Prison ministry....Truth in Sentencing to be Renamed Dishonesty

DennisTate

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This powerful message has given me a better idea of how we can reach out to inmates. Note: Paul is a Christian who is continually telling other inmates about his faith!

cassfox;1065847909 said:
Paul M. Nigl
#280834
Waupun Correctional Institution
PO Box 351
Waupun, WI 53963
May 28, 2015

Governor Scott Walker
115 East
State Capitol
Madison, WI 53702

Dear Governor Walker,

I hope that this letter will reach your desk and not become one of the many which ends up in the discard or unseen pile. I have exhausted all my options for help and attention, and have finally decided at the urging of friends and family, to contact you and your staff. My issue is regarding the truth-in-sentencing model which became a legislative act prior to my incarceration.

Eliminating the parole board was one of the biggest mistakes Wisconsin legislators made. With its elimination came the elimination for motivation to behave appropriately, change, or even succeed in the Wisconsin Department of Corrections. Inmates, for the most part, have taken a “forget it” attitude since many of us have absolutely no hope for earning release based upon good behavior or making the best choices. Yes, some of us have changed despite that act. The rest continue to be so problematic that it is costing the State of Wisconsin more to manage them than the 30,000 or so dollars it takes to keep them incarcerated each year.

It seems that no one cares about us as human beings, which we are, Sir. So, if our humanity is not an issue, then the fiscal responsibility of Wisconsin should be. The Department of Corrections is big business for Wisconsin. Yet, indirect and direct costs accrue not only to maintain us, but also when an inmate seeks a reason to sue the State of Wisconsin in an effort to obtain freedom from an overly harsh sentence, an unfair sentence, or misconduct by those who operate the prisons. Wisconsin judges are allowed to impose sentences at will with no accountability or consistency.

Even Caesar released one prisoner a year as an act of goodwill, and to maintain his popularity with the people he governed. Positive attention could be gained by you and your staff if you would remedy this massive incarceration problem as a pre-emptive move toward your future political goals. The money invested in maintaining a heavy prison population could be better invested in other areas in need of state funding. Those of us who are not fundamentally dangerous to society, and who have transformed ourselves should be allowed a second chance.

Sincerely,


Paul M. Nigl

Update: Mr. Nigl's new address is: Paul M. Nigl #280834, Redgranite Correctional Institution, PO Box 925, Redgranite, WI 54970-0925
 
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DennisTate

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Here is some more information on this particular case:


.....
cassfox;1065847885 said:
Wisconsin was going to release thousands of non-violent offenders after the feds released thousands last year. So far, nothing has been done. It's time to keep the promise and stick to the plan.

Truth in Sentencing To Be Renamed Injustice In Sentencing! 04/20/2015

Wisconsin has recently uncovered yet another judge who was apparently operating outside of his scope of practice; or, outside of his psychological and characterological capacity. Bizarre sentences given to a large number of male offenders and gross incompetence on the part of the Milwaukee judge led to many men being set free on technicalities. Sources indicate that the Federal Government had to get involved to unravel this mess and that the Feds will continue to work on revamping the entire prison system across the United States in the near future. This leads one to wonder how many of the more than 22,000 incarcerated individuals in Wisconsin actually belong in prison. One such case is presented in this document.

It seems that Mr. Paul M. Nigl (#280834 - Waupun Correctional Institution [WCI]) was made an example of by a corrupt judge, Bruce Schmidt, and a corrupt District Attorney, Joseph Paulus in Oshkosh, Winnebago County, Wisconsin in 2001. The pair, who wanted to appear to get tough on drunk driving, increased the sentence given to Mr. Nigl for an alcohol related accident from the average 5 years to 60 years with 40 years of probation. Mr. Schmidt has since retired and Mr. Paulus, who now lives in Florida, has since served a short federal sentence for gross corruption while in office; much less time than Mr. Nigl is serving. Mr. Nigl’s attorney made little effort to actually assist his client by ignoring important evidence which may have greatly changed the outcome of Mr. Nigl’s sentence. When Mr. Nigl attempted to fire his attorney and obtain help from another source, Mr. Schmidt denied him that opportunity.

