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MURDERED BY ARKANSAS
OTHER LOST LOVES

DAVID JACOBSON
In early 1999, Prisoner #113128, David Jacobson, was on his
way to lunch and was taking things out of his pocket to proceed through
the metal detector. He had been confined in the ADC for less than a year.
He looked to be in his 20s or perhaps early 30s. From where he stood, he
could not see out the side door, and had no real reason to look that way.
The officer on duty at the metal detector had apparently decided
to have a chat with a fellow worker in the Control Center, finding last
night's nightclub gossip more important and interesting than prison
security. There was no warning to David Jacobson that The Undertaker was
about to crash through the door behind him, or that the blunted spears of
its handle bars, like sucker tubes on a giant alien insect, this day
needed to be satiated with someone's blood.
As the cart hurled
through the door, a bag of laundry slightly askew caught on the frame of
the door and suddenly tipped the handlebars around and turned the cart
directly into the opening of the metal detector. The blunted tip of the
handlebar on the right side struck Inmate Jacobson squarely at the base of
the neck before he even had any time to react. He was hurled several feet
down the hallway where he landed in a heap on the cement floor in front of
the Control Center. The officer involved in the gossip quickly ran over,
hands covering the mouth in shock, but obviously recognizing the wonderful
grist the incident would provide for the gossip mill after work that and
well into the next.
Because David Jacobson did not at first move,
several prisoners rushed to assist him. After taking a moment to shake off
the jolt, he seemed to be relatively unharmed, but was escorted to the
Infirmary. Had he proceeded there himself, he would not have been granted
entry, but rather would have been told to "turn in a request slip", but
since he was being supported between two others because he could
apparently not walk by himself, the person on duty agreed to let him skip
that step this time.
Once inside the Infirmary, the Manager,
Doctor (and I use the term with deep reservations), Michael W. Young, a
shining example of the kind of "medical professional" (the Arkansas State
Medical Board disciplinary report record on this individual will soon be
posted on another site unless the Board rescinds his license to practice
medicine), that is typically hired by the private medical provider CMS,
(Correctional Medical Services, hereinafter known as "Convict Murdering
Services), with whom the State of Arkansas contracts to provide health
care services to inmates eventually decided to get around to asking why
this inmate was lingering outside the Infirmary. The Good Doctor Young,
whose license has been suspended under emergency orders of the Board, has
been ordered to undergo psychiatric counseling for certain abuses of his
former patients in the free world, and who is forbidden to practice
medicine without active supervision of peer doctors by order of the Board,
did eventually determine to examine Inmate Jacobson. Upon learning what
had happened to him, something that the Doctor seemed to find amusing, and
after briefly looking at the bruised spot on the back of Jacobson's neck,
Doctor Young decided that the prisoner's account that he was feeling a
sharp pain in his head and was feeling somewhat dizzy was a ploy to get
out of work for the rest of the day. He ordered a bandaid be given to
Jacobson to cover the bruised spot at the base of his neck, and ordered
that he be sent back to work.
Other than feeling a little dizzy
now and then and having a pretty bad headache, Inmate Jacobson did not
otherwise seem to be having any other difficulties from his experience
once he left the Infirmary. His fellow workers teased him a little about
it; about being run over by The Undertaker. The following day, however,
Jacobson could not seem to talk properly nor move his body or limbs
properly, and some of the men in the barracks with him called for a
supervisor and had him taken to the Infirmary again. A wheelchair was
called to transport him there.
For some time Inmate Jacobson was
made to sit there in the wheelchair before someone decided to have a
serious look at him and determine what might be wrong. When it was finally
noted that the injury was likely serious, and perhaps even by now
life-threatening, preparations were immediately made by the Infirmary
staff and Security to "seal off" the Infirmary from anyone who might be
able to observe what was going on. What goes on at these times is a
difficult protocol to describe in detail, but it is very similar to
Hollywood's accounts of the response a military medical team might
evidence if a biological weapon has accidentally caused harm, or some
alien spacecraft has suddenly crashed. A tangible blanket of cover-up and
secrecy is immediately in the air, and the dirty deed done, or which is to
be done is closely guarded to assure it's "for their eyes only."
After some more time in the Infirmary, Inmate Jacobson was rushed
to some unknown destination by ambulance.
Later in the day, the
Cummins Unit's Chaplain staff was informed to contact Inmate Jacobson's
relatives, because he was not expected to survive the day. And, indeed,
before the day was done he died...of an alleged "brain tumor." The
newspapers subsequently reported that he died of natural causes.
