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Ray
Ray was in the cell next to me in the hole. It was some time in
the mid-seventies . . .
There have been many people in cells on either side of me over the years.
Some never stopped talking, because they hated being alone with
themselves and could escape from that by yelling through their cell bars.
Mostly they talked about absolutely nothing. I timed a guy once who did
not shut up nor seem to
take a deep breath for 19 hours. To this day, it is difficult
to accept the assault of certain voices. There was one who constantly
talked about getting out of prison to become the first serial cop
killer in the country, because according to him, he
had been beaten and abused by cops all his life. Another wanted to rob
grocery stores, while still another wanted to be a drug kingpin. The
list of avocations I heard over all these years is bizarre.
Personally, I learned somewhere along the line to simply treasure each
moment, no matter where I happened to be. Perhaps because
I felt happy to even be alive, anywhere, after what I had endured in
Vietnam as a squad leader of Marines. As far as I was concerned, the
future would take care of itself, without my worry to impede it.
There was no time for mundane or idle conversation. It held absolutely
no interest to me. I spent my days reading and writing. I went through
all the classics and philosophers. Occasionally in between I'd read
what I have termed to be "mind candy" — Michener, Ludlum, King,
Conroy, McCarthy, and many many others of that genre. There were not
enough books in the prison library, so
I spent a large portion of my military pension on books ordered through
catalogs. I wrote short stories and volumes of poetry. I penned
scholarly and legal letters to judges. 24 hours in any one day just
wasn't enough.
Ray was into the law. He was good at it. Some of us knew, and he and
I agreed, violence never solved anything. If positive and meaningful
change were to happen, it would only be made through the courts.
This was, after all, where the real power of our county lived.
There was rarely any animosity toward the guards on our tier.
In fact, to this very day, I still see a few left over from back then.
Most all have retired. Those that still remain go out
of their way to say hello to Ray and me. They will say: "Remember
when . . . ." They call it the "good old days."
In five months, I will have been in prison for 34 full years. Never
once in all that time have I ever assaulted anyone, guard nor
prisoner. Yet, for a period of 12 years, the prison administration
put me in leg irons any time I left my cell for any reason.
This included the five hours a week I was allowed out of my cell for
"exercise."
Ray filed a civil suit on my behalf against the abuse and
torture of these leg irons. After a couple years of their
application, they wore large holes in my achilles tendons that have
never
healed completely. There is still a lot of weak and sensitive scar
tissue there.
It took 12 years (after the violation of
three court orders, all violated by the prison administrators) before
I got the
case before a judge and jury. Three Temporary Restraining Orders
violated, in
complete disregard to what
judges had decreed was cruel and unusual punishment. After a
week of trial and a dozen direct witnesses for my behalf, coupled
with mounds of doctors' reports substantiating my claim of injury,
the judge gave
the Department Of Correction a directed verdict. He said I had not
proven my
allegations of torture and abuse conclusively. I was taken back to
the prison
in waist chains,
plus leg irons over a pair of bloody socks. Ray, along with several
other legal
minds, was incredulous. Ray had worked so hard through the system
to find
justice for a friend, only to find justice denied.
At one point, I had been in the hole for over five straight years.
Again,
bear in mind that I never assaulted anyone. In that five year period,
I did
not get a serious disciplinary report. Every time I saw a classification
review board, which was mandated by the Department of Corrections
regulations,
they recommended I be returned to general population due to positive
adjustment.
Each time their recommendations were shot down by the Commissioner
Of Corrections, Michael Maloney. No reasons were given. Just the
one word: Denied.
Maloney told me once, passing by my
cell, that he considered me to be a radical militant and a negative
inmate leader.
That was the very phrase he used when he
had me exiled into the federal prison system for 13 months, only to
be returned to
his custody for more abuse.
Contrary to their regulations, I was maintained in segregation.
Warehoused and cured
like a side of beef. Once again, Ray picked up a pen and filed a
civil suit on my
behalf. After years of
legal wrangling, I won $37,500. I repaid a friend $12,500 that was
given to me for
legal fees in pursuit of an appeal on my criminal case. The other
$25,000 went to
my wife, Lynnette.
Lynnette had colon cancer. All she wanted, while going through
the suffering and
rounds of chemotherapy, was to die at home with her cat Sam in
her arms. Had it not
been for the money Ray won for me, she would have had to live
out the remainder
of her life in a state-funded facility, away from her cat and all
else familiar —
a charity case and a burden on the tax
payers. She would have lost the very thing she wanted the most
during this time:
her privacy. It is a long and sad story in
and by itself, so I will not open that door here. Lynnette died
within a year after being diagnosed with cancer. She died at
home with her cat laying on her chest, purring. There was $200
left in
her account.
Ray is in the cell next to me today. We have both been in
general population for several years, doing well. Neither
of us has had so much as a single serious disciplinary report
in all that time. Ray continues to work within the legal system,
and I continue to
read, write, and meditate.
Because Ray is also well read, and because he too has a daughter
and grandchildren,
we have lots of great discussion and debate about the world, both
here and on the
other side of the razor wire. We have been through a lot together,
and we have survived with
our senses of humor intact. Mankind has placated our cynicism
by doing
such incredibly wonderful things, and yet, distracts us with
war and ignorance.
Like I said, Ray and I have
lots to talk about, and a life sentence each of time for debate.
Joe Labriola
December 15, 2006
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