
Milwaukee, June 27, 2020: 1st Annual Together We Stand Celebration
Kenosha, June 19, 2020:Black Lives Matter march/protest
Black Lives Matter march/protest
Meet in the old Pick N Save parking lot, 4:30 P.M.
Peaceful protest to raise awareness of the systemic racism, injustice, and oppression of African Americans
Gather at 4 PM
March starts at 4:30 PM
Ends at Lincoln Park
Masks and social distancing encouraged!

Prairie du Chen (St. Feriole Island), June 14, 2020: Black Lives Matter Protest Against Police Brutality
Black Lives Matter Protest Against Police Brutality
This will be a short peaceful march to bring awareness to the Black Lives Matter movement and to protest police brutality.
We will start on the south end of St. Feriole Island, from there we will go down Black Hawk Ave to Marquette Rd, from Marquette Rd to Washington St, and from there we will head back down to the island. Signs are heavily encouraged.

June 13, 2020: Protest and March Through Genoa City
Eau Claire, June 8, 2020: Team Up Tuesday: Protest

Team Up Tuesday: Peaceful Protest
Protest to help bring the racial injustices of this country to a freaking end. We are stronger together. We will fight for as long as it takes! SAY THEIR NAMES. NO JUSTICE NO PEACE. Come every Tuesday to support the BLM movement. We encourage you to come TUSDAYS AT THE CORNER OF N. BARSTOW & E. MADISON any time of day, we might stop out at lunch some days! We will be there for sure around 5:00 pm every Tuesday. Bring your signs, bring love, bring encouragement, bring unity.
Kenosha, June 8, 2020: Stand with Chrystul Kizer-conference/bail review
Stand with Chrystul Kizer-conference/bail review
#FreeChrystul
Chrystul Kizer is a survivor of child sex trafficking. A conference/bail review for her case is being held Monday, June 8th at the Kenosha City Court house. She is wrongly being charged with first degree homicide during an act of self-defense against her abuser. Let’s show solidarity with Chrystul Kizer and pressure Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley to DROP THE CHARGES. #FreeChrystul
Protest starting at 11am. Court session is at 2pm. Due to Covid-19 we cannot perform a sit in during her hearing, but we can still make our stance of solidarity known outside of the court house. Please wear masks and be mindful of social distancing.
If you cannot attend please sign and share the petition and contact DA Micheal Graveley to pressure him to drop these charges. (see links listed below). Please share event link.
Petition: https://www.change.org/p/drop-all-charges-against-incarcerated-trafficking-survivor-chrystul-kizer
DA Micheal Graveley Contact info: https://freechrystul.wordpress.com/contact-the-da/
“Human trafficking survivor from Milwaukee, Chrystul Kizer, shot and killed Randy Volar in an act of self-defense in June 2018 when she was 17 years old. Prior to his death, officials in Kenosha knew about Randy Volar’s history of sexual abuse against young black girls. In February 2018, Volar, a 33-year old white man, was arrested on multiple charges including child sexual assault and was released without bail. Police had collected evidence that shows Volar had been sexually abusing multiple black girls, including Chrystul.
Kenosha prosecutors failed to act when they knew Volar was committing acts of violence and exploitation against black girls, including Chrystul. Yet, DA Michael Graveley is charging Chrystul with first-degree intentional homicide, which carries a life sentence in Wisconsin; her bail is (was) set at $1 million. In December 2019, Chrystul’s lawyer argued that affirmative defense law applies to Chrystul’s case. The judge rejected this argument; however, the judge’s ruling is subject to appeal. Affirmative defenses protect trafficking survivors from prosecution for “offenses” as a result of being trafficked.
DA Graveley is choosing to assert to Chrystul, her family and the broader community that Black women and girls do not live lives worth saving. Chrystul was a child and was being victimized and sexually exploited by an adult. Black girls have the right to resist sexual violence and the right to survive. ”
SOURCE: https://freechrystul.wordpress.com/

Wisconsin, July 1, 2020: Demand Parole Release Rally!

