Tumgik
#idoc
greeneyed-jade · 1 year
Text
IDOC
People say stay away from you
& I tell them to fuck off
Let them talk & let them judge
I’m a fool for your love & irs just the two of us
Take a chance roll the dice,
Life ain’t fair & love don’t play nice
But me and you, you & I
As long as I got your heart, you can have mine
Space & distance don’t factor in
And I forgot about all the time you gotta spend
Away from me — locks & bars & keys
Miles apart but I still know your heartbeat
Think of me instead of the concrete
Go to sleep, sweet dreams
And when the sun comes up again, you’ll be one day closer to me
10.02.2023
1:56 A.M.
2 notes · View notes
arrestdujour · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Fairbanks, Feliza
Boise, ID
JID Number: 01103418 Age: 35 Arresting Agency: Ada County Sheriff
 Register for notification on changes to inmate's custody status.
IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS Hold Not Bailable
Tumblr media Tumblr media
1 note · View note
wally-b-feed · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Anthony Fineran (B 1981), Beren Idoc An, 2022
0 notes
coochiequeens · 1 year
Text
FU ACLU
ByAnna Slatz August 30, 2023
The American Civil Liberties Union in Indiana has filed a lawsuit against the state’s Department of Corrections after a trans-identified male inmate convicted of murdering his infant stepdaughter was denied “gender affirming” surgeries.
The suit, which was filed on August 28, challenges a recently-adopted policy stipulating that the Indiana Department of Corrections (IDOC) cannot provide transgender surgeries to inmates. House Bill 1569, which took effect July 1, bans the spending of state or federal dollars on sexual reassignment surgery for inmates.
According to the complaint, the ACLU is accusing the state of “deliberate indifference to a serious medical need,” arguing that “gender affirming surgeries” are a “medical necessity” for some inmates. The ACLU also states that the policy “discriminates … in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
The ACLU brought the case against the state on behalf of a transgender inmate currently serving a 55-year sentence for the horrific murder of his stepdaughter
Autumn Cordellioné, also known as Jonathan C. Richardson, was arrested in 2001 after his 11-month-old stepdaughter died in his care while her mother was at work.
According to court records seen by Reduxx,  Richardson was visited by friends that night who observed he was “acting strangely” and refused to invite them in the house as he normally would.
Despite claiming the little girl was sleeping, Richardson had loud music playing in the home, and his guests noted that he appeared to have a fresh, bleeding tattoo of the child’s name carved into his arm
Tumblr media
Jonathan C. Richardson
Later that night, after his friends left, Richardson went to his neighbor and asked him to call 911, claiming the child was unresponsive. When emergency personnel arrived, they were briefly able to resuscitate the girl, but she died shortly after being rushed to the hospital.
Richardson was interviewed by police, who noted he was “calm and unemotional” during questioning, and his story about what happened to the baby changed dramatically over the course of the two interviews conducted.
At first, Richardson claimed he found the baby unresponsive after doing some household chores. But in the next interview, Richardson said the child was being “fussier than usual” and he attempted to throw her up in the air repeatedly in an effort to calm her down. He said her “head bopped forward and back up in a rough type of a manner,” and that the child continued to cry so he proceeded to shake her aggressively in an effort to calm her down.
During a failed appeals hearing, detectives from the case recounted how Richardson “physically showed” how he had manhandled the girl, getting up out of his chair and demonstrating the action in a rough manner.
An autopsy subsequently found that the baby had died of asphyxiation by manual strangulation.
Richardson was booked awaiting a court hearing, and would later tell a prison official “all I know is I killed the little fucking bitch.”
Richardson was found guilty and sentenced to 55 years in prison for the horrific crime.
According to the ACLU’s legal complaint, Richardson began identifying as transgender in 2020 and had been receiving testosterone suppressants and feminizing hormones. But the medications have not reportedly relieved fully Richardson’s “debilitating symptoms of gender dysphoria.”
Using “she/her” pronouns to refer to Richardson, the ACLU’s filing reads: “Accordingly, at this point gender-affirming surgery is necessary so that her physical identity can be aligned with her gender identity.”
Despite only having begun to identify as transgender in 2020, the ACLU claims that Richardson has “identified as a female” since he was 6 years old.
Tumblr media
From the ACLU's legal complaint
In addition to hormones, Richardson has been receiving ample accommodations from the IDOC, including being given bras, makeup, panties, and “form-fitting clothing.”
Richardson is currently incarcerated at a men’s facility.
This is not the first time the ACLU has attempted to intervene to protect the gender identity of a violent transgender inmate.
In June, the ACLU came under fire after condemning the state of Florida for not providing “gender-affirming care” to a convicted rapist and murderer prior to his execution.
