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SHUT IT DOWN!



Last Updated: 6/11/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 18
Sign: Libra

City: NEW ORLEANS
State: Louisiana
Country: US
Signup Date: 10/9/2007

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Sunday, June 07, 2009 

Lawsuit says juvenile jail inhumane, "grossly unsanitary"

06:24 PM CDT on Thursday, June 4, 2009
Katie Moore / Eyewitness News

kmoore@wwltv.com

NEW ORLEANS – A federal, class-action lawsuit against the city of New Orleans alleging inhumane conditions at the city's juvenile jail is moving forward with a judge setting a deadline for the two sides to reach an agreement.
..
Video: Watch the Story
Meantime, the group that filed the suit alleges conditions are still inhumane for juveniles being housed at the jail, called the Youth Study Center.The Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana filed the suit in December 2007, alleging juvenile inmates were locked up 20 hours a day in "grossly unsanitary" conditions.Speaking at a press conference outside Federal Court Thursday, 17-year-old Jerome Walker talked about his time as a former inmate at the Youth Study Center.“You have to take cold showers four at a time. The first day is automatic lockdown. The guards lock you down for no reason. Your last meal is at 4 p.m. So, everybody is hungry at night,” Walker said.  “Jerome was in the Youth Study Center a year ago. But from reports that we continue to receive of children that are currently in the facility, conditions have not substantively improved,” said Juvenile Justice Project Executive Director Dana Kaplan.JJPL alleges there are no mental health services at the center, that inmates are often denied necessary medication, and that they're still locked down much of the day.The city agreed to mediate JJPL's lawsuit through the court. Thursday's hearing established that national experts will research the center and make recommendations to improve it.“By agreeing to mediate, the city certainly does not admit that those conditions exist or that we've done anything wrong,” said Nolan Lambert, chief deputy city attorney for New Orleans.“What we've agreed to do is mediate it, meet with the expert, consider the issues that the plaintiff has brought forth and see if there's a middle ground we could reach to terminate the litigation,” Lambert said.JJPL remained skeptical that the city will implement any recommendations.They said the same experts made an array of recommendations two years ago, but that nothing changed. It’s a charge the city denies.“That's not true,” Lambert said.“If the city is going to take seriously the process of settling this lawsuit and take seriously the process of improving its public safety system, they're going to have to recognize that there are fundamental problems in that facility,” said Kaplan.U.S. District Court Judge Ivan Lamelle said if the two sides don’t work out a mediation plan by Aug. 20, he'll set a trial date for the lawsuit against the city to move forward.The city renovated part of the facility after it flooded during Katrina, and according to the city's recovery website, FEMA has obligated nearly $20 million dollars to build a new one. But the project isn't slated to begin construction until 2010.

For the original article and video of the press conference, go to WWLTV by clicking here.
Thursday, June 04, 2009 
Hi my name is Jerome Walker, I am a member of Young Adults Striving for Success A.K.A. YASS.  I am here to speak about why YSC should be closed, it should be closed because it is not a place anyone should be: it’s inhumane. Its inhumane, some people have bumps from insects, people have to take cold showers four at a time, first day on automatic lock down, guards put you on lock down for no reason, last meal at 4pm so everyone is hungry all night, we got spoiled milk a lot, if people were allergic to food they didn’t eat.
 
One day, while I was incarcerated at YSC I was in my cell bored so I decided to start sliding in my socks. It was fun because it was the only thing that kept me occupied. So I kept sliding so they came in the cell and asked for my socks. I gave them my socks so I sat down bored and then I started sliding on my pants. They were looking at me through the window and they opened the door and then one of the guards told me to take my pants off. I said no. So then they called for back-up, and then 2 more guards came and they told me to take my pants off again. I told them no, then one guard threw me on the bed and started choking me. I was trying to fight him off and the other two came, one punched me in my nose, while the other took off my pants. When they left, my nose was bleeding. I wiped it with a towel, and they came back and took the towel to keep the evidence.
 
