New York’s correctional system ended a 22-day wildcat strike after reaching a deal with the guards’ union contingent on 85% staff returning to work; however, over 2,000 officers were terminated for failing to comply with the deadline. The agreement includes a 90-day suspension of the HALT Act and adjustments to overtime pay, although the Legal Aid Society raised concerns about the deal’s implications for incarcerated individuals and the lack of a plan to restore services. Despite falling short of the 85% goal, the state honored the deal’s provisions, and the National Guard will continue providing support while recruitment efforts intensify.
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Malik Muhammad, a disabled veteran with PTSD, received a ten-year sentence—the harshest for any 2020 protest-related case—after pleading guilty to multiple felonies involving participation in protests and a Molotov cocktail incident. Despite Oregon’s 90-day solitary confinement limit, he has spent over 250 days in solitary, with his attorney arguing that the prison circumvents the limit by transferring him between units while keeping him in the same cell. This prolonged solitary confinement, following an incident where guards tased and beat him, exacerbates his PTSD and is considered by his legal team to be a form of torture. His recent hunger strike, protesting these conditions, ended after prison officials made some progress towards moving him to the general population.
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