Duane Owen, who was executed on July 15, had been handed a death sentence after brutally murdering a 38-year-old mother and a 14-year-old girl in 1984. During court proceedings, Owen claimed that he sexually assaulted women as part of a ritual to harvest their hormones, and that he was a transsexual who carried out the sexual violence to “turn himself into a female.”
On June 16, the ACLU, through their official X (formerly Twitter) account, lambasted the state of Florida for refusing to provide “medically necessary gender-affirming care” to Owen. Using feminine pronouns to refer to Owen, the ACLU claimed the state had caused Owen “enormous suffering” and had violated “her right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment for the more than 30 years she was in state custody.”
Earlier this year, Reduxx exclusively revealed that the ACLU in New Jersey had represented a transgender diaper fetishist in a case that would ultimately result in male inmates being transferred to the state’s women’s prison.
In August of 2019, the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ) filed a lawsuit against the state Department of Corrections on behalf of Danielle Demers but protected his identity. The suit argued that a “woman” named “Sonia Doe” had been “imprisoned for the past seventeen months in men’s prisons,” a situation that was said to constitute “cruel and unusual punishment.”
In June of 2021, the state of New Jersey reached a settlement with the ACLU-NJ and agreed to adopt major reforms to prison policies which would allow housing according to a self-declared and subjective ‘gender identity’ rather than on biological sex. The policy has since resulted in multiple extremely violent male offenders being transferred to the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for women.
According to testimonies provided to Reduxx from women incarcerated at Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women (EMCF), among the first men to be transferred to the prison after Demers and the ACLU-NJ were victorious in their lawsuit was a convicted killer who had beaten a prostituted woman to death and drank her blood.
Other violent male inmates currently incarcerated at the facility thanks to the ACLU’s efforts include Marina Volz, who sexually tormented his own 7-year-old daughter to make “transgender porn,” and Dejshontaye Goddeszholliwould, who stabbed his aunt to death.
47 notes · View notes
sergeant-spoons · 2 years
Text
Happy Birthday, Verity!
As today, December 17th, is my OC Verity Rich’s birthday, I was hoping to post the next chapter of In Defense of Chicanery sometime today. Unfortunately, writer’s block has proved a fiend, and I don’t think that will come to pass until late tonight/early tomorrow morning. In the meantime, I’d like to offer up this post-war epilogue I wrote almost a year ago starring Verity’s father Nicholas and Meredith Chatham, the young woman Verity danced with on New Year’s Eve ‘42. 
Thank you for all the support over the last two years. Writing IDOC truly has been the experience of a lifetime. 💕
This Place We Call Home (Epilogue I - 1954)
The last week in an Alton February was a wet, enduring time of the year. Snow came and went with the frequency of the seaweed on a beach ladled upon the shore by the waves, then sunk beneath that same tide all in one day. The spindly trees creaked from the cold, the icicles clinging to their branches melting and dropping one by one like the same trees losing their leaves in the Autumn. Sometimes, when one fell from the maple just outside Nicholas Rich's kitchen window, or from the sycamore behind the wall where the headboard of his bed stood, a reflex long-buried in his psyche would ring a bell of alarm. His body stiffened and his gaze shot towards the nearest stagnant, plain thing he could find, seeking a reminder of safety, of home, of time's unassailable passage. On his worse days, he might startle so thoroughly his joints would remind him of his age for the rest of the day, or freeze like the snowman the neighbors built across the street last week, or clench his teeth so abruptly his jaw stung with the ache of impact.
He was drying his hands on the dishcloth by the kitchen sink, his coffee mug drying on the countertop towel, when a knocking came at the front door. He paused, his smallest finger, still damp, dripping a drop of water onto his shoe. It was a Wednesday, he had no plans with a neighbor or a friend. Since the kitchen faced away from the street, he could not guess at the visitor, so he must move about to see and alert them someone was, in fact, home. In the end, curiosity brought him down the hall and towards the door; wariness had him glance out through the blinds from the living room. There was a woman standing alone on the front stoop, lightly stamping snow off her heel as she clutched a purple purse and a tan suitcase. It had been raining and snowing on and off all morning, and her hat, hair, and shoulders were damp. She was tense, nervous, and Nicholas went about to the door to let her in. Taking his scarf from the coat rack (even a few minutes in those wintry elements could make his neck sore for the rest of the day), he readied a greeting and turned the silvery knob.
"Sorry to keep you waiting," he said as politely as he could think to speak, "I was finishing the dishes when I heard the knock."
"No- no worries," said the woman, and Nicholas supposed she must be about his daughter's age as she shifted in her step, falling silent.
"Can I help you?"
"I, uh, well, you see, I-" She was turning red, and when she glanced over her shoulder at the street and realized her taxi had already gone, she started to visibly fret. "I'm so sorry for bothering you, I-"
"Are you looking for my daughter?"
A sense of understanding passed between them, and Nicholas stepped back, opening the door fully.
