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JOHN BOWDEN
Written 10th June 2007



I've
known this guy since he got put away for life in the early
1980s. He started his sentence off in Brixton and got moved
around all our jails. In fact, he was forever on the move.
No jail wanted him over his fight for cons rights. John was
a prison activist. A lot of his protests were peaceful but
ended violently, due to the vindictive establishment wanting
to crush him.
John spent years in isolation. Then he picked up the pen and
went to work. He learned that the pen is mightier than the
sword and now the System is afraid of the man. They can't
handle what he is today; they could when he was the old
John Bowden. Now they're puzzled, confused and having to
play dirty.
John will make it, as it's now blatantly obvious what's
going on and all can see it too. He's a political prisoner
who's been stitched up.
Let's make no bones about it, John Bowden was once a very
dangerous man. He won't deny that either. But people change.
Mature. Move on in life, which he obviously has done. It's
time to support this man's fight for freedom. He's done his
time and he's no more of a terrorist than he ever was.
The real terrorist in the State is Tony Blair. He's killed
hundreds of thousands of innocent people over LIES! That's
what needs to be rectified. It's time people woke up and got
real.
There's a lot of good in John Bowden and, given the chance,
he can still do a lot with his life. But now they have him
rotting back in a max-secure jail over a muggy lie. Don't
let this lie bury a good man. It really does need exposing
so that he can get back to his open jail, home leave and,
finally, release.

