Nicasio Cuevas Quiles III, a
46-year-old prisoner at Prairie du Chien Correctional Institution
(PDCI) two hours west of Madison, calls In
These Times in
October 2019 to discuss a civil rights complaint against the
facility’s administrators. During the call, Cuevas Quiles
rhetorically asks why prisoners are rationed toilet paper and no
longer issued bars of soap, when the annual budget of the Wisconsin
Department of Corrections exceeds $1 billion.
“If it’s falling on the
taxpayers of this billion-dollar juggernaut called the Wisconsin DOC
to maintain it running, then—”
He’s cut off by a robot voice:
“All calls other than properly placed attorney calls may be
monitored and recorded.”
Cuevas Quiles doesn’t miss a
beat, waits for the pre-recorded message, then continues: “—why
are we dealing with things such as two rolls of toilet paper and no
bars of soap?”
The automated disclaimers
repeatedly interrupt the paid call from PDCI as if to threaten, We’re
listening. But Cuevas
Quiles is unshaken.
He is one of 10 incarcerated
co-plaintiffs who filed suit in federal court in July
2019, accusing PDCI
of “continuous exposure to asbestos and asbestos-related materials,
lead, lead filings, radium, gross alpha and rust particles in the
drinking water and water supply, the arbitrary denial of acceptable
standards of sanitary living conditions, the arbitrary denial of
access to sanitary cleaning supplies to prevent the spread of disease
and bacteria,” and other violations at the 70-year-old facility,
according to a copy of the complaint.
PDCI, a medium-security prison,
houses more than 400 adult male prisoners. “The issues here at
Prairie du Chien are not unique,” Cuevas Quiles says. “I had
originally pursued this case to bring to light the issues that are
pretty much prevalent throughout the entire Wisconsin Department of
Corrections.”
The suit also charges that
plaintiffs face “the denial of proper medical care and attention to
the medical issue by staff,” increasing their risk of “cancer and
blindness,” and that unqualified correctional officers are handling
medications, in violation of their rights. “The rendering of
medical services by unqualified personnel is deliberate
indifference,” the suit alleges.
The Wisconsin Department of
Corrections failed to respond to multiple interview requests from In
These Times.
“Currently, the co-plaintiffs and
I are unrepresented by counsel,” Cuevas Quiles says—the civil
rights complaint was filed with the courts directly. “That’s
because not too many attorneys want to take on the Wisconsin
Department of Corrections.”
One of the few sources of outside
support that Cuevas Quiles and his co-plaintiffs have is the
Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee (IWOC),
an international labor union for prisoners. IWOC’s local in
Milwaukee connected with Cuevas Quiles in February 2019 through an
email newsletter it sends to more than 3,000 prisoners across 31
facilities in Wisconsin. (Corrlinks, a for-profit company,
is contracted by prisons to provide prisoners with email access, for
a fee.) While Cuevas Quiles found his co-plaintiffs himself, IWOC
Milwaukee has helped connect him with other supporters on the inside,
as prisoners are not able to email each other.
“We’ve been using
this newsletter to
help connect people across institutional boundaries by collecting
reports on conditions and updates at various institutions, then
organizing, editorializing and sending the messages back out to the
whole list,” explains Ethan Simonoff, an organizer with IWOC
Milwaukee.
With the help of IWOC Milwaukee and
other prisoner organizing groups, like Ex-Incarcerated
People Organizing and WISDOM,
Cuevas Quiles was also able to connect with local media, drawing the
ire of prison administrators. Cuevas Quiles says that, following a
radio story, he was forced out of his work assignment in the laundry
department, and two of the three computers prisoners use to file
legal documents were confiscated. He also says fellow prisoners have
been forced to address hazardous conditions without proper training
or equipment. IWOC Milwaukee corroborates Cuevas Quiles’ charges
with similar claims by other prisoners at PDCI.
Prison administrators are “telling
offenders, ‘If you don’t perform these duties, we’re going to
throw you in [solitary confinement],’ ” Cuevas Quiles says.
Despite the alleged retaliation,
Cuevas Quiles describes his co-plaintiffs and the general prison
population as hopeful—pending amendments, he expects the civil
rights complaint to move forward. IWOC Milwaukee came to their aid in
September 2019 with a call-in campaign to PDCI, asking administrators
to cease retaliation.
Back on the call, in the middle of
describing how the plaintiffs have been building strong supportive
bonds together, the robot interrupts Cuevas Quiles with, “One
minute remaining.”
Undeterred: “If the minute goes
up, I’ll call you right back.”
>> The article above was written by Arvind Dilawar, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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