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The Outside Story

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The
Outside
Story

Paul Wright surveys his
new editorial office in
his home in Vermont,
a stark contrast to his
cell in prison. Piles of
legal articles, newspaper
clippings and magazines
cover the floor.

An ex-con’s magazine fights for prisoners’ rights
BY JENNA FISHER

Y

OU COULD SAY THAT PAUL WRIGHT’S CAREER
as a magazine editor was launched in 1987 when
he killed a man. It was Super Bowl Sunday. The
New York Giants were playing the Denver Broncos.
Wright, 21 years old and six days shy of completing
his military service, fatally shot a man in a botched
holdup attempt—he was robbing a cocaine dealer who turned out to
have a gun. Wright claimed self-defense, but he was convicted of firstdegree murder and sentenced to 25 years in prison in Washington State.
“I guess I didn’t make a very good criminal,” says Wright today.
His job as a book fetcher at the prison legal library gave him the
chance to study prisoner-related law. And conversations with fellow
inmate Ed Mead helped foster an idea about what to do with all that
information. Why not start a magazine?
The result is Prison Legal News, a magazine written by and for prisoners. It provides a way for inmates to share news about court cases
so that those who might want to file appeals or new cases will have

access to the most recent developments.
Between the early 1900s and 1998, more than 200 prison publications were born, according to James McGrath Morris, the author
of “Jailhouse Journalism.” One of the most famous is the Angolite,
a bimonthly news magazine published in the Louisiana State Penitentiary. It covers issues related to life in the slammer and has won
several awards for journalistic excellence. Though the number of
prison magazines seems to be shrinking, inmates continue to produce
new titles. Most contain artwork, poetry or fiction on plain, photocopied pages. Some cover pop culture outside of prison. Some are
prisoner-funded; others are supported by the penal institution itself.
And then there is Prison Legal News, founded in 1990 by Wright
and Mead. Several things distinguish it from other prison magazines: It is highly controversial—it has been banned by prisons in
several states. It has helped fuel at least 20 cases across the country
that have overturned bans or attempted bans by prisons on prison
publications. It is the only independently funded prison maga31

When Paul Wright made the transition from prisoner to citizen, his editorial offices followed
him, even though his base of contributing writers, like Mumia Abu Jamal, and reporters
remained inside prison walls.
zine that has successfully outlasted its founder’s time on the inside.
And recently, a major foundation awarded it a six-figure grant.
Many prison publications last only as long as their editors remain behind bars. But when Wright made the transition from
prisoner to citizen in late 2003, his editorial offices followed him,
even though his base of contributing writers and reporters remained inside prison walls. Now, about 35 percent of the readers are prisoners’ relatives, prison-rights activists and lawyers.
The magazine continues to focus on legal cases and prison conditions affecting inmates. PLN has reported on everything from excessive use of force by guards to stifling air temperatures on death
row. It maintains a team of volunteer lawyers around the country,
who work to obtain public records and fight cases of censorship.
Which is not to say that PLN has won all its fights. In 1994,
Mead and Wright sued the Washington Review Board to challenge
an order that Mead, who had been sentenced to 18 years for his
role in a political bombing incident, have no contact with any felons while on parole. Since most of the people who volunteer and
write for the magazine are convicted felons, this meant that Mead
could no longer have contact with PLN. The American Civil Liberties
Union sponsored the case, but the ban was upheld and Mead had to
end his participation in the magazine three years after its founding.
Censorship has been a constant problem. In 1990, when PLN reported on the alleged beating of a black
The bulletin board
prisoner by a group of white guards,
next to Wright’s desk is
prison officials tried to prevent the pubcovered with everything
lication of the article by throwing Wright
from an ACLU memberinto isolation for 20 days. He published
ship card to a picture his
son drew for him.
the story anyway, but, he says, prison of-

32

ficials cut the article out of each copy before it was delivered to inmates.
Another issue of the magazine was banned in Washington State
prisons because of a controversial article, “White Guard Black
Guard: Racism in Washington Prison Continues,” written by Jennifer Vogel, a professional journalist and the daughter of an excon. Four volunteer lawyers took the case to an appellate court,
but it was sent back to the Washington State district court, which
dismissed it on the grounds that prison officials have the right to
censor incoming prisoner mail they think could incite violence.
To some degree, the influence of PLN can be measured by the fact
that the magazine, which was once banned in all Washington State
prisons and in at least 10 other states, can now be found in all maximum-security and medium-security prisons in the United States. It
has become a thorn in the side of prisons nationwide. “We’ve recently been involved in some litigation with PLN,” said Gary Larson,
spokesman for the Washington State Department of Corrections. In
fact, PLN has taken the Washington DOC to court nine times. In
2001 and 2002, PLN filed suits and won access to documents related
to staff misconduct, environmental contamination and prison safety.
Prison Legal News reprints relevant articles from newspapers and
law journals, uses state and federal freedom-of-information laws to
gain access to documents and information and has its correspondents
do their own investigative reporting. A typical issue contains an editorial by Wright, perhaps explaining delays in publication and providing information on PLN litigations. Stories carry such headlines
as “Arbitrary Draconian Restrictions on Texas Parolees,” “Federal
Prisoner Wins Right to Marry,” “Prisoners of Love” (a book review),
“Pro Se Tips and Tactics,” “Federal Court Orders Independent Evaluation Training and Credentialing of All California Prison Healthcare
Practitioners” and “A Georgia Sherriff’s
Illegal Profit From Captive Workforce.”
In addition to articles by prisoners (such
as Mumia Abu Jamal, whose death sentence
in Pennsylvania has become a politically
charged subject of controversy), freelance
journalists, legal-service lawyers and other
authors with a special interest in prison
law contribute about 5 to 10 percent of
the content. For example, Rachel Meeropol, granddaughter of Ethel and Julius
Rosenberg and a staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, contributed
an article focusing attention on the rights
of prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.
In an investigative piece, journalist Silja
J. A. Talvi went undercover to report on
workshops at the American Correctional
Association’s winter fair, where one session
featured film footage of a paranoid but
nonviolent prisoner who was strapped naked to a chair for 16 hours and died. She
reported: “The session was facilitated by
Todd Wilcox, the medical director of the

