Category: Uncategorized

  • Letter from Antonio Diaz: Free the Children Coalition

    Dear Editor:

    While I am totally appreciative of your attention to the plight of the families with children imprisoned behind the walls of that prison for profit named after the co-founder of CCA and a sty in the eye of Texas TD Hutto, I as an organizer would ask for some support from you as I am the principal organizer of Free the Children Coalition.

    The protests that have taken place in Taylor have been a product of my efforts along with others that you mention in your report from our last Freedom March in Taylor. While I am remiss in even bringing this up, but I must be candid without the recognition from the media for the efforts of bringing about these protest Marches it makes it harder to get participation from the community.

    Perhaps I should be appreciative in that the matter did receive media attention at all. I will continue to organize the protest Marches in Taylor along with the speakers stage, for it was I that instituted the stage with sound amplification.

    Again the media recognition is helpful when organizing for such events especially in recruiting volunteers for these much needed actions against these injustices that are so prevalent in these days.

    Antonio Diaz
    Co-Founder:
    Cesar E. Chavez March for Justice San Antonio Tx.
    Organizer :
    Free the Children Coalition

  • Rally against T. Don Hutto heads to Georgetown

    The Sunday Sun
    Georgetown, Texas
    October 21, 2007
    [Pages 1A, 5A]

    By KELLY GOOCH

    Critics of the T. Don Hutto detainee center in Taylor plan to take steps to get it closed down, and to them that means walking from Taylor to Williamson County, straight to the Commissioner’s Court chambers during a regular Tuesday meeting, October 30.

    Jay J. Johnson-Castro with Del Rio-based Freedom Ambassadors, a human rights network, and coordinator of the walk against what they call a prison for children, said this week that he will be walking in protest of the facility beginning October 28.

    After a noon news conference that day at T. Don Hutto, 1001 Welch St., Mr. Johnson said those who choose to walk with him will walk from the front entrance of the detainee center and go together about 19 miles to Commissioners Court, 301 S.E. Inner Loop in Georgetown, arriving in time for court at 9:30 a.m. on October 30.

    Other people joining him for at least part of the walk will include representatives from the Dallas Peace Center; Cesar Chavez March for Justice in San Antonio; and chapters of the League of United Latin American Citizens – in Taylor, Austin and San Antonio, Mr. Johnson said. People may not be able to walk the, entire time because of work and school obligations during the week, and participants could be taken back to their car at any time during the walk, Mr. Johnson said.

    “We’re going after the Williamson County Commissioners Court. And we believe we have a case,” said Mr. Johnson. Those who do walk will have help if they need it: Walkers will continually have water and a first-aid kit available via a support-vehicle, he said.

    Even if weather gets bad, Mr. Johnson said a car could provide shelter. He said that on Sunday and Monday nights, participants could end up staying in someone’s house or in a hotel. “We’re not going to camp out along the highway or something,” Mr. Johnson said. “Everyone will want to get showered or rested.”

    County Judge Dan Gattis said there is no permit from the county that is required for participants, to walk in protest. As far as any public assembly that might happen outside of the county building, he said they can be there as long as property isn’t destroyed or people kept from entering or leaving the building.

    “As long as they respect other peoples’ rights and privileges, we certainly won’t be hassling them,” Judge Gattis said. “They certainly have the right to gather together and protest.” He said if any officer(s) from the Sheriff’s Department were to be at such a scene, it would be for the safety of those that were there.

    People who have spoken to the court regarding T. Don Hutto have been “good honorable people with good intentions,” Judge Gattis said.

    Dr. Asma Salam, member of the Dallas Peace Center board of directors and a D/FW area resident, said she plans on being in Taylor at noon October 28 and walking part of the time.

    “I am looking forward to walking as much as I can,” she said, adding that she will be bringing five or six picket signs with her.

    Ms. Salam said one such sign will say “stop the inhumane treatment of children and women in ICE/immigration detention centers inside our country.” She has been in contact with different faith and ethnic community groups in Dallas, telling them about the walk, she said.

    “I still don’t know how many will join me,” Ms. Salam said. “But I’m hoping for good support.”
    She said she has her own reasons for wanting to participate. “I believe that we have to raise this awareness,” Ms. Salam said. “We have to save the rights of women and children.”

