill again." But most of the men
in High Security will get out.
I do not suggest that all, or even most of those in High Security, will
be driven to madness and terrorism. I don't even suggest that most of these
men belong in High Security. I am saying that if the State of Texas has
its way and builds eight of these things, there will be nearly 5,000 men
subjected to this cruel and unusual punishment. If just one out of a thousand
seeks revenge for his mistreatment when he gets out, and kills only one
person, five Texans will die because of the blunders of their prisoncrats.
To bring to light the truth that High Security doesn't make men better-it
simply makes them crazier-I wrote an article in 1982 which included the
poem "When I Get Out," written some 20 years ago by a convict
who was in the Marion Control Unit with me in the late '70s. He was executed
in 1992 by the State of Delaware, but not before he had killed 19 people.
He is an example of the monsters that mind-torture creates, bought by big
bucks spent on ever more sophisticated mind-control techniques used in legal,
behavior-modification torture chambers. The poem is obviously the product
of a totally deranged mind. I had to clean it up, cut out parts of it, and
change some of the wording before I could include it. Even so, it still
shocks and jolts the reader.
"When I Get Out" and my original introduction to it have been
published all over the world, including appearances in the books Cages of
Steel, Criminal Injustice, Journal of Prisons, and in the intellectual publication
Issues in Radical Therapy. So when the editor of The Huntsville Item asked
me for a guest column in December 1997, I cleaned up the 1982 piece with
the poem and sent it in.
Here is the poem. Listen carefully. You're about to step into the nightmare
that prisoncrats have created in your name.
WHEN I GET OUT
When I get out
the first thing I'm gonna do
is get me a gun to protect myself
from the police.
Probably more than one gun
because
there's so many different kinds
of police.
Maybe a .460 Weatherby
with a twelve-power scope
for kings, dictators, presidents and popes.
A .357 magnum for law enforcement officials in
general,
and a nice nine millimeter
Browning High Power
for just plain folks like you.
When I get out
I want to kill as many people
as I can before they get me.
I'd like to get the Queen Mother
and the Pope
and the President if I have the time.
Remember when you cut off my
eyelids by putting me in a
sensory deprivation chamber
in total darkness
because I wanted to go
to my mother's funeral?
Remember when you chained
me to a bed
and beat on my feet
with wooden paddles until
they turned to blood and
swelled up like basketballs?
When I get out
I'm going to spend the hatred
you've taught me
by becoming a mass murderer.
And all you judges, jurypersons,
cops, jailers and executioners
can't stop me
because it was you who
murdered Charles Brooke
and taught me that
it's cool to kill.
It was you who told me I lived
in a free country
as you ground your heel in my humanity
and laughed at my pleas for dignity
and spat on my manhood.
It was you who dressed up
in moon man suits
beat me to the floor with clubs
and drugged me with Prolixin
because I couldn't stop calling
my baby daughter's name
when she left this world.
So, in return for the lessons
you have given me
I'm going to teach you two things:
First, that these sealed-tomb, tiger cages
belong to you, Mr. & Mrs. America,
and it is you who must accept
the responsibility
for what you and your hirelings
have done to me.
The second thing I'm going to teach you
is something you should already know
but don't act like you do, namely
the Christians say "Do Unto Others, etc."
the Buddhists say something about
"What goes around comes around."
In prison we simply say:
Payback belongs to me
when I get out.
It won't be much longer.
I'm counting the days
So, you better pray I don't find you,
gentle reader,
'cause when I've paid my debt
to society
society must pay its debt to me.
When I get out . . .
I never dreamed "The Huntsville Item," which is read only by guards,
Ku Klux Klan members, and other redneck types, would publish my piece with
the poem. But on January 6, 1998, as I was sitting in my cage trying to
talk my cellie out of tattooing MAYHEM on his forehead, here comes Turd
Head Red--a runner at the law library--with the January 6 edition of"The
Item." Turd was all out of breath as he handed me the paper with my
piece in it.
My cellie looked at me and said, "Oh shit."
"Oh shit," I replied.
So I packed my books and legal files and waited for the guards to gather
me up. Three days later, on January 9, here they came, four deep--two rushed
me and handcuffed me behind my back while two began destroying my cage,
pouring my legal files out on the floor and stealing everything pertaining
to Leonard Peltier, political prisoners, my political files and notes and
the draft of The Item piece, plus some books, Cages of Steel, Can't Jail
the Spirit, With the Power of Justice in our Eyes, and other titles.
Before they throw you in the hole, they take you to the "infirmary'
where a guard posing as a nurse takes your temperature and blood pressure
to assure you are healthy enough for solitary confinement. They charge the
victim $3 for this service and you have no choice but to go. My blood pressure
was 276/148, a reading that means you have been dead for about a week, but
the guard/nurse recorded it as 229/121 and claimed it was so high because
I was scared of the guards. (Yeah, right! Hee, hee, hee. They really frighten
me.) They tried to kill me by refusing me all blood pressure meds.
