Subject: Re: Experienced News Writer |
From: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> |
Date: 5/9/10, 14:55 |
To: brooklynheightsblog <brooklynheightsblog@gmail.com> |
Sounds good; get in touch when you'd like to discuss it further.
Thanks,
Barrett Brown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302On Sat, Mar 7, 2009 at 3:05 PM, brooklynheightsblog <brooklynheightsblog@gmail.com> wrote:
Let's talk this week. Would love for you to have a diary (fka blog) about bushwick which would be unpaid but a good platform -- but I'd also want to give you paid assignments... all this is a erik in progress so I'd want to create a situation where both of us are happy in the collaborationjlTypos courtesy of my iPhone./div>Hi-
Glad you liked the article. I live in Bushwick near Flushing and Broadway, sort of on the edge of Williamsburg. I'd be up for covering pretty much anything at all; I've done everything from restaurant reviews to public policy pieces, although I think the local subject I'd probably be best equipped to write about is Bushwick's fast-changing cultural scene in general. For instance, I could do pieces somewhat akin to the New Yorker's shortish front-of-the-book pieces that profile some quirky or otherwise interesting slice of local color. Let me know what you think.
Thanks,
Barrett Brown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 1:20 PM, The Brooklyn Bugle <info@thebrooklynbugle.com> wrote:
that's a great piece!
we'll be launching the bugle soon - if you need a soapbox we'll have an area for diarists to set up (ie huffington post)... will totally keep you in mind for paid assignments... what interests you re: Brooklyn news/happenings etc?
What neighborhood are you in?On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 1:12 PM, Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi, John-
Thanks for your reply. As for what I've been doing, I just did my first piece for Vanity Fair this week; it can be seen here:
http://www.vanityfair.com/online/politics/2009/03/friedmans-follies.html
Thanks,
Barrett Brown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 4:29 PM, The Brooklyn Bugle <info@thebrooklynbugle.com> wrote:
Thanks for your interest.
We currently publish two neighborhood blogs - Brooklyn Heights Blog and Cobble Hill Blog.
Later this year, we'll be launching The Brooklyn Bugle - a community news site for the 21st Century.
We'll keep your info on file and we'll be contacting finalists closer to our official launch.
In the meantime, feel free to keep us up to date with what you're doing.
Regards,
John Loscalzo
Publisher
BHB/CHB
Brooklyn Bugle Media LLCOn Sun, Feb 1, 2009 at 3:06 PM, Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi-
I understand that you're looking for writers for your news site, and I'd like to be considered. I've written for a variety of print and online news outlets and other publications, including Skeptic, PoliticalBase.com, National Lampoon, The Onion A.V. Club, Austin Monthly, Dining Out, and The Fortean Times, and my first book, Flock of Dodos: Behind Modern Creationism, Intelligent Design, and the Easter Bunny was released in 2007 to praise from Alan Dershowitz of Harvard Law School, Rolling Stone, and other sources. I've also contributed to reference books by publisher Thomas Riggs and Company.
I generally work for around twenty cents a word, although this is negotiable.
Along with my attached resume, I've pasted a couple of samples below. The first is a simple news summary of the sort I used to write for Political Base, and the second is an article on new Texas prison regulations which effectively prevent inmates from freely communicating with journalists; it was cited by Sonoma State University's Project Censored as one of the most important underreported stories of 2004.
Please take a look and get back to me if you're interested in discussing the position further.
Thanks,Barrett Bown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302
White House Legal Trouble Update
1. The CIA's covert service head who some believe to have presided over the destruction of tapes which may depict the use of torture against al-Qaeda operatives is requesting immunity ahead of an expected appearance before Congress next week in which he'll be providing testimony on exactly what went down and why. Attorneys for the White House, meanwhile, are still urging a federal court to hold off its own investigation into the incident, claiming that it would interfere with ongoing investigations by Congress and the Justice Department. At any rate, they've been successful in their efforts to convince Judge Edward Kennedy that a judicial inquiry is unnecessary; Kennedy announced yesterday that he agrees, citing the inability of lawyers for a group of detainees to come up with evidence that a specific law pertaining to Guantamo captives was broken in light of revelations that the detainees in question were actually being held in secret prisons elsewhere at the time of the alleged abuse.
