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MEXICAN PRISONS
LA MESA, A PRISON WITH HOMELESS INMATES

"There are not words to describe this prison. It is the dirtiest, darkest, and most overcrowded place I have ever been...The conditions of the 'streets' inside the prison were broken and grimy and always covered with trash and dirty water.

Many inmates were 'homeless' inside this prison. The mass of humanity milling around was intimidating at first. It was impossible to stay together as a group when moving around the prison. If one of us were to be intentionally separated from the group, we would not have immediately noticed. The free and convicted were walking around together.

We were there on conjugal visit day. The visitors were free to roam around the prison also. Although we could not tell the difference, our friends told us that the differences were easy to spot. I'm sure the five huge permanent blue stamps on both arms are a start.

Evil is alive and well in La Mesa. 80% are active drug users, and a little bit of money can buy you just about anything, including a 'hit' on someone else inside La Mesa.

Mexico Prison Conditions
The judiciary is divided into federal and state systems. Federal courts have jurisdiction over major felonies, including drug trafficking. In the federal system, judicial power is exercised by the Supreme Court of Justice, circuit courts, and district courts (see Judicial, ch. 4). The first chamber of the Supreme Court, composed of a president and four other judges, deals with penal affairs. Twelve collegiate circuit courts, each with three magistrates, deal with the right of amparo (constitutional rights of an individual, similar to habeas corpus). Nine unitary circuit courts, of one magistrate each, deal with appeals. There are sixty-eight one-magistrate district courts. State judiciary systems following a similar pattern are composed of state supreme courts, courts of first instance, and justices of the peace or police judges.

In most instances, arrests can be made only on authority of a judicial warrant, with the exception of suspects caught in the act of committing crimes. Suspects often are arrested without warrants, but judges tend to overlook this irregularity. Those arrested are required to be brought before an officer of the court as soon as possible, generally within forty-eight hours (ninety-six hours when organized crime is alleged), whereupon their statements are taken and they are informed of the charges against them. Within seventy-two hours of arraignment, the judge must remand the arrested person to prison or release him or her.

Criminal trials in nearly all cases are tried by a judge without a jury. The judge acting alone bases his or her verdict on written statements, depositions, and expert opinion, although in some instances oral testimony is presented. Defendants have access to counsel, and those unable to afford legal fees can be assigned public defenders. The quality of pro bono counsel is often inferior. The accused and his or her lawyer do not always meet before trial, and the lawyer may not appear at the important sentencing stage. The right to a public trial is guaranteed, as is the right to confront one's accusers and to be provided with a translator if the accused's native language is not Spanish. Under the constitution, the court must hand down a sentence within four months of arrest for crimes carrying a maximum sentence of two years or less, and within one year for crimes with longer sentences.

The entire process--the time for a trial, sentencing, and appeals--often requires a year or more. According to Amnesty International, a large number of persons charged with crimes have been held far beyond the constitutional limits for their detention. The long trial process and the detention of those who cannot qualify for or make bail are major causes of crowded prison conditions.

The penal code stipulates a range of sentences for each offense. Sentences tend to be short, in most cases not longer than seven years. The actual time of incarceration is usually three-fifths of the sentence, assuming good behavior. Those sentenced for less than five years may avoid further time in jail by payment of a bond. Prison Conditions

The penal system consists of both federal and state correctional institutions. The largest federal prison is the penitentiary for the Federal District. The Federal District also sends prisoners to four detention centers, sixteen smaller jails, and a women's jail. Each state has its own penitentiary. There are, in addition, more than 2,000 municipal jails. As of the end of 1993, nearly 95,000 inmates were in Mexican prisons; almost half were persons still awaiting trial or sentencing.

Overcrowding of prisons is chronic. Mistreatment of prisoners, the lack of trained guards, and inadequate sanitary facilities compound the problem. The United States Department of State's country reports on human rights practices for 1992 and 1993 state that an entrenched system of corruption undermines prison authority and contributes to abuses. Authority frequently is exercised by prisoners, displacing prison officials. Violent confrontations, often linked to drug trafficking, are common between rival prison groups.

Mexican prisons also exhibit some humane qualities. In 1971 conjugal visiting rights were established for male prisoners and later extended to females. Prisoners held at the penal colony on the Islas Tres Marías off the coast of Nayarit are permitted to bring their entire families to live temporarily. Women are permitted to keep children under five years of age with them.

Based on interviews at a smaller state prison, United States penologist William V. Wilkinson found in 1990 that serious overcrowding, lack of privacy, and poor prison diets were the most common complaints. Wilkinson found no deliberate mistreatment of inmates. The prison fare generally was supplemented by food supplied by prisoners' families or purchased from outside. Prisoners with money could buy items such as television sets and sports equipment. Through bribery, prisoners could be assigned to highly prized individual cells, where even air conditioners were permitted.

