Columbus, Ohio: Rally demands end to ODRC #PrisonStrike retaliation

by Pittsburgh ABC

National-Prison-Strike-anti-retaliation-rally-outside-ODRC-HQ-in-Columbus-OH-111618-by-Pittsburgh-ABC-300x225, Columbus, Ohio: Rally demands end to ODRC #PrisonStrike retaliation, Abolition Now!
Activists from Ohio and Pennsylvania rally outside the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (ODRC) Central Office in Columbus, Ohio. – Photo: Pittsburgh ABC

On Friday, Nov. 16, activists from across Ohio and Pennsylvania collaborated for an action outside the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (ODRC) Central Office in Columbus. The rally was in response to a number of repressive and retaliatory actions against prisoners following the massive #August21 prison strike.

Organizers of the action included Lucasville Amnesty, Pittsburgh Anarchist Black Cross, Central Ohio IWOC (Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee) and BQIC (Black Queer and Intersectional Collective). Amplified voices recounted the demands of 2018 prison strikers, sounded off on the mistreatment of the prison strikers and all prisoners by the ODRC, and called for solidarity with queer and trans prisoners.

Interested ODRC staff lined the windows to witness the spectacle. A few pedestrians who passed by the rally stopped to speak about the harm that the ODRC had inflicted on their lives. The rally culminated when the following demands were hand delivered to the Central Office receptionist and security by the protestors:

  1. End all retaliatory communication restrictions against Siddique Abdullah Hasan and throw out the Serious Misconduct Panel decision.
  2. Cease the violent attacks on Toledo Correctional hunger strikers and meet their demands.
  3. Reverse all visitation restrictions imposed on the prisoners’ supporters and new policies designed to harass prisoners’ visitors at OSP.

More information on the demands:

  1. Siddique Abdullah Hasan is an outspoken prisoner movement leader who the ODRC retaliated against for merely trying to speak to the public about the #August21 prison strike. He was brought before a “Serious Misconduct Panel,” which violated due process to impose a year-long ban on his phone and email access and permanent visiting restrictions on some of his supporters and close friends.

    These restrictions take away vital connection to the outside world, which have helped Hasan survive decades in supermax solitary confinement at the Ohio State Penitentiary (OSP). More details on Hasan’s situation can be found in a recent Shadowproof article.

  1. David Easley, James Ward and others at Toledo Correctional have been engaged in off and on hunger strike protests since the national strike started Aug. 21. Their main demand is that the ODRC release them from solitary confinement and stop using solitary confinement to exacerbate the mental health crises that confinement in prison causes.

    The latest hunger strike started on Saturday, Nov. 2, and staff at Toledo Correctional responded by shooting the strikers with chemical weapons and refusing them access to showers so they can clean the mace and pepper spray off. Learn more from the announcement posted on It’s Going Down by hunger strike supporters.

  1. Following the strike and the highly suspect “mysterious toxic substance” scare in Ohio and Pennsylvania, ODRC has changed visitation policies for many prisoners, especially at OSP. Experts have described the scare as a “mass psychogenic illness” caused by guards’ paranoia, not the actual presence of toxic substances.

    Moreover, drugs are much more likely to be smuggled into Ohio prisons by staff than by visitors. Yet, the ODRC persists in new visitation policies – such as requiring visitors to use bathrooms in the downstairs lobby rather than the visiting room – that harass visitors and waste precious time with their incarcerated loved ones.

The protest was part of an ongoing campaign to gain amnesty for Lucasville Uprising prisoners, who were falsely implicated for crimes after the 1993 riot, which erupted in response to the horrendous state prison conditions. This October, after over 20 years of solitary confinement at the OSP supermax, Lucasville survivor Greg Curry was transferred into general population and lower security at Toledo Correctional Institution.

He credited his supporters’ pressure on the ODRC for this huge victory in his ongoing fight for freedom. For information on Lucasville Uprising prisoners, visit LucasvilleAmnesty.org.

Pittsburgh Anarchist Black Cross can be reached on Facebook, at https://www.facebook.com/ABCpittsburgh/.