Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do
PART II: WHY LAWS AGAINST CONSENSUAL
ACTIVITIES ARE NOT A GOOD IDEA
ENFORCING LAWS AGAINST CONSENSUAL ACTIVITIES
DESTROYS PEOPLE'S LIVES
- WHAT THE ENFORCEMENT of laws
against consensual activities does to individuals is
nothing short of criminal. The government is
destroying the very lives of the people it is
supposedly saving.
- A single arrest, even without a
conviction, is, in many cases, enough to ruin a life;
a conviction and a year in jail are almost guaranteed
to. All this, of course, is "for their own good."
As the Horace of Spain (15591619) wrote, "No
pain equals that of an injury inflicted under the
pretense of a just punishment."
- Let's take a look at the process
of arrest, trial, conviction, and jail. Please don't
think of this as something happening to some "criminal"
who "deserves it." Think of it as something
happening to you or one of your friends or relatives.
If you have ever taken part in any consensual crime,
it was luck alone that kept at least some of these
things from happening to you.
- As the song goes: there, but for
fortune, go you or I.
- When you are arrested, you are
thrown into a world of violent criminals handled by
individuals who are well-trained in treating people
like violent criminals. Don't expect that you will be
treated any differently. (A friend of our family used
to regale us with both horror and laughter at the
treatment he received during a consensual crime
arrest. After recounting an indignity or personal
violation, he would lift his hands to heaven and say,
"Who was I gonna call? The police? They were
already there!")
Prior
toor simultaneously withthe arrest, comes the
search.
You
can be home one evening watching TV when you hear a knock at
the door. "Who's there?" you ask, having seen some
nicely uniformed police officer in a documentary on crime
prevention recommend that you never open your door without
knowing who is on the other side.
"Open
the door. It's the police. We have a warrant to search your
premises." This is likely to be the only warning you get
before your door is broken down (if a "no-knock"
warrant is issued, you won't even get a first knock). The
police automatically assume that you are (a) guilty and (b)
hurriedly destroying evidence: flushing drugs, pornography,
or prostitutes down the toilet. The door is opened (by you or
by them) and, without a moment's hesitation, three or four or
five or ten uniformed and/or uninformed police begin going
through everything you own.
Here
a frightening question may cross your mind: how do you know
whether these are really police? Answer: you don't. Even if
they flash a badge, everyone knows fake badges are readily
available. If you have the presence of mind to ask to use the
telephone to call the station house to confirm that this is
an authorized search, the request will almost certainly be
denied.
So
there you are, surrounded by a group of armed authority
figures who are going through everything you own, putting
"suspicious" articles into boxes or plastic bags,
and you can only hope it's really the police and not some
enterprising band of criminals. (On the other hand, maybe one
should hope it is a band of criminalsstuff can be
replaced; time in prison cannot.)
At
about this point, you are "Mirandized." Amidst the
hub-bub of your fish tank being drained (who knows what you
may be hiding under the sand), your toilet being dismantled (lots
of room for contraband behind, in, or "down there"),
and every container in your kitchen being emptied onto the
counter ("This stuff in the oregano jar smells a lot
like marijuana"), being read your constitutional rights
sounds something like this: "Mumble mumble you
have the right to remain silent mumble mumble right to
an attorney mumble mumble can and will be used against
you mumble mumble do you understand?" And then,
amidst this atmosphere of physical, emotional, and
psychological terror, the questioning begins. By this time,
often, you will be handcuffed.
You
are asked about people, incidents, and things going back as
far as seven years (the statute of limitation on most
felonies). You are asked to remember where you were, who you
were with and what you were doing at a particular time, on a
particular date. If you're like most people, you don't
remember what you had for dinner two weeks ago, much less
what you did on a specific date two years ago, but "not
remembering" is treated as a clear indication of "withholding
evidence," "interfering with justice," being
"uncooperative," and, of course, guilt. If you
happen to remember something, anything, these comments will
be carefully recorded, and, if you happen to have a more
complete recollection later, it will be taken as a sign that
"you truly don't have an accurate memory of the
situation" or that you "lied to the police."