2. Allegations by the National Security Archive that the Bush Administration is hiding millions of e-mails that it had previously claimed were accidentally deleted has prompted a federal judge to order the White House to make a formal response to the charges within five business days of last Tuesday. White House spokesman Tony Fratto has thus far declined to comment.
Texas Prisons: Silencing Inmates
by Barrett Brown
(Toward Freedom, June 2004)
In March of 2004, a jailer at an Arlington, Texas, prison confessed that he had helped another jailer rape a female inmate the previous evening. Israel Mouton, a prison employee since 2002, told police that he watched his colleague commit the assault from the jail control room in order that he might alert his colleague if anyone were to approach. According to both Mouton and the inmate, who was questioned later by investigators, Mouton afterward told the victim via the cell's intercom, "Don't say nothing. You don't know nothing."
A few hours after the inmate confirmed the detailed confession, Mouton and his colleague were arrested. But unlike the inmate whom they had violated, both jailers were able to make bail, and in fact were released the same evening. And despite the fact that one perpetrator had voluntarily confessed to a second-degree felony, neither man was immediately fired; instead, they were placed on paid administrative leave.
Later in the week, the wire services picked up the story, which ran in every major newspaper in Texas. The timing was moderately ironic; the Texas Board of Criminal Justice (TBCJ) was set to meet in Austin a few days later to vote on several proposed prison policies. Given that the corrections system had just been hit with a rather disturbing scandal, one might have expected the TBCJ to adopt some new regulation ensuring inmates a reliable means of reporting staff abuse to a third party assuming that one was ignorant of Texas in general, its cultural climate in particular, and the increasingly disturbing manner in which the nation's largest state prison system is being administered.
Censoring the MailDuring a two-day meeting at Austin's Hyatt Regency, rather than pass any new reporting policies to help prevent cover-ups, the TBCJ instead did the opposite. On April 2, members passed Board Policy 03.91, by all accounts the most drastic restriction on Texas inmate correspondence rights in more than two decades.
Actually, the board passed two major policy changes during their meeting. One was a ban on incoming mail containing "sexually explicit" images, "material that shows the frontal nudity of either gender, including the exposed female breast(s) with nipple(s) or areola(s), or the genitalia or anus of either gender." Explaining the new policy, Texas Department of Criminal Justice Executive Director Gary Johnson pointed out that his office strives for "a more positive and safer environment for both staff and offenders," adding that "the elimination of sexually explicit material helps us move in that direction."
Because it dealt with such an attention-grabbing issue as pornography, the new "Playboy Policy" received nearly all of the media coverage; one Associated Press piece devoted all but two sentences to the porn ban. The remainder consisted of a verbatim reading of the second measure passed at the April meeting, Board Policy 03.91:
"Outgoing special or media correspondence will be opened in cases where there have been known problems ('special correspondence' is defined as any official of any federal, state or local law enforcement agency, including offices of inspector general). The intent is to prohibit offenders from sending correspondence that seeks to threaten, harass or intimidate in any way (including anthrax hoaxes)."
In other words, Texas prison officials are now permitted to read mail written by inmates to journalists, but only "in cases where there have been known problems."
Unfortunately, the term "known problems" isn't defined, which may seem odd in light of the great extent to which the board went in defining the female breast, which, as the reader may recall, includes both nipple(s) and areola(s). In contrast, the criteria by which media correspondence may be read by low-level officials are left to the imagination of prison staff. "Known problems," then, might very well include instances in which prisoners have spoken to the press about prison conditions or other issues of legitimate public interest.
In fact, this has already proven to be the case. In one of the few articles that actually focused on the board's new outgoing mail censorship provision, Houston Chronicle staffer Polly Ross Hughes described the case of William Bryan Sorens, a convicted rapist whose sentence was extended by one year after it was discovered he had sold Penthouse an article detailing his prison experiences. (Texas prisoners must get permission before accepting any payment for work they undertake while incarcerated.) In the course of researching her article, Hughes asked TDCJ spokeswoman Michelle Lyons about this incident; Lyons confirmed that Sorens' mail would most likely be tagged for automatic inspection under the new policy.
