Juvenile Transfer Laws Alonza Thomas was a 15 year old teenager with no prior convictions or a record. He decided to run away from home and found himself staying with someone he thought he could trust. Unfortunately, the man he was staying with demanded that Thomas was to rob a gas station to pay him back in return for staying in his house and eating his food. The man supplied Thomas with a loaded gun to rob a gas station.…
The Eastern State Penitentiary is a prison located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that has long been seen as haunted. The Eastern State Penitentiary is well known for its long and brutal history. The paranormal activity is also a very big factor why this prison is so well known. Also the attractions and publicity that they have gotten from various television shows and the attractions that they provide at the prison.…
The book Solitary: The Inside Story of Supermax Isolation and How We Can Abolish It divides into three parts: “Harsh Prison Conditions,” “The Human Damage,” and “The Alternative to Solitary.” In the first section, author Terry Allen Kupers explores the rise of supermax prisons and the normalization of long-term solitary confinement. Throughout the book, Kupers examines how isolation damages people’s psyches and its connections to race, violence, and gender. In the final section, Kupers requests a development of rehabilitative attitudes among all prison staff (as well as legislators and the public) and a plan to keep individuals with severe mental illnesses out of jails and prisons. Kupers argues for improvements in methodologies of protecting…
The first use of solitary confinement was in 1787. It was first used on a group of prisoners and it was believed if people were left alone in almost complete silence, they would feel repent for what they did. In the article, the author Dana Liebelson uses multiple real life examples to show how solitary confinement can have horrifying, long-lasting effects on people, especially children and young adults. Specifically the author uses the stories of a 17- year old named Kenny, and a 16- year old named Jonathan. Throughout the article you gain information that you may have never even considered to be possible, but the truth about this system is that it is extremely inhumane.…
I tend to coincide with the notion that solitary confinement should not be a form of punishment used on children, for children are in need of stimulation and direction rather than simply being locked away in solitude. However, one might argue that solitary confinement may be necessary if a child cannot be controlled and that the time in solitude would allow for them to reflect upon their unfavorable behaviors. Nevertheless, I maintain that solitary confinement is entirely unproductive in achieving both these things. The isolation generally only results in manic, depressive behaviors that do not allow for reflection will continue to reside within the child upon release from solitary confinement. Furthermore, I contend that since the brain of a juvenile is still developing and requires rich stimulation, solitary confinement robs that child of proper neurological…
Like a child who is being ignored, they will act out. Torture At Home: Documentary On Solitary Confinement in U.S. Prisons Misses the Mark is an article written by Alexandra Smith, about a documentary on isolation in prison, by National Geographic’s. Smith states options by Dr. Stuart Grassian, a psychologist, “Grassian discusses movingly how the most vulnerable individuals, in most need of support, tend to end up in solitary confinement. The isolation has a worsening effect on people, he explained, leading them to exhibit more impulsive, violent behavior as a result.” People, who are left alone all day, tend to develop their own form of right and wrong.…
C. This change allows verbal human contact, preventing an inmate from the mental illnesses induced by the silence of an isolated cell. CONCLUSION 1. The use of solitary confinement must be stopped, the risks outweigh the advantages. A. We must put an end to the torture. B. Solitary confinement has become a dominant weapon in the war on prisoners…
Solitary confinement, or also known as Security Housing Unit, is defined as isolating an inmate from the general population for twenty-two to twenty-three hours a day for months or years. Its main purpose is to punish inmates who break prison rules or endanger prison guards and other inmates. First, let’s take a step back and look at the downfall of solitary confinement. U.S prisons must ban solitary confinement because it causes psychological effects on inmates, it is considered cruel and unusual punishment and doesn't provide any known rehabilitation for inmates. Imagine being in a room the size of a walk-in closet, with cement walls, a four-inch wide window to look outside.…
Solitary Confinement Solitary confinement has been around for centuries, which may have started in the early 1800s. The purpose of solitary confinement is to segregate individuals who have committed horrendous crimes, put other inmates' lives in danger, and possibly breaking a rule while being incarcerated. Solitary confinement isolates inmates in small units, inmates are usually isolated for 23 hours a day, ranging from weeks, months, and even years. Inmates serving time in solitary confinement for long periods of time either adapt and better themselves while others undertake stress, anxiety, and depression, overall mentally break down. Solitary confinement is harsh and feeble, as a result harming individuals psychologically is inhumane, solitary needs to be amended, not to mention these isolated units increase the taxpayers money abundantly; however a partial amount of the population regard isolation as a solution…
Solitary confinement is defined as a form of imprisonment where an inmate is separated from other inmates and/ or human contact for over 20 hours a day for days, weeks, months, or even years. This practice has been used widely throughout the United States for many decades in an effort to separate highly dangerous inmates from causing harm to other inmates or themselves. Whether or not solitary confinement is useful in the prison system is up for debate but the effects it leaves on the inmates is a concern for many states. By taking a look at what solitary confinement is, examining the phycological effects of the imprisonment, and discussing the legality of the punishment we may be able to draw a better conclusion on whether or not this practice should still be used in the modern day prison system. Solitary confinement can be described as a form of punishment in a prison system where inmates are sent to a private room with no windows and no outside contact with other humans or inmates except prison guards.…
The policy is very precise in knowing how to operate dealing with minors in solitary, the people of contact when complications occur, and minors can access the rules that are put in place for the use of solitary confinement (Solitary Confinement in Prisons, 2017). The policy is measurable because researchers can measure the progress and the effects of the minors who have endured short-term solitary compared to those who have encountered long-term solitary. A study was conduced on exploring the effect of exposure to short-term solitary confinement by Robert G. Morris. The results of the study concluded that short-term solitary did impact the prisoner and helped deter the likelihood of engaging in violence or other acts that can result in the use of solitary (Morris, 2015). Also, the policy can make room for adjustments if need be to better accommodate the safety of minors in North Carolina prisons.…
Solitary confinement used to only be used as a short term punishment, but now is regularly used as a way of disciplining prisoners. The prisoners are put into solitary confinement to separate them from perceived threats. It is estimated that between 80,000 and 81,000 prisoners are in some form of solitary confinement nationwide. It is commonly thought that most prisoners in solitary confinement are dangerous criminals. When in fact, a third of isolated prisoners are actually mentally ill.…
“Solitary confinement is a practice that has been associated with adverse health consequences to those placed in these settings” (Iowa-Kollisch, Kaba, Waters, Leung, Ford, & Venters, 2016, pp. 3). While solitary confinement is enough to fracture a grown man… it can shatter a juvenile. Adolescents can really be psychological damaged when in solitary confinement because their brains are still actively developing, especially in their frontal lobe. The frontal lobe is responsible for cognitive processing. Due to the process of their brain still developing, it will be a challenge for them to rationalize and even cope effectively.…
“It’s an evil. Solitary confinement is the most torturous experience a human being can be put through in prison. It’s punishment without ending” –Albert Woodfox, served 43 years in Solitary Confinement. “Basically I lived in a tomb… I lost the will to live sitting in that tomb…you’re dead, you’re just dead.”…
Juvenile solitary confinement has been used over the years to punish poor behavior in the United States juvenile prison system. However after long term negative side effects that isolation can cause in teens, the General public has been in support of isolation alternatives. In this paper, I will be discussing the state by state solitary confinement rules and regulations, how rehabilitation and therapeutic services can be a healthy option as an alternative to confinement and how our nation’s youth don’t always have to feel that segregation is the only form of discipline. A lot of modern alternatives to juvenile solitary confinement would be preferable if not more acceptable to the general public. This idea of solitary confinement started back…