Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Shooting in Kaufman County is related to Colorado?

It isn't privatized anything? This is some kind of uptick due to the what? If the prison system is accessible by 211 Crew it is only prudent to stop visitors to the entire of any prison where these people are incarcerated.

Everyone needs to stop boasting about the fact killers will be caught. If McClellan's murder is evidence of anything it is how District Attorneys need to stop putting headlines in the newspaper. Their salaries aren't enough so they have to be superstars?

This article states Ebel suffered from mental deterioration during his incarceration because of solitary confinement. Solitary is not going to solve this problem. They still talk to people and find ways to get their messages out. There has to be a degree of communication shut down and limit television of any news stations FOR EVERYONE, including guards. The information has to stop being available to the members incarcerated. The incarcerated are the ones calling the shots according to this understanding.

Guards cannot have their authority truncated by demands for information either. A guard is not a friend.

Cause interference with the phone systems. Shut down communication. There is too much interaction with the world outside the prison system. That should be a privilege earned and for those leaving the prison system. Or folks on a special program for rehabilitation. But, the idea there should be free and open access with the outside world only increases the danger for the guards and wardens. If the prisoners are literally running the asylum form the outside how does anyone ever seek rehabilitation when all they have to do is endure their time inside? 

WITHOUT EXCEPTION.

Every visitor has to be suspected of cooperating with these directives and murders. Stop the solitary confinement and put more guards on the job. What the heck goes on between attorneys and these guys? Are they cooperating too? 

I sincerely think the judicial system is compromised by the permissiveness of communication and information to flow between the outside and inside of prisons. This is crazy. Then I wonder why LA has the problems they do. Prison is a loss of constitutional rights. These folks don't have a right to communicate at all. The gangs are empowered by permissiveness. That needs to stop.

I know how prisoners are calmer with communication and information through television. But, that calmness is due to the fact they are still being allowed to carry on with their gangs. That is crazy. Shackle them if they can't behave on the way to meals. I think distraction is fine, but, television should not carry news or any message about the success of THE SHOTS they are calling from inside the prison. That is crazy. 

Distraction in the prisons is suppose to be a part of rehabilitation not recreation. Closed circuit televisions designed for a change in lifestyle folks. This is nonsense. How many of the guards are in on it?

How do these guys know what shots to call? The prison systems can't control that? There is too much permissiveness here, including the 'bad ass' attitude within the justice system. It's not Hollywood.


...Experts who track hate groups (click here) said the 211 Crew is a small but vicious white-supremacist gang centered in Colorado’s prisons. In 1997, two of its members carried out one of the most notorious racially motivated murders in recent Denver history, the shooting of a Senegalese immigrant as he waited at a bus stop.
In 2005, more than a dozen members of the gang were indicted on charges of racketeering, bribery, distributing drugs and other charges. News reports and accounts from law-enforcement officers painted a picture of a secretive gang that operates through violence, paramilitary hierarchies, obscure codes, and sexual intimidation and abuse. Officials have said that the gang’s members on the outside funnel money to its imprisoned leaders, known as shot callers.
Mr. Ebel’s connection to the murders shocked his former lawyer, Scott Robinson, who had coached Mr. Ebel’s sister at softball and defended Mr. Ebel in his first criminal cases. Mr. Ebel had convictions for robbery, assault and weapons charges.
In 2011, Mr. Ebel’s father, Jack, told Colorado lawmakers about the toll that solitary confinement had taken on his son. “He’ll rant a little bit. He’ll stammer. He’ll be frustrated that he can’t find the words,” he said in testimony, according to a 2011 report from Colorado Public Radio....