"Come in, my dear, come in. It's freezing out here, and if you've got something on your mind, maybe I can help you put it to rest."
Read the rest on AO3!
Taglist: @thoughpoppiesblow​​​​ @chaosklutz​​​​ @wexhappyxfew​​​​ @50svibes​​​​ @tvserie-s-world​​​​ @adamantiumdragonfly​​​​ @ask-you-what-sir​​​​ @whovian45810​​​​​ @brokennerdalert​​​​ @holdingforgeneralhugs​​​​ @claire-bear-1218​​​​ @heirsoflilith​​​​​ @itswormtrain​​​​​ @actualtrashpanda​​​​​ @wtrpxrks​​​​​
8 notes · View notes
beurich · 14 days
Text
Investitionsschutz für IDoc-Mappings – neue WSW-Lösung konvertiert XML-Lieferavise aus SAP TM in IDoc-Format
Mit einer neuen JUNIQ-Prozesslösung von WSW Software für das SAP Transportation Management (SAP TM) lassen sich Lieferavise (Advanced Shipping Notice, ASN), die aus dieser Anwendung heraus im XML-Format versendet werden, in das IDoc-Format konvertieren. Die Lösung ist ab sofort verfügbar.   Mit der neuen JUNIQ-Lösung können Unternehmen, die die SAP-Transportlogistiklösung LE-TRA nutzen und auf…
0 notes
jonty-10 · 7 months
Text
0 notes
p-antalons · 1 year
Text
kind of panicking bc i sent my financial aid documents in 18 days ago and my award hasn’t been verified yet
0 notes
vvitchy-succubus · 6 months
Text
When do the waves stop hitting so hard? Tomorrow he gets brought home by a big police escort. The streets will be lined with people who knew him. The service is on Friday. I still don't understand how this is happening. I keep getting messages from people who worked with him, telling me what an honor it was to serve with him, which is making me angry. He was going to work. If they hadn't called him down south because they were scared of prisoner behavior during the eclipse, I would still have my brother. If he wasn't so hell bent on being a good officer, he would still be here. I don't care how honorable he was at his job, he was MY brother, that's what he really loved. Us, his family. And as far as I'm concerned IDOC took my brother from me. I want him back. I want this hell to be over. I'm angry at everything. People keep asking me if I need anything but what I need is my Andrew back. I just want my Andrew back.
12 notes · View notes
mus1g4 · 1 year
Note
Which button down uniform do you find the most comfortable to wear.
I am assuming you mean a prison or jail uniform with buttons. If I misunderstood your question, then send another message.
I am a huge fan of jumpsuits. Both the Federal Prison system (BOP) and Indiana DOC (IDOC) have khaki, button front jumpsuits that I really enjoy! I have attached photos of both.
The top photo is Indiana and the bottom is Federal.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
20 notes · View notes
arrestdujour · 11 hours
Text
Tumblr media
Salinas, Anthony Ryan
Boise, ID
JID Number: 01143537 Age: 19 Arresting Agency: Boise City Police Department
Charge Count: 5
 Register for notification on changes to inmate's custody status.
F Possession of a Controlled Substance with the Intent to Deliver Criminal Charge $100,000.00
M Drug Paraphernalia-Use or Possess With Intent to Use Criminal Charge Included
M Controlled Substance-Possession of Marijuana Criminal Charge Included
M Arrests & Seizures-Resisting or Obstructing Officers Criminal Charge Included
IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS Hold Not Bailable
This individual will not be released from custody due to a nonbailable charge(s)
Bail Total: $100,000.00
10 notes · View notes
oathofkaslana · 5 months
Text
EVEYIORN SHUIT UP IOTS CLLEIL CDAYYY DAOLYY COLLEI IDOC LLLEI COLLELIIII
3 notes · View notes
coochiequeens · 8 days
Text
There are so many people and causes that need legal help and the ACLU is helping this freak?
By Genevieve Gluck September 18, 2024
The ACLU has successfully fought to have a transgender baby killer be given taxpayer-funded “gender affirming” surgeries. Yesterday, the United States District Court of Indiana ruled that Autumn Cordellioné, born Jonathan C. Richardson, had been subjected to “cruel and unusual punishment” by being denied the various plastic surgeries he had demanded.
Richardson is currently serving a 55-year sentence for the murder of his 11-month-old stepdaughter. As previously reported by Reduxx, Richardson had been left to care for the child while her mother was at work. That night, he was visited by friends who observed he was “acting strangely” and refused to invite them in the house as he normally would.
Despite claiming the little girl was sleeping, Richardson had loud music playing in the home, and his guests noted that he appeared to have a fresh, bleeding tattoo of the child’s name carved into his arm. Shortly after his friends left, Richardson went to a neighbor’s home and asked them to call 911, claiming the child was unresponsive. The baby would later die at the hospital, with the cause of death determined to be asphyxiation by manual strangulation.
