Wasted Honor -

Carl R. ToersBijns is the author of the Wasted Honor Trilogy [Wasted Honor I,II and Gorilla Justice] and his newest book From the Womb to the Tomb, the Tony Lester Story, which is a reflection of his life and his experiences as a correctional officer and a correctional administrator retiring with the rank of deputy warden in the New Mexico and Arizona correctional systems.

Carl also wrote a book on his combat experience in the Kindle book titled - Combat Medic - Men with destiny - A red cross of Valor -

Carl is considered by many a rogue expert in the field of prison security systems since leaving the profession. Carl has been involved in the design of many pilot programs related to mental health treatment, security threat groups, suicide prevention, and maximum custody operational plans including double bunking max inmates and enhancing security for staff. He invites you to read his books so you can understand and grasp the cultural and political implications and influences of these prisons. He deals with the emotions, the stress and anxiety as well as the realities faced working inside a prison. He deals with the occupational risks while elaborating on the psychological impact of both prison worker and prisoner.

His most recent book, Gorilla Justice, is an un-edited raw fictional version of realistic prison experiences and events through the eyes of an anecdotal translation of the inmate’s plight and suffering while enduring the harsh and toxic prison environment including solitary confinement.

Carl has been interviewed by numerous news stations and newspapers in Phoenix regarding the escape from the Kingman prison and other high profile media cases related to wrongful deaths and suicides inside prisons. His insights have been solicited by the ACLU, Amnesty International, and various other legal firms representing solitary confinement cases in California and Arizona. He is currently working on the STG Step Down program at Pelican Bay and has offered his own experience insights with the Center of Constitutional Rights lawyers and interns to establish a core program at the SHU units. He has personally corresponded and written with SHU prisoners to assess the living conditions and how it impacts their long term placement inside these type of units that are similar to those in Arizona Florence Eyman special management unit where Carl was a unit deputy warden for almost two years before his promotion to Deputy Warden of Operations in Safford and Eyman.

He is a strong advocate for the mentally ill and is a board member of David's Hope Inc. a non-profit advocacy group in Phoenix and also serves as a senior advisor for Law Enforcement Officers Advocates Council in Chino, California As a subject matter expert and corrections consultant, Carl has provided interviews and spoken on national and international radio talk shows e.g. BBC CBC Lou Show & TV shows as well as the Associated Press.

I use sarcasm, satire, parodies and other means to make you think!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
































































































