Wisconsin’s parole commission is a disintegrating disaster.
***THE JUNE 3 MEETING OF THE PAROLE COMMISSION HAS BEEN POSTPONED***
Parole Commission says there will be a meeting in June, but not on the first Wednesday. We will post an update as soon as we know the date.
Volunteers, organizers and supporters of people sentenced under the old law (and thus eligible for parole) have been attending the monthly meetings of the parole commission since last August. There we have seen evidence of active efforts to sabotage and obstruct the long overdue releases of our loved ones.
The racism and signs of manipulation we witnessed at January’s meeting were particularly intolerable. We will not sit and watch this injustice any longer. From now on we will follow the monthly meetings with a rally supporting reform and releases.
We ask that you please join us at the next scheduled meeting on May 6, 2020 and on the first Wednesday of every month thereafter until they LET OUR PEOPLE GO!
Our Ongoing Agenda each Meeting Day:
9:30 am- PACK THE MEETING: attend the public portion of the parole commission meeting. Public is not welcomed to speak during the meeting, but the more people we have bearing witness, the more pressure for reform will be felt.
Unknown- REPORTBACK: the meeting will go to closed session and we will have to leave the room, so we’ll gather outside to share reactions to the meeting and stories about recent releases and deferrals.
If you cannot attend, please support this effort by signing and sharing our petition demanding accelerated releases and reformed criteria.
Background
Governor Tony Evers appointed John Tate II, a social worker from Racine to Chair the Commission. Tate is the first black man in this role, and the first person coming from a social work and helping profession (typically commissioners come from the DOC or prosecutor’s offices). He came in with a stated intention to increase releases and help reduce mass incarceration in Wisconsin.
In response, Tate has seen extraordinary obstruction from the DOC, the legislature, and even the rest of the commission.
At the meetings and through communication with incarcerated people, we have witnessed or learned about the following:
100% of Tate’s office staff left to work for the DOC.
Steven Landreman, one of three commissioners, who had been there 18 years quit abruptly and now works for the DOC.
Danielle LaCost announced an intention to resign, but has stuck around for months, making it harder for Tate to hire a replacement and get to work.
Prison guards and wardens have systematically targeted people before their hearings, giving them unusually strict or harsh conduct reports to jeopardize their release.
Senator Fitzgerald and other legislators have so far failed to schedule a senate vote to confirm Tate’s appointment to parole chair, seven months since he was appointed.
the DOC’s Bureau of Classification and Management (BOCM) has also prevented parole eligible people from gaining security level qualifying them for release
the DOC’s program review committee (PRC) has denied parole eligible people access to programs that qualify them for release.
The DOC’s Division of Community Corrections (DCC) has denied people placement in counties where they have family and a solid re-entry plan, undermining their prospects at parole.
The DOC and Parole commission have not implemented Executive Directive 31, which allowed the Parole Chair to consider releases for extraordinary circumstances like heath issues or overly long sentences.
People have been routinely and repeatedly deferred and held in prison for arbitrary and subjective reasons. Deferral reasons such as “not serving enough time for the crime committed” are common, as well as “serving too much time to be suitable for release”.
At the January meeting, Danielle LaCost indulged in repeating insults that her DOC friends had directed at Tate. “Our department has been called a shit-show”, she said to Tate, and “you’ve been called a dipshit.”
Commissioner Douglas Drankiewicz implied he was also considering quitting, saying “I don’t want it to be 100% commissioner turnover, too. I don’t want to leave, I think I’m good at this job, but…” He warned Tate not to hire from outside the DOC. We expect DOC employees will continue the obstruction and decades-long tradition of confining people as long as possible.
The sabotage of the Parole Commission started before Tate’s appointment. Under the previous Chairman Daniel Gabler, releases had all but ceased. There were so few paroles granted that Scott Walker considered abolishing the parole commission to “streamline” the process by not bothering with routine hearings anymore. This proposed change didn’t officially occur, but Gabler and Walker did allow the commission to shrink at the end of their terms. After losing the 2018 election, Walker appointed Gabler to be a Milwaukee County Judge. He is up for re-election on April 7, 2020.
The parole commission went from 8 Commissioners and 13 staff in 2014 to three commissioners and two staff by the time Tate took over. Those two staff left in his first six months. The commission was 6 months behind on correspondence on Tate’s first day, and is now more than 12 months behind. Family members write support letters and make calls to the commission, but they are never answered. Letters announcing details that would qualify people for release, like housing and job offers do not get into their files. The commission is so understaffed that they are giving out automatic 2 month defers without holding a hearing at all. Rather than letting Tate give people fair hearings and more frequent releases, Wisconsin’s parole system has made itself completely dysfunctional.
The roots of this problem lie in the law change that occurred in January of 2000. That’s when Wisconsin implemented its Truth In Sentencing Law, eliminating parole as a sentencing option in favor of a bifurcated sentence (X years in prison and Y years on community supervision with no evaluations, reviews or options for early release). This law change abandoned the people sentenced before Jan 1 to a legal limbo where they went before the parole commission whose budget and pay based on having review hearings for a limited group of people that would only grow more limited with every release. In this situation, a parole commissioner’s personal financial interest is against releasing people, because that risks making their job obsolete.
Meanwhile, the institutional culture of the DOC is to hold on to its captives using every means at their disposal. This culture is most explicitly stated in an April of 1984 memo to the DOC by then Governor Tommy Thompson. Upon discovering that he could not retroactively apply a law abolishing mandatory release, Thompson told DOC Secretary stating “I hereby direct the Department of Corrections to pursue any and all available legal avenues to block the release of [people]… the policy of this administration is to keep [people] in prison as long as possible under the law.” This direction has defined the DOC’s internal culture for decades, and based on our observations, the culture remains strong and is becoming increasingly aggressive.
Milwaukee, June 11 and 18, 2020: The Blood Is At The Doorstep Drive In Movie Showing
Milwaukee, June 12-15, 2020: Unity Fire
Unity Fire MKE • June 12-June 15
A Fire with intended purpose will be placed on Mother Earth for four consecutive days, beginning June 12th and burn continuously until sundown on June 15th. Native American people will tend the Fire and conduct Pipe, Tobacco and Water Ceremonies each day. The Unity Fire MKE is being done for our community’s healing, unity and safety for all, but especially for our elders and children. Community members are welcome to come to the Wgema Campus gate with tobacco offerings or prayer ties (the fire keepers will collect this tobacco and put it in the fire for you). We will practice Social Distancing and other health precautions — we ask that all who visit our Unity Fire, do the same.



