EXCLUSIVE: Feds Are Helping Register Alabama Prisoners To Vote
Feds 'deployed' a 'liberal' org to help register Alabaman federal prisoners to vote, according to a statement from the secretary of state.
Protesters gathered at New Jersey's capitol Friday to demand biologically male prisoners' removal from the Garden State's only all-female prison, the New York Post reported.
The #GetMenOut event in Trenton featured activists reading letters from female inmates at Edna Mahan Correctional Facility. In their letters, the female inmates detail their fears of violent altercations with fellow inmates who are biologically male.
Speakers at the Justice Speaks: Free Speech for Women event included activists Brittany Ortiz, Jennifer Thomas, and others. They advocated for the dignity of women incarcerated in sex-segregated prisons.
Ten inmates in EMCF are biological men, the Post reported. One such inmate, who now goes by the name Michelle Hel-Loki Angelina, once bragged about drinking a woman's blood in a letter viewable in an archived copy of a 2002 article from the New York Daily News, as Outkick reported.
That inmate, housed with women at EMCF, was born male, and was previously named Perry Cerf. He is reportedly serving a 50-year sentence for the rape and murder of a female prostitute.
"Yeah, I killed her. I punched and kicked her to death, crushing her skull in the process. One of the kicks landed in such a way that it broke her neck and all of a sudden her head was on backward ... Since I have a most unusual taste for blood, I drank and licked and lapped up my fill," Cerf wrote to the NYDN.
One letter read Friday in Trenton was written by 51-year-old Dawn Jackson. In it, she described her fears about being imprisoned with men who identify as women. Jackson, who has described being repeatedly raped as a child, is in prison for stabbing her adoptive stepfather after "years of sexual abuse."
Kim Kardashian's "The Justice Project" featured Jackson's story last year.
After Minor was transferred out to a men's prison, he reportedly attempted to remove his testicles with a razor. Minor identifies as a woman.
Watch coverage of the Justice Speaks event in Trenton, New Jersey in full below.
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After decades of outrage and community activism, the city of Philadelphia has now formally apologized for authorizing a local doctor to conduct medical experiments on inmates — most of whom were black and still awaiting prosecution — during the mid-twentieth century.
On Thursday, the office of Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney released a formal statement admitting that the city had allowed University of Pennsylvania researcher and dermatologist Dr. Albert Kligman to subject poor, mainly black and illiterate inmates at Holmesburg Prison to "pharmaceuticals, viruses, fungus, asbestos, and even dioxin, a component of Agent Orange" while they awaited trial. The experiments continued for approximately two decades, from the 1950s to the 1970s.
"While this happened many decades ago, we know that the historical impact and trauma of this practice of medical racism has extended for generations—all the way through to the present day," Mayor Kenney said. "One of our Administration’s priorities is to rectify historic wrongs while we work to build a more equitable future, and to do that, we must reckon with past atrocities. That is why our Administration today, on behalf of the City of Philadelphia, is addressing this shameful time in Holmesburg’s history."
Officials estimate that as many as 300 inmates were used in the experiments. While those in the program were paid for their participation, many of them had not even been tried for a crime and were desperate for bail money, creating an unethical power structure which compelled many vulnerable inmates to consent to experiments for money and unknowingly expose their bodies to dangerous chemicals.
In 2000, a group of former Holmesburg participants sued the university and Kligman, claiming that they had suffered years of health and psychological problems as a result of the experiments. The lawsuit was ultimately dismissed because, the court asserted, the statute of limitations had already expired.
Kligman himself was often well-compensated for the experiments. In some cases, he was paid tens of thousands of dollars to test various chemicals on human beings at Holmesburg. Until his death in 2010, Kligman continued to defend his research methods. "My view is that shutting the prison experiments down was a big mistake," he said in 2006. "... I’m on the medical ethics committee at Penn, and I still don’t see there having been anything wrong with what we were doing."
Medical experiment rules were different at the time, but they were still regulated. Kligman began the Holmesburg experiments just a few years after the horrors of the medical experiments conducted in Nazi concentration and death camps were made known, and the Nuremberg Code, which strictly limited human medical experiments, had already been passed.
Kligman did make some ethically-sourced advancements in dermatology regarding ailments like athlete's foot and dandruff, and he and research partners Dr. James E. Fulton and Dr. Gerd Plewig developed the popular acne treatment Retin-A, which is still on the market. However, Kligman's legacy remains tied to the Holmesburg experiments, and as a result, his name has since been removed from various University of Pennsylvania honorifics.
Senate Democrats rejected efforts on Saturday to keep the forthcoming pandemic-related economic stimulus out of the hands of imprisoned criminals and immigrants who are living in the United Stated illegally.
Prior to approving a whopping $1.9 trillion stimulus package — which is stuffed with items completely unrelated to COVID-19 relief — Republicans proposed numerous amendments that would have more responsibly directed aid at those Americans who need it most.
Republicans, however, were unsuccessful in leaning down the bill, which was ultimately approved without support from a single Republican senator.
Republicans Sens. Bill Cassidy (La.), Ted Cruz (Texas), and Tom Cotton (Ark.) introduced an amendment that would have prevented "any individual who is incarcerated in a Federal or State prison" from receiving stimulus checks.
Democrats rejected the effort, 50-49, which would have saved taxpayers nearly $2 billion.
Not adopted, 49-50: Cassidy Amendment #1162 (re: no checks for prisoners) in relation to H.R.1319, FY2021 Budget Reconciliation.— Senate Cloakroom (@Senate Cloakroom) 1615044096.0
"Prisoners do not pay taxes. Taxpayers pay for their every need. Inmates cannot stimulate the economy. But, under this bill they receive stimulus checks. This is a perfect example of nontargeted, inappropriate, and total waste of spending. It's ridiculous that this is in the bill," Cassidy said in a statement.