I was held incommunicado without a charge for 13 days (never mind their
"Rules of Disciplinary Procedure," which say if a pre-trial detainee
is held 10 days without a charge he'll be released.) They falsified my lock-up
date from 1/9/98 to 1/13/98 in order to comply with the pre-hearing 10-day
rule. The charge was "Threatening Capt. Pickett, other correctional
officers, and public officials." The FBI laughed at it.
The rules also say that in pre-trial hearing you will be allowed all your
property. I couldn't even get a stamp, envelope, pencil, or sheet of paper
out of my property even though I had tons of writing materials stored in
a room about 10 feet from my cage. They had me where prisoners can't come,
so nobody could slip me anything or smuggle a letter out. But through an
extralegal resource I was able to get word out.
Bonnie Kerness of the Control Unit Project of American Friends Service Committee
was the first to post my situation on the Internet, then Anna Dobbyn in
San Antonio, Zoitista, and now my wife has Peter D. Erricho's web page in
Boston. So the cards and letters poured in, along with faxes and phone calls
and telegrams. By March 26, 1998, I had received 1,600 letters, and people
were calling the prison, faxing the warden and director and writing outraged
letters. Whoever thinks that emergency responses are a waste of time and
resources can argue with me because if it had not been for the Power of
the People, I would be dead today.
The authorities figured out how to tame my support. On February 4, they
confiscated my legal files and political notes and began moving me from
wing to wing for no apparent reason. Then they took my name away from me
and on March 26, transferred me to Pack 1 Prison. My name must now be written
as "Robert H. Wilson," even though my legal name is Standing Deer
Wilson. What they accomplished by changing my name is that now they send
all the mail coming to Estelle back to the sender without explanation. This
makes all but the most dogged or experienced give up. When they call the
warden at Estelle, he says "Wilson is no longer here," and when
they call the warden at Pack 1, he says "Who? Standing Deer? We have
no such person!"
And we thought we were slick!
When they put me on a bus and brought me to Pack 1, I had none of my property,
not envelopes, stamps, writing paper--or any meds. My blood pressure med
is Clonidine 0.02 mg three times a day, and if you abruptly cease taking
it, you go into withdrawal and your blood pressure shoots sky high--there
are recorded deaths for not getting it. So I went into a blood pressure
crisis with a reading of 276/148 and nearly died. The health care professional
in the guise of a male nurse told me, "Nothing is an emergency. Put
in a sick call request." This happened at 2 p.m. By luck I had an attorney
phone call at 3 p.m. from Margaret Gold. When I told Margaret about the
denial of Clonidine, she called the medical director and bared her fangs,
so they got me to the clinic and put Clonidine and Anlodipine down me and
just barely saved my life.
The ACLU in Houston is now my good friend, and I've got a lot of help in
Texas. On 90.1 FM radio at 9 p.m. every Friday night, "The Prison Show"
airs with Ray Hill, an ex-prisoner, as the host. He said kind words about
me for two weeks running and gained me more friends, so a whole bunch of
folks will crawl down the prison's throat if they try to kill me again.
Ted Koppel did four "Nightline" evenings from Estelle's new control
unit. One evening he spent the night there to emphasize his journalistic
dedication. Now he really knows what it's like to be thrown into a control
unit with no company other than the camera crew, sound technicians, producer,
director, and guards bringing pizza, coffee, cupcakes, and seeking autographs
all night long!
Koppel got dynamite interviews from Marta Glass, an ACLU volunteer, Debora
Perkey, an ACLU attorney, and Ray Hill, but much of what they said came
out of Ted Koppel's mouth live as if he said it. That Friday night Ray Hill
started "The Prison Show" saying, "This is Ray Hill and Marta
Glass coming to you from Ted Koppel's cutting room floor."
Ted Koppel also said, "It's one thing to isolate dangerous inmates
23 hours a day, but it becomes a deeper social problem when those men are
literally driven nuts by the process, but then released right back out on
the street when their time's up." Hey Ted! That's exactly what I said,
but I got 24 days solitary confinement in the hole and lost parole eligibility
for another year. Ted Koppel should at least have lost his good time.
Attorney Margaret Gold sent Ted Koppel a big packet about how I was locked
up and given a major case, destroying my parole possibilities for at least
a year, and how the propaganda minister for the TDC lied to the press, saying,
"This is not a First Amendment case" and claiming I was not locked
up for having my guest editorial published in The Huntsville Item, but rather
because they found contraband in my cage and I was "verbally assaultive"
to the guards.
A total fabrication! There was NO contraband. There was NO verbal assault.
There might have been in other circumstances, but I was so happy to be locked
up for publishing a piece I have been trying for 15 years to have published
in a mainstream newspaper, knowing it was a clear First Amendment case,
that I wanted to keep it pristine.
By the way, when I went to the hole, my cellie did tattoo MAYHEM on his
forehead. Looks pretty good too. In color.
--IN THE SPIRIT OF CRAZY HORSE
STANDING DEER