thefreelioness:

The US military says guards have clashed with prisoners during the on-going hunger strike at Guantanamo Bay, leading officers to move detainees from communal to single cells at Camp 6.

The military says detainees have covered surveillance cameras, windows and partitions, preventing guards from observing them during a hunger strike that has been continuing for more than two months. Lawyers say most of the 166 prisoners are participating.

The US military said in a statement Saturday that detainees have been using improvised weapons to resist the transfer, ‘forcing’ guards to fire four less-than-lethal rounds. Officials say no guards or detainees have been seriously injured.

No one in America seems to give a shit about Guantanamo, OUR prison.  At least RT does. 

Lol I remember when Obama promised to close it down.

You’re never going to win… Bottom line is the house wins every time.

That’s what Maine Correctional Center Captain Shawn Welch said to a prisoner who was strapped into a restraint torture chair, his face coated with pepper spray and his legs shaking in pain and fear.

See the ACLU article:

The entire ordeal was captured in a disturbing video that recently hit the internet. After Captain Welch pepper sprayed prisoner Paul Schlosser in the face, Captain Welch ignored Schlosser’s plea that he could not breathe; at one point, Captain Welch responds to Schlosser’s pleas for help with the taunt, “Last I heard, I was as useless as tits on a bull.”

How in the world did this come about?

A former military medic, Paul Schlosser has received treatment in prison for both bipolar disorder and depression. After being held in solitary confinement for two months, he began to cut himself – a common response to such long-term isolation. On June 7, 2012, Schlosser pulled off his bandages and refused to be treated. He was then strapped to a restraint chair and confronted by Captain Welch.

In the video, we see Schlosser immobilized in the restraint chair and surrounded by officers in riot gear. Schlosser remains compliant until one of the officers pins Schlosser’s head to the back of the chair; Schlosser responds by squirming and then spitting at the officer. Without warning, Captain Welch suddenly coats Schlosser’s face at close range with pepper spray from a canister only intended to be used on large crowds from a distance of twenty feet or more, according to an investigator’s report. Schlosser chokes and fights for breath. He pleads, “I can’t breathe, Captain,” but Welch does nothing. Instead of following accepted professional standards and rinsing away the liquid, Welch puts a spit hood on Schlosser, effectively trapping the pepper spray against the man’s face. For over 20 minutes, Welch, with canister in hand, paces in and out of the small area where Schlosser is being restrained, and refuses to let him wash the burning spray from his face and eyes.

Sadly, this is one of many examples of corrections staff abusing restraints and pepper spray, at times with deadly results:

  • Nick Christie died in 2006 after being pepper sprayed twelve times and spending six hours naked in a restraint chair. There, too, guards placed a spit hood over Mr. Christie, ensuring that he would breathe the liquid as long as he wore it. The case was later ruled a homicide.
  • Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio discontinued the use of restraint chairs in 2006 after three wrongful death lawsuits.
  • Jesse Lee Williams, Jr. was restrained when guards sprayed an entire can of pepper spray into a hood before putting it over his mouth as part of a savage beating. He died two days later.

Openness and accountability are two of the strongest bulwarks protecting prisoners from abuse. This is true whether the abuse occurs in a matter of minutes, such as when Arizona guards beat, tased, stripped, and left Marty Atencio to die in a cell, or days, like when Michigan guards strapped Timothy Souders to a cement slab until he died of hyperthermia and dehydration.

Unfortunately, instead of promoting openness and accountability, the Maine Department of Corrections has closed ranks to protect one of its own. Corrections Commissioner Joseph Ponte ignored the recommendation to fire Welch despite an internal investigation which found that Welch acted on a personal vendetta against Schlosser and not for any legitimate security reason. Now, the Department has focused its attention on ensuring no more videos are leaked, instead of ensuring no more torture happens.

Paul Schlosser is lucky to be alive. The next Paul Schlosser might not be so lucky.

See the video here (video source from LiveLeak.com).

Maine Police Officer Pepper Sprays Restrained Inmate

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In a story first reported by 5NEWS, three Benton County (Arkansas) jailers were fired last month after using pepper spray on an inmate wearing a body restraint, Sheriff Kelley Cradduck said Monday.
He said the jailers were fired for using excessive force.
A jail incident report states that deputies were trying to restrain an inmate, Shannon Taylor, who had been placed into a detox cell in the Benton County Jail. Taylor repeatedly had been striking the cell door, despite deputies asking him to stop, the report states.
A sergeant, a deputy and a corporal entered the cell and wrestled Taylor to the ground, shocking him with a Taser stun gun as he continued to struggle, according to the jail incident report. Sgt. Shawn Henning, Deputy Michael Finnegan and Corporal Gale Roland were eventually able to place Taylor in a restraint chair.
The inmate’s legs were not restrained, and he kept kicking and thrashing around with his legs, according to witnesses. Roland used pepper spray on Taylor, who stopped resisting long enough for jailers to restrain them in the chair, Finnegan states in the incident report.

In a story first reported by 5NEWS, three Benton County (Arkansas) jailers were fired last month after using pepper spray on an inmate wearing a body restraint, Sheriff Kelley Cradduck said Monday.

He said the jailers were fired for using excessive force.

A jail incident report states that deputies were trying to restrain an inmate, Shannon Taylor, who had been placed into a detox cell in the Benton County Jail. Taylor repeatedly had been striking the cell door, despite deputies asking him to stop, the report states.

A sergeant, a deputy and a corporal entered the cell and wrestled Taylor to the ground, shocking him with a Taser stun gun as he continued to struggle, according to the jail incident report. Sgt. Shawn Henning, Deputy Michael Finnegan and Corporal Gale Roland were eventually able to place Taylor in a restraint chair.

The inmate’s legs were not restrained, and he kept kicking and thrashing around with his legs, according to witnesses. Roland used pepper spray on Taylor, who stopped resisting long enough for jailers to restrain them in the chair, Finnegan states in the incident report.

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