Archive for the ‘Sex Panic’ Category

The not so bold Peabody-Essex Museum

Monday, September 28th, 2020

September 28, 2020

Dave Olson, Editor
The Salem News
300 Rosewood Drive, Suite 107
Danvers, MA 01923

Dear Editor,

My name is Robert Chatelle and I live in Roxbury, Massachusetts. Since its founding in April of 2002, I have served as Executive Director of the National Center for Reason and Justice (NCRJ), an advocacy group for people falsely accused or wrongfully convicted of crimes against children.

A friend recently forwarded to me a flyer for an exhibit at Salem’s Peabody-Essex Museum, entitled “The Salem Witch Trials 1692.” The flier concludes:

“The victims of the Salem witch trials had complex emotions, fears, and doubts just like we do,” said Dan Lipcan, head librarian at Peabody Essex Museum’s Phillips Library. “To empathize and understand their experience emboldens us to speak out against injustice and cruelty in our own time.”

Sadly, the Peabody-Essex has not always boldly “spoken out against injustice and cruelty in our own time.”

The Daycare Panic of the 80’s and 90’s was in many ways a replay of the Salem witch hysteria. In January of 1997, Carol Hopkins of the Justice Committee had arranged a seminal two-day conference, Day of Contrition, that was to take place at Peabody-Essex. Presenters included DA (now Judge) Alan Rubenstein, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; internationally renowned psychologist, Dr. Elizabeth Loftus; journalist Debbie Nathan, the first to write critically about the hysteria; Mark Pendergrast, author; Professor Frederick Crews, University of California, Berkeley; Donald Connery, author and former Time-Life correspondent, Dr. Richard Leo, the leading expert on false confessions; and (by videotape) playwright Arthur Miller and author William Styron; and many others. Also attending were many victims of the hysteria.

Unfortunately, word got out and true believers in daycare sexual abuse complained to Peabody-Essex. Their response was far from bold. At the last minute, they told Carol Hopkins that she and her presenters were not welcome at Peabody-Essex.

Fortunately, the Hawthorne Hotel stepped up and the conference went on. Alliances were formed and many of us are still fighting for justice. The National Center for Reason and Justice, for example, grew out of discussions that occurred at that conference.

We appreciate that Mr. Lipcan has worked for Peabody-Essex for less than two years. We are optimistic that he means what he says about speaking out against cruelty and injustice and we wish him success.

Sincerely,

Robert B. Chatelle
Executive Director, National Center for Reason and Justice

CC: Dan Lipcan, Carol Hopkins, Day of Contrition presenters and attendees

 

A prison post from Shane Crum: The Staff

Monday, September 28th, 2020

When I began my incarceration back in 1996, the staff were professional, non-biased, and knew the O.A.C.s and O.D.R.C. Policies that governed their jobs. In essence, they knew the rules they had to follow. Gradually, this changed, and in no way for the better. Today, staff members like sergeant (correctional counselor) Stephanie Craft are of the false belief they can do what ever they want to inmates. I wish I could tell you she is among the few who act this way. Truth is, the old guard is slowly disappearing.

These staff mistreat inmates in every possible way they can, and then act incredulous when the inmate calls them on it, or asks their superior to intervene. It is rather amazing just how bewildered they are that “an inmate” could ever question anything they say or do. How dare they! If you actually have the heart to stand up for yourself, staff like Craft begin threatening you, having their peers harass you, will try to get you fired from your institutional jobs, moving you to the locks where all the chaos is, and a host of other things.

Read the rest of Shane’s post.

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Donate to the cause.

A Prison Post from Shane Crum — Computers for Prisoners

Sunday, September 6th, 2020

Everyone always talks about rehabilitation, but no one seems to want inmates to have anything of value. There can be no greater contradiction. The vast majority of inmates will, at some point, be released. The question everyone should be asking themselves is, “do we want inmates to have everything they need to be successful, or do we routinely poke at and antagonize them so they are like wild animals when they come home?” Keep in mind, many of these inmates will become your neighbor or a neighbor to someone you know and love. Personally, I would hope our self described civil society demand we treat every person with dignity and respect. Yet, I keep reflecting on something Thomas Paine once wrote,”A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial appearance of being right.”

Read the rest of Shane’s post.

Subscribe to his blog.

Visit his website.

Send him a message.

Donate to the cause.

