Solitary

Oprah Looks at How California’s Infamous Pelican Bay Prison Is Leading the Way In Reforming Solitary Confinement

Celeste Fremon
Written by Celeste Fremon

On Sunday’s 60 Minutes broadcast Oprah Winfrey reported on the use of solitary confinement in American prisons. She talked about how California is leading the way to reform of the practice, with changes in the state’s Pelican Bay Prison, which Winfrey called the most notorious state penitentiary in America.

It is a story that is very much worth watching.

“Designed and built as a ‘supermax’ facility,” Oprah began, referring to the 1989-constructed prison, “it’s been used for nearly 30 years to lock away inmates considered the most dangerous.”

As WitnessLA and others have reported, it was some of those most dangerous inmates—many of them leaders of the prison system’s notorious prison gangs, which have wreaked havoc inside and outside of the state’s correctional institutions for decades—who astonishingly managed to work with each other to organize system-wide hunger strikes, and a class action lawsuit, that led to negotiations with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), and ultimately real change.

The lead organizers, the best known of whom were Sitawa Jamaa, Todd Ashker, Arturo Castellanos, and Antonio Guillen, were each affiliated with different prison gangs. But they came together in what became known the “Short Corridor Collective.”

The collective’s five main demands were as follows:

1. Eliminate group punishments for individual rule violations;
2. Abolish the “debriefing policy,” and modify active/inactive gang status criteria**
3. Comply with the recommendations of the 2006 US Commission on Safety and Abuse in Prisons regarding an end to long-term solitary confinement
4. Provide adequate food
5. Expand and provide constructive programs and privileges for indefinite SHU inmates, including expanded visiting, one photo per year, a weekly phone call, two annual packages, wall calendars.

Reforming the use of long-term solitary confinement was the Short Corridor group’s central demand.


When Isolation Drives You Crazy

In her report, Winfrey talked to several men who’d spent years, or sometimes decades, in the Pelican Bay SHU, which meant they were locked for 22.5 hours a day or more in a cell “which is basically the size of a small parking space,” she said, “a windowless box with a sink and a toilet.”

Such isolated confinement did psychological damage, researchers found, Winfrey reported.

Moreover, the damage done by long-term enforced isolation was “at much higher levels than even I anticipated,” Craig Haney told Winfrey. Haney is a psychology professor at UC Santa Cruz whose studies of Pelican Bay SHU inmates “have become central to arguments against the widespread use of solitary confinement.”

The inmates and former inmates Oprah talked with each described their own form of damage.

There was, for example, Clyde Jackson, who’d been in the facility’s SHU for 24 years. “Your mind becomes diseased, and you start to accept the abnormal as normal,” he said of his decades in the SHU.

Following the reforms to Pelican Bay’s SHU system, Jackson was eventually transferred to the general population at Solano State Prison, near Sacramento:

OPRAH WINFREY: What was it like the first time you were taken out of the SHU and able to experience the environment?

CLYDE JACKSON: Well, Ms. Winfrey, to be honest with you, I was dizzy. It’s like being born again.

“At Solano,” Winfrey reported, “Jackson, has immersed himself in the rehabilitation programs that are now the focus of California’s prison system. The state has gone from ‘lock ’em up’ to ‘fix ’em up.'”

CLYDE JACKSON: I’m 54 years old. I’m finally in a position to get my GED.

OPRAH WINFREY: And so you’re taking advantage of everything you can?

CLYDE JACKSON: Everything that I can that I missed in the past.

OPRAH WINFREY: So tell me, do you have hope now?

CLYDE JACKSON: Yes.


Starving for Change

Winfrey told how the pressure to change the extreme policy of isolating prisoners for so long “really began to build in 2011,” when the Short Corridor group organized the hunger strikes, and ultimately filed the lawsuit—which included more than 500 inmates, who’d been isolated for 10 years or more.

“Fearing it might lose that suit,” Winfrey said, “the state negotiated a settlement with ‘prisoner-plaintiffs’ in 2015. California agreed to stop holding inmates in solitary for indefinite terms, and to stop sending them to the SHU simply for having gang ties.”

Interestingly, Scott Kernan, who is the head of the CDCR, thus the person who might be expected to criticize the reforms, did the opposite when he talked to Oprah Winfrey on camera. The SHU system worked in some ways, he said, in reducing crime in the general prison population. But the prison gangs still remained strong, and there were the collateral effects:

OPRAH WINFREY: Why did it not work?

SECRETARY SCOTT KERNAN: It didn’t work because of the impact on the offenders.

OPRAH WINFREY: I’m sure you’ve heard that statement from Justice Anthony Kennedy, who says, “Solitary confinement drives men mad.” Does it?

SCOTT KERNAN: I think it does.

Later in the broadcast, Kernan talked about the effect California’s reform measures were having elsewhere in the U.S.

SCOTT KERNAN: I think across the nation, people are looking at how we house restricted offenders and are making changes to that policy.

