| Doing “Katrina Time”—Torture in New
Orleans Prisons
Part 2: Evacuation Nightmare
by Li Onesto Revolution
#65, October 15, 2006
This series is based on a 141-page report,
“Abandoned
& Abused: Orleans Parish Prisoners in the Wake of Hurricane
Katrina,” released on August 10, 2006, by the American
Civil Liberties Union’s National Prison Project. Based on
questionnaires received from 1,300 prisoners, as well as interviews
with current and recently released Orleans Parish Prison (OPP)
prisoners, the report contains extensive and damning testimony
and evidence of the inhuman and racist torture-like conditions
and treatment that OPP prisoners have been subjected to. Part
one of this series, “Locked
Cells in Rising Water,” told how prisoners were
abandoned, some in locked cells, when Katrina hit and water
flooded into the prison, and how deputies later came back
and used mace, tasers, batons, and shotguns against prisoners
who were struggling to survive. This Part 2 tells the story
of how thousands of prisoners were evacuated under inhuman
and brutal conditions.
* * * * *
Three small boats. Almost 7,000
people. What did this mean for the prisoners
in Orleans Parish Prison who had already been abandoned and
abused? It took over three days to evacuate everyone. People
had to stand in chest-deep water waiting to be rescued for
up to ten hours. And this was only the beginning of what was
to be an evacuation nightmare.
Albert G. Couvillion, one prisoner interviewed
by the ACLU, said: “People were scared and were screaming
that they could not swim… On Wednesday we were escorted out
with our hands on our heads and automatic guns pointed at
us. I waded through slimy, greasy, trash-filled sewage water
up to my neck to boats waiting for us 1½ blocks from the jail.”
There were 354 juveniles being held in OPP
when Hurricane Katrina hit. They, too, told horror stories
of the evacuation—how they were tied together with plastic
cuffs, pulled out by a rope, and put on boats. One 15-year-old
boy said: “It was scary because I can’t swim and they were
pulling us by our shirts and I went under the water a few
times. I even swallowed a lot of water.”
The water was very deep and some prisoners
were too short or too weak to stand above the water on their
own.
One woman told of how she carried an elderly
woman on her back from her building to Central Lock-Up where
prisoners were being herded together to be evacuated. She
said. “We waded through 4½ sometimes 5 foot deep water. I
carried a 65 year old lady on my back because she was 4 foot
9 inches and could not swim and had a heart condition and
the officers told her that if she didn’t learn to swim quick
they had a body bag with her name on it…”
Interstate Highway 10.
This is where the prisoners were deposited, at the Broad Street
overpass—delivered not to safety, but to heartless and brutal
guards. They were made to sit, for hours, for days—sitting
cross-legged, back-to-back. They were not allowed to move
at all. Prisoners were assaulted if they tried to stand up
to relieve themselves. One man said, “I was maced several
times because I either wanted to stretch my sore and numb
limbs or because I need to use the bathroom.”
Even a deputy admitted, “[There were] some
instances where pepper spray was used when it could have been
avoided… When the inmates were getting pepper sprayed, the
only things they were asking for was food or water. They wasn’t
getting hostile or whatever. But when they got loud, they
got pepper sprayed.”
Quantonio Williams told the ACLU, “We were
put in rows. The rows in front had floodwater coming up to
them. The staff who took us told us that we would be given
food and water. Although we saw lots of food and bottled water
around, we were not given any. We saw the correctional officers
drinking the water… Lots of people were passing out in the
sun. The only way we could keep from burning up was to wet
our shirts in the floodwater. We sat out in the direct sun
all day without food or water… all the people who had passed
out were just left out in the sun to the side and not transported.
One man in the section started acting out, and the correctional
officer just sprayed all the people in the area, including
me. I got mace all over my back.”
Dozens of prisoners interviewed by the ACLU
talked about how officers used taser guns on people who were
just stretching or asking for help. One man said he saw someone
“get bitten by a dog because he had to use the bathroom and
‘stood up’ when we were ‘told’ to stay sitting in the sun
on that ‘hot’ concrete… The guard couldn’t get the dog to
release [his] leg for about 5 minutes.” Another prisoner said,
“I saw guards ‘march’ an inmate past me with Taser Wires attached
to his back. At no point were we given food or water, and
we spent the entire day sitting directly in the sun, at gunpoint.”
