The 2018 U.S. prison strike was a series of work stoppages and hunger strikes[1] in prisons across the United States that began on August 21 and ended on September 9.[2] The strike was conducted at least in part in response to the April 2018 prison riot at Lee Correctional Institution, which killed seven inmates and was the deadliest prison riot in the U.S. in the past 25 years.[1]
The start and end dates of the strike have symbolic meaning as they were planned to coincide with the 47th anniversary of the death of George Jackson, who was shot in an escape attempt on August 21, 1971, and the Attica Prison riot, which occurred on September 9, 1971.[1]
It was claimed that suspected strike participants and leaders were punished with solitary confinement, removing communication privileges, and prison transfers.[3][4][5]
The prison strike was called for and organized primarily by Jailhouse Lawyers Speak[6][1] and Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee, which is a prisoner-lead section of Industrial Workers of the World.[6] Millions for Prisoners and The People's Consortium[6] are some of the other groups involved.
The following were the demands of the prison strike according to the official page:[6]
Ronald Brooks was transferred from Angola Prison to the David Wade Correctional Center in late June 2018 after he made a pro-strike video.
In late July, Siddique Hassan was reported for five violations of prison rules,[7] including “Rioting, or encouraging others to riot”. This was most likely a way to prevent him from speaking to the media during the strike as he had during the 2016 Prison Strike.
On August 9, the first confirmed strike activity began at the GEO Group prison in response to administration cutting family visits, harassing families, strip searching elder family members, and STIU targeting, harassing, and abusing inmates. Three housing units joined in the work stoppage. In response, New Mexico prison officials put all state prisons on lockdown on August 20 as a preemptive measure.[8]
On August 19, prisoners in the Burnside jail in Nova Scotia, Canada held a protest and released a statement in support of the strike and with their own list of demands.[9]
While most news on strike activity didn't reach the outside on the first day, the strike received widespread attention from numerous news outlets including USA Today,[10] Newsweek[11] and National Public Radio.[12]
At least 200 detained immigrants at the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, Washington engaged in a hunger strike and/or work stoppage, releasing a statement stating that they are "acting with solidarity for all those people who are being detained wrongfully, and stand together to help support all those women who have been separated from their children, and to stop all the family separations happening today for a lot of us are also being separated and we have U.S. citizen children.”[13]
Heriberto Sharky Garcia, incarcerated in Folsom, California, declared a hunger strike.[14]
Two North Carolina prisons joined the national strike with protesting inmates bringing banners made out of sheets into the yard at Hyde Correctional and five people refused work at Correction Enterprises laundry facility outside Asheville between August 19th and 21st.[15] Community supporters & press at Hyde Correctional were barred from entering a public lot.[16]
There were also unconfirmed reports of 11 out of 143 prisons in Florida being affected, although the Florida Department of Corrections claimed that they had no stoppages, protests, or lockdowns related to the strike.[17]
It was claimed by strike participants and their families that suspected strike participants and leaders/organizers were punished with solitary confinement, removing communication privileges, and prison transfers.[3][4][5]