California’s SHUs now hold 80 percent fewer inmates than just a few years ago. Some people are still sent to the SHU but, according to the CDCR, it is only for specific infractions and limited terms.

Yet Winfrey acknowledged that there are many viewers who would want to know why an inmate deserves a break:

They “would say,” she told Kernan, “‘Why does an inmate deserve hope?’ Because they are here because of a crime that they committed, and inevitably took some form of hope away from somebody.”

SCOTT KERNAN: Over 90 percent of these inmates will complete their sentence and they’ll come back out into the communities. Do you want somebody with no hope, that’s involved themselves in criminal activities, doing dope, stabbing people, or would you want a guy that comes out that has an AA degree? Has addressed a substance abuse program? Has– went to domestic violence classes? What would you want as a taxpayer and a citizen of this State?

OPRAH WINFREY: How has your own personal perception of what it means to be an inmate, a prisoner, how has that changed?

SCOTT KERNAN: When I first came in, that person was the enemy. Now, 35 years later, I don’t view the inmates as my enemy. They’re people. They’re all coming out to be our neighbors. Why wouldn’t we spend the resources and create an environment where th– when they come out, they’re better people than when they got here? I just think it makes all the sense in the world. It’s common sense.


You can see the 60 Minutes segment here. Listen here to why Oprah Winfrey chose this topic to pitch to 60 Minutes. And for a lot more about this historic battle for change, read The Short Corridor: How the Most Isolated Prisoners in America Took on the System, and Won,” by Alessandro Camoni for The Los Angeles Review of Books. It’s well worth your time.


**EDITOR’S’ NOTE: For those unfamiliar, “debriefing” was the policy that meant many inmates in the SHU because of perceived gang membership, could only prove that they had completely left gang involvement behind by informing on other alleged gang member inmates, a practice that led to many false accusations, and often marked the inmate for deadly retaliation when they were released.

7 Comments

  • Oprah Winfrey? Who’s that? Oh… the one who can influence the thoughts of liberals with just one show…

    This whole reform thing… how many times have we been through this? Reform begins with the heart of the one who needs reforming. They need to decide they need reforming or else nothing will work.

  • I doubt prison reform is one of oprah’s real hobbies.This story seems to lend credence to the idea she is looking at getting into politics, a sort of liberal answer to Donald Trump. The cause of “Prison reform” looks like a real looser though, the majority of people don’t really care all that much about the worst of the worst (thank God we have prisons). Although I have to admit , it would be hugely entertaining to watch Oprah an Hillary go at it.

  • It would be even more entertaining to talk to Oprah after a year of having 10 rehabilitated “Former” criminals living with her in her 20,000 square foot house behind her 12 foot walls. If she lived through it of course.

  • Is it Oprah that is causing this reaction to prison reform; necessary and needed; or is it the notion that once convicted of a crime there is not such thing in a free and open democratic county for a second change, a second glance, a time to pause and analyze the consequences of long term isolation once inmates are returned to communities from whence they came

  • NO FAN OF OPRAH EITHER! NEVER OPRAH FOR PRESIDENT! UGH… BUT IF HER NAME HELPS TO FIND THAT SOLITARY CONFINEMENT IS CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT TO THOSE THAT HAVE A RELEASE DATE… HELL NO… IT MUST GO!

    HOWEVER, I AM AGAINST SOLITARY CONFINEMENT, ESPECIALLY FOR THE MINORS THAT ARE ALSO PUT THERE! THIS IS MORE LIKE HUMAN TORTURE… NOW UNLESS THE CRIMINAL IS BEYOND ANY REFORM AND IS DANGEROUS TO OTHERS…

    SADLY, THE USE OF SOLITARY HAS BECOME ALL TOO COMMON! AND THE MENTAL DAMAGE CAN LAST A LIFETIME!

    BEING REFORMED, MEANING THE INMATE HAS A RELEASE DATE AND WILL BE PLACED BACK INTO SOCIETY, SOLITARY CONFINEMENT CAN RUIN THAT, IF THEY HAVE SUFFERED FROM THIS FORM OF PUNISHMENT!!!

  • i won’t argue with Oprah if she classifies Pelican Bay as one of the most notorious state prisons in the U.S.
    However, any claim that Pelican Bay is the MOST notorious deserves to be challenged.
    If one conducted a simple Family Feud style of survey asking respondents to name a notorious state penitentiary – what would be the Number 1 mentioned answer?
    For my money, i would guess the top spot for notoriety belongs to Angola.
    if Oprah were betting her own money, i think she also would select Angola before Pelican Bay.
    Why is such a comparison of any need or importance?
    Generally, its not of any importance –
    however, Oprah’s decision to hyperbolize in reference to the chosen subject of her report is a cause for questioning her unspoken motivations and her journalistic integrity.

  • Until any of you deal with any of the people, on the streets, who end up in long term solitary, or see what they’ve done to innocent members of the community or other inmates that caused their punishment you have no standing on the issue. That goes as well for some juveniles.

Leave a Reply to Maj. Kong X