    Mr. Johnson said the walk has different facets to it.

    “It brings we the people together to a point of activity,” he said regarding people opposed to keeping families in the T. Don Hutto Center in Taylor, where illegal immigrant families are kept while waiting to be deported.

    He said the walk is also to make people aware of their opinions on T. Don Hutto.

    “We consider media one of the powers of ‘our country,” Mr. Johnson added. They definitely want to voice their opinions in Commissioners Court, he said. “We’re going after the Williamson County Commissioners Court,” he said. And we believe we have a case.” Mr. Johnson said he believes the county’s involvement with the facility had to do with money rather than human rights.
    “We hope they think beyond liability,” he said.

    Once whoever is walking arrives at Commissioners Court on October 30, Mr. Johnson said he is not sure how many people could join the protest or what exactly will happen.

    One thing he knew for sure: “We anticipate going to court and making public comment,” he said. “We want the facility shut down.”

    This will be the third time there has been a walk in protest of T. Don Hutto, Mr. Johnson said. He said two previous walks involved walking from Austin to T. Don Hutto where they have never needed a permit.

    Law enforcement officials in Taylor and Georgetown and the Williamson County Sheriff’s office would be notified, Mr. Johnson said.

    “What we are not doing is orchestrating a march that is going to block highways and streets,” he said.

    Captain David Clawson with the Taylor Police Department said the participants would not need a permit from the city of Taylor to walk in protest unless they were blocking streets. An officer could drive by just to make sure nothing got out of hand, he said.

    “It’s always been extremely civil,” he said of past protests of T. Don Hutto. “We don’t want to do anything to step on their rights to that.”

    According to a document on the city of Georgetown Web site, www georgetown.org, the walkers who arrive in Georgetown would consider the following regarding whether they need a permit: An “event” is a temporary event or gathering using private and/or public property. When determining whether a permit is required, consideration will be given to whether the following criteria exist: Closing a public street, Blocking or restricting public property, Blocking or restricting access to the private property of others, Use of pyrotechnics or special effects, Use of open flame, explosions or other potentially dangerous displays or actions, Sale of merchandise, food or beverages on public property, or on private property where otherwise prohibited by ordinance.

    “There is a non-refundable fee of $100 for an Event Application and the Application must be returned completed, as per the ordinance, no later than 30 days prior to the proposed event or a $100 late fee will be charged in addition to the application fee,” according to the Web site.

    On October 2, the Commissioners Court asked the county attorney’s office to draft notification to ICE and Corrections Corporation of America, who operates the detention facility, ending both contracts as of October 2, 2008.

    However, on October 9, the court tabled the idea of ending both contracts.

  • A Redemption Song: Jacob Favela

    Maybe you’ve seen the media stories about Jacob Favela’s redemption song. Here’s the video that started it all, from Tony Gallucci’s Milk River Blog.

  • Letter to President Bush: Free the Children Now

    Email from Jay J. Johnson Castro, Sr.–gm

    Greetings amigos…

    Last week at the Hutto Anniversary Vigil a letter was publicly read to President Bush to free the innocent children of Hutto prison as well as all across the United States. We want the same deal for the innocent children that Scooter Libby got. That letter is being mailed to the President tomorrow.

    If you share in the sentiments of this letter and would like to also send this letter to the President…in your own name and/or that of your organization…feel free to do so. (See copy below) Feel free to make copies and share this letter with your respective networks.

    Enjoy the holidays…your friends and your family…

    Jay

    Jay Johnson-Castro, Sr. as St. Nick
    (Photo by Walt Harrison / Winston Smith Media)

    See also the Dec. 16 Story


    President George W. Bush
    The White House

    Ref: Free the Children Imprisoned in America

    Mr. President,

    As the President of the United States of America, as the most powerful and first global ruler in world history, we appeal to you. Please exercise the power of your presidency and that of your office to free the innocent children from the grips of prisons. If you can commute the sentence of Scooter Libby, who has been convicted of crimes of national proportions, you can surely free innocent children who have committed no crimes and yet are in this T. Don Hutto prison with no rights on American soil right here in Taylor, Texas.

    In 1989, the world community adopted the International Rights of the Child. In 1990, the US Congress voted to ratify those rights. In 1990, your father, the 41st President, refused to sign those rights of the children into law.

