((The following published with permission of the author)) WHY NOT US, AND WHY NOT NOW? AN OPEN APPEAL FROM C-NUMBERS FOR JUSTICE Michael Clark (C-10666) Dixon Correctional Center 2600 N. Brinton Avenue Dixon, IL 61021 (July 10, 2003) Prepared for Town Hall Meeting on indeterminate Sentencing, Chicago, July 19, 2003. ============================================================== ABSTRACT This presentation is written as an address to this panel, and an invitation to its attending audience. We appeal to you to explore this course of dialogue in an effort to implore our Governor to make those wrongs right in our criminal justice system; to grant the C-numbers a deserving chance in becoming citizens again of this great State of Illinois. ======================================================= WHY NOT US, AND WHY NOT NOW? AN OPEN APPEAL FROM C-NUMBERS FOR JUSTICE It is my hope that the information being presented in this paper will explain, educate, as well as enlighten the attending audience to the issues concerning C-number prisoners. It is neither meant nor intended to be an indictment of the criminal justice system, or its supporting agencies. Any criticisms that you might find within the body of this paper are issues of paramount importance worthy of being addressed. The Illinois criminal justice system, according to our current and former Governors Rod Blagojevich and George Ryan, is broken, fragmented, incomplete, and/or disorganized. Our current Governor, Rod Blagojevich, is well-aware of the inappropriate situation regarding the C-numbers who have languished in prison for 30 years or more and who are deserving of an objective standard and/or criteria to assure a fair and impartial process of release. The Prisoner Review Board has arbitrarily released some C-numbers (by majority vote), while "setting" others without any apparent reasoning. The boilerplate excuse given to deny C-numbers parole is unacceptable, irrational, and a clear indication of the arbitrary and capricious process of the Prisoner Review Board. It is also a contradiction of procedural policy, because it states, "That to release you would deprecate the seriousness of the offense, and promote disrespect for the law." The majority of your remaining C-numbers are serving sentences for the crime of murder. If the aforementioned statement was valid, then no one would qualify for parole. Murder in our society will always be considered a serious offense, as it results in loss of life and hardship. No doubt, such an action would promote disrespect for the laws that band us together as a society. How, then, can the Prisoner Review Board justify the release of those C-numbers who they voted to parole, and not violate the very principles they give as a reason to release some prisoners and deny parole to others? On January 11, 2002, then-Governor George Ryan admitted in his speech to the public while addressing an audience at Northwestern University, that our criminal justice system is broken. The former Governor, and then-chief executive officer of the state, was not only referring to the circumstances pertaining to death row inmates, which prompted his decision of blanket clemency for all death row inmates. Rather, he directed his allegations at every level of our judicial process, including all departmental agencies that comprise our criminal justice system. The failure of our criminal justice system in Illinois is a direct result of the lack of fairness and equality that has plagued the procedural process. The unchecked arbitrary manner in which the Prisoner Review Board functions, in the absence of standards or criteria for the evaluation of parole indicates the political mind set of an administrative course that has lost its way. To realize the impact of the aforementioned statement, one only needs to understand those celebrated court cases reflecting the unconscious attitude the courts have taken towards the Constitutional rights of prisoners. The case of Heirens v. Mizell (729 f. 2d 449 (1984)), which was reversed by the Federal Court of Appeals, empowered the Prisoner Review Board to determine parole decisions without utilizing any standards or criteria, and allowing the erroneous application of the standard response of, "To release you would deprecate the seriousness of the offense and promote disrespect for the law." The case involves Mr. William Heirens, commonly referred to as the "lipstick killer," who was arrested in 1946 at the age of 17 for two murders. Now, at 74, Mr. Heirens has served a total of 57 years in prison, three years short of six decades. to my knowledge, no other inmate in the state or country has served longer. Incarcerating Mr. Heirens for 57 years is not justice; it's injustice. No civilized society should be willing to take credit for such an arbitrary capricious act of punishment. Mr. Heirens is symbolic of the injustice of our failing criminal justice system; that's an embarrassment to the concept of fairness and forgiveness, and more important, mercy. We often make use of words without being cognizant of the full import of their meaning; words such as deterrence, punishment, rehabilitation, and justice. We often fall short of the goals and/or objectives we set out to accomplish in our efforts to maintain professionalism. It is important that we not be in denial about the truths regarding our criminal justice system. As a result of hard work and progressive research by two Northwestern University Law School students, Christopher Coleman and Sarah Lively (class of 2003), we have an enlightening overview of our criminal justice system and just how dysfunctional it is. As Coleman and Lively point out in their article written for the Chicago Sun Times: In 1983, a federal judge ruled that the prisoner review board could not apply newer stricter rules for parole to justify keeping Heirens incarcerated, and therefore ordered Heirens released. However, police, prosecutors and the press waged an inflammatory campaign to keep Heirens behind bars, eventually persuading the General Assembly to pass a resolution urging the prisoner review board not to release Heirens. Even the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals caved in to public pressure and ignored its own precedent to prevent Heirens' release. Heirens' case exemplifies all that is wrong with Illinois' justice system; it contains all the flaws and injustices that troubled Ryan and provoked his courageous actions...