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LA County Jail Part 5: The Division Fiction

March 25, 2015 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

LA County Jail Part 5: The Division Fiction

Jail is a bad place. LA County Jail is no exception.

What’s taking place behind those bars is a microcosm of what’s taking place on the streets.

Nevertheless, I was astonished at the racial division inside the jail. A division that is promoted by those in charge. A division that’s become, over the years, ingrained in the system. Everything is set up around it.

Inmates come into the system dripping with the gasoline of racial tension. A small spark can set off an explosion.

The history of the LA County Jail system is not unlike LA County itself. And the whole nation knows about the deadly riots that have taken place over the decades…like the Watts riots of the 60’s and the Rodney King riots of the 90’s.

So, I guess this systematically enforced racial division does help to maintain order. But it just seemed wrong. And many of my fellow inmates, of all races, expressed similar sentiments.

I spent the largest amount of time during my three weeks in the jail in Dorm 611 of Wayside, aka, Supermax. This dorm housed around 70 or so inmates of all races. About 10% were white. The rest were evenly divided between blacks and latinos.

The racial division was very much a part of day to day life in this dorm. Everything was divided racially, from the bunk areas, eating places, showers, toilets, phones, to cleaning duties, use of the exercise area, etc., etc.

You weren’t supposed to share food with other races, or make gifts of food, or other items to them. You could talk to them, but you weren’t to get too friendly.

These were the rules and it didn’t pay to disobey.

Sounds pretty ugly, doesn’t it? Like another world…

well, sort of.

But, even though all that was like an overlay on life in the dorm, underneath it, I witnessed a racial harmony that belied this division fiction.

I say division fiction, because, even though the rules were certainly a reality of your everyday experience, the unspoken truth that everyone realized was, hey, we’re really all in this boat, shit-hole, or however you might want to refer to it, together.

I saw tough guys who you probably wouldn’t want to come across in a dark street alley on the outside, being nice to one another.

Please, thank you, excuse me, were words spoken repeatedly throughout the day. That seemed kind of odd, considering the circumstances.

I never would’ve thought prison could be so, well, polite. Even to a greater degree than life on the outside.

I write in this blog about this concept of the Big US. That the reality of things is that even though society is divided along racial, ethnic, cultural, political, socio-economical, religious, and other such lines, we humans really are all in this boat together.

That’s the reality behind the overlay of the division fiction.

When things get bad, really bad, that sense of togetherness tends to rise to the surface…as it did on the tough streets of New York in the immediate aftermath of the 9-11 attacks.

And prison is definitely a place were things are bad for everyone, no exceptions. There’s no one, I repeat, no one, in there who wants to be in there.

So, despite the division fiction, there’s truly a sense of togetherness, of brotherhood, of unity.

The point of this post is that if the division is indeed a fiction on the inside…

I would surmise that it’s also one on the outside.

And if we could just step back and take notice of that fact…

maybe all the idiocy behind racial strife and tension would just melt away.

And those in charge of perpetuating systematic racial division in our society, and who even benefit from it, would lose much of their power to do so.

image credit: Ryan_Brady via Compfight cc

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: LA County Jail, the big us

LA County Jail Part 4: Repository or Suppository?

March 9, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

LA County Jail Part 4: Repository or Suppository?

A-pod, 272 is a transfer tank in Tower 2 of LA County Jail.

It’s where inmates are sent, usually for a night, or two, on their way to permanent housing somewhere deep within the belly of the beast.

My situation being sort of unique, I was there for 3 (or was it 4?) nights.

The tank would repeatedly fill to the brim, with around 90 or so inmates, then it would empty again, only to repeat the process.

Usually the filling occurred late in the night. I was even able to learn to sleep through it.

The lights stayed on in the tank around the clock. I learned to sleep through that as well.

When the TV was on and everyone was up and about, the tank was a boisterous place, to say the least.

I remember when this one big brother appeared. I’ll have to admit, the guy was a bit intimidating…really big and always with this scowl…

well, not always…

You see, there was this other skinny dude with lots of frantic energy…and always happy, reminded me of Pharrell.

The skinny guy would dance around the tank, cracking jokes. He was a riot, really.

Well, one night, I was trying to sleep, but everyone else was pretty much still awake. I was one of the “older” dudes in the tank.

Anyhow, there was this Harry Potter movie playing on the tele.