NOTES FROM MAL:
If you'd like to write a letter of
support to John his latest address is:
John Bowden, 6729
HMP Glenochil
King O' Muir Road
Tullibody
Clackmannanshire
FK10 3AD Scotland
I should like to reproduce the
following letter from John Bowden, written from Glenochil
Prison in May 2007, which can be found on the
325 Collective site:
On the 18th April 2007, nine months after my transfer to
Castle Huntly Open Prison, and less than a month before a
critically important parole hearing to decide my suitability
for release after 25 years in prison, I was placed into
solitary confinement and the following day transferred back
to a maximum security jail. Incredibly, I was accused of
involvement with a 'terrorist organisation' on the outside,
a claim emblazoned across the front page of the local Dundee
Courier ('Castle Huntly killer has terror links') on the day
I was locked into solitary. In the current political climate
such a claim was obviously made with the deliberate
intention of keeping me imprisoned indefinitely.
In fact, the claim was a lie and reveals the extent of the
prison system's determination to deny me freedom even after
a quarter of a century behind bars. That such a ludicrous
and easily refuted lie should have resulted in my return to
conditions of maximum security and the almost certain denial
of parole also reveals the Kafkaesque nature of power within
the police state world of the prison system. There is,
however, a certain vicious rationale motivating the absurd
claim made against me.
The persecution and victimisation of prisoner activists by
the prison authorities is as intrinsic to the role and
function of the prison system as the injustice and abuse of
power that characterises its treatment of all prisoners. In
the eyes of the prison system and those who enforce it,
however, the most feared and hated prisoners of all are
those identified as 'ringleaders' and 'subversives',
prisoners who attempt to collectively organise and mobilise
their fellow prisoners into resistance and protest. For
these 'troublemakers' the system reserves its most vicious
and vindictive treatment, and an appetite for revenge that
blights the lives of such prisoners throughout their entire
sentences. If the targeted 'subversive' happens to be
serving a life sentence then every means will be employed,
including the collusion of prison employed social workers
and probation officers, to try and keep the prisoner inside
until they die. There are no civilised limits to the
vindictiveness of the prison system when it comes to
punishing those who have challenged and threatened its
power.
For more than two decades in prison I had pursued and fought
for the cause of prisoners' rights and tried with every
means at my disposal to highlight and expose the frequent
and often horrendous abuses of power that I had witnessed
and experienced. As a consequence, my name had become
synonymous in the minds of prison officials with sedition
and defiance, and the spectre of something that has always
frightened, enraged and driven them to use every method and
means to eradicate and destroy it: prisoner power.
In January this year as I approached the end of a 25 year
recommendation life sentence, the administration at Castle
Huntly Open Prison were obliged to prepare reports on me for
what should have been a final parole tribunal to decide my
release. As part of my preparation for release, I had spent
two years working unsupervised in the outside community as a
volunteer on projects for the mentally ill and socially
vulnerable, and had qualified as a literacy tutor for people
with learning difficulties. For almost a year I had been
allowed frequent home leaves. The two fundamental criteria
determining a life sentence prisoner's suitability for
release, the expiry of the recommended period of time served
in the interests of retribution, and the absence of any risk
to the public, were both sufficiently established in my
case.
Of all the reports compiled on life sentence prisoners
approaching final parole hearings and potential release, few
are more important and influential than those written by
social workers. It is the opinions and views of these
supposedly impartial professionals that exert a critical
influence on the deliberations of the parole board. In my
case, the prison authorities chose to dispense with the
services of ordinary prison social workers at Castle Huntly
following an allegation that I had formed an
'inappropriately close friendship' with a member of the
social work team there, and instead commissioned an outside
social worker to prepare my parole report. They chose Matt
Stillman, a right-wing American entrenched in punitive ideas
about the role of the parole and probation system.
During two brief interviews he attempted to interrogate me
about my political views and philosophy, and focused his
questions almost entirely on my contact and relationship
with prisoner support groups on the outside. He seemed
particularly interested in my contact with the Anarchist
Black Cross movement and claimed to have researched their
website and read articles of mine featured on it. In
Stillman's limited right-wing imagination he associated
anarchism with violence and terrorism, and despite what he
had actually seen and read to the contrary on the ABC
website, he decided to write the following critically
damning remarks in his report on me to the parole board:
'.Bowden has written for a self-proclaimed anarchist website
called Brighton ABC and he says he supports many of their
ideas and actions. A review of this website brings into
question the nature of the group. The members of this group
appear to be primarily eco-terrorists or paramilitary
members involved in what they see as battles against
political systems and principles.'. He then adds: 'Whilst at
Edinburgh prison it was reported that Bowden had received a
visit from terrorists.' This refers to two members of
Brighton ABC who had visited me at Edinburgh jail, neither
of whom had a criminal conviction between them.
As Stillman was well aware, particularly as an American with
firm right-wing opinions, levelling the accusation of
'terrorist' sympathies and associations against me in the
current political climate would effectively terminate any
possibility of the parole board agreeing to my release. And
of course those who invited Stillman to write his report on
me knew only too well that the opinions of an apparently
unbiased and neutral professional would be given infinitely
more weight by the parole board than those offered by
conceivably prejudiced prison staff. The social work unit
manager at Castle Huntly, Christina Brown, despite having
also reviewed the ABC website, submitted a report endorsing
Stillman's views and attesting to his impartiality and
professionalism.
The entire administration at Castle Huntly deliberately
colluded in supporting Stillman's ludicrous report, and
reacted viciously when I contacted the ABC and suggested
they pursue legal action over Stillman's definition and
accusation of them as 'terrorist'. On the 18th April, during
the afternoon, all prisoners at Castle Huntly were locked
down in their cells as I was escorted to the office of the
prison's deputy governor, James McKay. He informed me that I
had 'compromised the corporate reputation of the prison' by
highlighting Stillman's remarks (my intention exactly!), and
that my 'continuing contact with a paramilitary organisation
on the outside rendered my continuing presence in an open
jail unacceptable'. I was then placed into solitary
confinement and the following day moved to a maximum
security prison.
I had committed no offence against prison discipline at
Castle Huntly, breached no prison rules and had fulfilled
every bona fide criterion determining life sentence
prisoners suitability for release, and yet on the basis of
an obviously ludicrous allegation made by an idiotic,
redneck social worker, I was swiftly entombed back in high
security conditions and denied any possibility of release
for the foreseeable future.
The truth is that my treatment is politically motivated and
inspired by a determination to continuously punish me for
having fought the system in the past and encouraging others
to do so, and also by a determination to render me
intellectually and politically compliant and submissive. As
far as the prison system is concerned, the imperative now is
not about negating any genuine risk that I might pose to the
community, that stopped being an issue many years ago, but
primarily about eradicating my political identity and
spirit. From this point on, therefore, my continuing
imprisonment is nakedly political and centres wholly on what
I continue to represent to a prison system ever fearful of a
politically awakened and militant prisoner movement.
John Bowden HMP Glenochil
May 2007

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