Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Hastings 1st Annual Social Justice Panel Series covering the Pelican Bay Hunger Strikes


Yesterday our Journal had the pleasure of hosting UC Hastings' 1st Annual Social Justice Panel Series on the Pelican Bay Hunger Strikes that resumed yesterday. The idea for the panel was conceived just two weeks prior to the event when a couple of us who are working with the Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition saw the urgent need to bring this issue to law students. Despite, the short timeline we had to work with, many of you put a lot of time and effort into making this event possible. From the students who put their academic work on the back-burner to make and put up flyers, contact panelists and do extensive outreach, to the faculty and panelists who rearranged busy their schedules to make sure they could be there, it really took a community to make this event happen. THANK YOU Hastings Prisoner Outreach, La Raza, BLSA, NLG, SSDP, HCLS, HRPLJ, Brooke McCarthy, Eli Contreras, Whitney Larson, Caitlin Henry and Professor Aviram for your tremendous help in establishing this new tradition at Hastings.

Below are Professor Aviram's opening remarks as posted on her site and here is a link to Democracy Now's coverage of our press conference.


Good afternoon,

Don’t you know? Talking about a revolution, it starts like a whisper. But this panel is much more than a whisper. It is a strong, loud cry against a dehumanizing, cruel incarceration regime that demeans our society in its entirety. To shed light on these practices, a number of Hastings student organizations have invited former inmates, family members of inmates, and legal professionals, who will discuss this afternoon one of the most exciting and electrifying instances of protest against the evils and inadequacies in our correctional system.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Follow Fenwick

Written by Aaron Lewis

A recent article in the June 6, 2011, Daily Journal reported that “Just Four Percent of Lawyers Give to Legal Aid Groups Fund.” 

“It’s embarrassing,” Richard W. Odgers of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP is quoted as saying of the only 4.4 percent of California attorneys give to the “Justice Gap Fund.”  The Fund was created by the Legislature five years ago as a way to offset the depressing lack of access to legal services that so many Californians face.   The collected funds are then disbursed to roughly 100 legal aid organizations in the state.   When an attorney in California pays their $410 bar dues, they are asked to give $100 to “help close the justice gap for needy Californians.” 

Odgers chairs the committee that oversees the Fund, so he is clearly invested in rectifying this situation. But Odgers’ sense of embarrassment clearly does not seem to extend to his colleagues.  The Fund brought in $809,000 this year.  According to the California State Bar website, there are nearly 172,000 active lawyers in the state.   If each of them were to heed the call of the California Bar, at $100 each, this would represent over 17 million dollars.  This is clearly a high aspirational goal, but it shows what could be accomplished if attorneys in California took this obligation seriously. 

The Article quotes Jeffery S. Davidson, a partner at Kirkland & Ellis LLP, who believes that the giving rate “should be 100 percent, or close to it.”  The Article also notes that “although the bar declined to give a firm-by-firm breakdown of contributions, the statistics showed there were eight unnamed large firms whose attorneys made no donations to the fund.”

Friday, July 15, 2011

Human Rights Hunger Strike in California Prisons (Pt. 2)


Written by: Azadeh Zohrabi

In part two of this Hunger Strike series, I will focus on the Hunger Strikers first demand: an end to group punishment and administrative abuse. Since this is a two part demand, I will address each one separately.
(Part 1 of the Hunger Strike series can be found here)

Group Punishment:

The California Department of Corrections & Rehabilitation (CDCR) uses race as one of the main factors in the classification, placement and punishment of all inmates in CDCR custody. Inmates are assigned to their cells based on race, the recreation areas they use are segregated by race and group punishments are implemented based on race.[1] The most common form of group punishment is a lock-down status which restricts inmates’ access to family and programming.

During the years that I’ve spent visiting at various prisons in California, I’ve seen that it is common for an entire race group to be placed on lock-down for months at a time based on the actions of one or a few. Family members who visit regularly know to call the CDCR hotline the night before and morning of the visit to see if our loved ones are on lock-down, because it is so common. When inmates are on lock-down, they aren’t allowed visits or phone calls and are “denied access to the exercise yard, the canteen, law library, day-room and laundry.”[2] During a lock-down, the only time allowed outside of cells is for showers and sometimes even those are restricted.

A lock down status can be applied to an individual, a group of individuals, a housing unit or the entire facility whenever prison administrators believe a lock-down is warranted. Prior to the current Hunger Strike, Pelican Bay had been on lock-down from January through April, with inmates reporting that they hadn’t had time out of their cells for yard during that time.[3]

Clarence Darrow's Address to Prisoners in Cook County Jail in 1902


Added by Francisco Sánchez

One of the goals of our blog is to share what inspires us as a journal. Although Clarence Darrow is a towering figure for those fighting for social justice, did the myth of Darrow dilute what the man really stood for? Darrow was more than the grandiose litigator that represented Leopold and Loeb, Communists, teachers of evolution, unions, and Black families when such causes were unpopular.  He was a dreamer hoping for the greatest of American revolutions: the abolition of the American criminal justice system.




All words by Clarence Darrow - Excerpts from his Address to Cook County Prisoners, 1902

"If I looked at jails and crimes and prisoners in the way the ordinary person does, I should not speak on this subject to you. The reason I talk to you on the question of crime, its cause and cure, is that I really do not in the least believe in crime. There is no such thing as crime as the word is generally understood. I do not believe there is any sort of distinction between the real moral conditions of people in and out of jail. One is just as good as the other. The people here can no more help being here than the people outside can avoid being outside. I do not believe that people are in jail because they deserve to be. They are in jail simply because they cannot avoid it on account of circumstances which are entirely beyond their control and for which they are in no way responsible.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Human Rights Hunger Strike in California Prisons (Pt. 1)

Written by Azadeh Zohrabi
On July 1, 2011, inmates in the Security Housing Units (SHU) of Pelican Bay State Prison and Corcoran State Prison began a hunger strike to protest a variety of inhumane policies and practices that take place in these units. A week later the number of hunger strikers reported by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) had peaked at 6,600. These men are joined in hunger and solidarity by hundreds of other men and women on the outside and in other prisons across the country. The unified action is centered around five core demands:

1. End Group Punishment and Administrative Abuse
2. Abolish the Debriefing Policy, and Modify Active/Inactive Gang Status Criteria
3. Comply with the US Commission on Safety and Abuse in America’s Prisons 2006 Recommendations Regarding an End to Long-Term Solitary Confinement
4. Provide Adequate and Nutritious Food
5. Expand and Provide Constructive Programming and Privileges for Indefinite SHU Status Inmates