Naturally.
Too bad that Inmate David Jacobson had never been
warned about things that go bump, and thus The Undertaker has been fed the
life of yet another victim.
NOTE: THE UNDERTAKER IS DEAD!
CUMMINS UNIT WARDEN DALE REED ORDERED THIS DEMONIC PIECE OF EQUIPMENT
REMOVED FROM THE UNIT AND NEVER AGAIN RETURNED! A NEW LAUNDRY CART SYSTEM
IS NOW IN PLACE AT THE UNIT AND MANY INJURIES AND DEATHS WILL BE PREVENTED
AS A RESULT. I WANT TO THANK ALL OF YOU WHO SENT MESSAGES TO THE GOVERNOR
TO SEE THIS ACCOMPLISHED AND WE ALL WANT TO THANK WARDEN REED FOR THIS
FIRST ACTION TO MAKE THE ADC A MORE HUMANE INSTITUTION.
EDDIE BAGBY
THE ARKANSAS TIMES AUGUST 6, 1999
By Mara
Leveritt
We have a pretty good picture of what happened to Inmate
Eddie Bagby in the moments that led to his death. There's not much dispute
about the details. Their interpretation is murkier.
Here's what
transpired, as pieced together from investigators' reports obtained
through the state's Freedom of Information Act: Bagby was a 24-year-old
single parent with a 9th grade education who lived in Dardanelle. He
worked at a poultry processing plant and had a drinking problem. He had no
history of violence, but one night in 1998, while driving drunk, he tried
to outrun a police officer who attempted to stop him. Bagby was caught,
tried on a charge of fleeing, and sentenced to serve a year and a half in
the Arkansas Department of Correction.
Earlier this year, Bagby
was evaluated and found to be eligible for participation in the
department's Boot Camp program, a strenuous course of physical and
personal discipline t, if completed successfully, can lead to early
release. He was transferred to the unit at Wrightsville, where the boot
camp is run, on the morning of March 9, 1999.
By that evening, he
was dead.
True to its name, the boot camp program is not intended
to be easy. On the first day, participants get haircuts, attend an
orientation briefing, and eat lunch. Then they are taken outside for a
process referred to as "shock incarceration," or more simply, "shock."
This consists of double-time running, push-ups, jumping jacks, sit-ups,
and movement through an obstacle course. About five minutes into the
shock, while he was supposed to be running, Bagby fell to his knees. A
drill instructor yelled at him to get up. Bagby didn't. Then another drill
instructor, Sgt. John Broadway, reiterated the command, warning that he
would be sprayed with pepper spray if he didn't comply. When Bagby still
did not get up , Broadway sprayed him in the face.
As the officer
led Bagby to a faucet where he could wash off the pepper spray, Bagby
collapsed again. The drill sargent commanded him to get up. Bagby said, "I
can't." Broadway sprayed him again. As Broadway next attempted to lead
Bagby to the faucet, the inmate collapsed a third time. Minutes passed as
Broadway and other officers demanded that Bagby get up. Finally, the boot
camp administrator, Tommy Rochelle, ordered Bagby carried to the
infirmary. When attempts to revive him failed, Bagby was taken by
ambulance to a Little Rock hospital where he died at about 6:30 p.m.
The next day, prison spokesman Dina Tyler told reporters, "At this
point, we're at a complete loss to explain what happened medically. At
least as I understand it, they [the doctors] did indicate there was a
possibility he had suffered from a strange seizure disorder."
Reference to such a disorder appears nowhere in the record. Though
Bagby had suffered from childhood asthma, that fact was known when he
entered the boot camp, the condition was not considered serious and he had
passed the physical exam.
An autopsy revealed that Bagby also
suffered from sickle cell trait, a condition that can reduce the amount of
oxygen the blood carries. The medical examiner ruled that because of the
"several different variables" present at Bagby's death, the manner of his
death would remain "undetermined." He noted, however, that, "Because of
the short interval between pepper spray exposure and collapse, it is our
opinion that the administration of this substance was a contributory
factor in the chain of events leading to death."
How much pepper
spray Bagby actually received is unclear. Broadway told investigators that
after the incident he'd emptied the contents of his one-ounce canister
onto the ground. What was clear was that the spraying of Bagby in both
instances was in violation of department policy.
Pepper spray is
considered a non-lethal weapon to be used only "when absolutely necessary"
or "when the inmate threatens bodily harm ." Policy stipulates it "shall
never be used as a means of punishment."
