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		Three Prisoners Die in 
		Hunger Strike Related Incidents 
		
		
		 
		November 17, 2011 
		
		 
		
		CDCR 
		Withholds Information from Family Members, Fails to Report Deaths 
		 
		Press Contact: 
		Isaac Ontiveros 
		 
		Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity 
		
		http://prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/ 
		 
		Oakland – In the month since the second phase of a massive prisoner 
		hunger strike in California ended on September 22nd, three prisoners who 
		had been on strike have committed suicide. Johnny Owens Vick and another 
		prisoner were both confined in the Pelican Bay Security Housing Unit and 
		Hozel Alanzo Blanchard was confined in the Calipatria Administrative 
		Segregation Unit (ASU). According to reports from prisoners who were 
		housed in surrounding cells and who witnessed the deaths, guards did not 
		come to the assistance of one of the prisoners at Pelican Bay or to 
		Blanchard, and in the case of the Pelican Bay prisoner (whose name is 
		being withheld for the moment) apparently guards deliberately ignored 
		his cries for help for several hours before finally going to his cell, 
		at which point he was already dead. “It is completely despicable that 
		prison officials would willfully allow someone to take their own life,” 
		said Dorsey Nunn, Executive Director of Legal Services for Prisoners 
		with Children, “These guys were calling for help, their fellow prisoners 
		were calling for help, and guards literally stood by and watched it 
		happen.”  
		 
		Family members of the deceased as well as advocates are having difficult 
		time getting information about the three men and the circumstances of 
		their deaths. The California Department of Corrections and 
		Rehabilitation (CDCR) is required to do an autopsy is the cases of 
		suspicious deaths and according to the Plata case, is required to do an 
		annual report on every death in the system. Family members have said 
		that their loved ones, as well as many other prisoners who participated 
		in the hunger strike, were being severely retaliated against with 
		disciplinary actions and threats. Blanchard’s family has said that he 
		felt that his life was threatened and had two emergency appeals pending 
		with the California Supreme Court at the time of his death. “It is a 
		testament to the dire conditions under which prisoners live in solitary 
		confinement that three people would commit suicide in the last month,” 
		said Laura Magnani, Regional Director of the American Friends Service 
		Committee, “It also points to the severe toll that the hunger strike has 
		taken on these men, despite some apparent victories.” Prisoners in 
		California’s SHUs and other forms of solitary confinement have a much 
		higher rate of suicide than those in general population.  
		 
		The hunger strike, which at one time involved the participation of at 
		least 12,000 prisoners in 13 state prisons was organized around five 
		core demands relating to ending the practices of group punishment, 
		long-term solitarily confinement, and gang validation and debriefing. 
		The CDCR has promised changes to the gang validation as soon as early 
		next year and were due to have a draft of the new for review this 
		November, although it’s not known whether that process is on schedule. 
		“If the public and legislators don’t continue to push CDCR, they could 
		easily sweep all of this under the rug,” said Emily Harris, statewide 
		coordinator Californians United for a Responsible Budget, “These deaths 
		are evidence that the idea of accountability is completely lost on 
		California’s prison officials.”  
		 
  
		
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