-Bob

A new prison post from Shane Crum – judging others

Sunday, August 30th, 2020

“Judging others seems to be a special pastime in prisons. Staff and inmate alike pass judgment on people for the wrong reasons. Yet, they never want the maggot things they are doing to be seen by others. These staff and inmates even think of themselves higher than they should. It reminds me of high school in a way. You and another classmate both like a girl, and the only way for the other guy to be noticed is for him to poison your name and character. He has to talk bad about you just so he can shine for a second. Then his true nature comes out when everything is said and done. I usually phrase it as,” A nobody trying to be a somebody to a bunch of nobodies.”

Read the rest of his post.

Visit his web site.

Send him a note of encouragement.

Donate to his cause.

Questioning Corporate Media’s Thirst for Scandal in the Age of #MeToo

Sunday, August 16th, 2020

The Times Literary Supplement in a rave review of JoAnn Wypijewski’s provocative new book states: “It is thrilling and cathartic to watch Wypijewski slice through our culture’s flabbiest orthodoxies.” On this week’s installment of “Scheer Intelligence,” Wypijewski talks to host Robert Scheer about the “haste to castigate” that has led to shoddy reporting of the true meaning of trials she has covered, ranging from the media frenzy trial of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein to the framing of five teenagers known as the Central Park Five on rape charges, which she offers as a shocking example of a “scandal media” lynching mob.

And it’s not just the media that control narratives, but also prosecutors who wield wildly disproportionate power against even the rich and famous. To the journalist, the two very different cases of the Central Park Five and Weinstein reveal that not only is the presumption of innocence always under threat in a court case, but that there is “no one who [can match] the resources of the state,” making a fair trial nearly impossible.

Throughout her long career as a journalist for Harper’s Magazine, The Nation, and Mother Jones, Wypijewski has not only examined sex scandals, but everything from the Matthew Shepard murder to the Abu Ghraib torture scandal, always incisively formulating the questions that few in media seem to want to ask. Listen to the full conversation between Wypijewski and Scheer as the two journalists tackle some of the most controversial and therefore crucial questions of our timListen to the podcast here.

Listen to the podcast.

Read JoAnn’s book.

A few short prison posts from Shane Crum

Sunday, August 16th, 2020

From his blog.

This is Shane’s website.

Send him a note of encouragement.

Donate to his defense fund.

Shane Crum on COVID-19 behind bars.

Saturday, August 8th, 2020

For some time now, I have been corresponding with Shane Crum, an inmate in Marion, Ohio, whom I believe to be innocent.

Last April, a number of his emails referenced COVID 19 in Marion. He first mentioned COVID on April 1st:

“Bob, howdy again. I apologize for not responding before now. Sunday evening we got word that a staff member here tested positive for covid 19. On Monday, we went into lockdown. We still can move around our locks in the day room. We also still have access to the kiosk. Nevertheless, more inmates are in the housing unit all day, and many of them are using the kiosk more frequently. The whole thing is chaotic at best.

“What concerns me about all of this is that staff keep the inmates isolated from one another. However, they are the ones suddenly preparing our meals, washing our laundry, and roaming between the four quarantine zones. Yesterday, an officer came into the lock, emptied out our ice machine and had his entire upper body inside the ice machine. If this is going to come into this prison, they are the ones who will bring it in here, and they are taking no precautions to keep the staff from spreading it to the inmate population. It is as though they are under the impression that the inmates will have it before they will, and we will give it to them. This is all very backward.”

On April 10th:

“Bob, howdy. How are you today? I do hope you and your family are well and staying safe. The virus is currently at this institution. I have repeatedly attempted to tell staff that they will be the ones who bring it in here, and that they should be mandated to wear the masks. It took them up til last week to mandate that. The staff are still creating policies that indicate the inmates will give it to the staff and not the other way around. They have been handling our food without wearing masks, our laundry (the same), mail, and they keep coming into the block and getting ice out of our ice machine without wearing a mask, gloves or both (when the inmates should be the ones touching all these items and not staff). A virus spreads by mucus droplets that come from the mouth and nose, and through contact with that mucus. They do not seem to get it. What do you expect, I am just an inmate to them and I could never know more than they do. I do not think they realize they are liable for what happens to us. According to the Federal Courts, we are wards of the state, and they are suppose to protect us from such things. I am done ranting.”