Moreover, according to
policy, Rochelle, the boot camp administrator, should have confronted
Broadway after the first use of pepper spray on Bagby. If that had
happened, Bagby, who was fighting for breath, would have been spared the
second dose.
The department's internal affairs investigation also
revealed that the officers involved in the incident had not taken the
annual refresher course required for the use of pepper spray, and their
certification had expired. "Unfortunately," one report noted, no officer
responsible for training was "currently employed."
The outcome?
John Byus, the department's assistant director for medical affairs,
concluded that the use of pepper spray on Bagby had nothing to do with his
death.
Pulaski County Prosecuting Attorney Larry Jegley, to whom
the Arkansas State Police presented their findings, declined to prosecute.
Rochelle was suspended for five days. Broadway was suspended for
three.
ROY BEVERLS
Roy Beverls was 82 years old and had been confined in the
Arkansas Department of Correction for longer than even he could clearly
remember. The Cummins Unit had become his home. After more than two
decades he had become a kind of icon to many of the prisoners here; an
aged and withered symbol and living reminder of the meaning of hard times,
and of doing time.
Roy was blind for the last several years of his
life, and many of the men in the barracks with him respected, admired and
cherished him. Despite his inability to see with his eyes, he could paint
such vivid and living pictures when he spoke of the way "it used to be"
back in the old days, at the turn of the century when trial and hate,
prejudice, suffering and prejudice was just a normal way of life for black
people like Roy.
As he told his many first-hand accounts about the
cotton fields and the plantations still very much alive and well in the
days of his youth, you could tell that the images in his mind were crystal
clear and that he was seeing and living still yet the events he painted
for his fellow prisoners with his words. Through his stories young men who
listened to him could touch, fell and live with Roy what he had lived.
They would become silent, solemn humbled and sometimes ashamed that they
were not themselves stronger in facing and enduring their own trials here,
down on the Cummins Unit Prison Farm.
Roy had also been confined
in Arkansas during the "Brubaker" era, when inmate trustees were issued
pistols, shotguns and rifles to level against their fellow prisoners, and
who beat and tortured prisoners to the delight of the Arkansas good ol'
boys. Roy knew about the daily use of "the Strap" that took the skin from
human flesh in frighteningly large strips, and he knew the "Tucker
Telephone" that was wired to prisoners' testicles and was then cranked to
generate electricity "to make the call." He knew about the endless other
abuses and murders that finally led to condemning the entire Arkansas
prison system unconstitutional, a legal ruling that was unprecedented in
the entire history of the U.S.A. Indeed, even when I arrived in the summer
of 1981, inmate "turn keys" still "ran" things inside the prison and were
directly responsible for prison security.
Read the U.S. Supreme
Court decision referred to:
Most often, when Roy spoke of the
trial and tragedies of his and his fellows' struggles across his life, it
was not because he needed to wallow in some "poor me" self pity as so many
do. Roy was very much aware of the fact that some things change only to
stay the same, and that "slavery" was very much alive and well on the
Cummins Unit Farm, regardless of the whitewashing that was placed upon it
in the name of legitimate punishment and justice. He knew that prison
keepers take utmost advantage of the fact that society has a closed mind,
a blind eye and deaf ear regarding anything that might be perpetrated
against "condemned criminals who only get what they deserve," and that the
power to degrade, belittle and defile and push the human spirit to the
breaking point has become a finely honed science to the good ol' boys.
Despite this all Roy's true life memories and accounts were full
of dignity, pride and that special quiet that years of pain sheaths into
undaunted spirits. More often than not, Roy would give his accounts not
simply for the telling, but rather to encourage and to strengthen by
example the younger men around him in the barracks of who sometimes seemed
so overwhelmed by the experience of being here and who were ever on the
brink of giving up and doing something crazy and thereby play into their
keeper's sadistic hands.
When the men protested the insanity that
went on and that goes on to this day, Roy would quiet them with one of the
accounts from his own life. He knew that tragedy, suffering, pain, hate
and frustration could sometimes be quieted only by examples much, much
more extreme. No doubt Roy had had a hard life. Very hard. Indeed, despite
its many and dark evils, prison itself was a very real respite to Roy, in
contrast to what had gone before in his life.
He would tell the
young men, "Man, you don't have it hard. You're having a picnic. I
remember when..." There is no telling how much violence, especially
violence against cruel and malicious prison keepers, that was prevented
here because of Roy's recognition that desperate spirits can sometimes be
shamed into the strength necessary to fight for change by peaceful means.
