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Committee to End the Marion Lockdown

The Committee to End the Marion Lockdown (CEML) was a movement organization that opposed control unit prisons in particular, and racism and oppression in general. It was founded in 1985 and came to a close in 2000. Over the course of those 15 years, CEML led and organized hundreds of educational programs and demonstrations in many parts of the country and tried to build a national movement against “end-of-the-line” prisons. Along the way the Committee wrote thousands of pages of educational and agitational literature and pioneered new ways of analyzing and fighting against this national quagmire that morphed into the proliferation of the “prison industrial complex.”

Collection includes: Publications on their efforts to shut down the Marion Prison control unit, prevent the opening of USP Florence, CO; protests against toxic water at Crab Orchard Lake; efforts to improve conditions for inmates; efforts to stop the proliferation of Control Units in general; and further human rights and social justice in the US prison system.

Kurshan, N. (2012). OUT OF CONTROL: A Chronological Narrative of the Committee to End the Marion Lockdown's 15 Year Struggle (manuscript ed., p. 1).

Documents

No Contamination of Federal Prisoners! Background on Florence, CO Area Contamination No Contamination of Federal Prisoners! Background on Florence, CO Area Contamination
Publisher: Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1991Format: MonographCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Details air and water contamination at USP Marion. Part of Packet (Enclosure 5)
End the Marion Lockdown! Support Human Rights for Prisoners! End the Marion Lockdown! Support Human Rights for Prisoners!
Publisher: National Committee to Free Puerto Rican Prisoners of War; Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1991Format: MonographCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Advertises demonstration and court date for U.S. Court of Appeals. Includes General information on conditions at USP Marion.
Questions about the New control Unit Prisons ("Administrative Maximum Security Facility") Being Planned at Florence, Colorado Questions about the New control Unit Prisons ("Administrative Maximum Security Facility") Being Planned at Florence, Colorado
Publisher: Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1991Format: ExcerptCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Questions regarding policies and procedures planned for USP Florence, CO. Part of Packet (Enclosure 7)
Walkin' Steel Walkin' Steel
Publisher: Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1991Volume Number: Vol.1-1Format: PeriodicalCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Newsletter devoted to the abolition of control unit prisons. Spring 1991 issue. Includes: From Attica to Marion to Florence; Sept. 21st Attica Commemoration; Attica=Resistance; Resources on Attica; New York Control Unit Prisons; control Unit Prisons Proliferate; Florence Update; People to Contact; Who Killed Mcduffie; Toxic Water at Marion - Changes?; Get In Touch with CEML
Walkin' Steel Walkin' Steel
Publisher: Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1991Volume Number: Vol. 1-1Format: PeriodicalCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Newsletter devoted to the abolition of control unit prisons. Spring 1991 issue. Includes: The Proposed Prison in Florence, Colorado: A "New and Improved" Marion; A Policy of Containment Control Unit Prisons Flourish; A Chronology of Contamination the Cotter Uranium Corporation; Who We Are. Also includes Supplement: Questions About the New Control Unit Prison Being Planned at Florence, Colorado.
Hard Time: The Mission at Marion Hard Time: The Mission at Marion
Author: Michael IsikoffPublisher: Washington PostYear: 1991Format: ArticleCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Reproduction of 5/28/1991 article on conditions at Marion USP
Human rights group faults super security prison Human rights group faults super security prison
Author: Michael IsikoffPublisher: Washington PostYear: 1991Format: ArticleCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Reproduction: 114 Washington Post A36, col. 1 (November 14, 1991)
Big house on the prarie: To break out of its economic trap, Florence broke into the nation's toughest jail Big house on the prarie: To break out of its economic trap, Florence broke into the nation's toughest jail
Author: Mike O'KeefePublisher: WestwordYear: 1991Format: ArticleCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Reproduction of 4/24-30/1991 article on the development of Florence, CO as a prison driven economy