JULIUS CAESAR is a Play Within a Play in this Production

If you live anywhere near NYC, you might want to catch an altogether amazing production of Julius Caesar before it leaves Brooklyn after this weekend. This is a production by the famed Donmar Warehouse that takes place at St. Ann's Warehouse.

The construct of this production is that it takes place in a prison. All are women prisoners who decide to perform a production of the famed Shakespearean play. The New York Times called the show "gender-bending" but that is not actually accurate. When I directed women in prison, they played male characters and were superb. I attributed this to the fact that women spend so much time watching men than it is not all that difficult to portray them. The women here also superbly step into the shoes of Caesar and his followers and yet there is a sense always that they are playing characters who have so much more power than they do.

Women playing men who have the power. That is the key since women behind bars have so little power and in the raw violence, the grey of the prison and the dramatic singing and need to transcend prison walls the play is always the vehicle.

Some of the best moments in this production directed by Phillyda Lloyd, take place when the audience sees the disjunction between prisoner and play. A woman gets a visit and the actresses break with curses and fury, not wanting to lose their fellow cast member even for a few minutes of the show, a show one imagines will continue on and on since it is the life of women. We discover that Caesar is not the prisoner we thought she was at the end of the play when she unzips her prison garb to reveal a guard's clean white shirt and tie — these are Brits mind you. It is an unexpected stunning moment. 

 

Likewise, one of the least successful is the herding in of audience members by guards. It feels much more cliché than any other moment. But it is a rarity in a production that truly examines power.The play is 100% clear and even if you forgot your Caesar you get every word, every tension. The actors are physical and the set a warehouse at its best with upper levels and a dimly lit world to jump and descend to

The women in this play impressed me as actors but what I came away with most is how Shakespeare relates so much to the experience of incarcerated persons. This is why so many of us work with prisoners to put on Shakespeare. A reminder once again that universality is not just a word

Shoutout to upcoming Shakespeare in Prison conference next weekend, November 15th-17th.

Why Sentencing Juvies as Adults = Bad Bad Idea

This week I have a post in Boston Magazine on what Massachusetts is now grappling with in the wake of a murder of a high school teacher by a fourteen-year-old boy. You can read that here.

I thought it also was important to post some of the most recent photos that were posted http://generalstrikeusa.wordpress.com/2012/10/17/uncompromising-photos-expose-juvenile-detention-in-america/

a blog detailing the horrible confinement juveniles face. See this

Prison Visitors Sniffed by Drug Detection Dogs:This isn’t a Fix

It was barely five months ago that I wrote for Boston Magazine: "By now, everyone has heard about the amazing sense of smell of bomb-sniffing dogs, which we saw on the front lines of the Boston Marathon bombings. But a new policy coming to state prisons that involves dogs trained to sniff out drugs could rattle some cages, and it should cause us to ask: Is Massachusetts turning down the wrong criminal justice path, aiming to fix a problem without getting at its core cause?"

Since then our state has plunged ahead, seemingly oblivious to the fact that while dogs are certainly useful as a way of sniffing out bombs and contraband, when I asked, the Massachusetts Department of Correction (DOC) could come up with no research to support this action. An international study conducted from Australia in 2008 on how contraband gets into prison raised concerns about the effectiveness of random dog searches. Without secrecy, the study says, searches are not as effective, and secrecy is nearly impossible. Searches slow down as soon as dogs are present, and instead of acting as a deterrent, the dogs act as signals that such searches are in process.

11,500 people who live in our Massachusetts state prisons depend on visits from their families to give them hope that, one day, they will have a second chance at a productive life. That means letters and visits can be lifelines for prisoners. “Successful family and community reunification,” is part of the mission of Corrections, according to a resolution of the American Corrections Association.

And the irony of this policy is it assumes drugs are being brought in primarily by vistors to state prisons, a response to a so-called "huge up-tick," per a DOC memo.The DOC's "Use of Nonaggressive Drug Detection Canines" — to assure four year olds that they should not be afraid? to say there is will be no fallout with sniffing visitors in the traps when they enter prison? — says there have been 177 instances in three years and ten months— slightly less than once a week. But Lois Ahrens, Executive Director of The Real Cost of Prisons Project (RCPP), who has mounted a campaign against the policy, says this in "no way accounts for the volume of drugs (and other contraband including cell phones and pizzas) in Massachusetts' prisons."

The DOC is currently recommending dog-sniffing of staff and guards, new on the front burner since I wrote my article in May. But ironically again, these sniffs will begin in November at random sites _Massachusetts has seventeen state facilities — and occur only during visiting hours on the  3-11 p.m.shift. This leaves sixteen hours every day guards are not being sniffed. How is that tackling the problem of guards, staff, attorneys and other DOC employees possibly bringing in contraband?

DOC Spokesperson Terrel Harris said in an email that the DOC found only “seven incidents of employees introducing drugs or contraband into the DOC.” His list was compiled from “a database search for ‘drugs’ and investigations for the ‘introduction of contraband’ and/or ‘criminal conduct while on duty’ for dates 1/1/11 through 3/21/13.”

This seems ridiculously low. There are easily hundreds of incidents nationwide of correctional officers bringing in drugs, cell phones and other contraband, readily searchable online. Nationwide arrests of federal prison guards—in part, for smuggling contraband—increased by 90 percent over the last decade. A Boston Globe editorial put it well: “It beggars belief to think all drugs in prisons come from visitors.” To solve this problem in Massachusetts, Ahrens said in an interview, “there needs to be a real internal investigation of DOC employees, staff, and guards.” Officials insist they have a zero-tolerance drug policy in prisons and that drug detection dogs have sniffed out drugs in letters and packages addressed to prisoners. In 2011 and 2012, the DOC says they confiscated 18 instances of drugs that came in through the mail.

