Mississippi Today
Locked up in Parchman’s Unit 29, men chronicle life, longings and regrets
From the Depths of the Beast arises a chance for freedom from within. After ten and half years in solitary confinement, I have finally regained a chance at staying in general population. It is a greater freedom than I have had in over the past decade of my life, and a much more preferable living area while waiting and working toward a chance at release from prison to a second chance in life.
This is the first piece in a series of art and written work by men incarcerated in Unit 29, the destination for those considered the worst of the worst at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman. The Mississippi Prison Writes Initiative, a nonprofit organization whose goal is to teach state inmates writing skills, released the book on Nov. 22.
“Unit 29: Writing from Parchman Prison” can also be a teaching moment for readers.
“In a sense, I wanted to record human suffering as it unfolds,” Louis Bourgeois, the organization’s executive director, wrote in an email.
“Extreme situations result in extreme reactions. But I’ll let the reader decide for themselves if the book is successful in rendering the accuracy of what goes on there, right under society’s nose.”
The essays, as in this first one by Anthony Wilson, do not gloss over what landed the writers in the most infamous unit of the state’s most infamous prison. In Wilson’s case, it was escaping from a community work center with a fellow inmate, then assaulting and robbing an older woman, leading to her death. As he writes in “From the Depths of the Beast”:
Not a day goes by I don’t wish I could rewind the hands of time for the two of us and bring back life. Hers and mine together. Though her life was at its end, mine was only in the beginning and it ended before you really got started. I pray for her and pray the lord both forgives me for the stupid choices me and a brother made that day.
If a day comes, I regain my freedom more than the freedom on the inside, I’ll (sic) shall cherish it the rest of my days. Until then, I’ll take pride in my progress on the inside and make the best of the freedom I have inside these walls.
Unit 29 houses about 700 people and the average age of the men there is 38, according to records from the Mississippi Department of Corrections.
Some, like Wilson, were incarcerated as teens or young men and remain there for long sentences. The youngest men there are 18 and the oldest are 78. As of November, the average sentence in Unit 29 is 25 years, according to MDOC records.
Bourgeois has taught writing workshops to incarcerated people for over 20 years, starting at the Marshall County Correctional Facility in Holly Springs where he took over the program for former University of Mississippi professor Gabriel Gudding.
By 2010, Bourgeois co-founded VOX PRESS, a nonprofit organization whose purpose is to publish marginalized writers. That organization has published two volumes of writings by “Mississippi: In Our Own Words, Unit 30” in 2016 and “M”ississippi Prison Writing” in 2020, which includes work by women incarcerated at the Mississippi Correctional Institute for Women at the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility in Pearl.
The new book includes the work of over 30 incarcerated writers over a three-year period.
Bourgeois said most of the writers had never written anything before, but they created what he called “a masterpiece of prison realism” about undergoing the harrowing experience of staying alive in a Mississippi prison such as the infamous Parchman.
“The method to put this off was simple but potent: It doesn’t have to be good; it just has to be brutally honest,” he wrote.
Unit 29 also houses death row, where 34 men live in mostly solitary confinement, awaiting responses to their appeals as they inch closer to execution by lethal injection, or another method such as gas, electric chair or firing squad if the lethal drugs are not available.
Among those at Unit 29 is Steven Wilbanks, convicted for the 2013 murder of Zacharias McClendon. Wilbanks, then a student at the University of Mississippi, fatally shot McClendon, a first year Ole Miss graduate student, with the intent of stealing his money and credit cards.
A jury sentenced him to death, but he won a new trial on appeal. He requested a bench trial to spare his family and the victim’s family a replay. From his essay “Scars”:
A scar is an interesting thing. Some look cool. Some look ugly. But the scars that affect us the most can’t even be seen. They cut deep, down to the bone, and often break our hearts. Indeed: sticks and stones can break our bones, but words can hurt forever. And the pen is mightier than the sword.
My deepest psychological scar occurred February 15, 2018, when a jury of my peers sentenced me to Death by Lethal Injection. “Don’t worry,” my attorney said. “It’ll be quick and painless.”