And big “scary” dude and the skinny one started bantering back and forth like a couple of olde Brits…

imitating Harry and his female cohort, Hermione.

“Harry, Harry, stop it Harry…”

“I shan’t stop, Hermione, Lord Voldemort, commands me to carry on…”

“Oh Harry, stop it…no…Harry…no…”

“Oh yes…Harry…yes…yes”

These “tough” guys had to’ve been Harry Potter addicts because they had the accents down pat. They were killing me!

I couldn’t help but to break out laughing. They both looked over and gave me a…

“what the hell you laughing about, wood…”

kind of a look.

Then they just smiled and carried on with their Brit banter.

Others in the pod began to notice and all of a sudden everyone was having a grand old time being entertained by these guys and their Harry Potter impersonations.

It was a riot.

All this is to make the point that prison is actually a great repository of talent…

athletic talent…

comedic talent…

showbiz talent of all shapes and sizes…

and who knows what else…

perhaps literary?

But, rather than view prisons as repositories of talent, they are viewed more like suppositories…

You know, certainly not pleasant experiences to endure, but meant for some measure of rehabilitation.

I believe perhaps if those in prison were treated in a way that reflected what they really are…

That is, human beings possessed of the same potential as all the rest of us…

Rather than wretched refuse that society needs to be protected from…

Well, then perhaps real rehabilitation could occur…

And we’d all be a whole lot better off.

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Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: LA County Jail, removing impact blinders

LA County Jail Part 3: The Body Snatchers

March 7, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

LA County Jail Part 3: The Body Snatchers

I’m gonna start this post with an astounding premise…

That not everyone who’s in jail, or even in prison, actually belongs there.

I won’t go as far as my all-time prison hero, Andy Dufresne, and tell you that “everyone” in prison is innocent…

But, at least from my experience in LA County Jail…

There were many in there for stupidity that perhaps getting locked away in a cage for is a bit harsh.

Like…

Getting high…

Getting rough with that lady in their life…now, caution, I strongly condemn domestic violence and I believe any form of violence perpetrated by men against women is a gross dereliction of manhood…

But, in LA County, domestic violence is whatever the female says it is, or was, at the moment of arrest…

and sometimes, perhaps it really wasn’t.

Probation violation.

Now there’s a big one. Granted the initial reason for being “on probation” may have been a good one…perhaps you really did fuck up pretty bad.

But there are about a million ways to violate probation and find yourself right back in the pokey for the infamous “10 day flash.”

Like skipping town,

or, skipping a meeting with your charming PO…

or, as in the case of my buddy, Greene, having bullets somewhere in your house that someone else put there and that you had no earthly idea were there.

Not a gun, mind you, just the bullets alone are enough to get you snatched away and thrown back into the belly of the beast, er, “the system.”

Oh, I also should mention, “failure to appear”, or missing a court date that you were never informed about to begin with.

And here’s the thing…

It doesn’t matter to them what you were doing when you got snatched. Everything stops. Everything is left behind. You are now theirs, at least for a while.

It’s kind of like being raptured I guess.

If you’ve ever floated around in fundamentalist Christian circles, you probably have an idea what I mean.

When the rapture comes…

Two men will be in the field; one will be taken and the other left.

Matthew 24:40

And that’s really how it is with getting locked up.

Look it, I was at one moment happy as Gilmore, snapping photos of Mexico from my window seat, and the next it was…

“Up against the wall you SC redneck MF!”

And all the other things I had going on in my life at that moment of being snatched ceased to matter…

at least to them.

To everyone else involved? Different story.

And I heard countless similar tales…

of cars left behind…

jobs left unmanned…

possessions left unguarded…

and girlfriends left puckered.

Let me tell you, jail is very disruptive to your life!

Hell I was only in there for 3 long weeks and the repercussions were, to put it mildly, mildly devastating…

Can you imagine how it is for some of my jailhouse buddies…who are still there…and will be for quite some time to come?

And speaking of buddies, here’s another thing about jail…

One night you’re chewing the fat with them and the next morning they’re gone!

That’s right, snatched up in the middle of the night as if some alien invasion occurred and now they’re on a cold metallic table being dissected under blinding light by ET.

Yessiree bob, let me tell you, jail is bad enough.

You go from perhaps enjoying at least a semi-human existence (I say “semi” because many in jail are poorer than dirt and probably didn’t have things all that great on the outside), to being treated pretty much like a caged animal.

