Guest MINDSETTER™ Laufton Longo: Solitary Confinement is Torture

Guest MINDSETTER™ Laufton Longo

Guest MINDSETTER™ Laufton Longo: Solitary Confinement is Torture

The room is 8 feet by 10 feet. Smaller than most bathrooms. There is no furniture besides a bed and a small desk. A thin mattress placed on a steel frame. There’s a “window” but it’s so heavily barricaded you can hardly call it that, light almost never comes through. There are dozens of reasons why you could have been placed in the room. Maybe you attacked a guard, maybe they found a joint, or maybe you were just too gay or too loud. It doesn’t matter any more. You pass the time by reading books. A bible or a GED study guide. Maybe one day they take them away. You acted up after all. You have no watch. You aren't allowed one. Days become both impossible to count and immeasurably valuable. You are told you are entitled to one hour of recreation a day, but only if you ask for it. Maybe the guards don't tell you when they will be coming by with the signup sheet. They walk by in the morning, their hands muting the keys on their waist. Maybe one day they take the mattress away leaving only the metal frame behind. Sometimes they blast a fan for hours on end. You try to contort your own body to stay warm, it doesn’t work. Sometimes a mental health specialist comes to visit you after 90 days to ask if you're fine; to see if you have "recovered". You never have. As you try to sleep a guard kicks the door. After all you deserve it. The meaning of a day slips away. You can hear the people around you slipping away as well. You sit there for days, months, maybe even years.

 Eventually they let you out. You leave the room, you leave the prison. You are expected to do all of the things people your age are doing. Get an apartment, find a job, join your community. Do it all without talking about the room, do it all without thinking about the room. No special allowances or help are given. You are on your own. How do you explain to them that while other kids were learning how to use smart phones or to drive you were staring at a wall? How do you explain to them that you can't work a register because seeing that many people in a room makes you hyperventilate?

 To expect someone to go through this and come out fine is beyond absurd. 

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The stories above are not hypotheticals. They all come from testimony shared by prisoners who served time right here in our state. The Young Dems Rhode Island support the current legislation to ban solitary confinement for those under 21 for that exact reason. What happens after someone is released? What comes next? In an economy that is perhaps hardest on our youngest residents we should be attempting to break down barriers to success not strengthening them. The psychological and physical damage that results from solitary confinement is clear and well documented. Its effect is felt for the rest of a life. It’s why the UN has labelled solitary confinement that lasts for more than fifteen days as torture. It’s why President Obama has come out against it. It’s why those who serve time in solitary confinement have much higher recidivism rates. To subject anyone to this is cruel, to do it to someone just starting out in life, regardless of their mistake, is inhumane. We should do everything we can to ensure that young offenders are rehabilitated not ensure they relapse. We need them to leave prison and help build the future economy of this state. We gain nothing from manufacturing criminals. When they leave prison we should give them the best chance to find success. For their sake and for ours. 

YDRI urges the Senate and House to pass the bills banning solitary confinement and commends Rep. Regunberg and Sen. Metts for their work on this issue. 

 

Laufton Longo is a resident of Providence and the Vice President of YDRI


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