The Dallas 6 Case: Solitary confinement on trial in a US courtroom

by Andre Jacobs

The-Dallas-6-collage, The Dallas 6 Case: Solitary confinement on trial in a US courtroom, Abolition Now! Philadelphia – The trial of the Dallas 6 is set to begin on Dec. 9, 2013, in the Luzerne County Courthouse in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, before Judge Lesa Gelb. It is a rare instance of solitary confinement being put on trial in a United States courtroom. This trial pertains to an April 29, 2010, peaceful protest against illegal and barbaric conditions created by the prison guards in the hole at the State Correctional Institution at Dallas (SCI Dallas), including food starvation, mail destruction, beatings, medical neglect, use of a torture chair and deaths of various prisoners.

After guards tortured prisoner Isaac Sanchez in the torture chair overnight and threatened several Dallas 6 members with death, inmates Andre Jacobs, Carrington Keys, Duane Peters, Derrick Stanley, Anthony Locke and Anthony Kelly decided that they did not want to suffer anymore. Covering their cell door windows with bedding, the prisoners demanded that the abuse stop and requested access to their counselors, state police, the district attorney and the Public Defender’s Office. They had no access to telephones or computers and their incoming and out-going mail were being destroyed to undermine their ability to expose the corruption.

The trial of the Dallas 6 will represent a moment of truth and exposure. We call on all who believe in justice and equality to promote awareness of this case.

Rather than investigate or attempt to resolve the issues which occurred for over a year prior to April 29, 2010, prison officials staged an armed assault against the unarmed men, who were all locked inside of their individual cells, viciously attacking them with electro-shock shields, tazers, fists and pepper spray. While all of the guards involved in the incident admitted that they did not suffer any injuries, members of the Dallas 6 were left bloody, naked, with burnt skin, and in pain.

Friends-of-the-Dallas-6-Solitary-confinement-torture, The Dallas 6 Case: Solitary confinement on trial in a US courtroom, Abolition Now! Following the assaults, several Dallas 6 members were transferred to other prisons. Hundreds of documents were generated, including specific claims of misconduct alleged against the Dallas 6. Not once was the word riot mentioned. After civil actions and other complaints were filed against prison guards and officials regarding the events, the prison, state police and the Luzerne County Office of the District Attorney formed an alliance to bring criminal charges against the Dallas 6 – now calling the incident a riot four months later.

Andre-Jacobs, The Dallas 6 Case: Solitary confinement on trial in a US courtroom, Abolition Now! The Wilkes-Barre Dallas 6 Support Team exists to educate Luzerne County citizens about how their tax dollars are being misused to persecute and abuse people in their name. For transporting the Dallas 6 to court with helicopters hovering above, attorney hours, housing, court staffing and travel over the course of a three-year period, the state has spent between $250,000 and half a million dollars to prosecute these men who took a stand to save their lives and the lives of people around them.

The trial of the Dallas 6 will represent a moment of truth and exposure. We call on all who believe in justice and equality to promote awareness of this case.

Send our brother some love and light: Andre Jacobs, DQ5437, SCI Albion RHU, 10748 Route 18, Albion PA 16475. Vania Gulston of the Dallas Six Legal Defense Committee in Philadelphia can be reached at (267) 591-7219 or vaniagulston@thedallas6.org. Learn more at www.thedallas6.org.

On Sept. 17, 2012, the Human Rights Coalition hosted a rally in Philadelphia’s Love Park as part of their campaign to abolish solitary confinement in Pennsylvania prisons. Shandre Delaney spoke of the abuses against her son, Carrington Keys, and other prisoners in Pennsylvania who are targeted for filing lawsuits and standing up for their human rights.