Category Archives: Uncategorized

Expose: Jail falsifies medical records

JUST has for years laid evidence in front of the County, the State Commission on Correction, the Health and Correction Committees of the State Assembly, the Attorney General of New York, and Disability Rights of New York.  The C0unty has lost lawsuits over its medical care.  The inhuman treatment and deaths continue.  Here is yet more evidence of mistreatment and misrule: a lawsuit by former nurses at the jail, testiying they were forced to file false medical reports–and fired when they refused to do it.
The complaint and press release are here:4-24-18 Press Release 4-24-18 Complaint-ECF
News coverage:

Former CMC nurses say jobs, licenses threatened if they didn’t falsify records

Mariame Kaba in Binghamton on Criminalizing Youth April 17th

On Tuesday April 17th at 4:30pm the legendary Chicago activist and scholar Mariame Kaba will be speaking at the Broome County Library, 185 Court Street, on

Interrupting the Criminalization of Youth of Color Through Creating Restorative Communities

Free and open to the public. Mariame Kaba is the founder and director of Project NIA, a grassroots organization with a vision to end youth incarceration, and has founded multiple organizations and projects over the years including the Chicago Freedom School, the Chicago Taskforce on Violence against Girls and Young Women, the Chicago Alliance to Free Marissa Alexander and the Rogers Park Young Women’s Action Team (YWAT) among others.

Women have no privacy in the BC Jail

Women have no privacy in Broome County jail

Picture this: The new female pod at our Broome County jail, which was paid for under the most recent $5.7 million expansion, is a giant former gymnasium where everything you do takes place in the same room. Women sleep in bunks along the walls, eat in the middle of the room at tables just several …

League of Women Voters and JUST vs Mass Incarceration

League of Women Voters team up to help end Mass Incarceration

WICZ

Unfortunately, without alternatives we’re going to see people who really shouldn’t be at the jail, at the jail,” said Susan Ruff, President of the League of Women Voters of Broome and Tioga. Local officials have estimated, 80-85% of those in Broome County Jail suffer from addiction problems. Another …

JUST at Beyond the Bars Conference

On Sunday March 4, 2018, members of JUST made presentations at the Beyond the Bars Conference in New York City in two workshops: 1) What Incarceration Does to People: Combating Pre- and Post-Incarceration Trauma: presentations by Tinamarie Gunther and Josh Price, and 2) Fighting Jails Beyond NYC: Lessons from Grassroots Struggles in Broome, Cortland, and Tompkins Counties: presentations by Andrew Pragacz, Bill Martin, Kevin Revier, Joey Cardamone, Jack Norton, Bobby Black

Fox 40 on TruthPharm and JUST on jails & substance use disorders

Coverage of January 15th event in Binghamton linking substance use disorders and over-incarceration. Thanks to Alexis, Andy, Kevin, and all the others who tabled, attended, talked to the press.

http://www.wicz.com/story/37268578/truth-pharm-incarceration-for-drug-offenses-increases-overdoses

Truth Pharm: “Incarceration for Drug Offenses Increases Overdoses”

Posted: Jan 15, 2018 2:53 PM EST Updated: Jan 15, 2018 10:53 PM EST

By AJ Bush

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. –

Truth Pharm organizers hosted members from the local organization JUST (Justice and Unity for the Southern Tier), Monday, discussing the increasing rates of jail incarceration for drug offenses, and how it adversely affects the ‘War on Drugs.’

Alexis Pleus, Executive Director of Truth Pharm, welcomed three guest speakers to talk to event-goers about the rising number of drug-related offenders in jails, or prisons, and the reverse-effects it actually creates. According to one JUST speaker, Kevin Revier, although removing someone that committed a drug crime from society may have an immediate effect on the public, by placing that person in a more toxic environment, like jail, it puts them at risk.

“Incarceration does not address drug-related issues in the community: indeed, it often creates more,” said Kevin Revier.

According to the National Association of Drug Court Professionals (NADCP), the United States’ incarceration rate has exploded beyond its capacity. 1 in every 100 U.S. citizens is now confined in jail or prison, most are detained for drug abuse problems.

One statistic the Truth Pharm event addressed, nearly 80% of those incarcerated abused drugs and/or alcohol, and almost 50% of those inmates are clinical addicts. It’s a troubling fact, according to Alexis Pleus.

“This is an extremely important and often misunderstood topic. We can’t arrest our way out of the [opioid epidemic]. Our criminal justice system is not a corrective system,” said Alexis Pleus.

One JUST member claims the Broome County Jail stands out as a serious problem, “Broome County has the distinction of having the highest amount of incarceration rates of any county in New York State,” said Andrew Pragacz. Pragacz said he hopes the public will some day understand that more is needed to help people struggling with addiction, and just “throwing someone in jail” doesn’t teach them how to stay a contributing member of society.

“Many of the people inside of the jail have substance abuse disorders, they have mental health problems. Those problems are not going to be solved by incarceration,” said Pragacz.

JUST and Truth Pharm have a few suggestions they hope will someday be instituted within the criminal justice system. Alexis Pleus hopes that incarcerated individuals will be given treatment options for after-care possibilities, teaching drug users the tools they need to get clean and stay clean.

“If we are going to address addiction issues we actually need to address them with treatment and make treatment readily available,” said Pleus.

Kevin Revier and Andrew Pragacz believe a reformation of jail institutions is necessary to change addictions and overdose deaths. They said after collecting first-hand accounts from people that have gone through the penal system, many individuals find themselves in a worse situation then when they found themselves entering jail.

“If someone incarcerated gets released after being isolated, they’re tolerance has dropped and they pick right back up where they left off. Now they’re at risk of overdose death,” said Revier.

And if anything shows incarceration isn’t the proper way to promote a lifestyle devoid of drug use, Andrew Pragacz feels the staggering number of those that return to drugs, 95%, proves his resolve.

“What do you think is going to happen when people get out and can’t find a job, don’t have access to appropriate services? They go to the place [Broome] put money in the most over the last 40 years. Jails,” said Pragacz.

Three major steps JUST and Truth Pharm believe must take place in order to reduce jail population is; releasing 75% of those in Broome County Jail that are un-convicted of a crime, allow those incarcerated to have access to their prescribed medications (including Suboxone) within daily regulations, and refrain the use of solitary confinement for young, elderly, or individuals clinically proven to have mental or physical illnesses.

According to Drug Policy Alliance, since the inception of the War on Drugs in 1971, American taxpayers have dished out over $1 trillion dollars. And with the U.S. spending $50+ billion dollars yearly, Truth Pharm and JUST hope something changes…soon.

 

 

Memorial: Ty Tumminia

On November 5, 2017, Broome County lost one of its most committed and loved activists, Ty Tumminia.  Ty was an important and very active JUST member, in addition to his work in many community organizations.  A memorial was held at the Bundy Museum on Sunday November 12th. The program and one of Tumminia’s research notes, on gentrification in Binghamton, are attached here.  Ty program singles  Tumminia Gentrification Binghamton