8 April 2013

41 years on, Albert’s conviction overturned

Albert Woodfox
After four decades, it's long overdue. For Albert’s yesterday, his today and his tomorrow.

Albert was convicted in 1973 of the murder of prison officer Brent Miller in Louisiana State Penitentiary (known as ‘Angola’ Prison), in a case which raises serious legal and human rights concerns. Albert's case has been contested and overruled in the past, and this year it was once again overturned, this time on the grounds of racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson at his trial.


Albert Woodfox  
Albert Woodfox, 2010
Today will be much the same as yesterday for Albert Woodfox. And yesterday will have been much the same as thousands of days before that.
At least 23 hours of Albert’s day will be spent alone, in a cell measuring 2 x 3 metres. For the most part of 41 years, since he was convicted of murdering a Louisiana prison guard, Albert has been kept in isolation. State prison authorities have continuously broken their own rules to keep Albert alone, in his cramped cell – seemingly indefinitely.

Albert’s conditions: solitary – what’s in a name?

‘Contrary to numerous reports, this is not solitary confinement’ claims Buddy Caldwell, Attorney General for Louisiana, in an email I received from him the other day. If you’ve taken action for Albert, the Attorney General may have emailed you too. More on that later.
‘There is no universally agreed upon definition of solitary confinement’ acknowledges the UN Special Rapporteur on torture. But in his last report on the condition, he described it as ‘the physical isolation of individuals who are confined to their cells for 22 to 24 hours a day.’ Albert’s locked in for at least 23 hours every day.
‘Meaningful contact with other people is typically reduced to a minimum. The reduction in stimuli is not only quantitative but also qualitative. The available stimuli and the occasional social contacts are seldom freely chosen, generally monotonous, and often not empathetic.’ - Interim report of the Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights Council on torture 2011
‘Prolonged solitary confinement’ he describes as a period of solitary lasting more than fifteen days; 'at that point… some of the harmful psychological effects of isolation can become irreversible’. Such conditions amount to torture, according to the UN. Four decades of solitary is hard to imagine, but that’s Albert’s experience (and counting, day by day).
Solitary is a contentious term – and a damning one (the Special Rapporteur on torture just last week called for an investigation into its use across the Americas). In his email to me, Buddy Caldwell insists that Albert is being held in ‘protected cell units known as CCR [Closed Cell Restriction]. These units were designed to protect inmates as well as correctional officers’. CCR is 23 hours of isolation in a 2 x 3 metre cell. Despite over 150 reviews of Albert’s prison conditions, Louisiana has continuously opted to keep him in CCR, for reasons that violate their own policies.
Whatever you call the conditions that Albert has spent the last four decades in, there is no disputing that they are cruel, inhuman and degrading. Albert is 66. Louisiana cannot undo 41 years of mental and physical pain. But the state can do what is right, and allow him to access the justice that he’s owed.

41 years on, Albert’s conviction overturned

Albert was convicted in 1973 of the murder of prison officer Brent Miller in Louisiana State Penitentiary (known as ‘Angola’ Prison), in a case which raises serious legal and human rights concerns. Albert's case has been contested and overruled in the past, and this year it was once again overturned, this time on the grounds of racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson at his trial.
Four decades after he was first incarcerated, Albert could be retried.
There are many troubling aspects to the 1973 trial that convicted him, not least
  • A lack of physical evidence to incriminate Albert
  • The fact that he did not have access to adequate legal counsel
  • Misconduct by the prosecution
  • The state lost potentially exculpatory evidence.
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