Blog Archive

Sunday, June 24, 2018

Updates from Shawna

I will be uploading the new appeal which will be sent to me over the next few days.  Juror declaration will be included, sans any identifying info.  

On the recent suicide.  SF states the woman was in her cell 56min, guards had not done their walk thru.  The woman's body was left on the run uncovered, which is totally disrespectful and gives much insight on how the staff feels about the women housed there.  On the way out, her body was bumped repeatedly on the stairs.   I am left wondering how the staff would like their loved one treated in this manner??    

Special units have left.  Soon after, same day a very bloody fight broke out.  Good job whipping the women into shape.  

A proposal for a closed unit on each yard is being talked about by staff.  (In hopes of stopping all the fights.  Here's my hint for the staff, maybe try treating the ladies like human beings! And not animals~Rae).  

3 women on D yard were caught with dummies in their beds, so they could sneak off elsewhere.  Good thing it was not a SSR move.  

Updates are given by phone today.  The last comment on each update is from Rae, not Shawna.  


Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Shocking Suicides Rock Perryville!! What's going on there? Read on!

https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/southwest-valley/2018/06/20/arizona-department-corrections-second-inmate-reportedly-kills-self/711865002/

Investigation is going on at Perryville.  Lumley has special units with dogs because officers are afraid for their lives (and inmates).  Prison doors are rigged and basic lack of control is on the yards per SF.  The special police unit is there all day til 8pm, shaking down cells and inmates, trying to gain some control.  SF states, sad thing is...when they leave, the prison will go back to "normal'.  She states no one cares that inmates get assaulted and jumped.  But now that officers fear for safety and lives action happens.  

Friday, June 1, 2018

Arizona news from LifeLines



A very warm welcome to new writers on both sides of the pond and I hope everyone’s friendships, both new and old, are going well. Thank you to everyone for your letters, emails and cards; it is always good to hear from you.

I am very sorry to say that we have lost three more friends in Arizona since my last Statelines went to press. Robert Smith died on 5th February at Chandler Medical Center, two years after his death sentence was overturned. Sadly, Robert was still waiting to move off the row and so did not get a chance to enjoy the comparative freedoms of general population, which his penfriend says he was looking forward to. On 9th February Graham Henry died of cancer aged 71; his penfriend’s moving farewell letter to him is printed in this issue. My thoughts are with their penfriends, James and Stephen, and their friends at Browning and Central units. Brian Dann also died on 1st March; he did not have a LifeLines penfriend, but my thoughts are with his friends on the row. (Source: AZDOC)

I sense it may be a difficult time on the row at the moment, particularly in Central Unit perhaps, where several of our friends have passed away in recent months. You are all in my thoughts. I also often hear from people on the row about long waits for medical assistance or tests and I cannot imagine how stressful this must be for you, your friends and family. It will therefore perhaps not come as a surprise to you that Arizona’s prison healthcare has recently been in the news again. Dr. Rodney Stewart is the medical director at ASPC Eyman and works for Corizon, the healthcare company used in Arizona prisons. In March he testified in a U.S. District Court hearing about Arizona prison healthcare, stating that up to 80% of inmates at ASPC Eyman had Hepatitis C. Arizona Department of Corrections reports paint a very different picture, claiming only 15% of prisoners in the entire AZDOC population have the virus.

While Hepatitis C can now be effectively treated with antiviral medication, it is expensive - $43,000 to $94,500 for a 12-week course of treatment according to a 2016 study by Yale and Harvard universities. If left untreated, it can have serious consequences. An AZ Central article reports that, since executions were put on hold in 2014, five people on the row have died from Hepatitis C related infections, according to their attorneys and relatives. Brian Dann had to sue the director of the AZDOC last year in order to get the drugs. He was successful, but, due to the liver damage already caused by the virus, he needed an operation and sadly died during the procedure. A spokesman for AZDOC said, "The department treats Hepatitis C inmates pursuant to, and consistent with, Federal Bureau of Prisons guidelines." Those federal guidelines include an "opt-out" provision, meaning prisoners can voluntarily refuse testing. Then treatment depends on the level of cirrhosis. (Source: AZ Central). I wish you all good health and strength of spirit in the coming months.

There is more bad news I’m afraid as the Supreme Court has decided not to hear either part of Hidalgo v. Arizona – the case reported in the winter Wing – which challenged the constitutionality of both Arizona’s death penalty and of the death penalty nationwide. However, Justice Breyer did issue a statement, joined by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan, inviting a further challenge with more evidence. Using public records requests, Mr. Hidalgo’s lawyers had obtained information about 860 first-degree murder cases in one Arizona county that showed essentially every defendant was eligible for the death penalty under the state’s sentencing laws. “That evidence is unrebutted,” Breyer wrote. “It points to a possible constitutional problem … Evidence of this kind warrants careful attention and evaluation.” But Breyer said the case lacked enough expert evidence or studies to properly review the constitutionality of the death penalty. (Sources: New York Times and Reuters)