Once
armed with a search warrant, anything the police recover of
an "illegal nature" or even a "suspicious
nature" is fair game. They can dismantle and destroy
anything that might hold any illegal substanceand,
considering how compact certain drugs are, this means that
they can dismantle and destroy anything. They can take with
them any "suspicious substances" for laboratory
testing. This could include the entire contents of your
medicine cabinet, kitchen pantry, and garage. Anything that
might be used to "document" your criminal activity
can be confiscated. This means all files, correspondence,
notes, diaries, address books, phone bills, video tapes,
audio tapes, and even your computer. If you do business from
your home, a police search can put you out of business
immediately.
Getting
back your possessions can take weeks, months, and, in some
cases, years. You may find yourself trying to reconstruct
your personal and business records from scratch at a time
when you need them mostwhile gathering evidence for
your defense. Meanwhile, the police could well be calling all
the people in your phone book or professional database,
asking if they know you and, when they respond yes, asking
them such questions as, "Do you know anything about this
person's involvement with drugs (prostitution, homosexuality,
gambling, etc.)?"
Anything
that might indicate what "kind of person" you are
can also be seized, even if it's not directly related to a
crime. This includes books on certain subjects, magazines,
newspapers, even what station your television or radio was
tuned toanything that might make you look unusual,
peculiar, unconventional, or make a jury of twelve "normal"
people think you're pretty weird overall and probably deserve
to go to jail for either the crime you are being charged or
for the many crimes you've gotten away with.
Whether
you're arrested or taken to the police station for "questioning"
or on "suspicion," your property that hasn't either
been destroyed by the police or taken with them is pretty
much up for grabs. If the police broke down your door, they
don't exactly call a carpenter and locksmith to make sure
that everything is secure before they head off for their next
round of searching and seizing. They may put some tape across
the outside of your door, saying "POLICE LINES. DO NOT
CROSS," which, to any burglar, means "LOOT INSIDE.
OWNER SAFELY IN JAIL. WELCOME." One person who had been
searched and seized told another who had gone through a
similar experience, "After the police left, burglars
came, ransacked my apartment and took everything of value,"
to which the other victim replied, "How could you tell?"
Sometimes
you can't tell. If you're carted off before the police are
finished searching and seizing, you may come home and not
know the difference between vandalism, theft, and the work of
professional law enforcement. If you can't get bail together
quicklyor are held in jail for two, three, four days
before bail is even setyou may never see any of your
property again. If the police suspect you were using your
home, car, or any other possessions for drug selling, they
too will be immediately seized, and you may never see them
again either. But, we're getting slightly ahead of our story.
When
you are taken downtown ("downtown" does seem to be
the favorite euphemism for a police station; even if you live
downtown, you will still be taken downtown), you will
probably be put in some sort of holding cell (or, as they
call it, a holding tank) for an indefinite period of time. (The
Supreme Court says that you can be held for forty-eight hours
without even being charged.) If you are lucky, you will be
alone in such a cell. Most likely, however, what with jails
at 101% capacity thanks to the rigorous enforcement of laws
against consensual activities, you will probably find
yourself in a much larger cell with some real criminals who
have also been recently arrestedsome yelling, some
moaning, some covered in blood (their own or others'), some
vomiting, and some with little or no control of other
orifices.
Once
there, you are a criminal. Period. No distinction is made
between criminals whose crimes have innocent victims and
criminals whose crimes do not. Even if you are not harassed,
molested, abused, exposed to a contagious illness, or raped,
the sights, smells, and sounds are hideous. The odor of one
person vomiting, for example, can cause a chain reaction of
retching to which few are immune.
Seldom
do holding tanks have anything soft in them, such as
mattresses, pillows, or blankets. Concrete, wooden, or metal
slabs are the most that one can hope for, and even on these
unforgiving surfacesdue to overcrowdingthere is
seldom room to actually lie down. If you are not physically
strong enough to stake out your own territory you may end up
sitting on the floor or standing until the police get around
to questioning you, which might not be until some time the
next day, or the next. (Suspects are sometimes intentionally
put in the worst holding cells to "soften them up"
for questioning.)
Then
there is the questioning. Questioning is designed to be
traumatic. Whether they use subtle psychological manipulation,
hellfire and brimstone histrionics, or a combination of the
two in the classic "good cop, bad cop" technique,
questioning is designed to make you feel guilty about
everything so that you'll confess your guilt about something.