But aside from deterring the extremely small percentage of Texas inmates who run freelance writing businesses from their cells, the other major purpose of the policy, according to Lyons, is to protect media personnel from inmate threats and harassment. And how do journalists feel about being thus protected? Not surprisingly, they're almost unanimously against it.
Each of the Texas newspaper staffers I contacted regarding the case said they would prefer that inmate correspondence to journalists be privileged, in the same way that legal correspondence is, or rather used to be; another provision passed by the board during its April meeting dictates that "incoming special, legal and media correspondence will be searched for contraband and only in the presence of the offender." This includes letters from lawyers.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, one staffer with a major Texas daily pointed out that, among journalists who cover the prison system, mail is used as something of a barometer. Although reporters rarely reply to individual inmate letters or even take their assertions at face value, a large volume of mail detailing a specific problem often serves as the only indication that something might be awry in the state's prisons. After all, Texas inmates were already among the most elaborately muffled prisoners in the US; in mostly every other state, inmates are permitted to make phone calls whenever they please and at their own expense, whereas Texas inmates get only one five-minute call every 60 days. And Policy 03.91 comes just a few months after another new policy which prevents journalists from speaking to inmates unless the journalist in question is working on a specific deadline, thus preventing many writers from gaining in-person access to the prisoners they may be writing about.
Lack of ConcernThe "no deadline, no meetings" policy is part of the reason why few of the journalists I contacted were surprised by the passage of 03.91. Among Texas crime reporters, it's common knowledge that institutional procedure has undergone major changes in the last few years. Retiring corrections officials, they say, are often being replaced with a younger crowd possessed of a somewhat more Draconian view of prisoner rights and public access, and the overriding philosophy of this new breed is that the best way to deal with a crack in the wall is to apply a fresh coat of paint.
Indeed, 03.91 and similar new policies would hardly seem as threatening were it not for the fact that the Texas prison system is notorious for its cracks. Nationwide, the state is perhaps most famous for the often haphazard manner in which people are tried and executed; perhaps the most damning account in recent years involved a man found guilty of murder and sentenced to death during a trial in which his court-appointed attorney fell asleep several times.
Much of the criticism has come from progressive watchdog organizations of the sort one would expect to raise questions about such things. But some of the most serious warnings have come from the federal government itself. In 1998, the US House of Representatives asked the General Accounting Office (GAO) for a report on staff-on-inmate sexual misconduct in four of the nation's female prison jurisdictions, including Texas. When the investigation ended in 1999, the resulting document didn't do much to help the state's already-tarnished image.
If Texas prison officials really strived for "a more positive and safer environment for both staff and offenders," as asserted by Johnson in his statement to the press, they would most likely strive to compile data on the subject to inform recommendations for further action. But this hasn't happened. In fact, while conducting research for its 1999 report, the GAO found that Texas, like the other three jurisdictions deemed worthy of investigation, didn't have "readily available, comprehensive data or reports on the number, nature, and outcomes of staff-on-inmate sexual misconduct."
Additionally, if Texas prison officials were actually concerned with preventing inmate abuse, they might consider cracking down harder on prison guards who have "known problems" with sexual misconduct in the same manner in which they crack down on prisoners with "known problems" selling articles to national magazines. But that hasn't happened, either. Many staff members who sexually abused inmates during the four-year GAO survey were simply suspended. In other words, they were forced to take a leave of absence, but returned to work in the same capacity at a later date and often supervised the same inmates they abused in the first place.
Today, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice supervises about 150,000 prisoners. Of these, nearly half have been incarcerated for non-violent offenses ranging from possession of marijuana to writing bad checks. Their safety and well being depends upon the good will and competence of prison guards, some of whom have proven to be criminals themselves. And those who run the Texas prison system, although obviously aware of such facts, have done nearly everything possible to ensure that our fellow citizens are unable to protect themselves in the only manner in which a prisoner is able - to communicate with the world beyond the walls.
Thanks,
Barrett Brown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302
in which a prisoner is able - to communicate with the world beyond the walls.
Thanks,
Barrett Brown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302