PLN compiles and reSalt Lake County Metro Jail, who used
ports
news of legal interthe imagery as an example of how to
est
to
both inmates and
avoid costly litigation. ‘Don’t get personprisoner-rights attorneys.
al with this,’ Wilcox said. ‘It’s just busiPaul Wright co-founded
ness.’ He reminded the audience how
the magazine in 1990.
important it is to sever the ‘emotional
leash’ that guards and nurses can form
with prisoners. He also referred to some mentally ill patients with
‘Axis II disorders’ as ‘the people we affectionately call ‘the assholes.’ ”
In the back of each issue, Wright writes a section called “News in
Brief,” gathered from newspapers or inmates, organized by state and
covering such news as the dismissal of a prison official, an allegation
of prison rape or an inmate death. Scattered through the magazine
are advertisements pitching everything from prison law library resources to pen pal services to attorneys. There is also a short classified
section (for $40, you can buy a four-line ad to run in two issues).
The penal press has had its share of successes, but long-running
publications are few and far between. Author James Morris says
that because of the transient nature of prisoners and prison conditions, the mortality rate for prisoner publications is very high. Of
the more than 200 publications that Morris discussed in his 1998
book, those that survive today can be counted on one hand. Of Prison
Legal News he wrote: “The overtly political nature of PLN represents
the emergence of something that previously had been confined to
underground prison publications. But they were usually short-lived
and circulated only in small numbers in the recesses of prisons.”
Funding is an ongoing problem. PLN’s first issue appeared in May
1990 as 10 typewriter-produced pages, and it was sent to only 75
prisoners and activists the editors thought might be interested in the
magazine. Ed Mead swallowed the cost of mailing and printing—
$50. They viewed it as a six-month endeavor, since they didn’t know
whether they could find a way to support it for longer than that.
Now, 16 years later, PLN has four full-time and three part-time
employees (the highest salary is $40,000). Since they started accepting articles from inmates in 1995, the magazine has paid its writers
from $10 to $25 an article. PLN is published monthly and maintains
a website where every back issue is posted.
The magazine has grown to 48 pages. It isn’t fancy—it’s printed
on newsprint. It has about 4,600 subscribers. A one-year, hard-copy
subscription costs $18 for inmates or $25 for those on the outside,
and viewing it online costs $1 per day.
How did Wright make all this possible? Through his wits (and
parents who help pay for his house). Until last year, the magazine
was constantly on the verge of a deficit. The budget has grown from
$600 a year to about $160,000, and, until 2005, PLN was sustained
exclusively by subscriptions, reader donations (most under $50) and
advertising. Last year all of that changed when billionaire philanthropist George Soros’ Open Society Institute gave PLN a two-year grant
of $200,000 to help boost circulation and improve infrastructure.
PLN maintains two offices. Wright edits articles and coordinates
content from his home in Vermont, while in Washington State,
not far from the prison where Wright did his time, an executive
director, circulation manager and volunteers work out of an office
where they handle business matters, layout and correspondence.
Among the challenges PLN has managed to overcome are two instances of embezzlement by staff members on the outside, the enforced
separation of the original co-editors, the constant threat of retribution by prison officials for printing what they deem inappropriate

material, guards throwing the magazine out before it reaches inmates,
complaints from prisoners about articles that defend sex offenders
and advice not to “inflame the snouts” (prison guards and officials).
Still, most of the correspondence PLN receives is supportive. Wright is frequently invited to speak at prison-law conferences and law schools, and has appeared on Pacifica Radio’s “Democracy Now” as an authority on prison brutality and prison law.
Last year, The Petra Foundation honored him with a 2005 Petra Fellowship. “Through his work with Prison Legal News,” wrote Bridgette
Sarabi, the director of the Western Prison Project, “he has not only
shown fearless leadership in advocating for the human and civil rights
of the incarcerated, but has helped untold numbers of prisoners become more effective advocates themselves. Through his legal advocacy, he has helped force large prison bureaucracies to be more accountable. He has given hope to millions of current and former prisoners.”
Hope comes in different forms for those prisoners who read
the magazine. Whether it’s a good or bad thing for prisoners to
petition the courts in mostly losing cases, PLN helps them do
it. And in one case, a Connecticut prisoner representing himself
won an appeal based solely on the legal content he found in PLN.
Wright has given leads to reporters and editors from The Seattle
Weekly, Harper’s and Mother Jones. Over the years, newspapers across the
country have picked up several stories the magazine has broken, including pieces about the exploitation of prison labor by private businesses.
These days, Wright sounds less like an ex-con than your adverage editor. “The plan is to have 10,000 subscribers by the end of
2006,” he says confidently, arms crossed and feet firmly planted in the living room of the house his parents helped finance.
Sound unrealistic? Overly optimistic? Maybe so, but who would have
thought that when Paul Wright went in for murder, he’d come out a
magazine editor who, to date, has published more than 190 issues? ◆
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