You'll be asked to explain pieces of your life pulled from
the search and taken out of context: Polaroid pictures,
journal entries, personal letters.
The
courts have determined that, in order to get you to confess,
police can confront you with evidence they have made up. They
can show you drugs and claim to have found them in your house.
They can show you affidavits signed by names taken from your
address book accusing you of elaborate criminal conduct. The
police will attempt to convince you that they have an
airtight case against you on a greater charge so you'll plead
guilty to a lesser charge.
Somewhere,
you will be faced with yet another major choice. Could youwith
one or two phone callscontact a good, competent, honest
criminal attorney? Few people know how to contact a criminal
attorney because few peopleincluding those who
regularly take part in consensual crimesthink of
themselves as criminals.
Eventually,
the first wave of a very dark ocean known as The Truth About
Lawyers reaches your beach. Criminal lawyers want retainersthat
is, money up front of anywhere from $5,000 to $25,000. This
is just the tip of the legal iceberg, which frequently runs
into hundreds of thousands of dollars.
If
you are arrested for a consensual crime involving drugs, it
will be harder for you to obtain the services of an attorney
than if you had been arrested for, say, murder. If an
attorney takes your case for a drug charge and you are found
guilty, the courts can force the attorney to give all the
money he or she has made from your case to the law
enforcement agency that arrested you. It's part of the assets
forfeiture law. The courts have ruled that not only are your
house, car, money, land, investments, bank accounts, and
other tangible assets forfeitable, but everything you've paid
your attorney as well. Consequently, criminal attorneys are
hesitant to take on drug cases. Murderers, rapists, and
robbers are getting better legal representation than pot
smokers.
Many
attorneys (un)scrupulously investigate the client's net worth
and, lo, when the case is over, the final bill comes to
within a few thousand dollars of this amount. If they can't
justify charging all this money themselves, they call in any
number of attorneys as "specialists" or "consultants."
These same attorneys call your attorney in their cases to act
as a "specialist" or "consultant."
The
only alternative is to declare yourself too poor to hire an
attorney, in which case you will be assigned a public
defender who is overworked, underpaid, and sometimes not very
good (which may be why he or she got a job as a public
defender in the first place).
After
you are arrested, questioned, and charged, you are arraigned.
Basically, this is going before a judge who will set bail. Ah,
bail. Let's say that your bail is set at a nice, low,
reasonable $50,000. Can you put your hands on $50,000in
cash? From inside a jail? Can anyone you know (who would do
it for you) immediately come up with $50,000 in cash? If the
answer to these questions is "no," your choice is
either (a) stay in jail until your trial (it might be months)
or (b) visit the bail bondsman. Bail bondsmen take 10% of the
bail in cash (they are kind enough, however, to accept Visa,
MasterCard, and American Express). To put up a $50,000 bond,
they take $5,000. Even if the charges are dropped the next
day, they keep the $5,000. Still, if you can post bail in any
form, you're one of the lucky ones: 51% of all those who go
trial cannot afford bail and are jailed from the time of the
arrest through the final verdict. If you're fortunate enough
to haveor to have friends who will help you put upthe
$5,000, you are then free to return to whatever is left of
your previous life, much of which may have been confiscated
under the assets forfeiture law.
You're
also free to return to work. Ah, work. With the detention,
questioning, arresting, arraigning, and gathering of bail
money, you may have been in jail for several days, or several
weeks. What do you tell your boss? In all likelihood, your
boss already knows. The friendly detectives from the police
department have already visited your boss, asking if you had
behaved in any "unusual" ways which might indicate
that you were involved in drugs (prostitution, gambling,
sodomy, etc.).
You
may be fired. If you argue (quite correctly) that you haven't
been convicted of anything, and that one is, in our country,
innocent until proven guilty, the boss will probably vaguely
refer to something such as, "Where there's smoke, there's
fire," or "At our company, we can't even risk the
hint of impropriety."
Finding
another job will not be easy. An arrest, even if it ends in a
dismissal or an acquittal in court, remains on your record.
Many companies check for arrest records as a standard part of
screening applicants. Banks, credit card companies, lending
institutions, rental agencies, and others use it as an
indication of credit worthiness. Even though it is blatantly
unfair, and directly violates the tenet that you are innocent
until proven guilty, many companies use a "record of
arrests" as a reason not to hire you, rent you an
apartment, or extend credit.