Wilbanks writes that he believed pleading guilty would take him off death row. Instead he was resentenced to life without the possibility of parole, which means he will die in prison.
Despite it being the second worse day of my life, something positive did come out of it for which I will forever be grateful: I was finally allowed to apologize to the victim’s family, which I did, from the bottom of my heart….
The best thing I can think to do with all of these scars—psychological and physical—is to learn to live with them; embrace them; accept them for what they are: Proof that I am human
At the end of December 2020, riots broke out in Units 29 and 30 at Parchman, prompting the Mississippi Highway Patrol and multiple sheriff’s deputies to be called. Cellphone video from the inside showed fights and fires. By the time law enforcement quelled the violence, at least five prisoners were dead at Parchman and other correctional facilities.
Pictures and footage have also emerged of run- down living areas cited in a 2022 Justice Department report finding that conditions at Parchman violate the Constitution.
Gov. Tate Reeves vowed in his first State of the State address to shut Unit 29 down, but to date it has remained open, with plans by Corrections Commissioner Burl Cain to make renovations and bring closed parts back online.
A hostile environment filled with as many broken and lonely, lost people just trying to maintain a purpose. Underachievers and complete failures in life. Imagine urine, fan motors, random fires, floods, arguments, childish behavior, and sometimes aggressive behavior from people who don’t even know. Never-ending, floods, and smoke keeps things interesting—never a dull moment
That’s how Derrick Willis describes conditions in his essay, “G-Building Reflections.” He is serving life for capital murder and armed robbery and is in long-term segregation.
Some people wash clothes in the toilet. Don’t be gross; use the sink. Long-term segregation doesn’t have visitation, unless arranged, so a lot of people go a long time without seeing their family. No calls are cheap, though.
Locked down 24/7 for days and weeks. Showers are done three times a week. Yard call happens once every week. There’s no air in the summer, the heat is unimaginable. Concrete and steel draws in the cold so the heat just keeps the air moderate during winter
This past summer, temperatures soared above 100 degrees in the flat Delta as people incarcerated at Unit 29 sat in a concrete building, a material that can absorb heat. Humidity only amplifies the temperature.
Fans placed throughout a unit push hot air around. Those can sit directly in front of or under a fan purchased from the prison commissary. Air conditioning has come to a majority of Parchman – but not Unit 29 – as well as at the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility hundreds of miles away. There is not a set timeline to bring AC to the rest of the prison system.
The heat only adds to an oppressive atmosphere, which worsens for those dealing with mental illness. Two in five people who are incarcerated have a history of mental illness, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. Corrections Commissioner Burl Cain has recognized that many in the prison system struggle with illnesses and addiction.
Between 2015 and 2024, at least 50 people incarcerated in Mississippi prisons died from suicide, according to records from the State Medical Examiner’s Office.
Victor Perryman was serving 30 years as a habitual offender for slashing the throat of a Hinds County deputy and taking her vehicle. He died in June 2023 from natural causes, according to records of in-custody deaths provided to Mississippi Today by the State Medical Examiner’s Office.
In his poem “4 Walls,” he wrote:
As I stare at these 4 walls
Feeling sad depressed and lonely
The only thing that keeps me
Half way focused is my homies
My psych doctor comes by she
Put me to the test
Give me psychotics
To help me rest
These 4 walls is the real test
I’ve seen my revelations that
Suicide is probably the best
Bourgeois said some of the authors remain at Unit 29, while some have been moved to other prisons including East Mississippi Correctional Facility, South Mississippi Correctional Institute and Walnut Grove Correctional Facility. He said others have been released or have died.
“I am still in touch with several of them in the prison and outside of it, in which we will publish their individual efforts over the course of the next few years,” he said. “The whole premise of VOX Press is to allow the unheard to have a voice, and that is being played out now (in) a most meaningful way.”