(Coleman and Lively, 2003). The judicial branch of government has consistently turned away blindly from relevant issues regarding the Constitutional rights of prisoners. The courts have ignored setting forth guidelines and parameters concerning safeguards of Constitutional protections. The unfavorable decisions against prisoners' rights have served to inspire and motivate the inappropriate behavior of the independent quasi-judicial entity known as the Prisoner Review Board, thus lending to the gravity of their arbitrary and capricious decision making concerning parole of C-numbers. To better understand the procedure process of parole and how it affects the participating C-numbers, a descriptive, in-depth explanation is provide by A Position Paper on Indeterminate Sentencing and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board by the Prison Action Committee: When the PRB was created in 1978, and for the next six years, parole hearings were conducted by a three member panel. Three member teams would visit the institution and conduct a hearing with the prisoner. Subsequent to the hearing those same three members would vote on whether or not to parole the prisoner. A majority vote, or two members, would determine the prisoner's fate. All the members had exposure to the prisoner, the ability to meet him or her in person, become familiar with issues concerning each case, get to know the family and supporters, and be able to experience the demeanor and attitude of everyone they met. In 1984, that all changed. The PRB adopted a policy where only one member of the board would interview the prisoner, and then make a presentation to the full IRB, called an Enbanc hearing. At the Enbanc proceeding, you only have one member who has had any contact with the prisoners, and that member, whether for or against the release, makes the recommendation to the full board. A discussion takes place if there are opposing views, and then a vote is taken. Under the current system, it takes eights votes to be paroled. The change in policy was specifically implemented to limit paroles, subordinating the philosophy of rehabilitation inherent in the concept of parole (p. 1). The fact that the process of parole is tainted should be of great concern, as it deprives those parties who would participate and rely on it no fairness or redress. The fact that our current governor has acknowledged the inappropriate manner in which the C-numbers are being dealt with is indeed a start in the right direction of realizing that there is a problem of fairness. We hope that his effort to restructure the Prisoner Review Board is more than idle talk. After over 30 years in prison, the C-numbers deserve a chance to gain parole and be released back into society. The legislative intent was to abolish the concept of indeterminate sentencing, thus phasing out the old law. This special group (C-numbers) was set aside and not granted the same fair treatment afforded to those who received a fixed release date. It is this practice that our Governor points to as wrong and inappropriate. We urge our Governor to address this issue and propose legislation that would effect the release of the C-numbers who have waited patiently on a process that has failed to grant them parole. Most C-numbers are aging inmates who currently have the health problems that develop with age. They deserve the decency to return home to their communities and live out their remaining days. They pose no threat to society. They have fulfilled the obligation of their sentence through punishment, and have the right to be released. To do so would restore justice to a system that has all but abandoned it. We, as C-numbers, no longer rest our hopes on the court system. It has become obvious that the justices are preoccupied with the "mythos of society," which holds that "the ideas of dangerousness and the laws that we fashion are specific to a time, place, and pattern of popular beliefs. The utilitarian concept would direct our concerns toward the future, and not the past. as a few of a remaining class of C-numbers, we have survived the system's "war on crime," its "war on drugs," and its "war on gangs." More importantly we've rehabilitated ourselves in an effort to assimilate back into society. We served over 30 years behind the dismal walls of prison, where time molds and shapes the character of broken men. Faith and belief have molded us into productive, progressive individuals deserving of due consideration pertaining to liberty. We appeal to our communities and its residents, our cities and its people, our state and its citizens, to aide us in our struggle for justice. We challenge this panel to allow this current forum on indeterminate sentencing to be a first of a series of town hall meetings formatted and structured so that we, as C-numbers, can receive the fairness and justice that this great state of Illinois is capable of providing. We encourage our former and current Governors to work diligently in correcting the wrongs in our criminal codes. We caution our legislators' view of how grim our future is without changes in our criminal justice system. Accordingly, we would like to thank this panel for the courage it has shown in acknowledging our problems as C-numbers. We hope that this meeting will serve notice to community-based groups and church organizations that it is their responsibility to have a voice in the issues of human affairs that affect their community. We have paid our debt to society; we merely seek its courtesy of forgiveness in acknowledging that, like them, we're human. BIBLIOGRAPHY Prison Action Committee. 2000. Position Paper on Indeterminate Sentencing and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board. Prepared for the Illinois House of Representatives, Prison Management Reform Committee, August 1. Coleman, Christopher, and Sarah Lively. 2003. " "Decades-Old Prisoner Case Needs Review." Chicago Sun-Times, 2 February.
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