Ironically,
the presupposition of guilt for consensual crimes is even
higher than for violent crimes. If you are accused of, say,
holding up a bank at gunpoint, even your boss might say,
"Oh, I doubt it." If, however, you are accused of
propositioning a hooker or smoking a joint, most people
conclude, "Yeah, she probably did it," or "Why
was he dumb enough to get caught?"
It
is here that you go through the traumatic experience of
finding out who your real friends are. Some might rally 'round
with love, support, and material assistance. Others will
practice the ancient wisdom, "A friend in need is a
friend to be avoided."
Now,
too, is the time when that church or religious group you've
been supporting for so many years shows its true colors. If
your alleged crime is one of the consensual crimes, chances
are your church considers it a sin. Some clergy advise
accepting the punishment for a consensual crime as an
extension of God's punishment for having sinned and as a
lesson not to do such a despicable-in-the-eyes-of-the-Lord
thing again. Or they just avoid you and your calls altogether.
In other words, don't expect a nun who looks like Susan
Sarandon to appear and give you unlimited pastoral counseling.
And,
of course, consensual crimes put an incredible strain on the
family. If a significant other doesn't know about his or her
partner's forays into consensual crimes, an arrest is a
shocking way to find out (The Hugh Grant Syndrome, Part II).
If the significant other does know and, perhaps, even takes
part in the consensual crime with his or her partner, there
is still lots of room for incrimination. "I told you not
to bring that stuff in the house!"
A
consensual crime arrest could cause parents to permanently
lose custody of their children. In Oregon, for example, if
you are arrested with even less than an ounce of marijuana,
you can be charged with "endangerment"; your
children can be taken from you and placed in the state's
foster care system. Statistically, your child has, while in
that foster care system, a 20% chance of being either
physically or sexually abused. The children will also be
exposed to kids who are, themselves, criminals. What innocent
children might be forceably exposed to could destroy their
entire lives.
If
you're engaged or dating someone, how will he or she take it?
We all like to think that our beloved will stand resolutely
by our side. Yes, that's what we all like to think.
And
what if it was one of your children, or one of your brothers
or sisters, or even one of your parents who was arrested? How
much of your time, energy, and, most importantly, financial
resources could you commit to keeping him or her out of jail?
Successfully defending a criminal prosecution can cost
hundreds of thousands of dollars. Where would you have to
draw the line? Your savings? Your home? Your credit limit? It's
traumatic having to put a dollar amount on the people we love,
but when they're accused of a consensual crime, that is what
we must do.
It's
little wonder, then, that, at this point, most people accused
of consensual crimes seriously contemplate suicide. Not only
is one's own life in shamblesthe loss of possessions,
living space, savings, reputation, job, friends, futurebut
the fear of being a burden on the friends and family who are
willing to help is a pressure some people cannot bear. All
this despair, combined with the fear of prison, can make
suicide seem not only the most logical, but the only solution.
At the very least, one finds oneself in an ever-deepening and
seemingly bottomless depression. (If this chapter is becoming
too depressing, please remember that, unlike the consequences
of being arrested for a consensual crime, this chapter does
have an end.)
If
you choose to stay alive (which, by the way, I recommend),
now starts the seemingly endless round of hearings, motions,
further questionings, preparation of defense, and waiting,
waiting, waiting. One thing you will not have to wait for are
your attorney's bills. These will come on time, and you will
be expected to pay them on time.
Somewhere
along the line, plea bargaining begins. Anyone who says that
gambling is illegal in the United States needs only look at
plea bargaining to know this is not the case. In plea
bargaining, you are asked to gamble the rest of your money or
the rest of your life on the verdict of your trial. Rather
than go for an all-or-nothing, guilty-or-not-guilty, on the
charge for which you are accused, you agree to plead guilty
to a lesser charge with a preset lesser sentence. If you
accept the "bargain," you will have a permanent
criminal recordnot just an arrest, but a convictionand
you may spend some time in jail, but less time than if you
were found guilty of the original charge. The good news,
however, is that the legal bills stop; the interminable
waiting is over; and you can get on with what's left of your
life. If you want to bet on The Trial, however, it means that
the legal bills begin to escalate, and, if found guilty, you
will almost certainly get a worse punishment than you would
have if you had pled guilty to the lesser charge. (Prosecutors
and some judges don't seem to like pushy people cluttering up
the court systems looking for justice.)