Yea, getting snatched from your life is bad enough.

It seems to me, before they do that…

They’d ought to have a damn good reason!

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Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: LA County Jail, removing impact blinders

LA County Jail Part 2: The Indomitable Flaco

February 27, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

LA County Jail Part 2

In Part 1 I wrote about some of the characters I met during my 3 weeks in LA County Jail.

However, I didn’t mention one in particular who deeply impressed me…the indomitable Flaco…

I’d been pacing the concrete floor of the holding tank adjacent to Division 30 of CCB (criminal courts building) for hours. Lunch had already come and gone and my hope was building for a release at 5:00 PM when the court finally closed for the day’s business…

In walks a young latino dude, medium height and build, close crop hair and a stern look.

You always size people up in jail. Are they a threat? I guess it’s because we’re conditioned to believe everyone you meet in jail is.

But, they’re not.

This dude walked around the tank, not speaking a word to anyone. He seemed to be lost in thought. He would study the graffiti on the walls and occasionally would scratch at them as if trying to make his own personal mark.

I’d struck up a conversation with another guy who looked Mexican as hell, but didn’t speak a word of Spanish. At some point the new dude walked over and asked us something…I can’t quite remember what…maybe if we knew the time.

“What they get you for?”, asked my new friend.

The young guy told us he was there for a preliminary hearing regarding his charge of attempted murder. He told us that he was defending himself, as he had zero faith or confidence in the court appointed attorneys that were automatically assigned in all cases.

OK, now that’s interesting.

He told us he was known as Flaco. He’d been studying the law diligently while inside and felt quite prepared to take on “the system.”

Then what ensued was sort of a jailhouse soapbox diatribe by Flaco about the system and its evils.

Flako told us that the entire criminal justice system of LA County was designed to trap and hold young black and latino men. That they had strong economic incentives for doing so.

It kind of goes like this, according to Flaco…

They get you for something stupid, like drugs, or perhaps gang related violence. That’s your entry point.

They may give you a light sentence as a first-time offender. Then you get put on probation, or maybe you do you a short stint and then get released. But released as an easy mark for future capture.

The second time, your sentence will be longer. Definitely will involve probation. They assign you to classes, maybe for anger management or drug addiction. The classes are weekly and cost about $30 to $40 a pop, no small sum over the years you’re required to attend them.

If you miss a probation meeting, or a class, skip town for a romantic fling, or to see a family member, or any other of the myriad ways to violate probation…bang!…back in you go.

And this cycle will continue for years, perhaps for the duration of your life.

So, Flaco had had enough. He vowed to fight the system.

Our conversation steered towards the politics of LA County Jail…the racial division.

Flaco told us that such nonsense was supported by the system. It started decades earlier, but it had been perpetuated by the system.

He told us that the system had an incentive to keep inmate groups at odds with each other. It had an incentive to foment hate, perhaps even violence. Because violence again was an assurance that those trapped in the system would stay there.

That racial division was carried to the outside…to the streets. So that latino gangs would hate black gangs and vice versa.

He told us of the real truth…that we were all in this together. That the racial politics was a fiction imposed by the system. It was a blanket that shrouded and obscured the real truth.

That the system was designed to oppress, to dehumanize, to rob one of hope.

But why Flaco?, we asked. What purpose does all this serve?

It serves an economic purpose. There was money, big money to be made by the system. Prisons make money…pure and simple…and in order for that to happen, jails need inmates and prisons need prisoners. Otherwise, the system runs out of steam.

Poor black and latino communities of LA County were breeding grounds for a continual supply of what makes the system hum like a Ferrari engine…fresh young inmates that can be recycled through again and again…

robbed of hope and given the incentive to resort to a life of crime that would guarantee recidivism.

Flaco was one impressive dude.

About that time, Ms. Griffith entered the tank. My heart sank as her entrance was an indication that my nightmare had yet to end.

I left and said goodbye to Flaco. I hoped I would see him again.

About a week later, I was on my way to the bus, chained to three other inmates, and once again being transferred to somewhere else in the system…

when I saw him.

I yelled out “Flaco!”

He looked at me and smiled.

I won’t soon forget Flaco.

I wish him well.

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Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: LA County Jail, the big us

Radio! Reflections from LA County Jail: Part 1

February 25, 2015 by costaricaguy 5 Comments

Radio! Reflections from LA County Jail

They say everything happens for a reason.