On April 20th:

“Howdy Bob. How are you today? I am truly sorry I have not replied to your last e-mail until now. On Thursday the 16th, OSU came in and tested the entire institution. We now know 1828 inmates here have tested positive for covid 19. Needless to say, I have been a little distracted.”

And then on April 28th:

“Bob, howdy again. Well, the whole institution was tested for covid 19 on the 16th. They finally informed the inmate population on the results of those tests on the 23rd. 2100 out of approximately 2500 have tested positive here. From your e-mail, I would think you are aware of the conditions here. Anyway, I tested positive. I had a couple days where I was really down. I did not eat for three days straight. I did not have any major symptoms, so it was like being really tired with extreme headaches, and dizziness. I pulled through it without much of a problem. Most of the inmates here had similar symptoms, but some are not doing too well. From the beginning, the news reported that around 80% of the people who get infected with the virus would show mild to no symptoms. While that was promising, the other 20% where getting hospitalized and some dying. I am thankful that I did not go through what some of the other inmates are dealing with. The staff here are still running some bizarre procedures that will ensure the eventual infection of the entire population here. What I am really not understanding is that our administration has been negligent at best and O.D.R.C. continues to transfer inmates here. They keep separating the negatives from the positives, but that seems to be some sick way to ensure they will eventually infect the inmates who tested negative. The National Guard are great and efficient. Way better people than the C.O.s who work here. I keep asking them about some of these procedures the administration have put in place, and they are just as dumbfounded as I am. I wish I could tell you I am staying safe, but the staff are ensuring that is impossible for us. That is enough of the pitty party stuff.”

You can learn more about Shane by visiting his web site: https://shanecrum.org.

Please help him if you can. He would most appreciate just hearing from you: https://shanecrum.org/contact-us/.

-Bob

A prison post from my friend Shane Crum

Sunday, August 2nd, 2020

https://shanecrum.org/2020/08/02/two-thoughts-from-shane/

Learn more about his case at his web site.

You can send him a message or make a donation.

 

Funeral Services for Bruce Perkins

Friday, July 24th, 2020

Carol called me this afternoon. She sounded very tired. But reconciled that Bruce was finally at rest.

She does regret Bruce not ever getting to meet so many of his friends before he left. I told her we all knew and loved Bruce, the kind man, the gentle giant, the good friend. We didn’t need to physically meet him.

We, who know the story, and how he endured, with grace, 30 years of the slings and arrows of cruel and outrageous fortune, rose above it with his dignity intact, and at least got out of the Texas hellholes for the last year of his life, —-we admire the perseverance, his courage, the integrity, his faith and trust in his Lord,—-the strength and love of Carol, his wife who stood by him all those years. Brave, tough folks.

Carol asked me to forward along the information re Bruce’s funeral service.

He’ll be waked at:

Corley Funeral Home
418 N. 13th St.
Corsicana, TX 75110

(Funeral Home Phone: 903-874-3755)

Service to begin at 2 PM, Saturday, August 1, 2020.

Frank Kane, NCRJ Clerk-Treasurer

Joseph Allen Parole Hearing

Thursday, July 23rd, 2020

The NCRJ has been sponsoring the case of Joseph Allen since 2004.

It is a terrible case. Joseph was once even freed, with no restrictions, for a number of years after a judge ordered his acquittal. But the corrupt forces that railroaded him into prison refused to let that stand, and persuaded the Ohio Supreme Court to lock him up again.

Here is more information about the case from the NCRJ website.

Joseph will have a parole hearing in December. He is most anxious that supporters write letters of support.

Here is guidance from Joseph’s lawyers:

No longer than a page

  • a little bit about their background, such as their job, where they live, etc.
  • how they know Joseph/history of relationship;
  • describe any positive things they know about Joseph, such as his character, his accomplishments, specific examples of good things that he has done, improvements they have seen in his character over the years, etc.;
  • describe how they would support Joseph if he is released, whether emotional, economic, spiritual, job offer, etc.

Letter should be addressed to “Members of the Ohio Parole Board.”

You can mail your letter:

Attention Ricky Parsons
Kravitz, Brown & Dortch, LLC
65 East State Street #200
Columbus OH 43215-4277

You can also email it to Ricky Parsons <rparsons@kravitzllc.com>.

Thank you for your support of Joseph.

-Bob Chatelle