A
plea bargain may be the only economic alternative. It's hard
to get a job when an employer discovers you are awaiting
trial and may have to "go away" for, oh, five years
at some point in the indefinite future.
Once
the credit card companies find out about your arrest, they'll
probably start canceling your cards. (If you use a credit
card with the bail bondsman to get out of jail, that's a red
flag to credit card companies.) People awaiting trial, you
see, have this nasty habit of going bankrupt. Can you imagine
why? Lawyers know this too, which is why they work very hard
to be paid on a regular basis. (Bankruptcy attorneys want the
full amount up front before they even touch a case.)
If
you go to trial, you usually have the choice between a jury
trial or a trial before a judge (a "bench trial").
When charged with a consensual crime, you are dealing not
just with the facts of guilt or innocence; you are also
dealing with individual prejudices. On hearing what you're
accused of doing, will the prejudice of the jury be such that
your guilt will be presumed and the trial merely a formality?
Judges tend to be a bit more sophisticated, having dealt with
real criminals who go around raping, robbing, and murdering,
but judges have their prejudices too. They also have
political pressure. During a "crackdown" or "war"
on this or that consensual crime, a judge is more likely to
find guilt and sentence heavily. Economics enter the picture
once again: jury trials tend to last longer than bench trials,
and legal fees during criminal trials often run $2,000 to $5,000
per day, per attorney. (If they don't have all your money yet,
your attorneys will strongly recommend that you have at least
two attorneys representing you at the trial. If you're rich,
they'll suggest an entourage.)
Prosecutors
hate to lose. If the trial seems to be going in your favor,
you will be offered better and better plea-bargains. Your
attorney doesn't want to lose either (it's very difficult to
collect a final bill from a client who is in prison); so, if
the case seems to be going against you, your attorney will
recommend accepting poorer and poorer bargains.
Meanwhile,
everyone is involved in the psychological guessing game of
"reading the jury." Who's on our side? Who's not on
our side? This process begins with the selection of the jury
and continues throughout the trial. If you have money, your
attorney can hire a professional who will, during the
selection process, do on-the-spot instant psychological
profiles of each potential juror along with a recommendation
as to whether or not the juror would be favorable or
unfavorable to your case. Once the juror is selected,
investigative companies can give overnight reports as to the
net worth, politics, religion, marital status, sexual
preference, and spending habits of each juror. This overnight
profile costs, oh, $5,000 to $15,000 per jury, and, if you
can afford it, your attorney will claim it's "an
invaluable tool" in helping to "shape" your
defense.
A
lot of invaluable tools are available, and the more valuable
you are, the more invaluable they become. There is, for
example, the expert witness. The expert witness is a
professional who is paid an exorbitant amount of money to
give the "expert opinion" that you are right and
the state is wrong. A popular expert witness in consensual
crime trials is the psychiatrist. For, $3,000 to $10,000 each
(you'll want at least two), the psychiatrist will "examine"
you and claim that you're not a criminal, you're just sick;
you don't need jail, you need treatment. Why, with a year or
two of therapy you could once again be a productive member of
society. (The only thing that made you an unproductive member
of society, of course, was being arrested, but it's best not
to mention that at this point in the trial.) Yes, if you were
sentenced, that is, if the court referred you to five
psychiatric sessions per week for a year, that would be much
better for you and all of society than that same year in the
Big House. And, if the court takes this suggestion, that's
only another $25,000 to $50,000 out of your pocket.
When
the case finally goes to the jury, the high-pressure waiting
begins. Juries can deliberate for several minutes or several
weeks. The plea bargaining can still continue. Until the jury
actually announces its verdict, it isn't a verdict, and, if a
bargain is struck, the judge can call in the jury, thank them
for their efforts, and send them on their way.
