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If you have been following the Hurricane Gustav news (and it’s kind of impossible not to), then you might already know that Ray Nagin, the mayor of New Orleans, issued a statement saying that anyone caught looting will automatically be sent to Angola Prison – do not pass go, do not collect $200. This might not sound like a huge deal, but usually to be sent to Angola (aka “The Farm”) you have to have a sentence of 50 years to life. The word is that the prison isn’t as horrible as it used to be, but when Nagin issued the statement, he added, “God bless you if you go there.” So I’m assuming this is not a threat to be taken lightly. Anyway, in case you don’t know what makes Angola so horrifying (I didn’t before I wrote this), I thought I’d do the Q10 on it today… thanks to Jason English for the idea. And thanks to the Angola Museum for the picture.
1. It’s a working prison, meaning that inmates don’t just sit around and watch T.V. all day. This stems from the 1800s, when inmates worked on constructing a levee. Now, they do lots of agricultural work – the prison sits on 18,000 acres of farm land.
2. Conditions were so abusive and the brutality was so bad that in 1952, 31 prisoners slashed their own Achilles’ tendons to protest. Anyone who has ever cringed during that scene in Kill Bill when The Bride slashes Buck’s Achilles’ tendon with a scalpel knows how horrible that would be – especially doing it to yourself.
3. Of the 5,000-plus inmates, 86 percent are violent offenders and 52 percent are serving life sentences. There are 84 male inmates on death row and one woman.
4. It’s the home of Gruesome Gertie, the house electric chair. It’s not currently used, but it was the main form of capital punishment for 50 years. It was the chair that sent Elmo Patrick Sonnier, the subject of the movie Dead Man Walking, to his death in 1984. It was last used for execution in 1991. It made an appearance in the movie Monster’s Ball. That’s Sister Helen Prejean in Angola to the left, the nun who counseled Sonnier and made their story famous.
5. Horrifyingly, Gruesome Gertie didn’t always work as she should have. In 1946, teenager Willie Francis was to be executed in the chair for killing his employer at a local drugstore. But the prison guard who set the chair up was drunk at the time and didn’t do it right. Once the switch was thrown, Francis apparently screamed, “Take it off! Let me breathe! I’m not dying!” They did, and Francis appealed to the Supreme Court, citing cruel and unusual punishment (among other things). The appeal was rejected, however, and Willie Francis was executed (again) on May 9, 1947. I can’t imagine the horror of going back to the electric chair after the first botched attempt.
6. It’s where two of the Angola 3 were in solitary confinement since from 1972 until March 2008. Robert King Wilkerson, Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace were convicted of stabbing a prison guard to death. “Witnesses” included other inmates who were promised cigarettes and pardon recommendations for testifying. One prisoner repeatedly confessed to the murder over the years, but it’s alleged that prison officials chose to ignore him in favor of putting the Angola 3 in solitary because they were leaders of the prison’s Black Panther movement. Wilkerson was paroled in 2001, but Woodfox and Wallace remained in solitary until recently. Wallace said that for years, he would attend biweekly “hearings” to determine whether his behavior was good enough to spring him from solitary, but when he got to the room, he was simply handed a piece of paper saying that he was denied. He never got a chance to speak.
7. Musicians have been telling the tale of Angola’s horrors for years. Lead Belly, Freddy Fender, Robert Pete Williams, Aaron and Charles Neville, James Booker and rapper Juvenile are just a handful of people who have mentioned Angola in their works. Lead Belly actually served time in Angola from 1930 to 1934 for attempted homicide, Freddy Fender served about three years for marijuana possession, and James Booker spent six months at The Farm for heroin possession.
8. It sounds very Austin Powers – sharks with frickin’ laser beams – but Warden Burl Cain uses wolves and bears to help guard the grounds. Although the bears are more of a bonus than a planned thing: when it was discovered that a 400+ pound black bear was living on prison grounds, Cain viewed it as a plus. “I love that bear being right where it is,” he said. “I tell you what, none of our inmates are going to try to get out after dark and wander around when they might run into a big old bear. It’s like having another guard at no cost to the taxpayer.” It’s probably not the only bear, though – prison officials think they might have up to ten living at The Farm. As for the wolves, Paste magazine reported in 2003 that the prison had recently acquired wolves to act as guard dogs. “You’re more afraid of a wolf than you are of dogs,” Cain said, “so if I have a wolf that’ll bite, then the wolf will never have to bite anybody, because nobody will want to be challenged by the wolf.”
