Polunsky's Unit The Allan Polunsky Unit in Livingston
The unit where Roger is imprisoned houses about 3500 inmates, 370-450 of which
are on death row (depending on the year and number of executions). It is a
huge, poorly built "bunker" that is deteriorating so rapidly that some of the
cells get flooded during heavy rainfalls. The living conditions in this very
peculiar place are as utterly desolate and horrifying as one would expect from
a place called "death row."
However, it is important to emphasize that in the years since we started
corresponding with Roger, in 1997, those conditions have worsened steadily, to
an extent that is little short of inconceivable, and unquestionably constitute
"cruel and unusual punishment." For example, the food served to the inmates is
of an appallingly poor quality, and is barely enough to keep them alive. Roger
mentions in a letter (summer of 2004) that their daily intake is probably
around 1600 calories, which the World Health Organization (WHO) describes as
the minimum intake for the survival of a male adult. Since then, things have
only gotten worse.
In the spring of 2003, all Texas death row inmates were moved to the Allan
Polunsky Unit in Livingston , near Houston , and since then the severity of
the prison regime has increased dramatically.
The inmates cannot watch television anymore. They are allowed to have a radio
in their cell, but the reception is so poor in most cells that a radio is of
little use. Only three (music) stations are available, alternatively Mexican
or Rock/Country, and rap. They used to be allowed to make use of a simple word
processor, if they could afford one, but now they can only use primitive
typewriters that Roger recently described as "just a step above a chisel and a
rock." The typewriter ribbons they need are sold for an absurdly high price,
and are of such poor quality that no more than three to four letters can be
typed with one ribbon. The amount of stamps they are allowed to purchase
diminishes each year.
They used to be able to play a game of volleyball, basketball, or chess during
their daily recreation hour outside their cell, but since 2003 they spend that
hour alone, just as they spend every hour of every day. They have been
deprived of almost all their personal belongings. The prison rules make it an
offence for an inmate to put a picture of his kids on the wall of his cell.
They used to be able to engage in creative art work, an activity that not only
provided some solace and a (renewed) sense of self-worth, but was for many
inmates a way to express their feelings of appreciation and love to family and
friends. All that had been prohibited, with the exception of a few colour
pencils and some paper and cardboard for those who can afford them. They are
not allowed to do any work that could generate some income, which is depriving
many of them of the only means they have to purchase even the most basic items
of toiletry, such as toothpaste, a toothbrush, shaving cream and blades, a
comb, shampoo, or soap for laundry (the "clean" clothes and sheets they get
every week are often so filthy that they must be washed again, with cold
water, in the tiny cell sinks).
Whenever the inmates are allowed to leave their 10 x 6.5 ft. cells, for
example to go to the showers or to exercise on their own in the day room (see
below), they are cuffed, sometimes shackled as well, and escorted by two
guards. If they have a visitor, they are escorted in the same way, and led to
a metallic cubicle of 3 x 3 x 6 ft. with a Plexiglas window for a non-contact
visit. The only physical contact on Texas death row is that of the guards'
hands restraining the arms of the inmate. After the visit, the inmate is strip
searched before being escorted back to his cell.
The heating/air-conditioning system that regulates the temperature in the
entire unit is more often than not out of order, or the thermostat is set so
low in the winter months that the inmates suffer badly from the cold (they
wear only light cotton pants and shirts-- the most fortunate ones own a
sweatshirt-- and they have only one light blanket for the sometimes intensely
cold nights); during the summer the temperature often gets so high in the
cells, 45 degrees C or even higher one some days, that the inmates nearly
suffocate. The same happens with the water in the showers, often icy cold in
the winter, and scorching hot during the summer.
The daily routine on death row is highly disruptive and a source of constant
stress for the inmates. It is never possible to sleep for more than two or
three hours at a time; unpleasant surprises and changes in the daily schedule
are sprung on the inmates at all times, depriving them of one of the only
things that could help them maintain some degree of balance and sanity: a
sense of safety, and of relative control over what is left of their lives and
their identity.
One can say, without overstating it, that everything in that prison is
designed to make the lives of the death row inmates as miserable as possible.
Every means to dehumanise and humiliate them seems to be put into practice.