Mr. Nigl, on the other hand, works for the maintenance department in the prison in a position of trust, yet earns less than $4.00 per hour for the vital work he performs keeping the prison’s archaic plumbing and electrical systems functioning. He remains in good standing with the WCI staff, yet is treated as though he is less than human by many security officers. He has spent almost 15 years in prison maturing into a man who has valuable talents that could benefit society, but remains in an environment of danger and degradation. Wisconsin spends more than $30,000 a year incarcerating Mr. Nigl. It's time to save the taxpayer’s money and allow more men to have a second chance. Mr. Nigl deserves a second chance. He is seeking sentence restructuring, but should be seeking freedom through exoneration.

How many other men were unfairly sentenced in Wisconsin in recent times for political platform advantage? Is there not a class action law suit in the making that has suddenly freed men who have committed 1st Degree Intentional Homicide among other crimes (as mention above)? Many of them are going free right now because of the misconduct of a judge in Milwaukee who was allowed to serve insane, out-of-control sentences for decades in an inconsistent manner reminiscent of someone who is mentally ill. Mr. Nigl and others deserve the same opportunity to be re-sentenced or set free just like those who are now being released on technicalities thanks to that Milwaukee judge. A high ranking state official has confided to this writer, "Future sentences will be lighter. Those who are already incarcerated are screwed".

At Waupun Correctional Institution the water is almost undrinkable due to heavy metal in the old, and sometimes original, pipes and a break down in the City of Waupun water system last year. Men were forced to drink water after letting it run for long periods of time; it was still cloudy and discolored. The response from WCI staff was, “Well, don’t come to prison then.” The sewer system under the prison is so decrepit that the inmates who work down there making necessary repairs, like Mr. Nigl, are exposed to dangerous communicable diseases and are not always allowed to properly shower or obtain clean clothing afterward. Recently, Mr. Nigl, who is a plumber at WCI, was required to unclog some pipes in the sewer under a cell hall. He and his co-worker returned to their main worksite after the job was complete expecting to shower and change clothes. The officer at the site told them to wait while he called an upper level security supervisor first. The men were covered in blood, feces, and urine which may contain HIV, Hepatitis-C, herpes, and other dangerous communicable pathogens. The officer told the men that the security supervisor was denying them a shower. They were to return to their cells and wash up in their sinks. Both men were shocked and protested the decision, giving valid reasons for their protests. The office told them he would “write them up” if they continued to protest. Mr. Nigl quietly returned to his cell, took his clothing off, and sat up all night on his bunk after attempting to wash up the best he could in his cell. He phoned a family member the next morning, who in turn phoned the institution, and made a verbal complaint. Only after this was done did the Security Director go to the cell hall and apologize to Mr. Nigl in person and allow him to shower properly.

Food is so overcooked at WCI and other correctional facilities that there is no nutritional value left in it. Inmates are not always allowed to have medications in a timely manner, or at all, by security staff who are not trained to manage medical or psychotropic medications. Mr. Nigl was denied medication recently just after returning from the hospital for a surgical procedure. Psychiatrists in DOC and DHS are known to remove men cold-turkey from drugs that normally require titration. Inmates are forced to remain in their cells most of the day without sunlight or fresh air. Illness spreads rapidly among the inmates and staff. Fans in the cell halls are turned off to punish inmates, leaving them without cool air movement on upper tiers that get tremendously hot year round. Reports have leaked out of WCI for years of neglect and abuse by over-worked, underpaid staff members, who may not see their families for days at a time due to mandated overtime. This is what the taxpayers are spending $30,000 a year per inmate on instead of allowing them the opportunity to lead successful lives outside of the bars.

More disturbing is the higher power which unfairly incarcerates men who do not belong in prison and also imposes some (not all) unfair sentences on men who are deserving of a second chance. Those are the judges, who are allowed the freedom to impose sentence structures on a case-by-case basis, without strict guidelines, expert knowledge of mental or physical illness, and who are not accountable to anyone, least of all the public which they serve. This, in conjunction with misrepresentation by some state media sources, has led to grossly unfair treatment of many individuals in our state justice system.

There happens to be a high number of individuals incarcerated in Wisconsin who do not belong in prison at all. Those are men who have intelligence scores so low as to make them vulnerable to the true criminal element within the prison system. Those men are taken unfair advantage of sexually, financially, physically, and emotionally by staff and inmates. Of course, the numbers must be estimated because there are not enough competent psychologists who are trained in psychological testing, and who have time to perform the tests and report the results, to compile data to provide to lawmakers.

