Please note the address corrections:

Mail Art Call:

Defend a prisoner’s right to make art and to donate
his art to charity. Details in article below.

Send mail art of encouragement to:

Donald Johnson B#95524
P.O. Box 7500, D-10-207
Pelican Bay State Prison
Crescent City CA 95531-7500
 
(You may want to exercise caution in using a return
address – PO box is safer)

Send letters, mail art protesting Donny’s treatment
to:

Warden Bob Horel
Pelican Bay State Prison
5905 Lake Earl Drive
Crescent City, CA 95532

NO RETURN - NO DOCUMENTATION


http://www.nytimes.com/

New York Times:
August 4, 2006

Prison Disciplines Inmate Who Paints With M&M’s
By ADAM LIPTAK

A prison artist in California who uses the dye from
M&M’s for paint has been disciplined for what a prison
official yesterday called “unauthorized business
dealings” in the sale of his paintings. The prison has
also barred the prisoner, Donny Johnson, from sending
his paintings through the mail.
Mr. Johnson’s work has been on display for the last
several weeks at a gallery in San Miguel de Allende,
Mexico. Twenty of his paintings have been sold, for
$500 each.
Mr. Johnson had donated the paintings to the Pelican
Bay Prison Project, a charity which says it will honor
Mr. Johnson’s wish that it use the proceeds from the
show to help the children of prisoners.
According to a “serious rules violation report” issued
by the prison last month, Mr. Johnson ran afoul of a
corrections department regulation that prohibits
engaging in a business or profession without the
warden’s permission. The regulation defines a business
as “any revenue-generating or profit-making activity.”
Francisco Jacquez, the chief deputy warden at Pelican
Bay State Prison, in Crescent City, Calif., said the
violation could extend Mr. Johnson’s sentence or
restrict his privileges. “There are some consequences,
and that’s what we use to maintain discipline in
prison,” Mr. Jacquez said, declining to be more
specific.
Stephen A. Kurtz, a founder and director of the
charity, said the discipline was unwarranted. “He
wasn’t doing business,” Mr. Kurtz said of Mr. Johnson.
“He was simply making a donation. He didn’t make a
penny off this.”
The discipline was prompted by a front-page article
about Mr. Johnson in The New York Times last month,
according to the violation report. Pamela B. Hooley, a
deputy attorney general, sent a copy of the article to
prison officials on the day it appeared, the report
said.
Mr. Johnson, who is 46, is serving three life
sentences. He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder
in 1980 for a drug-related killing, drawing a sentence
of 15 years to life. In 1989, he was convicted of
slashing the throat of one guard and assaulting
another. Those crimes resulted in two additional
sentences of nine years to life.
He has been in solitary confinement in a small
concrete cell for almost two decades. He paints with a
brush he created with plastic wrap, foil and his own
hair. He makes paint by leaching the colors from M&M’s
in little plastic containers that once held packets of
grape jelly. His canvases are postcards.
It is not clear whether the prison will stop Mr.
Johnson from creating paintings. In a recent postcard
to his mother, Mr. Johnson wrote that prison officials
have stopped him from mailing his art to his family,
friends and supporters.
A lawyer for Mr. Johnson, Charles Carbone, said he was
considering bringing a legal challenge.
The United States and California Supreme Courts have
struck down laws that would have prohibited people
convicted of crimes from profiting from them. But
courts have been reluctant to interfere with prison
administration, even where First Amendment issues are
involved. In June, for instance, the United States
Supreme Court upheld a Pennsylvania prison policy that
denied access to newspapers and magazines to some
inmates.





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