There is an ombudsman the inmates can send complaints to, but as soon as the
guards know that a complaint has been received, they will take their revenge
by any means, legal or illegal, on the inmate himself, or on a whole group, by
enforcing a "lock down," for example. A lock down is a disciplinary, twenty-
four hours a day confinement period, imposed on a whole wing of death row
(60-63 inmates), lasting usually from two to four weeks, during which the
severity of the prison rules is intensified, and during which the only food
served to the inmates would typically be two pieces of white bread with a
little bit of peanut butter, three times a day.
Death row truly does justice to its name. It is a place where men, and a few
women, are waiting, each in turn, in a row, for their institutional death, in
the most inhuman circumstances imaginable in a modern democratic society.
A "typical" day for Roger
As Roger explains in his book, there is seldom what one could call a "typical"
day, especially in an environment where inmates are purposely deprived of a
regular schedule. However, many days can approximately unfold according to the
following routine:
Roger frequently suffers from insomnia that can last for up to two-three
nights. But normally he will get up at around 6 am, which means he will have
missed breakfast, usually served at 3 am!... Outgoing mail will often be
collected at 5 am, so if he wants to send a letter, he will have to get up
then. At 6 am, the first shift of guards takes place. Before that, between 5
and 6 am, the guards from the previous shift will have turned on all the
lights and made the first roll call of the day; every inmate in turn must call
his name and number, just to make sure nobody is missing. Half an hour later,
the new shift guards repeat the whole procedure. Then Roger can start his day,
usually with some physical exercise, a condition for survival for someone
living 23 hours a day (and sometimes non-stop for days on end during a lock
down) in a 10 x 6.5 foot cell.
Lunch is usually served at around 9 am. After lunch, Roger often spends a long
moment, if it is at all possible, in quiet prayer and meditation. He wrote
once, in February, 2004: "I have to meditate and pray just about hourly,
because it is almost impossible to set any kind of schedule in here. Every
minute is a new reality that must be dealt with and prayed upon. So you learn
to sort of pray on one's feet, so to speak. But I always pray for the same
thing mostly: more love to be shared between mankind. I ask God to grant
wisdom and insight to us all, that we may have clearer vision to see beyond
the illusion." (Roger is referring here to the illusion or veil of material
beliefs which prevent us from being aware of the ultimate reality, which many
believe is purely spiritual in nature). "I pray so much through the day that
I do it unconsciously. I study the Bible regularly. I try to keep from reading
too much structured and organized religious material, because I feel in my
heart I know what is expected of me by my Creator."
On most days, if inmates are not under a lockdown, Roger will have one hour
to recreate, either in the prison yard, the only time the inmates ever leave
the prison building, but even then they are confined in a roofless, enclosed
space of roughly the same dimensions as their cell or in what is called the
"day room," an open room in the corridor next to the cells, where they have a
little more space to move around. At some point during the day, he will
normally have the possibility of taking a shower, in a tiny space close to the
cells. Showers are frequently cancelled during lock downs.
Inmates spend hours talking, or rather shouting, with each other through the
small grid of their cell doors. Some inmates prefer to use the times between
meals to take a nap if they can, read a book, pace back and forth in their
cell, or write to family or pen pals. Roger spends a lot of time answering
letters from friends around the world. But he also enjoys reading, which is
actually the only way to "escape" death row for a while. The level of noise is
almost constantly very high, day and night, with people shouting, cell doors
being slammed, inmates screaming at the tops of their lungs because they lost
their sanity, or because they simply do not see any other way to express their
frustration, fear, anxiety, anger, sadness, pain. At other times, there is a
deathly silence that is almost as unnerving.
The second shift of guards takes place at 2 pm, with two roll calls. Dinner is
served between 3:30 and 4 pm. Any incoming mail will be distributed between
7 and 8 pm. And the third shift of guards will take place between 9 and 10
pm, with again, two roll calls. Between midnight and 2 am, "clean"
underwear, socks, pants, and shirts will be distributed a couple of times
during the week, and once a week "clean" bed sheets and pillowcases. And at 3
am! breakfast is served. Welcome to a bright new day in the Allan Polunsky
Unit.
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