“Unit 29: Writing from Parchman Prison” is available through www.voxpress.org/vox-books.html or amazon.com. The book will also be available at the following stores: Lemuria Books in Jackson, Square Books in Oxford, Lorelei Books in Vicksburg, Cotton Row Book Store in Cleveland, Book Smart Cafe in Starkville, Turnrow Books in Greenwood and Pass Christian Books in Pass Christian.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1938
Dec. 17, 1938
L. C. Dorsey was born to a sharecropping family in Tribbett, Mississippi. She became friends with Fannie Lou Hamer, who inspired Dorsey to get involved in the civil rights movement and to join the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, for which Dorsey began organizing boycotts and demonstrations.
She began working for Head Start and then Operation Help. After getting her doctorate from Howard University, she returned to Mississippi and resumed her work with Head Start, this time as the director of social services in Greenville. She also began working on prison reform, serving as associate director of the Southern Coalition on Jails and Prisons from 1974 to 1983.
Dorsey wrote a book, “Cold Steel,” describing life in Mississippi’s Parchman prison, and served on President Jimmy Carter’s National Council for Economic Opportunity.
In 1988, she became executive director of the Delta Health Center in Mound Bayou and later worked as a clinical associate professor for the University of Mississippi Medical Center.
She died in 2013. An annual award honors her work, and so does the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Top lawmaker to propose changes to certificate of need law
Lawmakers want to make it easier for medical facilities to add in-demand health care services by loosening provisions in a law that requires health facilities to seek state approval first.
The time-consuming and sometimes costly application process, which requires facilities to seek a “certificate of need” for health care planning purposes, can stifle needed services, especially in rural areas, according to health officials.
House Public Health and Human Services Chair Sam Creekmore, R-New Albany, said he plans to author a bill that would eliminate state approval requirements for hospital dialysis programs, substance abuse treatment centers and psychiatric care facilities in Mississippi. It would raise the capital expenditure threshold, or the maximum amount hospitals can spend on capital improvements without approval, by 50%.
“That’s a common sense bill that would help Mississippians,” he said.
Certificate of need law is a familiar target for legislative reform in Mississippi, but few substantial changes have been made to the law since 2016. A select committee convened by Speaker of the House Jason White and co-chaired by Creekmore met twice since August to explore possibilities for tweaking the law.
Certificate of need laws aim to lower costs and improve the quality and accessibility of health care by preventing duplication of services, but stakeholders are divided on whether or not the law accomplishes its goals.
Critics argue the law stifles competition and fails to decrease costs. Advocates say it ensures that communities have access to a range of health services, not only those that are profitable.
“Opponents of CON say, ‘We need more competition to bring health care costs down,’” said Creekmore. “Well, that’s clearly not the case. We’re already the lowest. We need to encourage more hospitals to add more services in these rural areas.”
Mississippi hospitals have some of the lowest costs in the country. Inpatient stays cost $1,425 per day on average in 2022 – less than half of the national average – according to data from KFF.
When hospitals do not have their own in-house dialysis facilities, patients in need of dialysis must be transferred to facilities that do. This can be inconvenient for patients and sometimes harmful to their health, said Creekmore.
Without certificate of need requirements, hospitals could open dialysis centers without first seeking approval from the state.
Certificate of need applications are often contested and it can take months or years to be approved to provide a new service or open a new health care facility. The appeals process can also be expensive.
“Particularly in our rural hospitals, it would allow them to keep the patient local, where they’re close to their friends and their family and their church members, and they won’t have to be transferred to a larger hospital in Jackson or somewhere else,” said Richard Roberson, president and CEO of the Mississippi Hospital Association.
Most rural counties in the United States do not have a dialysis facility.
Restrictions on purchasing new equipment and making improvements to buildings have also become a barrier for hospitals aiming to expand their services, especially as construction and hospital supply costs have increased since the pandemic, said Creekmore.
The Legislature last raised capital expenditure limits in 2016 to $5 million and $10 million for clinical and non-clinical health services, respectively, and capped new major medical equipment purchases at $1.5 million. The thresholds are adjusted for inflation as determined by the Mississippi Department of Health.