If
the verdict comes back not guilty, you do not get back your
legal fees, the arrest remains on your record, you most
likely won't get back your job, and you probably wouldn't
want the friends, family, or fiance who deserted you. You
will get back the evidence that was seized during the initial
search (it will have been gone through, categorized, labeled,
disassembled, much of it will be missingbut you'll get
it back). Even if you are found innocent, you still must go
to court again to get back your house, car, and moneywhatever
was seized under asset forfeiture laws.
- If you are found guilty, the next
wait begins: the wait for sentencing. During this
time, you can choose whether or not to appeal your
case. "An appeal," explained Finley Peter
Dunne, "is when you ask one court to show its
contempt for another court." If you thought the
first round of legal fees was expensive, when you
move into the world of appellate courts, legal fees
go into hyperdrive.
- You can appeal for a mistrial.
Here, you are asking the appellate court to declare
your original trial invalid because of a technical
legal error made by the judge, jury, or prosecution.
If you are successful in winning this appeal, your
trial will be declared null and voidbut that
doesn't make you free: you have to start all over
again with another trial, another jury, another round
of legal fees.
- You can also appeal on
constitutional grounds. Your lawyer can claimusing
some of the brilliant arguments given in the chapters,
"Laws against Consensual Activities Are
Unconstitutional" and "Laws against
Consensual Activities Violate the Separation of
Church and State, Threatening the Freedom of and from
Religion"that the very law violates your
constitutional rights and that the court should
overturn the law. Here, you are looking at cases
going to state supreme courts and, perhaps, even the
federal Supreme Court. You are also looking at legal
fees, not in the hundreds of thousands, but in the
millions. (Most cases involving individuals that
reach the Supreme Court are paid for by organizations
such as the ACLU, who are doing it not just for the
individual, but to set a legal precedent that will
affect others.)
- While the case is on appeal, if
you don't want to spend time in jail, there is a
little matter of additional bail. You are now, in the
eyes of the court, a convicted criminal; thus the new
bail will probably be higher than the first. Not
everyone can meet bail, of course. Most people can't
afford anything other than accepting their sentence
and doing their time.
Let's
talk about doing time.
If
you've never visited a penitentiary, you might want to do so.
The worst ones, however, are rarely, if ever, open for public
inspection. The average citizen would be reluctant to send
even a real criminal, much less a hooker or a pot smoker, to
such a hideous place.
Here's
what Jimmy Hoffawho served time in and visited many
prisonshad to say:
I can tell you this on a stack of
Bibles: prisons are archaic, brutal, unregenerative,
overcrowded hell holes where the inmates are treated
like animals with absolutely not one humane thought
given to what they are going to do once they are
released. You're an animal in a cage and you're
treated like one.
Thanks
entirely to the crackdown on various consensual crimes,
prisonsnever designed for comfort in the first placeare
overcrowded. Cells designed for two inmates are holding three,
sometimes four. Even spending, as we are, $5 billion per year
on new prison construction, this overcrowding is likely to
continue into the indefinite future.
- The first two things you'll
notice on entering a penitentiaryYour Show of Shows a
little while to figure out: BIG MIKE: "While I
was in solitary, I spent a lotta time thinkin'. I did
a lot of thinkin'. I thought about the walls . . .
the bars . . . the guards with the guns. You know
what I figured out?" OTHER CON: "What?"
BIG MIKE: "We're in prison." are the noise
and the smell. The smell is body odor, cigarette
smoke, unflushed or backing up toilets, diarrhea,
vomit, and wafting through it all is the strange but
clearly unpleasant aroma of the mysterious substances
the prisoners are fed. The noise is a cacophony of
televisions, radiosall tuned to different
stationsboom boxes, and voices. Some of the
voices are shouting. Some of the voices are babbling.
Some of the voices are singing, chanting, or praying.
Some of the voices are communicating. Because the
person they are communicating with could be several
cells away, to the untrained ear the conversation
sounds like the rest of the yelling. (Sometimes
twenty or thirty of these conversations are going on
simultaneously.)
- There is absolutely no privacy. A
toilet (with no toilet seat) is bolted to the wall of
each cell. It is usually only inches from the bottom
bunk. If it becomes clogged and will not flush, it
may take several days to get fixed, but the prisoners
have to use it anyway.