I dare say that several guards and many inmates would not be alive today
had it not been for Roy. The breaking point would otherwise have come to
many.
After seeing Roy being escorted to chow, the chapel,
bathroom, or anywhere else he had to go, I determined one day to inquire
into what might be done to allow an old man to spend a few of his
remaining years in a bright and free more gentle place. From my times in
the western desert among the wind-burned and sun scorched faces of Indians
and Mexicans with whom I shared some moments across the years, I knew the
meaning of the lines etched in Roy Bevel's face. There had, indeed been
pain and suffering gashed there many times, but kindness and humor had
left their strokes as well. His face was also carved with the knowledge of
things that I'm sure he sometimes wished he would rather forget, but that
perhaps can never and perhaps never should be forgotten, even as I
remember from my boyhood in Germany the lines on the faces of those who
had endured the Holocaust, and from my days in the west I remember the
lines on the faces of those who live with the slaughter of their tribes
and the eradication of the culture of those who will pass this way no
more. I remember the faces of those monsters who committed the atrocities
of those WWII times; the same lines I now see on the faces of the good ol'
boys. I didn't actually know Roy, and was not his friend, indeed I had
never spoken to him. And yet, I heard his voice.
In 1984 or so, I
was assigned to the prison Infirmary on the night shift, mainly in the
summer months. It was still during the days when prisoners themselves
basically were responsible for providing "medical treatment" to fellow
prisoners. Oh sure, a few free world persons were employed as medical
staff, especially after the federal courts had declared the entire system
unconstitutional and when the Justice Department investigators were
constantly under foot. But, few of them had time for things like their
job, except when someone like the Feds were here looking.
During
my time in the Infirmary, I often took the liberty of reviewing random
prisoners' medical files(for reasons that will become clear in time.) All
inmates who cared to do read them had ready access to the files, and
especially those of us who worked in the Infirmary.
One evening as
I headed to work, I saw Roy Bevels shoved into the riot gate when he was
returning from chow by a guard who had decided he had the right of way,
even against an old man being escorted through the gate by a fellow
prisoner. Roy smashed his head against the iron plates and cut his lip.
For a moment he stared at his hand with the blood on it as if he could
actually see it, and then he raised his chin up and went on down the hall.
I decided then not merely to check into, but simply to do
something about getting Roy some help so that someone might be able to get
him out of prison and to a place he deserved to spend his last years. I
wasn't looking for anything in particular in Roy's medical file, just
anything that might be useful in making an appeal on his behalf to allow
him to be granted clemency of something. I hoped for some clue to
relatives or friends who might be contacted to that end. I was aware that
Arkansas has an obscure law that allows for "arrangements" for release to
be made for certain terminally ill or extremely elderly and infirm
prisoners, or for prisoners who win substantial legal settlements against
the state. Not, of course, out of any compassion, concern or respect for
the dying, feeble or elderly, but so that the ADC and the great state of
Arkansas would not have to absorb the sometimes high costs of prison
healthcare or geriatrics, or by which to "deal" away having to pay legal
judgements. I thought that maybe there was a loophole for Roy, based on
something in his files.
After looking over most of his file, which
really was very skimpy seeing that he had been locked up for more than two
decades, I was about to give up thinking that I might find something
there. Then, upon closing the file to put it a document in the very back
it, bearing the symbol of an eye caught my attention.
When I
reopened the file to look at the symbol I found a letter from the world
renowned McFarland Eye Clinic in Pint Bluff. The letter was dated a few
years before, addressed to the Arkansas Department of Correction medical
staff and stated that after Roy's examination it was determined that he
suffered from a severe form of cataracts, and that by a simple surgical
procedure requiring no more than a local anesthetic, Mr. Beverls' vision
could be restored to a level that would allow him to become
self-sufficient again. I just stared at that letter for a while. Roy was
blind and had been put through so much misery only because someone didn't
want to spend the few dollars it would cost to remove his cataracts! I had
to do something about this. I just had to.
At that time, a friend
of mine, Jane Gordon, the daughter of a well-known and politically active
family in Little Rock, had been coming to visit me in a continuing effort
to get to the bottom of certain "rumors' of abuses going on in the ADC,
especially regarding the beatings at the Tucker Maximum Security Unit.
Jane was a freelance reporter for the Arkansas Democrat, prior to its
merger with the Arkansas Gazette, and was on the staff of a Little Rock
freebie rag, the Spectrum.