United States veterans, who served our country with their lives, have been incarcerated instead of receiving appropriate help from the Veteran’s Association or their respective counties. They were abandoned to cope with posttraumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues on their own. Many of them turned to drugs and alcohol and made mistakes for which they are now paying with long or life sentences.

Men who were not career criminals are being punished with what amounts to life sentences for accidents or mistakes that occurred once, and usually in late adolescence or early adulthood. Many of them seek help, and are turned away by corrections staff. They are provided a greater chance of becoming criminals due to the corrections environment in which they are forced to live. Rather than habilitating or rehabilitating them, as the Wisconsin DOC claims, they are locked in a cycle of failure with no hope for a second chance or a life of purpose. Our prison population grows younger every day across the United States. Men who are incarcerated at ages ranging from 19 to 30 are stuck in developmental stages that will never allow them to mature or be productive members of free society. The United States is losing a valuable portion of its young men and women to the short-sighted, arrogant, jaded, decisions of some judges; Wisconsin is one the most guilty in that respect.

Wisconsin purports to be a state with harsh sentencing laws, yet many individuals who belong in jail or prison live free lives in our communities. Individuals with money or “the right connections” commit the same types of crimes that incarcerated individuals committed, and are given light sentences or no sentences at all. There is no justice in that. Justice is not blind in Wisconsin, and lawmakers look to line their own pockets or to use their personal beliefs simply as political platforms for self-promotion. It’s time to look at the sentencing structures of the incredible number of incarcerated men and women in Wisconsin and make immediate changes. The prison system is nothing more than a grand money-making scheme for this state.

For research purposes here are the links to the two original writings:

http://www.politicalforum.com/law-justice/444104-when-will-states-release-inmates-promised.html

and....

http://www.politicalforum.com/law-justice/444106-truth-sentencing-renamed-dishonesty.html
 
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DennisTate

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Praying that justice is done, and quickly.

Thank you immensely Brinny! I have read that 2017 is a Jubilee year so I am expecting miraculous breaking of chains both literally as well as on hearts and minds.
 
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brinny

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Thank you immensely Brinny! I have read that 2017 is a Jubilee year so I am expecting miraculous breaking of chains both literally as well as on hearts and minds.

i pray that it happens as well...continuing to pray!
 
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skn

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Praying that justice is done, and quickly.
Brinny and DennisTate,

Thank you for this support. Paul Nigl is still incarcerated, but has been moved from maximum security to 2 different medium security prisons. We are hopeful that he will be released from this unfair 100 year sentence this year. Why? Because God has said so, and President Trump is insisting on federal prison reform, which we believe will also affect the state prisons. My letters to the White House have not been ignored. Paul and I have a great testimony and great ministry to accomplish on the outside of the prison walls! God bless you. Sandra Kay Johnston-Nigl
 
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brinny

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Brinny and DennisTate,

Thank you for this support. Paul Nigl is still incarcerated, but has been moved from maximum security to 2 different medium security prisons. We are hopeful that he will be released from this unfair 100 year sentence this year. Why? Because God has said so, and President Trump is insisting on federal prison reform, which we believe will also affect the state prisons. My letters to the White House have not been ignored. Paul and I have a great testimony and great ministry to accomplish on the outside of the prison walls! God bless you. Sandra Kay Johnston-Nigl

Thank you for the update. Praise God, Sandra!!!! Continuing to pray!!!!
 
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Brinny and DennisTate,

Thank you for this support. Paul Nigl is still incarcerated, but has been moved from maximum security to 2 different medium security prisons. We are hopeful that he will be released from this unfair 100 year sentence this year. Why? Because God has said so, and President Trump is insisting on federal prison reform, which we believe will also affect the state prisons. My letters to the White House have not been ignored. Paul and I have a great testimony and great ministry to accomplish on the outside of the prison walls! God bless you. Sandra Kay Johnston-Nigl


The State of the Union Address was sure good news wasn't it?

 
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skn

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The State of the Union Address was sure good news wasn't it?

It was fantastic. He truly is our Cyrus; not just for America, but for the world. I pray blessing and protection over him.

Please pray for Paul, who is not in a good place emotionally right now. I also need prayer for my healing and finances. This is urgent. Thank you!
 
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DennisTate

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It was fantastic. He truly is our Cyrus; not just for America, but for the world. I pray blessing and protection over him.

Please pray for Paul, who is not in a good place emotionally right now. I also need prayer for my healing and finances. This is urgent. Thank you!


Here is something that will really encourage you........

 
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