- There is little ventilation. This
keeps the smells and any airborne bacteria or viruses
carefully contained. Air conditioning? Hardly. It's
sweltering in the summer and usually over- or under-heated
in the winter. It is a textbook breeding ground for
misery and disease.
- There are few telephones.
Needless to say, it's pay phones, collect calls only.
Visitation days are once a week (in some prisons,
once a month) and you usually see your friends or
loved ones (those who are willing to travel the
hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles) through a
thick, plastic partition. No touching is permitted.
In some prisons, you talk by telephone as the
separation between the two of you is not only bullet-proof
but sound-proof. These conversations may be monitored
and recorded. The prisons that allow conjugal visits
only do so only every few months.
- In most prisons, reading is
limited to what's in the prison library. In many
prisons, reading material must be sent directly from
the publisher. Books, magazines, or newspapers sent
by individuals are returned or destroyed. That means
if you want to read a book that's out of print (which
most books are) or is printed by a publisher that
does not do direct mail order, you are out of luck.
- Then there's a matter of money.
Except for the absolute necessities, you must pay for
everything: books, stationery, postage, cigarettes,
cassette tapes, your television, everything. You can
make this money at a prison job that pays
approximately twenty cents per hour. If you are
transferred from one prison to anotherwhich can
happen at any time and as often as the penal
authorities dictateyou must leave all but the
basic necessities behind and start over.
- If you are marginally young,
marginally attractive, or white (and heaven help you
if you're all three), your chance of being raped is
about as good as your chance of getting a cold or the
flu. Even if you go to a prison that makes an attempt
to separate "likely targets" from the rest
of the prison population, rape doesn't take longand
who is to say rape is not going to take place within
that separated population?
Rape
in prison is something of a sport, like hunting. Devout
heterosexuals, who would just as soon kill (and may have
killed) a male who approached them with a sexual proposition,
seem to become sexually ravenous as soon as the prison door
slams behind them. Rape, of course, in any situation is not a
sexual act; it is an act of violence, domination, control.
The macho sport in prison is who-you-can-get-how-often-and-when.
The only way to keep from becoming an open target and
susceptible to gang rapes and individual hits at every
possible opportunity is to become the "punk" of the
most powerful hunter you can. He will then protect you from
all the restalthough he may occasionally trade you or
give you as a gift to one of the other hunters.
By
the way, if you report any of this to the authorities, you
will be killed. It's that simple. Turning in a fellow
prisoner will mark you, both in and out of prison, for the
remainder of your life (which will not be a long one).
Although
rape is excruciatingly painful, humiliating, and degrading,
if you don't die of hemorrhaging, there's always AIDS. Due to
the high incidence of intravenous drug use, both in and out
of prison, and completely unprotected sexual activity inside
of prison, AIDS has reached epidemic proportion within the
prison system. In 1991, 15% of all deaths in prison were AIDS-related.
Condoms, of course, are not provided by most prisons.
Prisoners are not supposed to be having sex; therefore, they're
not; therefore, they don't need condoms. Even when condoms
are available, rapists tend not to use them even to
potentially save their own livesit just isn't very
macho.
As
a perpetrator of a consensual crime, you will probably end up
at the bottom of the prison pecking order. Every one seems to
know, even before you arrive, exactly what you're in for. In
prison, consensual crimes are thought of as somewhat wimpy
things, and since your crime did not involve violence against
another person or another person's property, it will be
assumed that you won't fight back. You will be taken
advantage of at every opportunity. Your pillow, blanket, and
even mattress may be "borrowed" by another cellmate.
Your clean towel will be exchanged for a dirty one. Any food
that is even marginally edible will be consumed by others.
("You don't want this, do you?") Your hunter, by
the way, will not protect you from all this; he is only there
to protect you from sexual attack. If you want additional
protection, you will have to provide additional favors: money,
cigarettes, running errandslittle tokens of your
appreciation.
- When you are sentenced to prison,
you are enrolled in the Institute of Higher Criminal
Learning, the world's foremost university of crime.
Here, you make contacts and learn a new trade. It's
obvious that, if you are unable to get a job while
awaiting trial, you certainly aren't going to get one
as an ex-con. At least not in the pristine nine-to-five
world of American business. To make a living when you
get out, you have two choices: become a professional
writer or become a professional criminal. The
professional writing game seems to be pretty full,
what with Stephen King turning
out a new book every three weeks and Norman Mailer no
longer sponsoring former prisoners with literary
aspirations. With writing unavailable, that leaves
the alternative form of crime: crime.