After I told Jane about Roy Bevels she
determined to write an article in the Democrat making the public aware of
the fact that an 82 year old man had been blind for several years only
because the ADC had refused to pay for a simple, inexpensive cataract
surgery. As hoped, the article stirred some public response, and also
"stirred" the ADC officials to take the usual, "face saving and public
appeasing" action. Roy's condition and the failure to provide the surgery
had been an unfortunate oversight, it was said, and it was announced that
Roy would soon be given the surgery.
Across many of the years of
Roy's imprisonment, he had been collecting a Social Security check of
about $50 a month. He was not, at first aware that he could get this
money, but a fellow prisoner and some people outside made it possible for
him to begin receiving checks. After many years of being forced to buy the
most basic staple things that the great state of Arkansas otherwise did
not (and to a large degree still does not) provide in any reasonable
quantity; things like soap and toothpaste. Roy was still able to scrimp
and save a few dollars now and then. By 1986 he had accumulated a savings
of over $4,000, I was informed. It was his "going out to pasture money,"
as he referred to it.
In 1981, then Attorney General Steve Clark,
an especially malicious and twisted Arkansas good ol' boy who liked to get
elected by climbing on the bodies and suffering of state prisoners,
decided one day to sponsor a bill to the General Assembly to require that
ADC prisoners pay "room and board" for the privilege of being confined in
the Department of Correction, which was still under declaration of
unconstitutionality at that time! Act 715 of 1981 permitted the state to
seize any assets or estates from any of its prisoners to whatever sum it
was felt was owed for room and board at the time of the seizure. Of
course, according to the Act the prisoners' resources were to be
"investigated" by none other than the Attorney General, Steve Clark,
himself. Clark then selectively single out certain prisoners from whom to
collect the payment, and ADC prisoners soon dubbed those whom he went
after as "The Chosen." Although, technically, the illegal bill applied to
any and all prisoners, no effort was ever made to collect money from other
than a handful of them. Some of them might well have insisted upon a right
to trial by jury.
Not long after the state began seizing money
form a select group of targeted inmates, Steve Clark was indicted for
felony theft for paying for certain luxuries out of state coffers, so the
real motive for his sponsorship of Act 715 was fairly evident to us. He
wasn't concerned with wanting to have the people of Arkansas reimbursed
for the cost of housing prisoners; he wanted ready funds for himself, his
staff and fellow good ol' boys, to use to take vacations, throw parties
and make expensive renovations in their offices and to pay for "official
business" of every sort.
After Jane Gordon and the Arkansas
Democrat revealed the tragedy of Roy's needless blindness and helplessness
for so many years, Steve Clark and his cronies evidently decided to get
even. Since the smart-assed old man had embarrassed creeps like Prison
Director Lockhart and his ilk, and he was actually going to go through
with forcing the state to pay for the surgery that they had decided he did
not need, well, they would make it an expensive venture for him.
So, Roy was one day simply snatched out of the Cummins Unit, taken
to yet another bastion of Arkansas justice, the courts of Star City,
Arkansas, and without having been given notice or being provided an
attorney, he was charged $22.50 per day for his "room and board" and over
$4,000 that he had painstakingly saved across so many years from his
Social Security checks was taken away from him.
Earlier, when Act
715 had come under some fire, Steve Clark had made the public comment that
the Act was not unconstitutional nor unconstitutionally applied, and that
he would resign from office if that were so. I wrote a letter to the
Democrat "Voices" column pointing out a few facts that I felt the public
should be made aware of, and commenting that Steve Clark would not resign
from his job as AG even with an edict from the General Assembly. I also
took the opportunity to point out several reasons why the Act was, in fact
unconstitutional or illegally applied. The Democrat editors refused to
print it, of course, just as they had refused to print all my previous
"Voices" letters or any letters from prisoners which were not the
obsequious drivel of some prisoner trying to "get in good" with Lockhart
and his minions. I did also tease, or prod Clark by reminding him of his
professed resignation should the Act be shown to be illegal.
I
suppose that seizing Roy's hard-earned Social Security savings may not
have been related to the "stir" he was causing once the reason for his
blindness had become public. But, given that Roy had accumulated those
savings for many years and yet no effort was made to take it for room and
board at any time before, it seemed peculiar that "someone" suddenly
decided to go after his Social Security money just when attention had been
drawn to him. Since Act 715 directly charged Clark with the responsibility
to investigate who would become The Chosen, there is little doubt that he
was directly aware, by statutory presumption, if by no other means.
