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PRISON BRUTALITY
Written by Charlie on the 10th February 2007
I’ve experienced and suffered prison brutality at its very
worst. Here are five I’ll never be able to forget. I could
give you dozens … scores of incidents, but these five will
give you some idea of what violence is all about!
You need to ask yourselves “Who guards the guards?” It’s
been happening for all time and it never goes away. Only
last year in Full Sutton it happened. It happened because I
am the target.
Now days it is the young screws who are after a “name”. “I
DID BRONSON!” but it’s never “TWENTY of us did Bronson!”
Even some of the screws are disgusted with the brutality and
some Governors will do their utmost to stop it. But for guys
like me, with a history of rebelling and being a prison
activist, it’s never far away. I’m forever walking on egg
shells.
Bare in mind that I may have upset a screw thirty years ago
and he is now a Governor or a big-shot in prison HQ. It’s
only common sense that he’s out to make sure that I never
get on … or get out. It’s called “get-back time.” But one
thing is for sure; that I also never forget. The only
difference with me and them is that I do it alone. I don’t
need a gang behind me. I’ve never been a coward and I don’t
know what it is like to be one.
After all is said and done I still respect screws. I have no
problem with any screw who does his job properly and most
are just people doing a job. But it’s time the cowards and
bullies were booted out once and for all and men like me are
left to serve their time in peace.
Accept facts … I’m ready to go home.
Just read “The Loose Screw” by Jim Dawkins and then wake up
to the reality of brutality in everyday prison life.
WANDSWORTH 1976
I had just arrived from Wakefield. I was naked and in a body
belt. The van pulled up outside the Seg Block and I was
carried into the a gauntlet of screws. The governor read me
the riot act and told me what to expect if I started
anything in his jail. Just days later it kicked off.
It was at my cell door with a hospital screw and half a
dozen block screws (not one of them under six foot) and all
of them had steel toe-capped boots on having a go at me. It
was pure intimidation at its worse (or best) and I just
steamed into them. I got as many punches in as I could
before they done me. By the time the alarm bell went it was
just like a cowboy brawl that you see in those old films. But the alarm
brings scores more. In Wandsworth it’s known as “The
Locomotive”. Boots on boys! The very sound of those boots
running, getting closer, is a crazy feeling. You know that
you’re bang in trouble.
I was a human football. I was kicked and punched into
oblivion. I awoke in a pool of blood and couldn’t move. My
entire body was numb … black and blue. I had toe nails and
finger nails ripped off and my head felt (and looked) like a
balloon. I was pissing blood for a week after.
It was while I was in that state in Wandsworth strong box
that a large brown envelope was slung into me with the words
“EVEN YOUR WIFE HATES YOUR GUTS!” It was my divorce
papers.
PARKHURST 1978
It was just one of those days. You wake up and you just know
that you have a bad day ahead of you.
Taffy Davies was a loud mouthed screw who nobody liked. Even
the other screws hated him. To me he was a typical bully boy
… a total coward if he was on his own, but always first to
kick you in the nuts when you were down. Him and me were
never gonna see eye to eye coz I can’t stomach cowardly
bullies. It was only a matter of time before I was gonna
punch his lights out.
Well, he was digging me out and getting right up my nose. We
had had words and I had warned him off, but he just kept it
up, prodding me, pushing me. I was starting to see him in my
dreams and it was only a matter of time before it blew up.
It happened on a Sunday. How I remember that after all this
time is simple: it was Corn Flakes day. In them days we only
had Corn Flakes on a Sunday … and it started over them. It
was also a day when I didn’t want any trouble, as my sister
and auntie were coming to visit me. But Taffy wanted it and
I gave it to him.
He was serving the milk into my bowl and deliberately poured
it all over my hand. Accident? Impossible unless he was
pissed. That was it for me. Whack! That whack ended up with
a few dozen whacks and more. But every whack I gave him cost
me a hundred back. Boots, sticks, fists all reined in on me.
Even after I was in the strong box it still kept coming at
me. Dozens of them queuing up outside the cell to give it to
me.
They finally left me unconscious in a body belt and ankle
straps. I felt like I was dying, my heart was pounding so
much in
my head. I just felt myself slipping away.
But it did not stop at this beating. They then began their
psychological torture on me. That drove me mad, kicking the
door every 15 minutes, keeping the light on, spitting on my
food, putting scouring powder in my water. Dirty clothes …
smelly blankets. No books. No papers. TOTAL ISOLATION.
TEN to open my door. TEN to watch over me to the yard. More
intimidation. Jumping me for the sake of it. Stopping my
visits and my letters. Everything was getting very paranoid.
Everything was on alert. Until I finally went mad and lost
control totally. They certified me insane and sent me to
Broadmoor.
That’s what can and does happen, believe me.
RAMPTON DECEMBER 1978
Until I landed in this nuthouse I never knew the real
meaning of madness. On my first day there I got smashed to
bits and felt their “liquid cosh”.
