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WSWS : News
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America : The
Brutal Society
California judge orders man electronically stunned in courtroom
By John Andrews
18 July 1998
Every so often an event happens which captures the essence
of the times better than thousands of words ever could. One such
instance occurred in a Long Beach, California criminal courtroom
on June 30, 1998.
The defendant, Ronnie Hawkins, was acting as his own lawyer
at a sentencing hearing before Municipal Judge Joan Comparet-Cassani.
A chronic substance abuser in his forties--HIV positive and burdened
with a lengthy criminal record--Hawkins was facing a sentence
of 25 years to life in prison under California's barbaric "three
strikes" law after being convicted of shoplifting $265 worth
of painkillers.
Below Hawkins's jail jumpsuit, he was wearing a two-pound belt
with a battery pack. Manufactured by Stun Tech, Inc., the belt
is designed to deliver an eight-second 50,000-volt electronic
shock when activated by a transmitter controlled by the court
bailiff. For two years, Los Angeles County has been placing the
device on prisoners who supposedly pose a risk of flight or violence
during court appearances, but it had never before been activated
in a courtroom.
During the sentencing hearing Hawkins kept trying to speak
over the judge. Comparet-Cassani told him, "You are wearing
a very bad instrument, and if you want to feel it, you can, but
stop interrupting me." Hawkins replied, "You are going
to electrocute me for talking?" Comparet-Cassani said, "No,
sir, but they will zap you if you keep doing it." After Hawkins
again spoke, Comparet-Cassani said, "One more time. One more
time. Go ahead."
When Hawkins declared, "That is unconstitutional,"
Comparet-Cassani ordered the bailiff to activate the belt. Stunned
observers watched Hawkins drop to the floor, his face contorting
and his limbs rigid and shaking for almost 10 seconds.
"I guess that's how a guy feels who goes to the electric
chair," Hawkins said in a later interview. "It was like
a stinging in my spine and then a lot of pain in my back. I was
paralyzed for about four seconds." Hawkins added, "This
is America. What about the Constitution? What about my rights
to be protected from cruel and unusual punishment?"
This is America.
Hawkins filed a civil rights suit against the judge this week,
but he will never see a dime because the Supreme Court has already
given judges immunity for ordering courtroom assaults by bailiffs.
Instead, Comparet-Cassani will continue to sit as a judge, with
her like-minded colleagues of the California judiciary, collecting
a six-figure salary for the job of defining and enforcing constitutional
rights.
See Also:
Alienation, adolescence and violence:
The social crisis in America
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