The Release of Mark Cook: It's A Question of Justice By Ed Mead [Ed Mead was a former member of Seattle's George Jackson Brigade, a small group of revolutionaries that conducted armed actions and bombings against the state during the last half of the '70s. He was released from prison in late 1993, after serving eighteen years in prison for Brigade related crimes.] I am going write a little bit about my imprisonment, and in doing so I hope to express to you the twisted logic that enables me to be out here in minimum custody (on the streets) while Mark Cook is still in prison today. When I first went to prison I was put in the hole in the Penitentiary at Walla Walla. From that incarceration grew a group of resistors who became known as the Walla Walla Brothers. That resistance culminated in a institution-wide work strike that lasted for forty-seven days. Of the fourteen demands presented to the administration, first on the list was a rectification of the brutal conditions and treatment of prisoners in the segregation unit. The strike at Walla Walla was a major news story in 1977, with television and newspaper coverage every day. In all of that daily coverage by the bourgeois media, however, not once did a prisoner or even someone representing the prisoners get a single inch of print space, or a second of air time on the Seattle television stations. Then, on the forty-third day of the strike, the George Jackson Brigade placed bombs in safety deposit boxes in two Rainier bank branches located in the affluent Bellevue community. The Brigade issued a communique that pointed out the interlocking directorship between the Raineer Bank and the Seattle Times, it unmasked the biased coverage the Seattle Times and other media outlets and explained how they presented only the state's point of view of this struggle, and the Brigade promised to continue bombing Raineer Banks until such time as the Seattle Times at least made a pretense of evenhandedness in its coverage of the struggle at Walla Walla. Within days of the adoption of a new perspective by the news media, the public's sympathies had changed. This was because the Seattle Times finally interviewed a prisoner. The statewide change in consciousness was so drastic that it quickly resulted in the firing of Harold Bradley, the boss of Washington's Department of Corrections, as well as Walla Walla's warden, B.J. Rhay. Lesser figures, like the associate warden of custody, were transferred to different prisons within the state. And the Walla Walla Brothers were released to the prison's general population, where they went on to organize Men Against Sexism and other work on the inside. The strike at Walla Walla was the longest in state history. The winning of that struggle represents the application of armed struggle at its best. We are not about that form of liberalism any more. There were other struggles at Walla Walla and much trouble, too. The end result of it was that I was placed in the hole with several comrades in connection with an armed escape attempt. From within the segregation unit my friends and I tried to escape again, and we were waging constant battles with our captors. During one such battle guards shoved a riot baton up Carl Harp's ass, causing a 5/8 inch tear in the wall of his rectum. No guard was ever charged, although some lost their jobs for a little while before they were put back to work in the segregation unit and elsewhere within the prison. Anyway, the prison administration was quite anxious to get rid of my friends and I. Some years later, through documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, I learned why I am out of prison today. The state contacted the federal government about sending me and some of their other troublesome prisoners to the U.S. Prison at Marion, Illinois. As it happened, however, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, the Circuit that has jurisdiction over Marion Prison, in a case involving a Hawaiian state prisoner, had just held that the feds are not in the rent-a-prison business for the states, and that they can no longer accept state prisoners from other jurisdictions. The feds told Washington prison officials how to circumvent this ruling. They said if you write the U.S. Attorney and ask him to get the federal court to run Mead's federal and state time together, concurrently, then they could ship me to Marion as a federal prisoner. That's what they did. The federal appeals court ruling was soon overturned, but in that small window of time my sentencing structure had changed. Within five months, while taking part in a hunger strike by all segregation prisoners at Marion, I was given back to the custody of the state of Washington. From Marion I went to various other state prisons in other states, and ultimately back to Washington. In washington I stayed at the prison in Monroe, where I served the next ten years. While I was in exile I filed a Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence in Seattle's federal court. I successfully contended that my thirty year sentence for bank robbery was illegal because the court cannot give me consecutive terms for armed bank robbery (25 years) and being armed during the commission of a federal felony (five years). While my federal time was cut from thirty to twenty-five years, the federal bureau of prisons was not informed of this fact. Thus they always told the state that my federal release date was five years longer than it actually was. In April of 1993 the state parole board gave me the two year administrative review all long timers