By BitcoDavid
http://deafinprison.wordpress.com/2013/03/06/wasted-lives-our-children-die-in-adult-jails/
In the 1990s, a wave of fear tore through the fabric of American culture. We were terrified by the idea of non-prosecutable children committing murder and other violent crimes. We were constantly being told that gangs – most of which were Latin in origin – were recruiting minors, and the Media was rife with stories of random killings and armed robberies committed by children.A fearful and punitive nation had to react, and react we did.

Richard Brown’s suicide note. Georgia Alliance for Children
On October 19th, 2007, Ashley Smith – while allegedly being monitored on video – tore some strips of cloth from her bed sheets, wrapped them around her neck, and slid off the bed into oblivion. She had spent the past year at an adult facility in Canada – most of that time in solitary. Guards who swear they were watching her, didn’t find the body for 4 hours. She was 19.
In Georgia, Richard Brown had just turned 15 when he decided to break into a Little League concession stand. Georgia sent him to a youth facility, but it was over a hundred miles away. His family couldn’t afford to come visit him. Left by authorities to his own devices, Brown was bullied and antagonized by the other teenaged inmates. He was deprived of food and sexually assaulted. Six days before Christmas, he scrawled out a hand written note, and hanged himself from the ceiling fire suppressor.

Ashley Smith spent almost a year in Segregation before hanging herself at 19. Photo: The Star – Canada.
The NYT reports, that teenagers are 36 times more likely to commit suicide in an adult jail than those in juvenile facilities. The idea of holding minors in adult jails until the youth authorities can decide what to do with them is proving to be an abysmal failure, as well. Forty-eight percent of youth suicides in adult facilities take place in the first week of incarceration.

I debated whether to use this picture. I finally decided to go with it. My apology to any who find it offensive. Photo: CharonBoat.com. You might find the comments interesting.
Furthermore, Children are often held for much different reasons than are adults. Incorrigibility, truancy and a plethora of psychological and behavioral issues – none of which are actually crimes - can be behind why a minor may find herself in custody. You’re a 15 year-old girl who feels like a misfit at school, and acts out. Next thing you know, you’re in solitary confinement in a Supermax! Or possibly worse – you’re thrown into a population with abusers and hardened criminals.
BitcoDavid is a blogger and a blog site consultant. In former lives, he was an audio engineer, a videographer, a teacher – even a cab driver. He is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and a Pro/Am boxer. He has spent years working with diet and exercise to combat obesity and obesity related illness.
Related articles
- Growing Up Locked Down (asolitarytorture.wordpress.com)
- Scarred by Solitary: Experiencing Prison Isolation As a Kid (solitarywatch.com)
- Fortresses of Solitude: Journalists Barred from Prison Isolation Units (solitarywatch.com)
- FORTRESSES of SOLITUDE from SOLITARYWATCH (inprisonedwomen.wordpress.com)
- Chronicler of Solitary Confinement: Brandon Green (inprisonedwomen.wordpress.com)
- NY State Bar Report: Imposing Solitary Confinement On Children, “Particularly Harsh” (asolitarytorture.wordpress.com)
- Guarding the Fortresses: How Prison Policies Limit Media Access to Solitary Confinement (solitarywatch.com)
- Ashley Smith: Youth jail file lists punishments, her appeals for help (thestar.com)
- Mom furious that girl, 12, jailed among adults (cbc.ca)
- ADA ignored by Denver Law Enforcement (deafinprison.wordpress.com)
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