    Sixteen years later, at its grand opening in May of 2006, your Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff, bragged about T. Don Hutto being the prototype of prisons that would detain innocent immigrant children all over this country. That also means that your administration has been guilty of orchestrating such crimes as the imprisonment innocent children, which is now being done by private “for profit” prison companies.

    One year ago today, December 16, 2006, we the people of this great State of Texas stood up to that immoral and illegal position. We have continued and will continue to oppose, as well as expose this immoral and illegal act. We appeal to you for your help. We need your help.

    In May of this year, 2007, the “Special Rapporteur”, Jorge Bustamante, from the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations came to Texas to inspect the human rights violations of children in prison cells. He was denied access by Mr. Chertoff. At your directive as Commander and Chief, our government has bombed a country because it denied access to UN inspectors to inspect WMDs that did not exist. Sr. Bustamante was denied access to investigate human rights violations that did exist, as has been born out in the August settlement between Mr. Chertoff and the ACLU.

    The attorney who drafted and signed the contract with Williamson County Commissioners and Corrections Corporation of American (CCA) to imprison innocent children for profit, Gustavus “Gus” Puryear IV, is the corporate council for CCA. He is also a deacon of the First Presbyterian Church in Nashville, TN, a church that openly opposes ill treatment of immigrants and profit prisons. His actions not only betray his faith, his actions betray the moral conscience of America and the laws of the international community. As an accomplice to the imprisonment of innocent children for profit, he is morally, let alone judicially, unfit and your recent nomination of him to the Federal bench should be immediately withdrawn.

    Now, at the end of this year of 2007, our country, with the exception of Somalia, is the only country in the world that does not guarantee innocent children basic human rights. If you are truly a man of faith, you well know that the Lord would never have allowed the imprisonment of children. He scolded those who would even look down upon them. As the author of “No child left behind”, this is an appeal to you to assure Texans, the United States of America, and the international community that “no child will ever be left behind bars” in the entire world…let alone on American soil…“deep in the heart of Texas”. To do otherwise would be a continuance of what is totally unchristian, un-American, immoral and illegal by any standard of decency.

    Since you intervened in the case of Scooter Libby, stating that the punishment did not fit the crime, we publicly appeal to your sense of fairness and justice to intervene in this case and to readily declare that the imprisonment of the children of the world does not fit their innocence.

    Your Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security allows these children to live in the 8’ x 12’ cells of this medium security prison. Mr. Chertoff spends a minimum of $2,800,000 per month of our taxpayers’ money to commit this international crime. On this very day, that amounts to $20,000 per child per month. That is a corrupt amount of our money being funneled to CCA to imprison innocent children that should never be behind a prison wall. Such a heinous practice must not be allowed to exist in the land of the free. Mr. Chertoff has betrayed America by such an immoral, inhumane, illegal and politically corrupt act. He should at the very least be indicted for crimes against humanity.

    Since you are the leader of the “free world” then please free these innocent children, immediately. If you grew up singing “Jesus loves the little children of the world. Red and yellow, black and white, they are precious in his sight” please exercise the values you were taught in your church here in America. You are the one, the only one, who can overturn the immoral and criminal decision and practice of Michael Chertoff.

    Please do the moral thing. Please do the humane thing. Please do the legal thing. Please show yourself to be a leader. Do not let the imprisonment of children in “for-profit” internment camps under you watch to cloud your legacy as the 43rd President of the United States. Put an end to this crime against humanity now, before the end of your term. Show the world that we as Texans and Americans still believe in the tenets of the Declaration of Independence, that we really do believe that all are endowed by our Creator with the inalienable rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Show the world the power of the Constitution, that “all men…even children…are created equal”.

    Today, at this Hutto Anniversary Vigil in protest against the imprisonment of the children here, “We the people of the United States”, make this appeal to you. Texans, Americans and the whole world look to you to show such moral resolve that no other elected or appointed official in America seems to show. We appeal to you to exercise your moral leadership and give these children here in Hutto, and all immigrant children across our great country, at least as good a deal as you gave Scooter Libby.

    Very Sincerely,

    Jay J. Johnson-Castro, Sr.
    Freedom Ambassadors
    Del Rio, Texas