Woman prisoners, in particular, were subjected
to sadistic guards. One female prisoner recalled, “[They]
made us urinate and make bowel movements in our clothes where
we sat. It was inhumane, humiliating and also degrading. I
and other females were on our menstruation and had no sanitary
napkins to change our old ones. We wore what we had on for
3 days. Some of us had menstrual blood all over us. The S.I.D.
[Special Investigation Division] and Swat team called us ‘crackheads,’
‘whore,’ ‘bitches’ and all sorts of other names.”
Three and Three Dozen.
The inhumane evacuation of people from OPP took three days.
And the prisoners were then put on buses—to eventually end
up at over three dozen different Louisiana state prison facilities.
The ACLU report contains many stories of the brutality that
continued, and even intensified, as guards seemed to single
out the OPP prisoners for even more (than the usual) racist
and sadistic treatment.
A 17-year-old prisoner who was taken to the
Bossier Parish Maximum Security Jail said, “We were being
maced and having racial remarks told to us by several guards.
I was only there for about two weeks and I was maced six times.
They feed us small portions of food, barely enough to live
on.”
Timothy Ordon said an officer beat him up,
then whispered in his ear “lil nigger boy, you know where
the fuck you at, we don’t play that shit out here, you ain’t
in New Orleans,” started hitting him some more, and then dragged
him into a cell by his feet.
Tyrone Lewis was a musician who wrote many
popular songs. Some of them had been performed and recorded
by the Neville Brothers. When he was booked into OPP in July
2004, he told the prison staff that he had been hit in the
chest before his arrest and that he was afraid that his may
have dislodged his pacemaker-defibrillator. But Lewis was
never given any medical attention. After being evacuated,
he continued to complain to prison deputies that he was having
chest pains. According to the ACLU report, the only response
he got was: “Fuck you nigger, we’re not doing shit for you
niggers from New Orleans.” His condition deteriorated after
being evacuated and he was finally admitted to a hospital
in Monroe, Louisiana on September 14. He died 3 days later.
His death certificate stated that complications with his pacemaker-defibrillator
played a role in his death.
One prisoner sent to Bossier said his release
date was September 9. He said, “I told one of the guards that
my release date had passed and asked if there was anything
I could do to get out of here. He blew up on me and started
cursing me out. I started cursing him back and that was when
he pepper sprayed me through the food slot in my cell… The
guard later came back with a whole crowd of guards, including
a big bald-head white guy who seemed to tell all of the other
guards what to do. From outside the cell they told the dude
in the cell with me that when they opened the cell he should
come out. I could see that they were pointing a red light
from a Taser at me and when I saw that I knew they were going
to come in and beat me up. I got on my knees with my hands
on my head to show them I wasn’t going to cause any problems.
They walked in the cell and the big guy shot me with the Taser.
When he stopped shocking me, the other guards all jumped on
me and put handcuffs and leg shackles on me. Then they started
beating me. Those wires from the Taser were still stuck in
me, one in my chest and one in my stomach, so when he told
them to get off me he started shocking me again, saying shit
like, ‘you like that, you like that!’ He did that three times,
where he would shock me and then let them beat me up and then
start shocking me again. I blacked out and woke up alone in
a cell with no clothes on at all. There was a rack for the
bed, but there was no mattress. The only thing in the cell
was the rack, a toilet and toilet paper. They were saying
things to me like, ‘You New Orleans niggers think you so bad.’
They also said, ‘You are all animals. I’m gonna put you in
the woods with the animals.’ They called New Orleans ‘Thug
City.’ I’m American Indian, but my skin’s brown, so I guess
they thought I was black.”
A prisoner taken to Quachita Parish Correctional
Center wrote: “ I have been beat, tazed, maced, sprayed with
pepper, bean bagged, spit on, almost bitten by a dog several
times, cursed out, called niggers, monkeys, animals and other
racist slurs. I have been deprived of all my privileges and
some of my rights, put in rubber rooms, stripped naked and
sprayed down with pepper… They think all of us in here are
killers and they tell us, since we kill people and think we
can get away with it then they can treat us any way they want
and get away with it. That nobody gives a damn about us and
we all are gonna die here and they’re gonna bury us out back
where their parents used to bury our parents. Now you know
they’re talking about slavery and if that’s not discrimination
I don’t know what that is.”
Next:
Part 3: Dungeon “Justice” and Slave Labor
This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolution
Online
http://revcom.us
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497
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