I’ve always believed that to be true, even though it sounds a tad ecumenical for an agnostic sort like me.

I guess the “why” of what happened to me from the very moment I set my foot upon U.S. soil on February 2nd, 2015, until February 23rd, could be explained from several different vantage points…

I deserved it (and believe me there are many out there who would choose that one)…

It was meant to be (a more positive way to spin it)…

or, I’ve been bitten by that proverbial snake of outrageously misfortunate venom…

But, here’s the thing…

The “why” is inconsequential compared to the “what” I learned from the experience, so I refuse to address matters of why in this blog…it’s simply not the place for that…

I woke up early this morning and posted the following to my Facebook wall. It perhaps sheds a little light on my motivations for writing about all this (forgive me for the rambling length of the following sentence, but, like I said, it was a Facebook comment)…

for “the record”, which FB wall posts and comments have now become an integral part of, I need to say, clearly, since what I say is judged by some in the most negative light possible, that when I commented above that the why is “inconsequential”, I didn’t mean to imply that I haven’t made decisions in my life that led to this event, but only that what I will emphasize in my writing about it is not “why” it happened, since doing that, although it could be cathartic, would not be impactful, but about my opinion, which has been solidified in many ways by this event, that there are two vastly different American experiences and that there’s a growing minority that lacks the economic means to pursue happiness on terms acceptable to the majority of those who do…and it seems incarceration is all too often our capitalistic society’s answer to that dilemma…

This morning I thought I’d start this hopefully captivating series of observations from my three weeks in captivity in LA County Jail with a blow by blow chronological account of the event…

as I know there are many out there desiring to hear the sordid details…

February 2 – 4: I had an early morning flight out of San Jose, Costa Rica. My wife and I had decided to move to the States to improve our position in life economically and this was the day for that plan to be set in motion. I boarded the flight with three bags containing all the belongings I desired to take with me from my decade long Costa Rica experience.

Radio! Reflections from LA County Jail

I was bound for Portland, Oregon, the place we’d decided to call home for awhile, but had a layover in LAX. The flight was delightful with clear weather the entire route and I snapped many photos from my window seat of the vast expanse of Mexico as it passed 39,000 feet below the fuselage.

I was surprised to learn when I entered customs and immigration that you were required to scan your passport through a computer prior to engaging with a live agent. When I did so I didn’t notice that the printout contained a large X.

After a few moments staring into the screen, the agent informed me of shocking news. I had an outstanding warrant for my arrest…and arrested I was…on the spot…like some highly sought after international terrorist.

They handcuffed me to a metal bench while the agents sorted things out. The warrant was issued from South Carolina, on a “family matter.” Upon learning that it immediately dawned upon me what was afoot. I was told that probably it was inconsequential and that I’d soon be released and allowed to proceed to my connecting flight.

But it wasn’t inconsequential. South Carolina “wanted me.” It’s flattering to be so desired, but this is one time when I would’ve gladly embraced rejection. I was deeply concerned about many things at this point…the plan…my wife…my business…my stuff. The stuff was placed in storage and I was assured it would be there when and if this nightmare ended.

I was taken into custody by the infamous LAPD and led downtown, hands cuffed behind my back, for booking. Afterwards I was taken to the 77th Avenue “holding tank” where they hold arrestees for 72 hours until arraignment. I was given the ability to make the proverbial one phone call, but only local calls were allowed. Having never set foot in Los Angeles in my 54 years on this planet and having just left my beloved in Costa Rica, the privilege of a “local” call really didn’t help me much.

I was more than cooperative at every turn as the last thing I wanted to do was worsen my situation by copping an attitude. I gently expressed to an officer my concern about informing my poor wife of the rapidly unfolding situation. He told me not to worry as I would surely be released the next day if no one from South Carolina showed up to retrieve me.

They gave me a couple blankets and put me in a cell with several other arrestees. Everyone was sleeping and I climbed into the concrete slab of a bed, covered myself with the blankets and tried to do the same…at that point I wasn’t completely sure if what was unfolding was reality, or just a nightmare.

The next day did not bring release as informed. I remained in custody at 77th until the following day when I was chained to three of my fellow prisoners and transported by bus to court…for exactly what, I wasn’t sure, since I had done absolutely nothing in LA county that I could possibly be prosecuted for…at least not in this life.