Cruz similarly introduced an amendment that would have prevented immigrants living in the U.S. illegally from receiving checks.
Democrats also rejected that effort, 50-49.
"Joe Biden and the Democrats want to give illegal aliens $1,400 COVID relief checks. I proposed an amendment to prevent that from happening," Cruz said.
Cruz explained, "Democrats just voted against my amendment that would have prevented American taxpayer dollars from being handed out to illegal aliens in the form of $1,400 stimulus checks."
Democrats just voted against my amendment that would have prevented American taxpayer dollars from being handed out… https://t.co/RbRNo9vtUn— Senator Ted Cruz (@Senator Ted Cruz) 1615045230.0
Senate Majority Whip Dick Durban (D-Ill.), however, accused Cruz of being dishonest.
"The statement of the senator from Texas is just plain false. False! Let me be clear: Undocumented immigrants do not have Social Security numbers, and they do not qualify for stimulus relief checks," Durbin said, The Hill reported.
Amendments that were also rejected include one to allow construction of the Keystone XL pipeline to continue, another to provide more targeted pandemic relief, and one to require in-person learning for education funding, among other amendments.
President Joe Biden said Saturday that Americans will begin to receive their stimulus checks this month after the House approves changes to the stimulus bill made by the Senate.
A year and a half ago when Vice President Kamala Harris was gunning for the Democratic presidential nomination, the Washington Post published a story looking at her close relationship with her sister Maya that contained what some might call a disturbing anecdote.
In short, Harris likened the effects of the fast pace and long days and nights of the campaign trail to how a desperate, overwhelmed prisoner might feel begging for food and water. Here's how the first seven paragraphs of story read when it was originally published on July 23, 2019, Reason reported:
It was the Fourth of July, Independence Day, and Kamala Harris was explaining to her sister, Maya, that campaigns are like prisons.
She'd been recounting how in the days before the Democratic debate in Miami life had actually slowed down to a manageable pace. Kamala, Maya and the rest of the team had spent three days prepping for that contest in a beach-facing hotel suite, where they closed the curtains to blot out the fun. But for all the hours of studying policy and practicing the zingers that would supercharge her candidacy, the trip allowed for a break in an otherwise all-encompassing schedule.
"I actually got sleep," Kamala said, sitting in a Hilton conference room, beside her sister, and smiling as she recalled walks on the beach with her husband and that one morning SoulCycle class she was able to take.
"That kind of stuff," Kamala said between sips of iced tea, "which was about bringing a little normal to the days, that was a treat for me."
"I mean, in some ways it was a treat," Maya said. "But not really."
"It's a treat that a prisoner gets when they ask for, 'A morsel of food please,' " Kamala said shoving her hands forward as if clutching a metal plate, her voice now trembling like an old British man locked in a Dickensian jail cell. "'And water! I just want wahtahhh….' Your standards really go out the f***ing window."
Kamala burst into laughter.
Yup, she laughed. At her own ill-advised joke. Not the best look.
Kamala Harris Laughing Compilationyoutu.be
And Reason noted the effectiveness of the Post's story:
The scene was a brilliant bit of reporting and writing because it did what few political features can accomplish: showing, rather than telling, something about the candidate at the center. Harris made her name as a prosecutor, and her track record includes defending dirty cops and laughing off criticism of her history of throwing poor parents in jail when their kids missed school. The Post profile provided a mask-slipping moment that seemed to perfectly capture a warped sense of justice and lack of basic human dignity—all in just a few hundred words.
At the time, Harris was fair game like all the other Democratic hopefuls wanting a shot at the White House. Indeed, she was an early front-runner, which made her an even bigger target for the media. But less than five months after the Post's profile ran, Harris dropped out of the race as he poll numbers plummeted and the staff departed.
Reason took a look again at the Post's 2019 story — and discovered that, lo and behold, Harris' cringeworthy joke was gone.
Turns out the paper put together an online series prior to the inauguration, and when Reason asked the Post's communications manager why the story was changed, the outlet said it got this response: "We repurposed and updated some of our strong biographical pieces about both political figures" and the story in question "was updated with new reporting, as noted online, using the existing URL. The original story remains available in print."
What's more, it appears the Post did some fast fixing.
Reason's story about the Post doing a "memory-hole" number was published at 10:25 a.m. Friday. But in an new update note, Reason told its readers that as of 1:15 p.m. the Post had "updated its website and URLs to restore the original version of the Kamala Harris profile."
Sure, the repurposed story dated Jan. 11 without Harris' anecdote is still there — but a number of other links that Reason said redirected users to the sanitized Harris story were restored so that they now go to the original.
"We should have kept both versions of the story on the Post's site (the original and updated one), rather than redirecting to the updated version," Kris Coratti, the Post's vice president for communications, told Reason on Friday. "We have now done that, and you will see the link to the original at the top of the updated version."
Reason had an inkling of what may have been at the heart of things:
The original quote might have demonstrated something about Harris — indeed, it suggests why her presidential primary campaign flopped so hard — but its disappearance suggests something about the Post, and about the way traditional political media are preparing to cover Harris now that she's one heartbeat away from the presidency.
Eric Boehm, author the Reason piece, added that "at a time when legacy publications are increasingly seen as playing for one political 'team' or the other, this type of editorial decision will not do anything to fix that perception — is there any doubt that the Post would not have treated an inartful comment from Mike Pence in the same way?"
"Intentional or not, the memory-holing of the older version of the piece sends a message that the Post is willing to pave over its own good journalism to protect a powerful politician from her own words," he concluded.
Trump STUNS Nation at RNC, Announces Surprise Pardon of Man Who Turned His Life Around