When Roy was returned to the unit, I sent him word that I would
draft a lawsuit for him to challenge Act 715 and the manner in which the
money was stolen from him without even affording him minimal due process
of law. Cases were already pending, but I felt that local good ol' boy
attorneys would fairly well botch the allegations asserted against the Act
and would lose. Then the good ol' boy courts would spout some meaningless
yap saying that it was perfectly legal. I also wanted to take the
opportunity to shove the ultimate ruling up Steve Clark's - well, where
the sun doesn't shine. So, I began drafting the suit for Mr. Beverls and
began contacting some attorney friends of mine to perhaps represent it
free of charge.
During the days immediately after the announcement
that the cataracts would be removed, Roy became very apprehensive and
afraid, and he didn't want to go through with it. Several of his friends
and I concluded that Roy was just scared of the "change" that regaining
his sight might bring after such a long time. Who knows the psychological
mechanisms that underlie such things. He had become accustomed to being
blind, and perhaps used the attention that he received because of it from
fellow prisoners who always looked out for him. Or, maybe Roy just felt
that he had seen enough in his lifetime and would rather finish life
seeing nothing else except the images inside him. Maybe he knew or
apprehended far more than any of the others of us could at the time.
Across several days, a lot of guys were stopping in to see Roy and
to nudge him to continue to have the same strength and courage he had so
often instilled or revived in many others himself and go to get the
surgery. And so, taking a deep breath, and assuming an air of dignity and
resolve only an 82 year old man can take on, Roy agreed to have the
surgery. He wasn't doing it out of his own need, but as an example.
I was never his friend and never close to him, but it was a good
thing to see in him nonetheless.
Finally, the day for his surgery
arrived! On his way out several of the guys cheered him on. From a
distance away, I could have sworn that I saw Warden Willis Sargent and
Director A.L. Lockhart slinging rocks and dirt all over the place when
spinning wheels and racing off in a state vehicle. Maybe I did.
We
got word later that day, through the Chapel that Roy's surgery had gone
just fine. It had only taken a few minutes, and he would be returning to
Cummins later in the evening, once the effects of the anesthetic and other
chemicals had completely subsided. Then, late in the day we learned that
the Diagnostic Unit in Pine Bluff; today known as The Cemetery, had
decided to keep him overnight just to make sure there were no
complications of any kind.
The following day we got word that for
no identifiable reason, Roy had died that night. It stunned many.
Looking back now, maybe that is why Roy had been so apprehensive
and afraid of having the surgery. He knew or suspected something we
didn't. Maybe he knew that to see meant to die.
Goodbye, Roy. I am
sorry. I have kept my word; I have told part of your story. Vaya con dios.
by Inmate Rolf Kaestel
FACTOR 8: THE ARKANSAS PRISON BLOOD SCANDAL
Kelly Duda and Concrete Films have produced a documentary which details the corruption and greed that led the Arkansas Department of Correction to spread death from Arkansas prisons to the entire world. Hear the story from the mouths of those responsible for the harvesting of infected human blood plasma, and its sale to be made into medicines.
Duda's award-winning film unflinchingly documents the whole story the U.S. government and the state of Arkansas have tried to keep hidden from the world.
Click the photo of Kelly Duda at work to order your own copy of "Factor 8: The Arkansas Prison Blood Scandal"
Click the photo of Kelly Duda at work to visit the Factor 8 Documentary website
Please help spread the word about this important film, along with the urls to the linked pages.
This PRUP
(Prison Reform Unity Project) site owned by
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DUE TO CONTINUAL SPAMMING OF MY PRISON
REFORM WEB SITE GUEST BOOKS BY PRISON GUARDS POSTING URLS TO
PORNOGRAPHY WEB SITES, I HAVE BEEN FORCED TO SET MY GUEST BOOKS SO
THAT MESSAGES LEFT MUST BE APPROVED BY ME BEFORE THEY'RE
PUBLICALLY POSTED. PLEASE SIGN MY BOOK, AND ALL LEGITIMATE MESSAGES
WILL BE APPROVED AS SOON AS I RECEIVE NOTIFICATION THAT THEY ARE
PENDING.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATIENCE, AS THIS WAS NECESSARY BECAUSE EVEN
WHEN THEY DO IT FOR A LIVING, SOME "PEOPLE" JUST NEVER GET THEIR FILL
OF TORTURING OTHERS......
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