Thursday, January 19, 2012

~~~~Wasted Honor – the truth ~~~~~



Since writing my three books, I have been asked by many people that have read them – “what is missing?” The question is most certainly loaded and it bring to the front page a deliberate indifference in the media and by the media to eliminate or refusal to cover the entire span of control of the Arizona Department of Corrections focusing on civil rights and life preservation efforts. Many have said that I have taken this stance on the agency personal. To tell the truth, it appears that way but isn’t at all accurate. What I have taken personal is the constant hiding and lack of transparency the agency provides to its citizens whenever a serious incident “kicks off” and since I have accumulated over 24 years of experience while working in corrections, I always wanted to do something about this culture to “cover up” the truth and expose their failures seeking repaired efforts to correct and balance for the agency to work together with the media and demonstrate ethical and professional accountability of their mission, their staff and their programs. When people die as often as they do inside Arizona prisons, there is something wrong with the prison system and it’s the responsibility of the media to investigate and find the truth.

The truth be told, Arizona corrections has many problems as it soaks approximately one billion dollars a year from the state budget. They [politicians] would rather spend these funds on prisons then paying for improving our schools and other wellness programs that helps stabilize our future and our children’s growth. It is my opinion that if the state were to be placed under a federal court order to “clean up” its act there would be less violence, less “natural deaths” and less suicides within these prison walls while at the same time, students would improve their grades, reduce gang activities and avoid more drop outs throughout the state.

Coming onboard in June of 2005, I fell into an abyss of darkness and draconic prison conditions that put my ability to manage back at least ten years compared to the New Mexico prison system. I suspect because New Mexico was under a federal court decree called the Duran Consent Decree, it improved rapidly under the scrutiny of lawyers and judges that held administrators accountable for several itemized conditions ordered by the court. The truth be told, Arizona has not made one inch of improvement since 2005 in my opinion and has rather chosen to regress rather than progress as their problems remain to be at a critical stage and considered by many a “disaster area” in need of federal funds and interference.

I make these comments because I believe that I was a highly successful administrator who participated, planned and strategized important programs to reduce violence, deaths and misconduct. I have seen the positive results of building positive programs to manage prisoner behavior and conduct. I have been involved in programs that increased individual responsibility skills, improve motivational conditions to learn and listen better and allowed prisoners to act and live under near normal conditions in a lockdown setting at SMU II now the Browning Unit. The reason for wanting to improve the conditions inside Arizona prisons is not personal nor is it religiously motivated although it is my strong belief that religions play an important part of the prisoner’s life and tribulations daily to control their own behavior and respect of others.

Since my retirement in 2010, it is for sure that I could no longer be involved in the mechanics of such change thus I must appreciate the works of others dedicated for change and improvement of the prison complexes inside Arizona. Since writing my books I have been criticized, ostracized and condemned for speaking out against an industrial complex that was organized for one purpose and one purpose only – mass incarceration to make profit of human lives that belong to the state and other entities.

Although I can no longer do the work, I appreciate the work of many others who continue to seek change and reforms in this arena where human lives are at stake. I bear no responsibility for the outcome or any credit for any change. I am a strong advocate of sentencing reforms and other alternatives that offer persons a chance to stay out of prison or county jails. I know there are good state representatives working on sentencing changes that could reduce the prison population thereby reducing the burden of keeping our large prison complex from growing into a conglomerate that has been designed by many in the past that include prosecutors, legislators, special interest groups and private prison lobbyist.

My feeling about the way prisons are run has no bearing on the truth or seeking the truth. The current destruction of sound prison programs that began to crumble in early 2009 puts the prison administration without redemption or hope to ever return the programs due to lack of funding or personnel to operate such programs. Today, newly committed prisoners are doomed for failure (a design that allows more prison beds to be requested or allocated) since the focus of changing the culture from a punitive environment to a healthy and productive environment is not likely to happen anytime soon under the current executive leadership in the Capitol or on the fourth floor on Jefferson Avenue. Today, the prisoner and their families have been decimated by the sheer political power and brutal machine that dominates their lives and creates harsh and toxic prison conditions under the current philosophy and correctional practices. They are no better than organized crime that does not care about human beings or their hardships as long as they make the profit anticipated.

In the meantime, this political machine has dealt the employees a terrible blow of confidence and faith in their leaders.

It is difficult to express the mistrust and frustration that exists within the prison system as employees are used as pawns to cater or barter prison employee rights and benefits for the sake of prolonged mass incarceration methods. Employees are not at fault for the dismal performance of this agency. They are just as much victimized as the prisoners and face a reliance on their legislative representatives to pull them out of this chasm of division and conflict. For the prisoners, this has also brought frustration, loss of faith in the system and hopelessness that they will be able to return back to society a better man or woman without being returned back to prison because of lack of training, educational efforts or pre-release opportunities to reduce recidivism thereby reducing the financial burden on the state and citizens.

