They raided the shop Thursday morning. Both investigators,
the Major (in street clothes) and a half dozen COs walked into the furniture
shop and took all six office workers into custody. All six have – change that,
“had” – access to computers. Wednesday night on a “tip” (i.e. an inmate dropped
a note) a factory worker in 1A was shook down. In his possession were notebooks
full of parley slips. And, the slips were all typeset. There were hundreds of
tickets for NBA and NHL play-offs, NASCAR, and Major League Baseball. The guy
had an OTB operation running out of his locker.
They took
him into custody and he did what an inmate is never supposed to do: he told on
his business associates. Those associates were all the computer guys at the
factory. Now they’re all together in the hole.
The hole.
There’s a lot going on in DOC right now about solitary confinement. Virginia
has been under the watchful gaze of church groups, Amnesty International, and
the ACLU for its liberal use of solitary confinement. These groups, supported
by scientific and medical research have argued that solitary confinement for
long stretches causes long-term psychological harm. For some sociopathic,
violent inmates, solitary confinement is the only option. For most, however,
the hole is pure punishment.
Most guys
in here will puff their chests and tell you that you haven’t done “real time”
until you’ve (1) been to a “major” (a high custody facility) and (2) been to
the “hole.” I did my 4 ½ months in receiving with the psychotic murderers, and
rapists, and child predators; I witnessed firsthand the packs of gang bangers
robbing, rolling, and beating other inmates; I saw the after-effects of
stabbings and rapes; I did enough “time” to meet test #1. I have no desire to
notch, as a completed goal, item #2.
The same
day the VCE shop guys got locked up I had to walk over to 7 building. No, I
wasn’t “in trouble.” I was delivering worksheets and a test to one of our
college guys sitting in the hole for dirty urine. The warden allows guys doing
their hole time to stay up on their classwork – provided it’s on paper; no
hardback books allowed in solitary.
My buddy
DC, once one of the most notorious convicts in the Virginia prison system,
pulled over a dozen straight years in solitary. There were times, he told me,
when he thought he was losing his mind. Being alone in a small confined space
begins to play tricks with your mental state. Doing hole time back then was
serious. There weren’t cameras anywhere. Officers would come along at different
times and pop your cell door and beat on you. DC was a boxer; he got his shots
in, but six on one and he usually came up short.
The hole today
is different. You get outside once a day (weather permitting) for rec. You’re
put in a “dog kennel,” a twelve by twelve fended-in enclosure, just enough room
to walk around, do some calisthenics, and get some fresh air. Every three days
you get walked down the hall to the shower.
Where the
hole gets you now is the idleness. You aren’t allowed any electronics – no TV,
no radio or CDs. Books are limited; stamps, envelopes, and paper and pen if you
already possess them. You give up all your commissary – food and hygiene
products – and live on the 3 trays they give you plus small tubes of
toothpaste, a state toothbrush, and bar soap. You sit in a cell, with no view
of the world and no sounds, and you sleep, you sleep the days away.
One of our
other college students, “Wes” was back there for fifteen days at the beginning
of April. He came out ten pounds thinner (he only weighed 160 to begin with).
What did he do? He typed a sexually charged letter to his girlfriend on a work
computer. They found it, fired him, threw him out of the college building, and
left him sitting in the hole for over two weeks.
Every week
you see guys with officers in tow pushing carts with all their belongings
toward “7.” It’s a long walk with 900 pairs of eyes fixed on you. No matter
what guys tell you about toughness and “manning” up, it isn’t fun.
There’s no
honor in prison on either side. The officers – many of them anyway – are as
dirty and corrupt as those they’re paid to police. We have a new investigator
who is busy locking guys up; all the while, we know about the tobacco he used
to sneak in and the furniture he had built – for free.
And then
there are the inmates. Most end up getting caught due to their own stupidity
and arrogance. “Cubby” – he was using heroin two to three times a week. Wes –
he forgot to put a stamp on his envelope. The letter came back, was opened,
read, and Wes was walking to “7.” The shop workers – they used their work
computers to run book even knowing that they watch every keystroke.
Investigation?
This isn’t the Warren Commission at work. We, collectively, are our own worst
enemies. So the gambling and the drugs, the store boxes and the Google numbers,
the guys who run the hustles change but the hustles keep going and the
officers, running their own hustles, keep playing along. Another week, another
investigation, and a few more in the hole.
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