Gang validation: The new inquisition

by Steve Champion

Steve Champion in a photo taken in 2007

On July 23, 2010, my cell was searched and three boxes of my property –
legal material, books, notes and personal writings – were confiscated
and turned over to Institutional Gang Investigations (IGI) for possible
gang validation. The reason for the action, I was told, was my
possession of a Kiswahili dictionary and the book “Soledad Brother” by
George Jackson.

This is not the first time I have been targeted for a gang validation
wherein George Jackson was the cause. In May 2007, I co-wrote an article
in which we referred to Jackson as “Comrade George Jackson.” It was
determined by IGI that the word “Comrade” constituted gang associate or
sympathy; therefore, I needed to be investigated. The investigation
yielded nothing.

I have been in San Quentin – and on death row – for almost 28 years, and
for most of this time I have had George Jackson’s books in my cell. I
ordered them through the prison Special Purchase Order (SPO). My cell
has been searched hundreds if not thousands of times and never, not
once, were George Jackson’s books taken.

Why now? And why the link to gang activity when it is well known that
George Jackson was a member of the Black Panther Party and a political
revolutionary? It is only by exposing the insidious and inscrutable use
of politically charged books to label prisoners gang members, thereby
criminalizing critical literacy, that we can arrive at answers. Both
prisoners and prison activists need to understand how the Prison
Industrial Complex (PIC) is using political and historical texts to
repress prisoners.

My story is not new or unique. I’ve read numerous accounts from across
the U.S. prison landscape – state and federal – of prisoners having
books by George Jackson, Che Guevara, Chairman Mao and others stolen
from their cells or confiscated under the false pretext of gang
activity. Some prisoners have even been validated as gang members and
locked away indefinitely in Security Housing Units (SHUs).

And in June 2010, a ruling by a California appeals court explicitly
condoned the practice in California, as follows: “Assigning an inmate to
secure housing based on his possession of constitutionally protected
materials linking him to a gang [does] not violate his first amendment
rights.”

Let’s be clear. The confiscation of leftist and revolutionary books,
magazines and newspapers is not a mere First Amendment issue; failing to
understand the bigger picture will just extend your stay in wonderland.
Thus, I’m not going to argue a case of censorship – although one can
certainly be made since none of the above authors have been ruled to be
either dangerous or obscene by a court of law or the PIC.

I am interested in a much broader analysis that deconstructs the current
ideology of suppression in U.S. prisons that can be traced to other
interrelated post-9/11 realities, such as creation of Homeland Security
and the gradual erosion of civil liberties; the prosecution of a global
“war on terrorism”; the virtually unrestricted spending on and by
intelligence agencies; and redefining domestic terrorism to meet the
threat posed by gang violence.

Included in these realities, but in a more subtle way, is the
government’s fear of the possible rise of a new prison movement and
radicalized prisoners. The fear of prisoners becoming political
extremists and functioning as independent terrorist cells once they are
released is, I believe, the main catalyst for the “unofficial” policy of
censorship carried out nationwide. But such fear is unfounded and seems
to be based more on paranoia than rooted in reality: How many inmates
have been paroled who have participated in or been linked to a terrorist
organization? Where is the evidence? Can prison administrators or the
government show this happening? They cannot. The objective of this
unofficial policy is fourfold:

1. To define any “in prison” political activism as gang activity.

2. To criminalize and dehumanize politically conscious prisoners – past
and present – by labeling them gang members.

3. To redefine revolutionary and leftist writings as gang literature.

4. To institute countermeasures that will disrupt, inhibit and
delegitimize the emergence and growth of individuals and groups that
could in any way be influenced by radical views.

The fear of prisoners becoming political extremists and functioning as
independent terrorist cells once they are released is, I believe, the
main catalyst for the “unofficial” policy of censorship carried out
nationwide.

Prison administrators know that if even one prisoner shuns George
Jackson’s books or other leftist material because he thinks he might be
labeled a gang member and placed in the SHU, then the strategy of
suppression is effective. Doing routine or targeted cell searches when
George Jackson’s books and other leftist literature are not being found
– or not being found in abundance – allows prison officials to claim
that the policy is effective.

One prisoner’s fears can potentially infect many, and the fear becomes a
deadly pathogen that kills self-determination, resistance and critical
thinking. Unwittingly, a fearful prisoner becomes a tool for a
COINTELPRO-like apparatus.

But because they understand what is at stake, politically conscious
prisoners can never become unwitting agents of a pacification operation;
they understand that acquiescence would mean the struggle is lost. The
price they pay for this understanding is long-term persecution in SHUs.

What also facilitates the suppression of political consciousness is the
unending cycle of ethnic and sectarian violence that permeates the U.S.
prison system. Violence is micromanaged to perpetuate racial hatred and
division among prison groups.