In the 1970’s in both prisons and asylums drug control was a
way of telling you who was boss and I had more injections in
my butt than most. To me it was torture and totally illegal.
Nobody should have drugs forced on them against their will.
The prisons banned the Liquid Cosh in the 1980’s but the
asylums kept it going. Places like Broadmoor and Rampton
experimented with drug control and I was a guinea pig. To me
it was and always will be immoral, illegal, brutal and inhumane. It
was even more diabolical to me as I was totally anti-drugs
and there they were shooting me full of these psychotropic
chemicals.
My first day in Rampton was one never to forget! I was
jumped on by half a dozen “nurses” … screws there are called
nurses but they are in the POA (Prison Officers Association)
and they wear boots. So, to me, they are screws NOT nurses.
Anyway, they jumped me, bent me up and put me in a bath of
freezing cold water and proceeded to beat me with wet
towels. What sort of nurses do that? Sicko screws whipping
me with wet towels? Fucking pervs! They punched and kicked
me all the way to my cell. That was my first day in sunny
Rampton.
Then I was drugged up with their psychotropic tranquilisers!
This is ENGLAND 1978! MY COUNTRY! What a nightmare come
true!
Over the next year at Rampton I was constantly abused with
the Liquid Cosh. My weight ballooned up and I suffered with
serious side-effects from the injections. But I had no say
in it. I had to take whatever drugs the prescribed for me.
SYMPTOMS: Blurry vision. Dryness of mouth. Endless bouts of
the shakes. Constipation. Constant tiredness. Muscle spasm
attacks. Sleepiness. Memory loss. Trying to stay awake at
ANY time was a huge effort for me.
Believe me, you NEVER forget it. What they did to me is no
less than what the SS doctors in Nazi Germany subjected many
of the Jews to. They used me as a human guinea pig … an
experiment … and it made me into what I am today: a
survivor.
SCRUBBS 1994
This was probably the most cowardly of all the attacks on me
by psycho screws.
Around this time the Scrubbs Seg Block was extremely brutal.
It was run by a team of brain dead screws who had too much
power and were seriously out of control. It can’t be denied,
as it all blew up many years later and the truth cam out.
Some of them were convicted for their brutality.
With me it was a case of “Show Bronson who is boss!” and it
was a totally unprovoked attack.
My Dad had just died and I was in a state of shock. I felt
that my whole world had just fallen in on me … buried me ... and
I just went right into my shell. I couldn’t speak and I
couldn’t accept that he was gone out of my life for ever.
The screws got very edgy and paranoid about me.
The morning they set about me I was busy slopping out and
was about to walk back to the strong box under my own will.
I was in no state for a confrontation or any violence. All I
wanted was some space and time to myself to reflect. But all I got was
violence. They jumped all over me and bashed me to pulp.
They smashed me with sticks, ripped out my 'tash and kicked
me senseless. All the time screaming and shouting abuse at
me. They were totally out of control, like a pack of wild
animals.
Days later they slung me in a van and moved me to
Wandsworth. An old PO there, Mr. Wells, was so disgusted at
my injuries that he had me photographed. My lawyer at the
time, Maggie Morrisey, also noted my injuries: toe nails
off, finger nails off, black and blue bruises all over my
body, cuts, black eyes. Just the normal injuries sustained
after a very sound beating.
But they had done something a lot worse than smash me up …
they slipped a letter under my door from my Dad, a letter he
had written weeks before he died but they had withheld from
me. That letter gave me so
much grief. No beating could have hurt me as that single act
of cruelty. And every screw that beat me that day is still
in my mind. I will never forget you and what you did to me.
“Pray to your God that you never bump into me on a normal
prison landing or outside” was all I could think, “because I
will repay you for what you have done to me. You are all
just SCUM!”

RISLEY 1984
I arrived there drugged up from Ashwater Asylum. I was in a
right mess. In reception I could barely stand. A lot of what
I’m recounting at this point is a bit blurry, but I was
later told by fellow inmates exactly what happened.
I was carried into reception and slung on the floor. Water
was thrown in my face and I was grabbed by the legs and
dragged through the corridors on my back to the Hospital
Wing. I awoke the next day covered in bruises, laying in sick and
blood and I could hardly move.
Apparently I was given oxygen that night to revive me (I was
told all this by inmates the next day). It seems I was
drugged and beaten and lost consciousness. They panicked and
put the oxygen on me. That’s how close I was to my end.
Days, weeks later I was still walking around in a daze. It
seemed like a dream and I suffered a total loss of memory.
But my body told the story for me. I was just a mass of cuts
and bruises, every one a testimony to their brutality. Even one of my testicles
was four times the size of the other one. I had also bitten
my tongue (how and why I still don’t know).
I learned a lot about The System over that episode. Fear
causes paranoia and The System feared me. I knew from that
day on that I could easily be found dead at any time. A
“mystery death”. I wouldn’t be the first … or the last. But
one thing is for sure: every one who knows the real Charlie
Bronson would know that it was murder!
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