Going to court was an experience in and of itself. I was put in a holding cell for hours with about 20 or so others. I’d befriended a couple of other “old dudes” who repeatedly assured me from their vast criminal justice experience that I’d be getting out of there shortly, since what they were holding me for was relatively minor in the overall scheme of things.

They were wrong. A court appointed attorney finally showed up and informed me that I needed to sign a “waiver” (of my rights to fight extradition) that would give South Carolina thirty days to come and get me. If they failed to do so, only then would I be released.

That didn’t appeal to me, so I asked for an alternative option. She informed me that I could “time waive” the matter for two days. I decided to do that as I optimistically believed I could resolve the matter with a phone call.

With that decision I would become inmate 4226104 in LA County Jail.

I’d sparked a conversation with a Nicaraguan dude named Mario who was also headed over to “county” with me. He’d been in and out of there a number of times and reassured me that I’d be OK. He gave me some pointers, like to make sure I asked for shoes one size larger than what I normally wore.

The process of getting booked into LA County Jail lasted throughout the night. I was issued my “county blues” and finally, after about 10 hours of waiting in one holding pen after another, given a bed in the medical tower. I had to be medically cleared before being moved to “permanent” housing due to the minor heart condition that I informed them that I took medication for.

I passed the first night in county in a cell with one other inmate. They kept the bright fluorescent lights on throughout the night and every hour upon the hour, an officer would pass by and tap on the window to make sure that neither I, nor my cellmate, had passed in our slumber.

February 5 – 6: The following day I awoke to “count.” This was a process that I would become all too familiar with over the coming days and weeks.

The medical tower “pod” housed me along with another 60 or so inmates. I quickly noticed that only about 10% of those were Caucasian, with the rest divided evenly between African-American and Latino. That was a ratio that held constant throughout my stay in County.

Later that day I did get to see the doctor and was informed that I’d be given my medications shortly. They never showed. While I sat waiting to see the doctor they brought in an inmate who’d been placed on suicide watch. I learned that the last thing you wanted to do was admit to such inclinations, as they would strip you naked, clothe you in nothing but a “horse-blanket”, and place you in solitary confinement. The poor guy seemed panicky and scared. He was Latino and I tried to spark a conversation with him in Spanish to help take his mind off his troubles. I wanted to tell the nurses that they really should attend to him in some way, but decided in my own self-interest that it probably wouldn’t be the best idea. In fact, I learned that talking with guards, nurses, or anyone else who wasn’t a fellow inmate, for any reason, wasn’t a very good idea.

The medical pod did have a few phones that allowed collect calls and I was finally able to reach someone on the outside. I got word to my wife about what had transpired and talked with others in hopes of finding some resolution to my dilemma.

Early in the morning on February 6th, perhaps around 1:00 or 2:00 PM (I can’t be sure because they purposefully refuse to allow inmates to ever be cognizant of the time) I was awoken and told to “roll it up.”

I was marched to a holding tank that already contained a multitude of groggy inmates. I was soon to learn that this was a regular procedure at LA County Jail. After several hours the tank was emptied and we were all marched, shoulders against the right-side wall, to Tower 2. What happened next was one of the most degrading episodes of my life to that point…I was strip searched. There were a number of officers who managed this search and I wasn’t sure whether it actually served some useful purpose, or whether they were simply trying to make our lives a bit more miserable.

After the search we were given bunks in A-Pod 272, another holding tank that housed around 90 inmates, packed in like sardines.

Early in the morning on February 6th I was called to court, once again chained to three other inmates and transported on the bus.

I passed the day in court in optimistic hope that my phone call had worked and that I’d be released that day. The same attorney returned and gave me similarly sad news. I resolved to fight and told her that I would not sign that damn paper and to put it off again through the weekend, when I’d return Monday and achieve my victory. She shook her head and reluctantly agreed, as she just wanted a signature on the waiver so she could be done with me. I noticed that most of the court appointed attorneys for other inmates had similar non-zealous attitudes about their clients’ cases. I saw one of them nonchalantly inform his young Latino client that he was facing his “third strike”, which meant life in prison. The young gang member looked at me with panicked eyes and asked what I thought he should do. “Man, get another lawyer”, was the only reply I could muster.

February 7 – 9: After court I went back to A-pod 272 and found to my delight that it was completely empty. I asked for a “fish-kit”, containing shampoo, soap and deodorant, as I really needed a shower. Later that evening the cell was filled to the brim with other inmates returning late from court.