And let me be honest, prisoners make it easy for prison administrators
to accomplish this when they fail to redress the stark contradictions
between their intransigent conflicts against each other and the
repressive and often brutal treatment meted out to them by the prison
regime. As long as prisoners don’t frame their conditions and treatment
in a political context, they will remain powerless to alter their
situation. The gang mentality cannot produce viable change for
prisoners. This can only come from conscious prisoners who are willing
to struggle collectively.

One prisoner’s fears can potentially infect many, and the fear becomes a
deadly pathogen that kills self-determination, resistance and critical
thinking.

The need for a new and radical ethos among prisoners is self-evident and
long overdue. How to bring a unifying ethos into being is open for
discussion and critical debate. Such debate can take place in cells, on
the tiers, in yards, at school, and in work places between friends and
foes.

What cannot be questioned is the truth that the route from an apolitical
gangster mentality to a socio-politically conscious prisoner is only
through education. This is the fundamental message to all prison writers
and activists. It is why prisoners, me included, have gravitated to the
writings of George Jackson, Franz Fanon, Che Guevara, Bobby Sands, Liam
Mellows, Nelson Mandela, Paulo Freire, Malcolm X and many others like
them.

The trajectory and/or transformation of their lives offers prisoners a
new perspective from which to radically contextualize their own
identity. Prisoners can tangibly and emotionally relate to the words of
these authors, even though most prisoners don’t view themselves through
a political lens.

Yet these same “apolitical” prisoners will recognize on a general level
that their own existential condition can be compared to George
Jackson’s. It is this identification with George Jackson that makes him
symbolically powerful and very much alive. And for this, he must be
vilified and punished, over and over again – suppressed and chased away
from anyone who dares consume his words.

“Apolitical” prisoners will recognize on a general level that their own
existential condition can be compared to George Jackson’s. It is this
identification with George Jackson that makes him symbolically powerful
and very much alive. And for this, he must be vilified and punished,
over and over again – suppressed and chased away from anyone who dares
consume his words.

The revisionist tactic by the PIC of not acknowledging that George
Jackson developed a political philosophy that he lived and died for –
not unlike like the founding fathers of the United States – makes it
easy to deny the political activism and convictions of conscious
prisoners. However, the confiscation of books, newspapers, and magazines
with political content acknowledges the existence of politically minded
prisoners.

The truth is contained in the system’s lie: George Jackson was not a
gang member! He was a political thinker. To suspect a prisoner of gang
activity because he reads Jackson’s books is, therefore, also a
political – certainly not a logical – move.

George Jackson was not a gang member! He was a political thinker. To
suspect a prisoner of gang activity because he reads Jackson’s books is,
therefore, also a political – certainly not a logical – move.

It is ideas that can change individuals and, so, change the world. Ideas
awaken the mind, galvanize courage and liberate people; and ideas, not
gangs, are the most potent weapons against tyrants and repressive
regimes. People may fear other people, but people’s ideas are feared
even more.

Steve Champion is on California’s Death Row at San Quentin. You may
write him at Steve Champion, C-58001, San Quentin State Prison, San
Quentin, CA 94974.

How you can help

Steve Champion’s friend, Professor Tom Kerr of Ithaca College, tells how
we can help get Steve out of a deplorable situation:

“Steve Champion, death row prisoner and author of ‘Dead to Deliverance,
A Death Row Memoir,’ has been held in administrative segregation,
without phone and other privileges, since just prior to the execution of
his friend Stanley Tookie Williams in December 2005.”

“So-called ‘gang validation,’ which he deconstructs in this article, is
one of the many technologies of control used by San Quentin to assail
Steve’s dignity and suppress his powerful voice. Steve welcomes calls or
emails to the CDCR (California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation) – to Public Office Representative Samuel Robinson at
(415) 455-5008 or [email protected]) and/or to San Quentin
Warden Vince Cullen at (415) 455-5000 – that express deep concern over
the interminable restriction of his privileges on death row.”

You can also help Steve by purchasing his book – a copy for yourself,
another for a gift and one for your pen pal behind enemy lines – from
the publisher, Split Oak Press, or your local bookstore. Here’s the
publisher’s description:

“Steve Champion, in his death row memoir, describes his early life in
Los Angeles and the allure for him of the Crips street gang, his
incarceration and experience in the U.S. prison system, his life on
death row, and his growth and struggle as a human being. He also offers
a critical analysis of the prison system, especially capital punishment,
and describes how through sustained collaboration with Stanley Tookie
Williams and Anthony Ross, he evolved on death row from a high school
dropout into an accomplished writer and student of the humanities.”

Related Posts

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http://sfbayview.com/2011/gang-validation-the-new-inquisition/
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