Rattling the Bars: Judge rules California prison must close

Published: Sept. 26, 2022, 4:40 p.m.

Read the transcript of this podcast: https://therealnews.com/judge-rules-california-prison-must-close

Visiting Lassen County Judge Robert F. Moody ruled against the town of Susanville on Sept. 8 in a lawsuit which aimed to stop California Correctional Center (CCC) from closing. Judge Moody\u2019s ruling lifts the preliminary injunction and allows the state to move forward with plans for closure effectively immediately.

On Sept. 2, the state requested an expedited ruling to dissolve the lawsuit, arguing that the court\u2019s stalling tactics were a \u201cdisregard of clear law\u201d which amounted to \u201can abuse of the court\u2019s discretion.\u201d The ruling marks the end of the town\u2019s year-long fight to keep CCC\u2013\u2013a six-decade-old facility requiring $503 million in repairs\u2013\u2013open indefinitely. Governor Newsom\u2019s 2022-2023 Enacted Budget mandates that CCC must close by June 30, 2023.
The case has been drawn out, contentious and has attracted national media attention. In May, people incarcerated in CCC filed an amicus brief demanding the process be expedited, which was rejected by the judge. Incarcerated organizers released a public statement on Tuesday, August 23rd which decried the process and asked the court to do \u201cthe right thing,\u201d stating it was time to \u201cmove on\u201d from this case and shut the prison down. Advocates see the decision in this case as a decisive victory.

Brian Kaneda is the Deputy Director for CURB, Californians United For A Responsible Budget and a leader of the statewide campaign to Close California Prisons. He is a founding chapter member of California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP) Los Angeles and has spent the past decade monitoring and challenging the incarceration crisis and advocating for the rights of incarcerated people.

Shakeer Rahman is an attorney and organizer with the Los Angeles Community Action Network and Stop LAPD Spying Coalition. He represented Timothy Peoples, Duane Palm, and Patrick Noel Everett in their effort to bring the perspective of prisoners inside the California Correctional Center into the City of Susanville's lawsuit to halt the prison's closure.

General Dogon is an organizer with the Los Angeles Community Action Network. He previously served 27 years in the California prison system.

Studio/Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

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