Ahrens decries the idea that these "sniffs" of visitors are harmless. Currently, visitors are sent through a scanner, much like at an airport, and they’re often asked to take off articles of clothing such as shoes, belts, and the like. It’s not uncommon for an officer to inspect the bottom of a visitor’s feet, or to ask the visitor to open his mouth or to go through her hair. Andrea Cabral, Secretary of the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security (EOPSS) said in an interview that “Just the presence of the dog will keep people from bringing in drugs,” or so she hopes. But If the dog “alerts” to the smell of drugs on a visitor and sits, the visitor must consent to a “thorough search” by Department of Correction staff. If not, that person will be banned from entering any DOC facility. Accommodations will be made for those who have allergies or are “dog phobic,” but no one has mentioned what these accomodations are. There is the possibility, if drugs are found, of arrest on the spot.

Many family members of prisoners are not happy with this impending policy. A recent Globe article was highly critical of the plan, and social justice activists launched a letter and call-in campaign which you can find out more about on the RCPP facebook page. Ahrens feels the policy is “demeaning, degrading, and treats the visitor as a suspect, and dogs will make visiting even more cumbersome"—waits can be long. On the DOC website, the original video which showed the whole sniffing process has been shortened to show only a very friendly-looking golden retriever, obviously to make the process less intimidating and to justify the rationale.

A search of the visiting policies on DOC websites in nearby states showed no dog-sniffing policies mentioned in New York, Connecticut, Maine, or Rhode Island. New Hampshire considered dog detection but ultimately decided not to embrace the policy, said Jeff Lyons, Public Information Officer for their DOC, in a phone conversation. Vermont does allow drug-sniffing canines. But certainly, nationwide, there is no consensus. Some states such as California only allow visitors’ cars to be sniffed by dogs—considered less intrusive in an Oklahoma litigated case than sniffs of “bodies.”

Meanwhile, per the Globe and Jim Pingeon, attorney at Prisoners Legal Services (PLS), groups such as the Massachusetts chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and PLS are discussing suing over this issue. They are currently looking for plaintiffs, especially children who are afraid of dogs, and interested persons can contact Ahrens at lois@realcostofprisons.org.

If Massachusetts wants to get serious on ridding its prisons of drugs, then it better take a holistic approach. Instead of just looking at the visitors, we need to consider the whole picture—a picture that also includes the very people tasked with keeping prisons running in the first place.

Gideon’s Promise and Peril

This Friday, October 11th, Massachusetts has the opportunity to get a two-for-one punch. An all day free conference will take place at Harvard Law School’s Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice called “Gideon’s Promise and Peril: Meeting the Mandate for Indigent Defense.”

The day includes a showing of the amazing documentary, Gideon’s Army, about Georgia law professor, Jonathan Rapping’s Southern Public Defender Training Center, known as “Gideon’s Promise.” The film takes us through the lives of some of our hardest working public defenders. With often 150 cases at a time and a salary of not much more than $40,000, they seek to help the indigent get a fair shake in a system that much too often insists on unjust punishment. Filmmaker Dawn Porter examines the difficulties in getting a just trial and fair sentencing when loopholes exist: for example, you more often than not get fewer years if you plead guilty. Only since 1963, have those who cannot afford an attorney been provided with public defenders. These men and women are indeed an army, fighting in an often hellish war. Over 2.2 million Americans languish in our prison. I saw this documentary two weeks ago and it really is must-see for anyone interested in our dysfunctional criminal justice system.

The all day conference also promises an amazing lineup of speakers. I’ve listed the agenda below and you can register for the conference here. Note the keynote address is by Stephen Bright, President and Senior Counsel of the Southern Center for Human Rights. Their accomplishments include representing those facing the death penalty; ending human rights abuses in prison and improving jail conditions; and making real the Constitutional right to counsel.

Agenda

9:00 – Welcome and Opening

 

9:30 – Stephen Singer, Assistant Clinical Professor, Loyola University College of Law, New Orleans


10:00
– Panel 1 on structural reforms, moderated by Carol Steiker, Henry J. Friendly Professor of Law, Harvard Law School

  • Anthony Benedetti, Chief Counsel, Committee for Public Counsel Services
  • Robert Boruchowitz, Professor from Practice, Seattle University Law School
  • Alexandra Natapoff, Professor of Law, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles

11:00 – Video of HLS faculty Charles Ogletree and Nancy Gertner

11:30 – Gary Drinkard, Board member of Witness to Innocence and exonerated Alabama death row prisoner

 

12:00 – Lunch (provided)

  • Honoring Judge George N. Leighton (HLS ’46), U.S. District Court of Northern District of Illinois, retired

1:00Keynote address: “Defiance and Resistance to Gideon” – Stephen Bright, President and Senior Counsel, Southern Center for Human Rights

 

1:45 – Marc Bookman, Director, The Atlantic Center for Capital Representation

 

2:15 – Panel 2 on MyGideon and training, moderated by Robert J. Smith, Assistant Professor of Law, UNC School of Law

  • Cathleen Bennett, Criminal Defense Training Director, Committee for Public Counsel Services
  • Stephen Singer, Assistant Clinical Professor, Loyola University College of Law
  • Jeff Sherr, Education and Strategic Planning Manager, Kentucky Department of Public Advocacy

3:15 – Renée Hutchins, Associate Professor of Law, University of Maryland School of Law

3:45 – Dehlia Umunna, Acting Deputy, Director and Clinical Instructor at the Criminal Justice Institute (CJI) at Harvard Law School

4:00 – Screening of Gideon’s Army documentary

 

5:30 – Conversation with Gideon’s Army director Dawn Porter and Ronald Sullivan, Clinical Professor of Law & Director, Criminal Justice Institute, Harvard Law School