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GOVERNMENT SHOULD NOT DICTATE CLOTHING STYLES, SAYS ACLU
9.7.2010


St. Tammany Sheriff Issues New Policies for Suicidal Prisoners
8.24.2010


Federal Court Orders Louisiana to Provide Mental Health Care for Pretrial Detainees
8.10.2010


ACLU Hires Field Organizer In Shreveport
7.29.2010


ACLU Welcomes New Coast Guard Rules For Media Access To Oil Spill
7.13.2010


ACLU Responds To St. Tammany Sheriff: Cages Aren't Humane
7.9.2010


ACLU Demands St. Tammany Sheriff Stop Treating Suicidal Prisoners Like Animals
7.8.2010

After extensive investigation into conditions at the St. Tammany Parish jail, today the ACLU of Louisiana sent a letter to St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Jack Strain and Parish President Kevin Davis, demanding an end to the practice of caging suicidal prisoners in "squirrel cages." After the jail determines a prisoner is suicidal, the prisoner is stripped half-naked and placed in a 3' x 3' metal cage with no shoes, bed, blanket or toilet, according to numerous interviews conducted with current and former prisoners. Prisoners report they must curl up on the floor to sleep because the cages are too small to let them lie down. Guards frequently ignore repeated requests to use the bathroom, forcing some desperate people to urinate in discarded containers. The cages are in a main part of the jail, allowing other prisoners to gawk at those confined in these cages. People have been reportedly held in these cages for days, weeks, and months.

Sheriff Jack Strain has been quoted saying that prisoners "need to be caged like animals." Tragically, Sheriff Strain treats his most vulnerable prisoners worse than the minimum legal standards for dogs. According to St. Tammany Parish Code 4-121.10, dogs must be kept in cages at least 6' wide x 6' feet deep, with "sufficient space [...] to lie down." "This really should go without saying, but in America we should not treat any person worse than animals." said Barry Gerharz, Prison Litigation Fellow at the ACLU of Louisiana.

Marjorie Esman, ACLU of Louisiana Executive Director, said "This is what can happen when you have law enforcement treating the mentally ill. If the Constitution's Eighth Amendment protection against cruel and unusual punishment means anything, it means that people shouldn't be treated like this. Jails across this country typically have housing for suicidal prisoners and don't resort to such barbarity. The squirrel cages belong in the history books."

Several witnesses report suicidal prisoners forced to wear orange short shorts ("Daisy Duke" style). Prisoners also report being forced to wear Daisy Duke shorts with "Hot Stuff" written on the rear end. People who have been placed in the cages describe acute physical and psychological after-effects, including clinical depression, nightmares and crying fits after they were released from jail. Prisoners report that they are hesitant to inform guards when they feel suicidal, out of fear that they will be placed in the cages. This increases the likelihood that a prisoner will commit suicide, as happened last fall.

The Sheriff is scheduled to receive millions of dollars for upgrades to the jail. In this morning's letter to Parish President Kevin Davis and the Sheriff, the ACLU of LA demands that some of this money be used to create humane housing for people on suicide watch at the jail.

"We appreciate that mentally ill prisoners pose a challenge for the jail, but Sheriff Strain has a legal and moral obligation to care for sick people in a humane way. Caging them for prolonged periods of time is an unacceptable solution, both from a legal perspective and from a human rights perspective. We hope that the sheriff will use this opportunity to build a more humane facility, so that we can avoid litigating this issue," said Katie Schwartzmann, legal director for the ACLU.

The ACLU's open letter may be read here.

 

 


As Holiday Weekend Approaches, ACLU of LA Issues Alert to State Residents Traveling to Arizona
7.1.2010


New Orleans City Council Urged To Evaluate Criminal Justice Needs Before Approving Prison
6.30.2010


ACLU Reminds Law Enforcement To Respect Media And Public Access to BP Oil Spill
6.28.2010


City Council To Vote On Expansion Of Largest Per-Capita Jail In America
6.16.2010


ACLU Calls On City To Halt Sheriff's Plan To Expand Largest Per Capita Jail In America
6.14.2010


ACLU Urges New Orleans Police Department To Conduct First Amendment Training
6.8.2010


ACLU Urges City of Thibodaux to Allow Political Signs
5.6.2010


Prisoner Punished For Writing Complaints Is Vindicated by ACLU
5.4.2010


Advocacy Center Sues to Ensure Mental Health Care for Prisoners
4.12.2010


Judge Rules State of Louisiana Cannot Ban Religious Publication
3.31.2010


ACLU Reminds Louisiana Schools of Equal Rights At School Dances
3.22.2010


South Lafourche High School Holds First GSA Meeting
3.12.2010


ACLU: Order Removing Satirical Article From Website Unconstitutional
3.11.2010


ACLU Calls on Nagin and Riley To Release Records Sought By Inspector General
3.4.2010


Hearing Begins On Sex Segregated Public School In Louisiana
2.24.2010


Federal Appeals Court Tells Louisiana To Issue Birth Certificate To Adopted Child Of Gay Couple
2.18.2010


Lousiana High School Punishes Student For Wearing Indianapolis Colts Jersey
2.5.2010


U.S. Participates In United Nations Human Rights Review Process
1.27.2010


NOPD TO PAY TASING VICTIM
1.22.2010


ACLU Gives Award to Larry Bagneris, Lifetime Champion of Civil Rights & Liberties
1.14.2010


Angola Prisoner Released From Solitary Confinement After ACLU Urging
1.8.2010




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