A higher cap will make it easier for hospitals to purchase needed medical equipment and complete renovations but also encourage health centers to keep costs low, Creekmore said.
Psychiatric and substance abuse treatment could also benefit from removing certificate of need requirements, he said.
“Psychiatric care is something we can get done that would easily provide people with better and more care for mental health,” he said. “Substance abuse facilities need to come out of CON.”
State Health Officer Dr. Daniel Edney on Aug. 19 said the state needs more behavioral health treatment capacity in the state.
“We’re desperate for mental health beds,” he said. “We have folks wanting to move into the mental health space and CON and the process has driven them away.”
A bill to remove psychiatric and substance abuse treatment from certificate of need requirements passed the House of Representatives last year but died in conference.
Roberson said he supports removing substance abuse and chemical dependency beds from the certificate of need process to allow hospitals more flexibility when treating patients.
The hospital association will focus primarily on dialysis and capital expenditure limits in its push for certificate of need reform this year, he said.
Creekmore said he is also considering a separate bill that would require any party that unsuccessfully appeals a certificate of need application to pay the original applicants’ legal fees.
This would prevent long, costly appeals that prevent or stall new health services from opening in Mississippi.
“There are legitimate reasons to challenge some (certificate of need applications), but some people challenge … to delay the process,” said Creekmore.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
T.O. Richardson and T&T Logging, a 3rd generation business in Hinds County
T.O. Richarson, 36, rolls up after transporting a log load to Hermanville. Dust devils swirl in his wake, dancing behind the log hauler he calls… his baby.
The weather is perfect. High, blue skies on a hot day made tolerable by a slight breeze refreshing enough to cool hard-working men like T&T Logging owner T.O. Richardson and his crew, masters in their elements, who prefer the outdoors, working with their hands and expertly operating humongous machinery clearing land of timber.
In this case, a 110-acre tract of land in Jackson.
Logging consists of cutting down trees and bunching them together with a feller buncher. Next, a skidder is used to haul the cut timber from the forest to a loading deck, where the trees are processed by a loader and placed on a log hauler for transport to a mill.
“It’s a business not built for everyone,” said Richardson. “Every job is different. Different and loud. Some jobs are just a clear-cut, clear everything and trees are replanted, starting from scratch. Some we just go in and thin out timber. On some, we clear out the bigger trees to give the smaller ones a chance to grow.”
“Not only can my logging company cut your timber, we can also gravel the road to your house or deer camp. We cruise timber too,” said Richardson, a process used to evaluate the amount of trees in an area and the value of the land it is on.
Richardson was “Lil Man,” back in the day, a 3-year-old, he says, “soaking up the game” from his dad, Thomas J. Richardson, who worked the fields and the family farm as a 9-year-old, when his father gave him a cultivator and mule.
The game, Richarson speaks of, is logging. He carries on as the third generation of a business with over 40 years of experience. The seeds were planted in Richardson early and he knew he wanted to be just like his father. “Work boots and a cap, instead of a suit and tie,” said Richardson, remembering, adding with emphasis, “not a gangsta in the streets, a baller or an entertainer. A working man. I knew early I wanted to work for myself. Have my own business. And that comes from my daddy. He taught us hard work. He instilled that in us.”
“At 10 years old, I started my own business. Asked my mom to buy me lollipops. Oh, she looked at me funny, but she bought them. Thirty-four suckers, I was making 17 dollars a day while my friends and other kids were out playing somewhere.”
“Out of high school, I even went to college to become an accountant. I moved to Atlanta. I was thinking maybe I’d find my way doing something in the electrical field, too. But logging… it was in my heart, in my blood.”
“I remember telling my dad,” Richardson says, smiling at the memory. “He had this magnificent smile on his face. I knew I was on the right path.”
“Now look, it wasn’t easy. But those trials and tribulations made us into what we are now. We’re self-made and pressure-tested approved. It’s a load that might be too heavy for some people, too overwhelming, but that load for us is just right.”
Contact T&T Logging company, located in Edwards.
(601)339-1652
Open 24 hours, 7 days a week.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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