To end on good news – in March the death penalty was taken off the table for Darrell Ketchner, who had his conviction overturned in 2014 and is still awaiting a new trial. (Source: Mohave daily news) The Las Vegas Review Journal reported the prosecutors cited the cost of pursuing a death sentence as the reason for their decision. They have also withdrawn the death penalty as an option for another high profile case saying, "There is no reasonable likelihood of the death penalty actually being imposed in a realistic and efficient timeframe given the current state of affairs surrounding persons sentenced to death." Maricopa County Prosecutor Bill Montgomery said, "I can tell you we have fewer capital cases pending than at any time in the last 20 years”. Death penalty cases are down in both Maricopa and Pima counties. Given Maricopa was one of three counties in 2017 that accounted for more than 30% of death sentences across the US, hopefully this downturn is a sign of things to come. (Source: ABC15 Arizona)

Lindesay Mace

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Update on Shawna

Just an update on Shawna, I spoke with Shawna by phone yesterday and she's doing well and in good spirits.  She wants to thank all those who support her and believe in her. Shawna wants to encourage all those with questions/support to write her at Shawna Forde # 260830, Perryville/Lumley Unit, P. O. Box 3300, Goodyear, AZ  85338.  Shawna will answer all letters.  Remember you must include your return address or the prison will not give her your mail.  Thank you!!

Monday, February 19, 2018

Update on pads; grievance about bras/panties/clothing state issue, needs your help!

I got a call from Shawna today & she & other ladies send a huge thx to all that helped get the ladies their pads, she said they came around and passed out 30 pads to each woman. Unfortunately, immediately afterwards, in an act of revenge, DOC went and destroyed all the plants and adobes the inmates had been working so hard on to improve their environment. Obviously they care NOTHING for morale, and only want to play petty power games and stomp on people beneath them like junior high bullies.

Now the next thing they would ask people to call/email/snail mail about its the fact DOC is not giving the ladies their state issue bra's & panties & other clothing items. DOC uses excuses about "nothing on the shelf" available! Where is all their money going?? This is just ridiculous, they are violating their own policy.  Not many can afford to just buy all that on the low wages they make, and after paying electric, medical & medication co-pays & etc. Hopefully, we can make a difference here.  Some contact info:

ADC Contact Information

Central Office

1601 W. Jefferson
Phoenix, AZ 85007

602-542-5497

You may contact the Family and Friends Liaison by email IFFLiaison@azcorrections.gov or telephone (602) 364-3945 or in-state toll-free (866) 333-2039.

Perryville Prison
Main Telephone:
(623) 853-0304
Main Fax:
(623) 853-0425
Physical Address:
2105 North Citrus Road
GoodyearAZ 85395
United States

Kim Currier
Warden

Governor Doug Ducey's info:   

Phone Number:
(602) 542-4331
Fax Number:
(602) 542-7601

Address

1700 W. Washington Street
PhoenixAZ 85007
United States

Sunday, February 4, 2018

Phone cards

Shawna is in need of some money for phone cards to call her family.  If anyone can donate 5 to 10 dollars or more, it would be great!!  Thanks from Shawna!  

Sunday, January 28, 2018

AZ DOC refusing to provide sanitary pads to women, this is a health concern

    AZ DOC has decided to NOT provide female inmates with sanitary pads each month.  They are going to have to buy them from commissary.  This will place undue and unfair financial stress on many of the women.  Menstruation is a bodily function for all females.  This is is unfair discrimination.  The prison is supposed to provide the basic needs for each inmate.  Where's all the AZ taxpayer money going?    Please contact the warden and additional office below and politely let them know this is unacceptable.  Bodily functions are NOT controllable!  I will be contacting the ACLU as well.  thx

Kim Currier
Warden
AS(623) 853-0425
PC - Perryville
PO Box 3000
Goodyear, AZ 85338
 Telephone:
(623) 853-0304
Main Fax:


