Rethinking solitary: National prisons group pushes changes
Proposals range from mandatory health care visits and mental illness treatment for inmates in segregation to more time out of cells for recreation and education.
“The punishment that we give to Americans is deprivation of their liberty, but it doesn’t mean that we try to punish them more while their liberty is deprived,” said
In
Last month,
Also in September, the
Critics of rigid solitary confinement say it’s a dehumanizing form of punishment that increases inmates’ anxiety and anger, strips them of social contact necessary to interact safely with others, and makes it harder for inmates to integrate back into the general prison population and, upon release, society.
Inmates sent to solitary should be prisoners “we’re afraid of, not mad at,” said
Mohr and
A 2014 Colorado law bans the placement of inmates with serious mental illnesses in solitary confinement. That law was enacted after the fatal 2013 shooting of
Ex-
Hairston, 59, said he spent many days “in the hole” during 15 years in and out of several
“I’d always identify myself as the animal,” said Hairston, now a security guard at a
At
In the past, inmates caught using drugs could wait weeks before learning whether they’d end up in solitary. Once there, they stayed in small cells for 23 hours a day with a short break spent in only a slightly bigger holding area for bare-bones recreation like using a pull-up bar. Inmates often just spent their time talking to fellow solitary prisoners.
Today, a streamlined system removes such rule breakers from the general prison population much faster. And instead of ending up in a tiny cell with no privileges, they’re housed in a separate, dormitory-style wing and given the chance to take substance abuse programs and other classes. A 90-day sentence can be reduced by a month if inmates accept the educational opportunities.
Inmates sent to solitary for bigger offenses, like fighting, are still housed in traditional solitary cells but are also given access to classes and counseling out of their cells — unheard of in the past.
The change in philosophy has led to a decline in inmates returning to segregation, Belmont warden
“When you let them back out, it was kind of a crap shoot on whether they were going to violate rules again or not, because we had taken all pro-social activity away from them in segregation,” she said.
The goal is preventing new victims of crime by focusing on inmate rehabilitation, including their time in solitary, Raemisch said.
“I don’t see my mission as punishing someone once they get to prison,” he said. “Anybody that’s been through a prison knows just being there is punishment enough.”
Category: International