After I left YSC, I was fortunate to attend the Evening Reporting Center. During that time I was able to strive at the Evening Reporting Center. At the Evening Reporting Center they helped me with homework, we ate a good dinner, we had group, and then we did something fun. It kept me busy and off the streets. After my time at the Evening Reporting Center was done I kept going to the program.  In New Orleans, we need to rethink how we treat young people and send them to alternatives like the ERC instead of sending them to youth jails.
 
Thursday, June 04, 2009 
Hi my name is Corey and I'm a member of Young Adults Striving For Success. In YSC youth are treated wrongly.They are subjected to inhuman conditions. If a child that does a crime in the City of New Orleans or the State of Louisiana they should be treated like a human not like a dog. Children have rights like everybody else.

In the last three weeks there have been reports of youth being hit in the face with a belt and a buckle by the staff. Also, youth have been reported to have serious wounds that were not treated. Two girls were pregnant and did not receive the care they needed. Some of these kids were at YSC just for missing school or having no other place to go. Do you think that's right for those kids to be treated like that? These guards stay working and they are not put in jail. What kindof city do we live in? It likes throwing away helpful people for the city. The child that you are throwing away could make New Orleans a nice place to stay. What's going to happen to this city future if we give up on our youth?
Wednesday, June 03, 2009 
PRESS CONFERENCE
REGARDING ONGOING PROBLEMS AT
THE YOUTH STUDY CENTER (YSC)
NEW ORLEANS YOUTH DETENTION FACILITY
 for more info please call: 504-522-5437
 
Please Join Us Tomorrow
Thursday, 6/4 at 1pm
in front of the Federal Court Building:
U.S. District Court
500 Poydras Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
  
THE VIOLENCE AND MEDICAL NEGLECT OF OUR YOUTH CONTINUE  AT THE YOUTH STUDY CENTER.
Independent investigators found potentially life-threatening conditions in direct violation of safety regulations including locked fire doors with no available keys, children with serious medical conditions denied medication and lack of medical health services to suicidal youth. In the last 3 weeks alone reports include:
- children beaten by guards including hits to the face with belt buckles 
- girl taken to hospital was prevented from contacting parents and they were also not notified
- at least two suicide attempts  
 
A CRITICAL EVENT - FAIRNESS HEARING BETWEEN JJPL and the CITY
Judge Lemelle will be presiding over the fairness hearing in the class action lawsuit JJPL filed against the city for unconstitutional conditions of confinement in YSC, towards negotiating a settlement process between JJPL and the City of New Orleans.
 
 
Thursday, February 05, 2009 
Lawsuit on behalf of juveniles detained at Youth Study Center given class action status

by Katy Reckdahl, The Times-Picayune ....




Thursday February 05, 2009, 5:15 AM....


A federal judge ruled Wednesday that a lawsuit brought on behalf of juveniles detained in the city of New Orleans' Youth Study Center should be certified as a class action. ....
In December 2007, the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana sued the city over the center, which has been plagued with escapes and reports of poor conditions, including 21-hour daily lockdowns, inadequate education and shoddy medical and mental health care. ....
The class approved by U.S. District Judge Ivan Lemelle could potentially include about 400 young people who have rotated through the Gentilly facility since the suit was filed, along with anyone held there in the future. The plaintiffs are not seeking damages but are asking for correction of the facility's problems. ....
The merits of each issue will be argued at trial, expected to be set for June. ....
The city has not decided whether to appeal the judge's decision, said Assistant City Attorney Franz Zibilich, who argued unsuccessfully that the lawsuit's claims would be moot once the city builds a new facility with $16 million from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. ....
In his oral decision, Lemelle sided with the plaintiffs. "Some issues would survive even with a state-of-the-art building," he said, including insufficient medical and mental health care, lack of access to courts and excessive use of isolation. ....
The decision was applauded by one teenager in the courtroom. One of the case's named plaintiffs, called "R.J." in court records, spent 21 days last summer in the center, which holds arrested young people until they face trial. ....
"I'll never forget it," he said in an interview, recalling how he had frantically banged on the door of his cell, pleading for his medicine, while a staff member stood 10 feet away and ignored him. ....
The facility and its management have long been controversial. On Monday, Mayor Ray Nagin vetoed a City Council ordinance that prohibited his administration from spending any FEMA construction money on the juvenile jail project without first getting approval for the plans from the council's Criminal Justice Committee. The council is slated to vote today on whether to override the veto. ....
Thursday, February 05, 2009 
New Orleans City Council overrides Mayor Ray Nagin's veto, forces administration to bring plans for youth detention center before council committee
by David Hammer, The Times-Picayune....