Arizona Department of Corrections

1601 W. Jefferson
Phoenix, AZ 85007
Phone: 602-542-5497



Office of the Director

Director Charles L. Ryan


602-542-5225

Sunday, January 7, 2018

More news about AZ giving humanity to DR prisoners

AZ in the news

https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/node/6960




Several months after Arizona settled a lawsuit over the conditions of confinement on the state's death row, the state has ended the practice of automatically housing condemned prisoners in solitary confinement, and prisoners and prison officials alike are praising the changes. Carson McWilliams (pictured), Division Director for Offender Operations in the Arizona Department of Corrections (ADC), told the Arizona Republic that the new incarceration conditions provide an "atmosphere where [prisoners] can socialize," resulting in "reduce[d] anxiety" that, in turn, "adds to safety control" of the prison. And, prison officials say, it has reduced institutional costs. Prior to the lawsuit, death row had meant 23-hour-per-day confinement in a concrete cell the size of a parking space, shuttered by a steel door with a perforated slot through which the prisoners would receive their meals, and with a bench bed and a sink attached to an uncovered toilet. Prisoners had no contact visits with families or lawyers, were handcuffed behind the back and subjected to body-cavity searches whenever they left their cells, and were restricted to showering or exercising three times a week. They also were denied prison jobs and educational opportunities. About the solitary conditions, McWilliams remarked, "The more you're restricted inside a cell, the more likely you are to have depression, to have anxiety, to have other types of mental problems that could lead to some type of problem inside the system, whether its self harm, or suicide, or aggression towards a staff member or towards another inmate." One death-row prisoner who was interviewed by the paper said, "It’s hard to explain the deprivation. . . . It weighs on your mind." McWilliams said it now requires fewer officers to manage death row because officers no longer have to deliver individual meals or individually escort each of the 120 prisoners. Kevin Curran, who has been a prison warden at various facilities run by the ADC, said that he "feels safer among the death-row men than among the career criminals and gangsters in the general population." Under the new conditions, prisoners are able to socialize with each other in activities such as playing basketball, volleyball, or board games, and can eat meals together. One ADC corrections officer told the Arizona Republic that he was "apprehensive" at first about the changes, but the transition has been "very good" with only a "few minor incidents," which were "a lot less" than he expected.

(M. Kiefer, Arizona death row comes out of solitary, giving convicts more human contact, socialization, Arizona Republic, Dec. 19, 2017.) See Death Row.

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Arizona Statelines from The Wing


Warm greetings to everyone on both sides of the pond – I hope this finds you all in good spirits and that your friendships, both new and old, are going well. Thank you to everyone for your letters and emails; it is always good to hear from you.
I am sorry to say we lost one of our friends on the row – Albert Carreon died of an illness on 8th September aged 55. He had been on the row for 14 years. May he rest in peace now. My thoughts are with his penfriend at this difficult time.
Now an update on the legal case originally brought by a coalition of news organisations in 2014, which has received its final ruling: Arizona does not have to reveal who provides its execution drugs or divulge the qualifications of people who carry out executions. U.S. District Judge Snow ruled the media outlets didn't show they had a First Amendment right to know the suppliers of lethal injection drugs and showed concern that some drug suppliers would decline to do business with the state if their identities were not kept secret. However the media coalition has filed notice that it will appeal the ruling. (Sources: Associated Press & Arizona Republic)
I’m glad to say that hope has sprung up in another quarter though. A group of 20 former Arizona judges, prosecutors and legal experts are urging the U.S. Supreme Court to hear an interesting new case brought by one of the guys on the row. If it decides to hear the case they will have to decide whether the state’s death penalty law is constitutional, but also whether the death penalty as a whole is. The lead lawyer on the case is former Obama administration acting solicitor general Neal Katyal, also known as the lead lawyer for Hawaii's challenge to President Trump's travel ban.
The primary argument of the case is that Arizona’s law doesn't do enough to narrow who is eligible for the death penalty. After the Supreme Court found the US death penalty unconstitutional in 1972, it brought it back 4 years later only as a result of new state laws that imposed new constraints. For example, Arizona’s new law required the finding of "aggravating" circumstances, which the court concluded would "direct and limit" who was eligible for execution "so as to minimize the risk of wholly arbitrary and capricious action." At that point there were just 6 aggravating factors that could make someone eligible for the death penalty. However 40 years later the law now lists 14 factors so that, far from the state limiting the application of the death penalty, it has instead expanded it. Indeed, so much so that in an 11 year period 99% of murder cases in Arizona were classed eligible for the death penalty. If the suit was successful Dale Baich, the assistant federal public defender, advises it could result in some death sentences being vacated.
The secondary aim is that the court should rule the death penalty unconstitutional nationwide under the Eighth Amendment's guarantee against cruel and unusual punishment. It makes three other key arguments in support of this larger aim: states can't give guidance that ensures only "the worst offenders" are sentenced to death; states can't enforce the death penalty without "ensnaring and putting to death the innocent" and decades spent on death row with "the remote but very real possibility of execution" is in itself a constitutional violation. First and foremost though - fingers crossed the Supreme Court accepts the case onto their docket. (Sources: BuzzFeed News, KJZZ Radio & Washington Examiner)
Finally, as indicated in my last Statelines, sadly executions are now legally possible again, but the state has still not filed with the Arizona Supreme Court for any execution warrants, in part because it has had difficulty obtaining drugs to perform the executions. The Arizona Department of Corrections has pledged to carry out further executions using the anaesthetic sodium thiopental or the barbiturate pentobarbital without adding paralytic drugs that could mask pain and suffering, however neither drug is available to prisons from U.S. pharmaceutical firms. The state has indicated it will continue looking for them overseas or have them made to order by compounding pharmacies. Hopefully their search will be a long one. (Source: Arizona Republic)
I wish you all good health and strength of spirit in the coming months.

LIndesay Mace

Sunday, November 5, 2017

A personal note from Shawna, a real must read!

This moved me very much this morning.  So much so, I felt tears prickling the backs of my eyes.  We must always remember the potential for growth within all humans and strive to help them achieve it.  Kudos Anthony.  Shawna, you have made me so proud girl.