A-pod 272 is a transfer tank and generally inmates are held there a couple days at most. Since I had court again on Monday, I was there for the weekend. I befriended a couple other inmates, one a young fellow named Justin from Baton Rouge, and the other a slightly older than me white-haired character from Virginia named Casey. They both were sympathetic to my plight. Casey took it upon himself to don me “Carolina”, as he constantly liked to tease me about the long bus ride across the country I’d soon endure. He was just kidding around as he confided to me on more than one occasion that according to his extensive incarceration experience, hell would certainly freeze over before South Carolina would transport me across the country for the trouble that I was in.

I made a call on Sunday that I thought for sure would gain my release the next day. So early Monday morning on February 9th off to court I went for the third time. Once more, I was overly optimistic. I succumbed to my fate and signed the damn waiver Ms. Griffith kept waiving in my face. That started the clock for South Carolina to carry out the decision to extradite me, or not. They had until February 23rd, with a ten day extension.

I came back to an empty A pod 272 once again, but the pleasure was short-lived as a few hours later I was on a bus for the hour-long trip to Wayside, also known as SuperMax.

February 10 – 15: After being transported from one holding tank to another for a week, I was finally taken to “permanent” housing in Dorm 611, SuperMax. I finally got to see exactly what all the talk about prison “politics” was about.

When I entered the dorm the rep for the “woods” addressed me and the one other newly arrived white guy about dorm rules and politics. You see every dorm is divided racially. There are 3 groups…the brothers and others, consisting of African-Americans, Southeast Asians, and Indians, the southsiders and paisas, who were the Latinos and then woods (as in “peckerwood”), or white guys. Rules consisted of things like where you could relieve yourself and where you were forbidden to do so, where you could eat, or sit, or shower, or what phone you could use, clean up duties, exercise requirements and the like. I was told that when I heard the word “radio”, I was to shut up and pay attention. The penalty for non-compliance? Well, I did see one young “brother” get disciplined for rules breaking of some sort. I quickly decided that while such racial division is diametrically opposed in every conceivable way to my world view, I’d better comply to the letter.

The days in Dorm 611 were divided by the 4 counts we had to endure each day. For each count you had to be fully dressed in county blues, on your bunk, either sitting up or lying down with head at the foot. We were constantly reminded by our reps not to be the reason for causing the entire dorm privilege denials due to someone not being fully prepared for count.

They do feed you regularly and fairly well in prison. They continually checked my blood pressure and even took a blood sample. I was finally given my meds. I’ll have to say, if one can keep his mind right, staying healthy in prison perhaps in some ways is easier than it is on the outside, with the myriad of temptations out there that are nonexistent in jail.

I met quite a few characters while in Dorm 611. There was a young heroin addict named Kirby who had a dark sense of humour and thought my situation for being there to be particularly amusing. There was “bad Grandpa”, who in his mid-sixties was the oldest guy in the dorm (I was actually the second). Bad Grandpa looked considerably older than he was. He was a very experienced inmate who regaled us with his outlaw tales. There was our tall “wood” rep who we called “Bluedog.” He was fond of writing love songs to female companions on the outside and then serenading us with them in his Jason Miraz-like voice. About half-way into my stay my old A-pod buddy Casey even showed up. All in all, my time at Wayside was perhaps the best of my days in jail. I spent them voraciously reading and actually finished books in record times that I’d before never been able to accomplish.

I went to bed on Sunday, February 15th around 9:30, but was awoken from a dead sleep by Kirby. “Carolina, Carolina, get up man, you’re going home”, said Kirby. I replied groggily. “Yea man, they just called you, you’re going home.”

I rolled up my stuff and asked the guards what I was being called out for. No one knew for sure, although they did comment that release was one possibility.

As I was led down the hallway to the jail exit I saw an officer, dressed in full SWAT gear, running in the opposite direction and carrying what looked like a bazooka. The officer that had come to retrieve me informed me that a fight had broken out in one of the dorms on the 600 block. When I’d left it had been completely peaceful in Dorm 611, but I was thankful that I potentially got out of there just before a riot, complete with teargas and who knows what else.

I was transported back downtown, hands handcuffed behind my back for the entire hour long ride. Another fellow was being transported at the same time, but in an ambulance, as he’d been involved in the melee and had received a razor cut across the face.