Thursday February 05, 2009, 12:24 PM....



The New Orleans City Council voted today to override Mayor Ray Nagin's veto and push forward an ordinance that would force the mayor's administration to bring plans for a new youth detention center to a council committee before the money can be spent.....

The ordinance, which passed last month 5-0, says the administration cannot spend any of the $16 million designated by FEMA for a new Youth Study Center without the approval of the council's Criminal Justice Committee.....

The mayor vetoed the ordinance claiming it violated the separation of powers. He has Councilwoman Cynthia Willard-Lewis' suppport. She was absent for the council meeting when the ordinance passed and said today she is concerned it would delay the process of replacing the Youth Study Center that was heavily damaged by Hurricane Katrina.....

But her colleagues stuck to their guns. They voted 6-1 to override the veto.....

Bill Chrisman, the city's director of capital projects, said the $16 million in FEMA money will not be enough to build a new center according to best practices. He estimates it would require $30 million.....

The drive to override the veto was spearheaded by Councilwoman Shelley Midura and hinged on the support of Councilman James Carter, who is the chairman of the Criminal Justice Committee.....

For a moment, Carter appeared as if he were willing to block the veto override. Questions were raised as to whether the ordinance was needed if the Nagin administration promised to bring in national experts to ensure the facilities are built following best practices. But Councilwoman Stacy Head said the administration couldn't be trusted to follow through on promises without the council's checks and balances ensured.....

Carter then said he would make sure not to hold up the process by calling a meeting whenever Chrisman's team was ready to present plans.....

But Willard-Lewis continued to argue that the council should leave the mayor's staff alone to get the work done.....

"All the lacks in that center are the lacks of this body, in not moving forward," said a disappointed Willard-Lewis.....

Friday, January 30, 2009 
JOIN US FEBRUARY 4th, 2009


PLEASE HELP US PACK THE COURT ROOM FOR THIS INCREDIBLY IMPORTANT EVENT!

Youth Study Center Class Certification Hearing:
Wednesday - February 4th, 2009 @ 9am

What: This hearing will give us a chance to represent and fight for ALL YOUTH detained inhumanely at the Youth Study Center since December 2007. The presiding Judge will be Honorable Ivan L.R. Lemelle in Courtroom C-501.

When: Wednesday - February 4th, 2009 @ 9am


Where: U.S. District Court
500 Poydras Street
Courtroom C-501
New Orleans, LA 70130

Contact Bridgette at 504-522-5437 x 246 for more info.


-------------------------------------

JOIN US FEBRUARY 7th, 2009

COME OUT & FIGHT FOR YOUTH JUSTICE!

"The Jericho Walk: Let's bring the walls down and the sound the horns!!"

~ by Campaign to Close Youth Study


"The Jericho Walk"
Saturday - February 7th, 2009 @ NOON

IT'S BEEN OVER A YEAR SINCE WE TOOK ACTION AGAINST THE CITY TO FIGHT FOR THE RIGHTS OF OUR YOUTH AND THE HORRIBLE CONDITIONS AT THE YOUTH STUDY CENTER (YSC).

IT'S BEEN OVER 30 YEARS OF HORRIFIC CONDITIONS UNDER THE SAME MANAGEMENT OF YSC.

IT'S TIME FOR A CHANGE AND WE DEMAND IT NOW.

What: Please come join us for a walk to fight for youth justice. At noon we will gather together at the corner of Milton and Davey to walk around the inhumane Youth Study Center seven times. Let the city know it's time to replace the old YSC with a better managed facility, qualified staff, effective education, and adequate medical and mental health services.

