« CA: Race-based prison policy under scrutiny |
Main
| Mississippi complying with HIV order to Integrate HIV Infected Prisoners »
Monday
Feb072005
Monday, February 7, 2005 at 05:36AM
The extreme isolation and sensory deprivation found in Indiana’s
Secured Housing Unit spurred four suicides and numerous
self-mutilations by mentally ill prisoners, said the American Civil
Liberties Union today in a lawsuit filed against state prison
officials. "Locking up prisoners with mental illness in small
windowless cells is psychological torture," said Ken Falk, Legal
Director of the Indiana Civil Liberties Union. "Confinement for lengthy
periods of time in 24-hour isolation would compromise even a healthy
person’s sanity." At issue in today’s complaint, filed by the ACLU’s
National Prison Project and Indiana Civil Liberties Union, are the
brutal conditions faced by mentally ill prisoners confined in the
Secured Housing Unit (SHU) at the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility
in Carlisle, Indiana, a "supermax" facility. The ACLU charges that the
prisoners’ mental illness is exacerbated by the unbearable conditions
in the SHU, which have caused prisoners to hallucinate, rip chunks of
flesh from their bodies, rub feces on themselves and attempt suicide.
"A disproportionately high number of mentally ill prisoners are
transferred to the SHU because they are often misidentified as
trouble-makers in prison," said David C. Fathi, an attorney with the
ACLU’s National Prison Project. "If mentally ill prisoners receive
inadequate mental health care or their disease worsens because of the
extreme deprivation within the SHU, it is likely they will find it
difficult to obey prison rules and will remain stuck at the facility
indefinitely." [more]