9. Prisoners make their own coffins. At least, they could be. A coffin-making factory on the grounds keeps inmates busy, but it serves a purpose as well: prisoners who die and are not claimed by anyone are buried in them. This is a step up from the cardboard boxes they used to use for burials. That practice had to be stopped when a corpse fell through the bottom of the box.
10. There’s not much mercy for those who act out. When one inmate got unruly at his trial in 2002, officers dealt with the problem by taping his mouth shut. Well, his whole head, almost. Paste quotes the the Baton Rouge newspaper The Advocate: “State Penitentiary security officerswrapped the bottom half of his face and all of his neck with duct tape, then wrapped a circle of tape under his jaw and over the top of his forehead.”
However, Angola also has some things other prisons don’t: its own radio station (“The Incarceration Station”) and magazine produced by inmates, the annual Angola Prison Rodeo and a four-year bible college.
what’s the story behind the one woman inmate? where does she live in the prision? what did she do to get in there? why is she the only one?
posted by kat on 9-2-2008 at 3:32 pm
I’m convinced. No looting for me this storm.
Well done, Stacy!
posted by Jason English on 9-2-2008 at 3:32 pm
One interesting thing that’s rarely mentioned is the toll an environment such as this takes on the guards, not just the inmates. My boyfriend works as a detention officer at a prison farm (albeit a lower-security, non-violent offense farm) and he is constantly stressed by the responsibilities of his job. He is never more stressed as when he has to take inmates out to do community service. He has to watch for a number of things, sometimes all by himself: that no one escapes, that no one gets hurt, that he isn’t overtaken by the prisoners, that the prisoners are doing their assigned duties, that people on the street don’t provoke the inmates…the list goes on. He is constantly on-call in case another guard gets hurt.
I’m sure some of the practices at Angola are taken to unnecessary extremes, but these guards are in danger every single minute they are on duty.
posted by alice on 9-2-2008 at 3:48 pm
Wow, I never expected to know anyone in this article . . . luckily not one of the inmates! Sr. Helen Prejean came to my university to give a talk and answer questions on her writings and her time with Angola prisoners. I was amazed at her heart and tenaciousness. She’s a lovely woman.
posted by nutmeag on 9-2-2008 at 4:30 pm
I went to high school in Baton Rouge. While a sophmore (1989!) we were taken on a field trip to Angola. Our tour was very brief and was mostly a lecture from the warden and an inmate. Although brief, it was enough to send me on the right path.
posted by ames on 9-2-2008 at 4:32 pm
yikes, remind me not to go there. sounds like a bit of a rough place.
good post!
posted by BPO on 9-3-2008 at 8:48 am
Great post! Fascinating subject…
posted by Anthea on 9-3-2008 at 3:24 pm
The Angola prison hosts a rodeo, several times each year. The prisoners are the competitors.
angolarodeo dot com
posted by Chad Cloman on 9-4-2008 at 12:58 am
#1 should read: It’s a prison, dummy.
posted by luke on 9-9-2008 at 3:58 pm
Very well written, Stacy !!! And, an interesting subject. I felt compelled to read the whole article after your first sentance. I live in Illinois, and I haven’t played Monopoly in probably 20 years; But when Mayor Nagin made the statement informing potential looters of their impending doom of being shipped “directly to Angola Prison”, a little voice inside my head said “do not pass go, do not collect $200″. LOL !!!!!!! :)
posted by Andy on 9-9-2008 at 6:20 pm
This is the model all prison should follow, don’t feel a bit bad for them.
posted by Jay on 9-12-2008 at 9:49 pm
Though I’m glad for the effort, several statements are incorrect.
1. The inmates that cut their achilles did so in the early 30s not the 50s.
2. Inmates were leased as early as the 1840s when they were mostly White and housed in the “Fortress” in Baton Rouge.
3. After the Civil War they were then moved into an agricultural setting to offset the lost free Black labor in Louisiana.
4. About 80% of inmates are serving life sentences.
5. The electric chair’s name is “Old Sparky.”
6. The two left of the Angola 3 were only moved out of solitary temporarily.
7. The wolves are more for intimidation than anything else. They are bread with attack dogs to make a breed unique to Angola.
posted by Daniel on 9-29-2008 at 7:49 pm