The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Solitary confinemen­t and our community

- By Terry Kupers Terry A. Kupers is a psychiatri­st, professor at The Wright Institute, and author of “Solitary: The Inside Story of Supermax Isolation and How We Can Abolish It” (University of California Press, 2017).

As a forensic psychiatri­st with five decades of experience, I know a mental health problem when I see it. The Mandela California Mandela Act, Assembly Bill 280, would greatly limit solitary confinemen­t and enhance rehabilita­tion opportunit­ies in California prisons, jails and immigratio­n detention facilities.

AB 280 has been passed by both the state Assembly and Senate twice, but after its first passage Gov. Gavin Newson vetoed it citing security concerns. AB 280 was recently passed again by both houses and is on pause while negotiatio­ns with the governor proceed.

While it is very clear that solitary confinemen­t causes massive psychologi­cal and physical damage to prisoners, there is no evidence that limiting solitary confinemen­t would create a security problem in correction­al facilities, nor would it lead to negative safety outcomes for the community at large.

The issue of solitary confinemen­t has an important history in our state. This includes Ashker v. Brown, a class action lawsuit that greatly limited the time the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion (CDCR) could consign prisoners to solitary confinemen­t. From 2011 to 2013, many thousands of prisoners participat­ed in hunger strikes, supported by large gatherings of family members and advocates in the community. The hunger strikers’ demands included a fair process for consigning prisoners to solitary confinemen­t, meaningful programs, and steps to being released from solitary. CDCR actually agreed to these very reasonable demands when the Ashker case was settled in 2015.

I testified as a psychiatri­c expert witness in Ashker v. Brown. I examined 24 prisoners who had been in solitary confinemen­t at Pelican Bay State Prison for over ten years (20 or 30 years in some cases), and found alarming symptoms and disabiliti­es. While relatively stable prisoners (from a mental health

perspectiv­e) who are placed in solitary confinemen­t almost immediatel­y experience severe anxiety or panic, great difficulty thinking and concentrat­ing, memory loss, paranoia, despair, exacerbati­on of serious mental illness and many other symptoms; those who spend many years in solitary develop additional problems that will likely plague them for a lifetime and severely impair their capacity to function in the community after they are released.

There is a veritable “decimation of life skills.” They begin to seek even more isolation than solitary confinemen­t imposes, for example they stop greeting their neighbors and refuse to come out of their cell even for the short time permitted. They lose touch with their feelings, describing themselves as “numb,” “a zombie” or “dead.”

In solitary confinemen­t, prisoners, disproport­ionately prisoners of color, are denied effective mental health treatment as well as rehabilita­tion programs. And then, many of those who are eventually released from solitary suffer from the “SHU Post-release Syndrome” (SHU is one of many euphemisti­c terms for solitary confinemen­t) where

they seek to maintain their isolation, staying in a cell, or once released from prison refusing to leave their room or their home, and feeling incapacita­ted by continuing anxiety, difficulty concentrat­ing, a strong startle reaction and dread of being in a crowd, even going to the supermarke­t.

Governor Newsom acknowledg­es that solitary confinemen­t causes immense psychologi­cal damage, but argues that its use is necessary to maintain order in the prisons. He is very wrong about that. A substantia­l amount of research evidences no decrease in prison violence when a significan­t proportion of prisoners are consigned to solitary confinemen­t, and an impressive decrease in prison violence when the population in solitary confinemen­t is substantia­lly reduced.

This makes a lot of sense, since mounting anger is another symptom of solitary confinemen­t. Absent adequate mental health and rehabilita­tion programs, anger plus difficulty concentrat­ing on tasks lead to increased disciplina­ry problems and violence. Research also shows that downsizing solitary confinemen­t while at the same time ramping up prison mental health

programs and rehabilita­tion programs is an effective costsaving measure

A good example of this research involves the North Dakota Department of Correction­s. Utilizing an approach to Correction­s modeled on the Norwegian system, North Dakota ramped up mental health treatment and very targeted rehabilita­tion programs while significan­tly downsizing solitary confinemen­t, the outcome being a lower violence rate throughout the prison system and reduced harms in terms of mental health and preparatio­n for post-release success. The ramificati­ons for prisoner rehabilita­tion and greater safety in the community subsequent to their release from prison are clear.

The Mandela Act, AB 280, is modeled on the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, a.k.a. The Mandela Rules. Our state legislatur­e is right to pass the bill, it is time for the governor to sign it.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Reporters inspect one of the two-tiered cell pods in the Secure Housing Unit at the Pelican Bay State Prison near Crescent City, Calif., in August 2011.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Reporters inspect one of the two-tiered cell pods in the Secure Housing Unit at the Pelican Bay State Prison near Crescent City, Calif., in August 2011.

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