receive. As always, they had unceremoniously continued my case for another two years, meaning the soonest I would have a parole hearing, not even a parole hearing but another administrative review, was in April of 1995. I did not have a defense committee, but I did have a circle of good friends. I filed a clemency petition and these friends wrote letters in my behalf. My attorney said word about my case, about why I was in prison for so long, got to the governor and he suggested that the Board review my case. What ever the reason, I was promptly given an unscheduled and unrequested in-person parole hearing and released to my federal detainer. The state thought I had that extra five years to serve with the feds. Upon arriving at a federal prison I presented the applicable officials with a certified copy of the court order cutting my sentence by five years, and after every effort to drag the process out, the feds released me a little over a year ago. I was given a plane ticket and some shabby clothing. After eighteen years I was "free." In an written article in the Seattle Post Intelligencer shortly after the feds let me go, the Parole Board boss was quoted as saying that my release was a "mistake," that they thought I had several more years of imprisonment to serve. The Board was wrong. I was not released early. My release came ten years too late. I should have been released, and could have been released safely, back in 1983 rather than 1993. That's one of the problems with corrections today, they don't know when it is time to release someone. They don't even care. And that's what makes the experience such a destructive one, to you as well as to us. I am out here today not because I deserve it, but because I was a trouble maker. In contrast to my case, Mark Cook has maintained a good record in prison. He was active in the struggle for prisoner rights, and filed prosecuted litigation in behalf of the labor and safety rights of prisoners, especially those working in the prison's industrial area. But unlike me, in the earlier years of my confinement, he did not do his prison work violently. At Walla Walla I was busted having three home-made hand grenades, a pistol, and eighty round of ammunition. So I am now on the outside. And Mark is in prison. Yet I am the more culpable, both while inside the walls and out here in minimum custody before my imprisonment. So why is Mark still in prison? Just how much should a person serve for committing crimes such as those allegedly committed by Mark Cook and his comrades? There are three things that need to be looked at: Firstly, you should look at the amount of time served by darlings of the right wing who are convicted of political crimes. Secondly, the amount of time served by social prisoners convicted of the same type of crime Mark was convicted of, that being two counts of first degree assault. And thirdly, the amount of time served by others in the Brigade for committing the same range of crimes. On the first point, the amount of time right wing terrorists are sentenced to, you can take it from me that they receive relative pats on the back of the hand in relation to the time given to left wing political offenders. The pro-capitalist Cuban who blew up a Cuban airliner that killed 76 people received something like three years in a U.S. prison. As for the issue of social prisoners, according to the Washington state department of statistics, the average amount of time served in this state for first degree assault, and I averaged the annual figures over a ten year period, is 57.1 months, that's under five years. Mark is serving his nineteenth year, more than most first degree murderers, who on average serve a little over seventeen years. And thirdly, while we expect political prisoners on the left to serve more time than social prisoners for the same crime, just as we expect to be treated more harshly that right wing offenders. Not only are both of those true in Mark's case, but he is also serving more time than his white counterparts in the Brigade. We are free. Janine Burtram is free. Rita Bo Brown is free. Threse Coupez is free. I am free. Yet Mark Cook, the only Black man arrested in connection with Brigade actions, remains in prison. Mark would like people to ask three petinent questions of state parole and clemency officials in Washington. These are: (1) Why hasn't Mark Cook's federal and state terms run concurrently, like Ed Mead's sentence? (2) Why hasn't the Washington state parole board (ISRB) used it's discretion under the Sentence Reform Act's RCW 9.94A.400(3) to run Mark Cook's state and federal time concurrently? And (3), if Ed Mead had two consecutive life terms and Mark Cook had two concurrent life terms, then why must Mark serve more time than Ed did? We of the Mark Cook Freedom Committee are not seeking a break for Mark Cook. That point was passed many, many years ago. What we are asking for is simple justice--something that is long past due. To get justice from this state's apparatus of repression will require the involvement of a lot of people. One very important person is the lawyer who will be doing Mark's clemency petition. The governor had a hand in my release, I believe, and so he should have a hand in Mark's. But the process getting an attorney to file and prosecute a clemency petition is a costly one. We could use your support. Please give what you can toward the legal expenses involved in Mark's petition for clemency. Send contributions and requests for more information to: Mark Cook Freedom Committee P.O. Box 85763 Seattle, WA 98145-2763 USA