From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Returnees Who’ve Served Decades in Prison Need Help
Date October 30, 2022 12:00 AM
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[With virtually nothing but the clothes on their backs, many
inmates are placed on a bus, given $50, known as ‘gate money,’ and
if they’re lucky, they may be told to have a nice life. ]
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RETURNEES WHO’VE SERVED DECADES IN PRISON NEED HELP  
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Roach Brown
October 19, 2022
The Washington Informer
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_ With virtually nothing but the clothes on their backs, many inmates
are placed on a bus, given $50, known as ‘gate money,’ and if
they’re lucky, they may be told to have a nice life.  _

, StockPhoto/NNPA

 

A growing crisis sweeping the country involving men and women released
from prison after serving three, four, or possibly five decades behind
bars needs to be addressed. The unrelenting determination to be free
can quickly become a nightmare of unexpected and deadly consequences
when the prison doors close behind them.

Kevin Fythe, 52, was released from prison after serving 28 years last
January. He had severe mental and physical disabilities that prevented
him from speaking, and he was confined to a wheelchair. Despite his
disabilities, Flythe reportedly was placed on a bus headed to D.C.,
where his family anxiously waited to reunite with him. In August,
Fythe’s story was covered by The Washington Post, detailing his last
known location and reporting that he had never been found seven months
later.

Unfortunately, this is not an isolated case.

With virtually nothing but the clothes on their backs, many inmates
are placed on a bus, given $50, known as ‘gate money,’ and if
they’re lucky, they may be told to have a nice life. 

For so many, getting home is only one of the many challenges these now
older men and women must face. Moreover, they are returning to a world
that’s changed technologically in every way, and some will begin to
experience it fast.

Returning citizens don’t always know how to negotiate basic societal
functions, such as putting on a seat belt. I recall picking up an
older guy, and once in my car, I told him to put on his seatbelt. He
asked, “What’s a seat belt?” I showed him how to put the seat
belt on.

When I looked back at him, he had the strap wrapped around his neck. I
told him, “You are going to kill yourself!” I asked another person
why hadn’t he called me. He said, “Roach, I walked and walked and
couldn’t find a phone booth.” One individual got on the bus and
asked for a transfer. The bus driver laughed at him and said, “Where
have you been, Mister? We haven’t given out transfers in decades.”
And another person, after serving 50 years in prison, was asked,
“What are your employment prospects?” He was 80 years old, never
had a job, failing health, and had no family or income. He’s paid
his debt to society, and now he has to fight his biggest fight, trying
to survive and live out his remaining years in a modicum of dignity
and peace.

The list is long of tools that nearly control every aspect of our
daily living, things formerly incarcerated people have to relearn to
participate fully in society.  Adjusting to unknown situations
creates frustrations, irritations, and feelings of isolation. Many
feel ignorant, as they are being laughed at or stared at.

Additionally, very few have any surviving family. If they have
surviving relatives, they can’t live in the same home if someone has
a criminal record. The last alternative is to go to a shelter.

How can we reduce the fears of decades-long incarceration upon reentry
into society? If the military recognizes the need for PSTD counseling
after tours of duty in combat zones, why can’t men and women
who’ve experienced decades of incarceration in violent environments
also receive services?

Releasing them without any services to address their “PISS” (Post
Incarceration Stress Syndrome) is akin to releasing them in downtown
Hong Kong, leaving them on the sidewalk, and telling them to figure it
out and have a nice life.  Where do you go for help? What do you do?

When neighborhoods and entire communities have changed, their roots
are destroyed. They’re lost, helpless and homeless in the city they
were born and raised in. Countless cultural, social, economic,
technological, and psychological hurdles must be overcome. Then
there’s the bureaucracy of red tape, which has contributed to
“penalcide,” a term used to describe when one commits another
crime to return to where they feel safe and secure. Or worse, suicide.

I’ve been highlighting the plight and challenges of men and women
returning from prison after enduring lengthy sentences on our weekly
radio show, Cross Roads, on WPFWFM.org, 89.3 FM. And I’ve been
advocating for transitional housing to keep them from becoming
homeless and destitute.

This is a public safety issue. These men and women can and should be
able to live out their remaining years after decades of trauma with
some degree of peace, and if they are able and willing, they too can
contribute to society by helping to reduce violence and crime.

They need our help.

_Roach Brown, is a longtime D.C. fixture and voice for the voiceless
who routinely and unabashedly takes on injustice within America’s
criminal justice system, with emphasis on the formerly incarcerated. 
His monthly talk show, CROSS ROADS, is aired by local Washington DC
radio station, WPFW-FM 89.3, the show can also be heard via the
Internet @  www.WPFWFM.org [[link removed]] on Pacifica Radio
(worldwide). _

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