When: February 7th, 2009 @ NOON
Where: Corner of Milton and Davey
Saturday, January 24, 2009 
From Times Picayune:

Council requires its OK on juvenile jail

In a move that could trigger Mayor Ray Nagin's second veto in as many months, the New Orleans City Council passed an ordinance Thursday prohibiting Nagin's administration from building a new Youth Study Center until a council committee approves the plans.

Administration officials warned that the measure could halt design work on a badly needed new detention center for troubled young people, but the council passed it 5-0, with Councilwomen Cynthia Hedge-Morrell and Cynthia Willard-Lewis absent.

The measure, introduced by Councilwoman Shelley Midura, reflects council members' fear that the administration intends to draw up plans for a new study center, replacing one severely damaged by Hurricane Katrina, without consulting with national experts on youth detention or even with Juvenile Court officials.

Deputy Chief Administrative Officer Cynthia Sylvain-Lear promised the council that she and other administration officials will meet with all interested "stakeholders" before making decisions on the new center's design, but Midura said the council has found time after time that it cannot rely on such administration assurances.

The ordinance says the administration can't spend any of the $16 million money designated for the youth center without getting approval for the plans from the council's Criminal Justice Committee.

The council would need five votes to override a Nagin veto, as the council last month overrode his vetoes of several items in the 2009 city budget. The two sides later resolved their disagreements on the budget.

Nagin also might simply declare that he considers the new restriction illegal and therefore will ignore it, as he threatened to do with some of the provisions in the original budget.

The Youth Study Center, where juveniles accused of serious or repeated crimes live while awaiting trial, has long been a focus of controversy.

The Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana filed a federal lawsuit a year ago alleging squalid conditions at the facility, and it said last month that little has changed since then.

Juveniles held at the center last summer described sitting in cells for more than 20 hours a day, having little constructive contact with staff members, receiving haphazard education, and getting inadequate meals that sometimes included spoiled milk.

Attorneys from the Juvenile Justice Project said in December that the city has failed to work with national experts, specifically the Annie E. Casey Foundation's Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative, to improve conditions at the center.

This initiative has helped the Juvenile Court judges develop a risk-assessment tool that proponents said ensures that only children who really need to be locked up are held at the center.

Ilona Picou, who coordinates the initiative as the head of community projects for Juvenile Court, told the council again Thursday that the administration has made no efforts to involve the Casey Foundation or other interested outsiders in making decisions about the center.

Sylvain-Lear said the administration has chosen an architect but is not yet ready to bring in outside stakeholders.

She said the administration is eager to use "best practices" in designing a new center, but she bristled when Midura said conditions at the center were "abominable for years" and that it took a lawsuit to get the administration to take action.

Midura's ordinance was intended to ensure that the Criminal Justice Committee will get a chance to review the completed design for the new center before the architects are authorized to create construction documents.

However, Sylvain-Lear and Capital Projects Administrator William Chrisman said the language is so broad that it could require the administration to go before the committee every time it wants to spend a single dollar on the project. Midura said the language was based on what Chrisman previously said would be acceptable.

click here for full article
Thursday, December 18, 2008 

New Orleans City Council committee could discuss controversial youth jail today

by Laura Maggi, The Times-Picayune
Wednesday December 17, 2008, 6:47 AM

The city-run Youth Study Center, 1100 Milton St., in Gentilly, pictured last December.

A year after advocates for accused juvenile delinquents filed a federal lawsuit alleging unconstitutional conditions at New Orleans' youth detention facility, they say little has been done to improve conditions there.

Attorneys from the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana say they are pushing the lawsuit more aggressively, filing a motion this month to establish the suit as a class-action based on depositions of juveniles held at the Youth Study Center this summer. The juveniles described sitting in cells for more than 20 hours a day, having little constructive contact with staff members, receiving haphazard educations, and getting inadequate meals that sometimes include spoiled milk.