In ending this comment, the State of Arizona must change its ways regarding the way they run prisons and the way they are condemning the educational and other sound human resource systems within the state. The focus should be on rehabilitation and reforms while funding the schools in sufficient fashion to better educate our kids keep them out of gangs and reduce the terrible drop out rate within the state today. Legislators know this to be true but ignore the symptoms of this disease. This state government, from the top of the ladder to the lowest rung, their contribution in keeping the media involved in prison operations has faltered on purpose for both fear and retaliation for speaking or seeking the truth. They believe that the majority of people inside this state do not care about improving prisons and reforming our school systems. They fear personal persecution and labeling of being “disgruntled” and ruination of their personal careers.

For them, there is only the hope that one day they will realize their silence has ruined the moral fiber within their own bodies and mind and make a change in their approach, their thinking and their actions to redeem themselves and join the others for reforms and change in the current political status quo in Arizona.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Have you even opened up a can and found out that it was something you should have perhaps not opened but your ethical and moral values drive you to do it anyways? Well, saying what you need to say and doing what you need to do sometimes dri...ves a person to do just that - open a can with contents unknown and hard to deal with.. thus, I fall back on what I have said all along... you don't know what you can do until you do it.. Peace and enjoy life with all its happiness that is found by being your own guide and your own person following your own dreams and your own destiny..

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Evolution of the idea of SHU’s from both sides of the cell door.

. Here is a history lesson I just read.


http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/issues/95nov/prisons/prisprog.htm

March 1922

Prison Progress

by Brice P. Disque

…about twenty per cent will turn out to be hopeless, hardened, and deliberate criminals. Their presence in the place will greatly increase the difficulties of developing good results. Their example and influence will be bad on the other men, some of whom may be wavering between weakness and strength of will-power.

Additional restrictive and disciplinary measures will be necessary to guard them, and it will be desirable in every way to segregate them…

I would, therefore, send the hopeless, hardened, and deliberate criminals to a third sort of institution, in which they would be forced to earn their own living, and from which there would not be the slightest possibility of escape, except after unquestionable evidence that they had qualified for the B institutions again. Not many of such fellows would qualify, but all should have a chance, and be encouraged to try. If they never take advantage of that opportunity they should remain in the third class for life, regardless of the sort of crime of which they were convicted.

http://www.theatlantic.com/past/issues/95nov/prisons/whyriot.htm

An inmates view observations on the subject.

October 1955

Why Prisoners Riot

Maybe it is time, now that everyone else has had his say on the continuing problem of prison riots, that a former convict should make some

…some general conclusions that seem to have escaped most of the people who are trying to find out how to cure the epidemic of prison riots.

1. Convicts…are generally not mature, fully developed people; …they are truncated personalities–a separate breed whose natural habitat is prison and who find an outlet for all of their limited facilities in prison surroundings. From a therapeutic view, the important thing is to find and to concentrate all corrective efforts on the relatively small percentage who are complete human beings capable of assuming the responsibilities of free citizens.

2. …the greatest threat to prison order always lies in the small group of violently unstable men, usually at least mildly paranoid, which every prison holds. It is equally clear that convicts of this sort respond to specific kinds of treatment in a quite predictable way. They will respect strict discipline and not much else. And with absolute dependability they will interpret kindliness or a softening of discipline as a sign of weakness to be exploited. Obviously, then, the first requirement of prison management is to curb this element–vigorously, using whatever means are necessary.

3. But in a general, all-purpose prison, this isn’t as easy as it sounds. The disciplinary standard of any prison has to be geared to the requirements imposed by the most troublesome element in the total group–and one man’s discipline, after all, is another man’s repression. It is obviously neither just nor wise, from a morale or security view, to impose on tractable prisoners the relatively severe disciplinary measures necessary to whittle the paranoiacs down to size. It doesn’t seem enough, then, merely to suppress the style-setters of anarchy. As soon as they are identified they should be shipped off, bag and baggage, delusions and pretensions, to a separate, maximum-discipline institution. And if no such institution exists–as in the case of all one-prison states–it should be provided.

4. This would mean that the old technique of inmate classification would have to be relied on–but with a difference. Maximum-discipline prisons have always existed, but they are regarded as a special preserve for escape risks and “bad men” who for security reasons need closer watching. It is a perfectly safe bet that there are several prison wardens in the nation today who recognize (perhaps belatedly) that it is less disastrous that an occasional convict should escape, if it comes to that, than that his prison should go up in flames at the hands of a flock of bobby-soxers. And the danger signs are easy to spot. It is the convict who swaggers in his walk, who shoulders a guard out of his path, who makes a theatrical production of his contempt for authority and not the convict who gets caught with a pair of bar-spreaders in his mattress, who is the real threat to prison security.

…an uprising needn’t have any element of good faith or good sense about it. Too often it hasn’t had. The goal of sensible convicts, after all, is to get out of prison, not to run one.