December 18, 2003 - San Francisco Chronicle
Flaws in the Penal System
'Let My Dying Mom Out of Prison'
By Rashida Edmondson
"I don't want my mommy to die in that place by herself.
I want her to come home first so we can hug her and take lots
of pictures together. Will you please let her come home before
God takes her to His home? Please?" -- Karma Dias, 10
During the holidays, Karma Dias, like most of us, will be
spending time
with her family and loved ones. But unless a judge shows compassion,
Karma's mother will not be there, because she is dying in prison.
The state could save hundreds of thousands by sending Karma's
mother, and others like her, home. After all, it can cost a small
fortune to keep a terminally ill person in prison. As our state
fights the worst budget crisis in its history, taxpayers are
carrying the burden of keeping dying, medically incapacitated
people locked away from their families. Meanwhile, the budget
for the Department of Corrections budget has been spared from
any cuts.
Karma's mother, Beverly Dias, 51, is dying at Valley State
Prison for Women in Chowchilla (Madera County). She has 20 months
left on a 6-year sentence for possession of 6.3 grams of cocaine.
Dias is suffering from a combination of liver cancer and cirrhosis
of the liver caused by hepatitis C. The only treatment remaining
for her is to undergo a liver transplant. But she has been denied
transplant eligibility by the transplant team at the University
of California at Davis. No female prisoner in the history of
California has ever been allowed to obtain an organ transplant.
Without the transplant, doctors have declared that Dias will
die in the next six months.
Dias is in constant pain and requires significant pain medication
to function at a very basic level. She is constantly fatigued
and sleeps 14 or 15 hours a day. She is so incapacitated that
she is unable to walk to the cafeteria for meals, instead relying
on cellmates to bring food for her.
Working with our nonprofit organization, Dias applied to get
out of prison early under California's compassionate release
law, which allows the early release of prisoners who have less
than six months to live and who pose no threat to society. The
intent of this law is to allow prisoners to spend their last
days with their families and not alone in prison.
Last week, after previously denying her release, the director
of the California Department of Corrections, Edward Alameida,
reconsidered and recommended Dias for compassionate release.
We credit his change of heart to widespread support from the
community. Now it is all in the hands of the judge who originally
sentenced Dias, Rene Navarro, to approve her release; the case
will be decided Friday.
The plea of Beverly's daughter Karma is the plea of all children
who wish for their parents to come home to die. We are working
with dozens of other women who will die in prison. Their prospects
of spending their last days at home are minuscule. In the past
two months, two terminally ill women whom we worked with have
died in the custody of the corrections department, despite qualifying
for compassionate release. They died hospitalized and bed ridden,
shackled to their beds and guarded 24 hours a day by security
officers earning overtime pay. These deaths followed a 10-day
period in July, when three other women we represented died in
similar fashion.
Denying terminally ill women in prison the chance to spend
their last days with their families is unacceptable and thwarts
the intent behind the
compassionate release law.
Beverly Dias' story, while one of hope, highlights our prison
system's illogical policies that result in enormous waste of
money and human potential. The fact that our state is spending
scarce resources to confine dying prisoners is especially troublesome
in these rough economic times.
The approaching holiday season is a time for family, compassion
and goodwill. At this time, Dias needs to go home. It is cruel
and inhumane to deny a 10-year-old child's simple wish that her
mother come home to die. |