At the same time, these advocates said the city staff that runs the center is missing an opportunity to work with national experts to improve conditions there, specifically declining to work with experts at the Annie E. Casey Foundation's Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative.

This initiative has helped the Orleans Parish Juvenile Court develop a risk-assessment tool that proponents said ensures that only children who really need to be locked up -- a category that includes young people accused of violent crimes or repeat offenders -- are held at the center. It has also sparked the creation of an after-school program that provides an alternative for arrested youths who are found to need some supervision but don't need detention.

The Youth Study Center might be discussed when the City Council's Criminal Justice Committee meets today at 10 a.m. in the Council Chambers at City Hall.

Bart Lubow, who heads the initiative for Casey, said he hasn't heard from any of the city employees who run the Youth Study Center in about a year.

"I really don't have a very clear sense of what the city administration really wants to do around that facility, much less them taking advantage of our offers to help, " Lubow said.

Lawsuit cited

Lesley Eugene, a spokeswoman for the city, acknowledged that officials are not working with Casey or any other organization about conditions at the center. This is because the facility is the subject of a lawsuit, which means city officials can't discuss operations, she said.

But Eugene insisted that Youth Study Center employees are participating in other aspects of the initiative to find alternatives to juvenile detention. She said this has meant that city staff members are continuing to participate in other working groups of the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative.

The city employees do indeed participate in the other working groups, said Ilona Picou, who coordinates the initiative as the head of community projects for Juvenile Court. But Picou said the city is effectively blocking improvement on the one aspect of the juvenile system they directly control: the detention of youth awaiting trial at Juvenile Court.

Within the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative are several working groups, which include members from city agencies like the New Orleans Police Department, public defenders or district attorney's office, that work with community advocates and others to improve various aspects of the juvenile criminal justice system.

The working group on conditions of confinement has been trained to evaluate a youth detention center, offering suggestions and assistance for improvements, Picou said. This could mean helping staff at the Youth Study Center or Department of Human Services, which oversees the facility, obtain more teachers from the school system or develop better record-keeping, she said.

Since the lawsuit was filed by the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana a year ago, Picou said the particular working group dealing with the Youth Study Center has been at a standstill and that members haven't been allowed inside the building.

Dana Kaplan, executive director of the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana, said her organization has offered to work out an agreement with the city to allow the working group to move forward, despite the pending federal lawsuit.

"The fact that we are in litigation is a poor excuse, " Kaplan said.

Conditions described

The depositions taken this fall from juveniles recently held at the center show that conditions have not improved since the justice project filed its lawsuit in December 2007, Kaplan said.

Eugene said she could not respond to any questions about conditions at the Youth Study Center, because of the litigation.

The lawsuit asks for the federal court to issue an injunction to force changes at the detection facility, including providing counseling and education, improved medical treatment and more nutritious meals. In the most recent motion, U.S. Judge Ivan Lemelle is asked to certify that all youth at the center are a class that the justice project can represent in the suit.

Juveniles interviewed by attorneys for the city and justice project in October depositions provided similar accounts of the facility, which flooded during Hurricane Katrina and reopened in the summer of 2006.

They described long periods in "lockdown" when they did something wrong, but also said it was standard practice for them to remain in their cells for 20 hours a day.

Each of the youths -- many of whom spent as much as a month in the facility -- described at most two hours of school a day. Some said they never went to school during their stay.

A few juveniles, named only by their initials in the depositions, described fights that were not immediately stopped by the staff.

"They will wait for about 15 minutes until one kid got blood . . . or a black eye or a busted nose and then they'll decide to go break the fight up, " said D.B. about his monthlong stay this summer.

. . . . . . .

You can access the article here.

Friday, December 12, 2008 

Come tell City Council to Close Youth Study!

When:  Wednesday, December 17th, 10:00am

Where:  City Hall, 1300 Perdido St.

The City Council Criminal Justice Committee is having a special hearing on the problems at Youth Study.  They want us to come tell them why it should be closed.  Come support New Orleans youth and tell them that Youth Study is no place for kids and to SHUT IT DOWN!

For more information, call JJPL at (504) 522-5437.