Once we arrived back at Old County I was placed in a holding tank and kept there about 10 hours. It was crowded, there was no room to lay down, so I just sat and waited. Finally I was retrieved and led to Dorm 507, the so-called “Old Man’s Dorm” that I’d been told about. Once again, I was greeted by the wood rep and informed of the rules. However, I found out that the politics were much more relaxed in this dorm than it had been in 611 at Wayside.

Since I’d been led to believe that I was enduring another mid-night transfer in order to be released, it was a great let down to find out I was simply being re-housed. You might be asking yourself why do they keep transferring inmates from here to there and back again. That’d be an awfully good question. I don’t know the answer for sure, but I was told by many that there was an economic incentive involved.

February 16 – 18: My days in the Old Man’s Dorm were uneventful. I kept to myself and read. At this point I began to get the feeling that perhaps I was trapped in a never-ending nightmare. Would I ever see the light of day again? I wasn’t sure.

It did make some sense to transfer me all the way back to the downtown jail, since if South Carolina was coming to get me, I’d have to released and retrieved from there.

February 19: Sure enough that occurred early Thursday morning on the 19th. The wood rep woke me up around 4:30 am and told me to roll it up as I was being released. What? Released? As good as that sounded it was to be a release “in custody”, meaning the answer had finally arrived…I was actually being extradited to South Carolina.

Guess where they took me? Of course, to another holding tank…the “extradition” tank. I was the first one in there. Later some others came in. I asked where they were headed…some said Texas, others Florida. One Indian guy had succumbed to an eerily identical fate as I’d experienced back on the 2nd. He’d been living in Latin American as well and had first learned of a warrant upon reentering the U.S.

I looked across the hall to the tank directly in front and there were a bunch of inmates in there…including my buddy Casey! He made hand gestures to ask if I was off to Carolina. I nodded in the affirmative. He shook his head in disbelief.

At that point I had no idea what to expect. Would they take me by bus, which would encompass a painful weeklong trip, or by plane? And what would become of all my possessions, which I trusted were still in storage at LAX? At that point I’d begun to expect the worst.

I got my answer around 9:30 am. The extradition agent showed up and informed me I’d be flying back. I asked him if we could make sure that my stuff would be on the same flight. He told me he could make no promises, but would do what he could.

I was handcuffed and led to the airport. I wore a jacket with my hands in the pockets and extended out through holes cut in them…the handcuffs were thereby concealed so as not to “scare the old ladies.”

I was fortunate to have Charles as my extradition agent. He did indeed make sure that my luggage made it onto the flight. He also let me have one hand-free the entire time, which helped with matters such as eating and drinking my first cup of hot coffee in 2.5 weeks.

We finally arrived at Myrtle Beach airport around 10:30 Thursday evening. I’d carried on my backpack with my computer, so I entered J. Rueben Long Detention Center with only that in tow. The rest of my stuff we just left on the turnstile. Charles reassured me not to worry and that the airport would store it until someone could be sent to pick it up.

I spent that night in another holding tank, but this time in a different jail…in Horry County, South Carolina.

February 20 – 23: The four nights I spent in the Horry County jail had a different tone. I was now in the place that actually had jurisdiction to dispose of my case…which could mean disposing of me…for anywhere from 30 days to a year.

I went to court early in the morning on February 20th. I was already given my orange county jumpsuit. While I always went to court in LA in my county blues, but un-cuffed, in Horry County, they lead you into court in hand and ankle cuffs…ala the chain gang on Old Brother Where Art Thou…it’s a humbling experience.

I told the judge my view of the situation. He wasn’t that sympathetic. Luckily I’d made a phone call early that morning that helped me. The judge put the whole case off until Monday when others would be in court who were pertinent to resolving my issues.

So, I spent that weekend in J. Rueben Long. I don’t have a lot to say about it. It wasn’t pleasant, but after a few calls I could finally catch a glimpse of light at the end of the tunnel. That helped get me through it.

Early Monday I went to court for the last time. I was able to resolve the issue, with the help of my father, and was finally released.

As I exited the jail in the freezing cold with my father waiting in the car outside, I can tell you for sure that freedom had never felt so cherished.

I will be writing in the coming days about specific observations and impacts stemming from those fateful three weeks that spanned February 2 to 23.

My purpose in doing so will not be about me, or the situation that led me to custody, but to hopefully shed some light on this perplexing situation of mass incarceration of poor people in our supposedly free country.

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: impact over interest, LA County Jail

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