A major building program by the CNDH added 800 prison spaces in 1993 and 1994. In 1991 Mexico's only maximum security facility, Almoloya de Juárez, was completed. Major drug traffickers were transferred to it from other prisons. The prison's 408 individual cells are watched by closed-circuit television and the most modern technical and physical security equipment. Violence in prisons is a constant problem as a result of overcrowding, lack of security, and the mixing of male and female prisoners and of accused and sentenced criminals.

Imprisonment of peasants, often for growing marijuana, puts a heavy demand on the system. Through the efforts of CNDH, a program of early release and parole benefited 1,000 people incarcerated on charges of growing marijuana in 1993.

Under the terms of the 1977 Prisoner Transfer Treaty between the United States and Mexico, United States prisoners in Mexican jails and Mexican prisoners in United States jails may choose to serve their sentences in their home countries. An extradition treaty between the United States and Mexico took effect in January 1980. It requires the mutual recognition of a crime as defined by the laws of each nation. Because of the extensive processing required under extradition requests, however, informal cooperation has developed among police on both sides of the border. Suspected criminals who flee to the neighboring country to escape apprehension routinely are turned over without formal proceedings to police in the country where the crime was committed.

Noncompliance with the Prisoner Transfer Treaty has occasionally created friction between the United States and Mexico. The United States strongly criticized Mexico's decision in 1988 to release William Morales, a leader of the Puerto Rican Armed National Liberation Front, who was wanted for a series of bombings in New York in 1978. Mexico rejected a United States extradition request even though a Mexican court had found Morales extraditable. Washington objected particularly to the initial Mexican characterization of Morales as a "political fighter."

The death penalty has not been applied in Mexico since 1929, when the assassin of president-elect Obregón was executed. The federal death penalty was abolished under the Federal Penal Code of 1930, and by 1975 all state codes also had eliminated the death penalty. The military, however, still holds certain offenses as punishable by death, including insubordination with violence causing the death of a superior officer, certain kinds of looting, offenses against military honor, and treason.

OTHER PRISONS IN MEXICO
  • Mexico City's Reclusorio Norte prison
  • Juarez prison
MEXICAN PRISON RESOURCES & INFORMATION
If you escape from prison and do not break any laws, you will not be charged for anything and if you are caught time will not be added to your sentence. Prison escape is not illegal. If you avoid capture by the police it is not a crime. Lying on the witness stand when testifying in your case is not perjury. All of these things are human nature and there not only legal but considered to be the right thing to do.

Cereso 1 has private enterprise among the prisoners. The food stand is owned and operated by prisoners. They also have cable TV if they can afford it. Prisoners can shine shoes, do laundry or start businesses to make money.

FOREIGNERS IN MEXICAN PRISONS
Prisoner: Patrick Henderson Prison: Penitenciary Del Estado in La Mesa, Tijuana.
Arrested 22 October 2005 Nationality: US Citizen

Offence: Full details are unclear at this time but Patrick's wife has told FPSS that her husband was in the process of purchasing prescription pills to bring back to the US.

The couple have two small children. Anyone who has any contacts in Tijuana Mexico that might assist this family, please contact FPSS - click here.

Prisoner:Kenneth Quarders Prison: Penitenciary Del Estado in La Mesa, Tijuana.
Arrested May 2005 Nationality: US Citizen

Charged with allegedly trafficking 360 milligrams of valium.

Legal Support has been secured through Lawyer Carlos Escobar Ontiveros.

NEWS LINKS
  • Mexican army urged to take over prisons
  • 5 inmates shoot their way out of Baja prison
  • Mexico's Dirty War Never Ended Inside Puente Grande Prison
  • Guards reassigned after killings of two Americans in Mexican prison
  • Marjie Lundstrom: In Mexican prison, American woman awaits justice, help
  • Riot at Mexican prison kills one, injures 12
Toddlers live behind prison bars / In Mexico City, female inmates can keep their children with them up to age 6

Victoria Jaramillo, 40, holding her 3-month-old daughter, Frida,
The increased activity of women participating in drug dealing has increased dramaticaly in the last two decades and so has the percentage of young children living with them in jail.

They lack proper pediatric, nutricion and psychological attention besides the adecuate conditions for their physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social growth.

I had the opportunity to visit the prison in the city of La Paz and meet and visit four women living inside a small cell with 4 bunkbeds, a stove and kitchen utenlils all crowded together with their personal belongings, in this case with 2 small children.

The motive of my visit was to assist my friend Dr. Lourdez Gonzalez Aleman who was doing medical volunteer work there at the time.

  • Click Here for Complete Story

FREEDOM IS A RIGHT OF ALL HUMAN BEINGS IN A WORLD WHERE LIFE IS VALUED AND PEACE MAY FINALLY BE A POSSABILITY
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All information is © Copyright 1997 - 2003 'Foreign Prisoner Support Service' unless stated otherwise - Click here for the legal stuff
All information is © Copyright 1997 - 2003 'Foreign Prisoner Support Service' unless stated otherwise - Click here for the legal stuff