- As with the prison pecking order,
having a conviction for only a consensual crime does
not look very good on your criminal rsum. Fortunately,
in prison you will have many opportunities to prove
yourself worthy of recommendation to one of the
outside criminal organizations. You could show your
daring, for example, by distributing drugs within the
prison. Doing this, you might even be able to put a
few dollars aside over and above your weekly
protection payment. Smuggling weapons, either into or
around the prison, is always popularand will
get you points for courage. Even if you don't want to
be a part of some of the more serious crimes for
which those weapons are used, being a lookout while
those crimes take place can get you high points for
low risk.
- What does the state give you on
release? On what can you start a new life? It varies,
but usually it's $100 and a new suit.
- Meanwhile, whatever remnants of a
life you had on the outside are now almost entirely
gone. Loves find other loves. Friends find other
friends. Apartments get rented to other tenants.
People change and, more importantly, so do you.
- Prison is a crash course in the
darker side of life. Few survive it without becoming
a different person: more cynical, jaded, fearful,
angry. It's hard to trust again, hard to believe,
easy to hate a system that destroyed your life behind
the pompous pretense of "saving you from
yourself for your own good."
- Even without police intervention,
the laws against certain consensual activities make
them far more dangerous than they need to be.
Activities involving consensual crimes are completely
unregulatedeither by governmental or private
consumer groups. It's not the law of the marketplace
but the law of the jungle that prevails.
- The list of these unnecessary
risks is long indeed. Here are some obvious examples:
Low-grade marijuana is sometimes
laced with the drug PCP to make the pot seem more
potent. It's hard for users to know whether or not
they've gotten great pot or PCP pot. Alas, PCP is far
more damaging than even the most potent marijuana.
Similarly, LSD is sometimes "enhanced" (without
the buyer's knowledge) with strychnine, a lethal
poison.
When dosages are unknown, it is
difficult for the user to moderate consumption. If
marijuana were legal, for example, the THC (the
psychoactive element in marijuana) level could be
printed on each package. People could then
intelligently moderate their usage. As it is, one
joint could have twenty times more THC than another,
and the usershort of trial and errorhas
no way of knowing. This becomes particularly
dangerous when it comes to driving, operating
machinery, or even cooking. With regulated, legal
alcohol, one can moderate intake. The same is not
true of uncontrolled substances.
Gay bars, coffee houses, and
bookstores are often forced into the less-than-savory
parts of town. The higher crime of these areas is
visited upon the gay visitors and makes preventing
hate crimes such as gay-bashing more difficult.
The real crime (violence, robbery,
extortion) often associated with consensual crimes
often takes place only because the consensual crimes
are crimes. A customer robbing a prostitute or a
prostitute robbing a customer would be far less
likely to happen, for example, if both prostitutes
and bordellos were licensed. In that case, either
party could call the police if a nonconsensual crime
took place.
Because those who take part in
illegal consensual activities do not have access to
the civil courts to resolve differences, a great deal
of vigilante violence takes place. Almost all gang
violence, for example, is drug relatedprotecting
turf, collecting debts, enforcing punishments.
If gambling were legal, credit
could be extended to gamblers based on the prevailing
credit policies of the aboveground marketplace.
("Sorry, a $100 bet takes you over your Visa
credit limit. Do you want to put part of this on your
MasterCard?") As it is, credit is extended in a
haphazard fashion and collection techniques are more
intrusive and violent than even those practiced by
DiscoverCard (although I know that's hard to believe).
By now, however, we are veering
into the chapter, "Consensual Crimes Encourage
Real Crimes." (This chapter is about ruining
lives. Having your arm broken by the Mafia would
probably not ruin your life. It may play havoc with
your penmanship for a while, but your life would go
on.)
At
any rate, I'm tired. Do you need a break? I do. Thinking
about the 4,000,000 arrested each year and the 750,000
currently in jail for consensual crimes is exhausting. "It's
all so solemn," Pauline Kael observed, "like Joan
Crawford when she's thinking."
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© 1996 Peter McWilliams & Prelude Press
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