Richardson was booked awaiting a court hearing, and would later tell a prison official “all I know is I killed the little fucking bitch.” The following year, he was found guilty and sentenced to 55 years in prison.
Tumblr media
In 2020, while incarcerated at the The Correctional Industrial Facility (CIF) in Madison, Richardson began identifying as transgender and taking estradiol, a synthetic estrogen, and anti-androgen spironolactone. Two years later, Richardson lodged a sexual harassment complaint claiming that he had been raped by his cellmate in 2005, and that he stabbed the inmate in retaliation.
Despite the brutal nature of his crime, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Indiana took up his case and launched a human rights lawsuit against the Indiana Department of Corrections (IDOC).
In the suit, which was filed in August of 2023, ACLU lawyers refer to Richardson as an “adult transgender female prisoner confined in a male institution,” and complains that “the total ban on gender-affirming surgery violates [his] right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment.”
The suit was intended to challenge a recently-adopted policy stipulating that the IDOC cannot provide transgender surgeries to inmates. House Bill 1569, which took effect in July of 2023, bans the spending of state or federal dollars on sexual reassignment surgery for inmates. The bill, the ACLU argues, “mandates deliberate indifference to a serious medical need and therefore violates the Eighth Amendment.”
Among a list of demands prepared by Richardson and presented as evidence in court was a document titled “Surgeries to Reach My Ideal Self.” The first item on the list, the court heard, was a “vagina,” followed by: breast implants, a brow lift, a brow reduction, a tummy tuck, gluteal implants (BBL), a uterus transplant, hair removal, and wigs.
However, during court proceedings Richardson stated that he had amended his demands to two surgeries, an orchiectomy and a penile inversion.
In addition to identifying as transgender, Richardson identifies as “Muslim,” and is currently engaged in a separate lawsuit against his prison’s chaplain for being denied a hijab.
During his deposition, Richardson told the legal counsel for the IDOC, Alex Carlisle, that in 2018, he had been informed about gender identity by another male inmate at CIF who went by the name of “Pearl.” According to Richardson, Pearl had brought in pamphlets from California state prisons that explained the concept of “gender identity” and introduced to him, for the first time, the idea of taking feminizing hormones.
“I always knew I was a girl, didn’t know that term applied. Because until I talked to Pearl I didn’t even really know transgender was the name for it. I was hearing at the time that it was transsexualism and that didn’t seem to fit me because it was apparently people that like to wear girl clothes to have sex,” Richardson said in his deposition.
However, Richardson also stated that while briefly married to the mother of the infant he murdered, he had been working in an “adult bookstore” that sold pornographic videos. While employed as a janitor, Richardson would have sex with various male customers while pretending to be a “girl.”
Richardson further testified that he had taken the feminine name “Autumn” after his high school girlfriend, and said that he used to steal his sister’s clothing and his mother’s makeup as a youth. “When I put on the clothes, I could for a second realize the girl inside,” he said.
“I felt I was only a woman when a man used me,” Richardson remarked. “It was the only acceptable time to be a woman so it brought me a certain amount of satisfaction that I was pleasuring a man like a woman would and I got to express who I was.”
But the mother of the baby girl Richardson strangled to death opposed his legal bid to obtain surgery. Linda Thomas submitted a brief statement expressing her concern that his identity may be concealed from her when he is released from prison.
“On the day he murdered my child, I personally observed Plaintiff with a fresh bleeding tattoo of my child’s name on his arm while I was at the hospital that evening,” Thomas said. “I live in fear for myself and my children of the day [Richardson] is released from prison, which largely increases at the thought that [his] identity may be concealed upon release.”
ACLU attorneys under the leadership of Kenneth Falk attempted to have Thomas’ testimony dismissed as court evidence on the basis that “Ms. Cordellioné objected to the relevance of this declaration.”
During court proceedings, Kate Meltzer, a legal representative for the Office of the Attorney General, emphasized an issue of “timeliness” related to Richardson’s attempts to secure an early release.
On January 4th, Richardson had lodged a pro se request seeking a reduction of his sentence. According to Meltzer, Richardson’s request claimed that the “circumstances that resulted in the crime are no longer present,” as the motivation for the murder of the young girl was “tied to [his] transgender identity and [his] gender dysphoria.”
The court also heard testimony from Stephen B. Levine, a psychiatrist who specializes in sexual dysfunction and transsexualism, who founded the Case Western Reserve Gender Identity Clinic in Cleveland during the 1970’s. Levine was Chair of the fifth edition of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s (WPATH) Standards of Care in 1998. He also served on the American Psychiatric Association DSM-IV Subcommittee on Gender Identity Disorders.
In March of this year, while the case was ongoing, Levine emailed the Attorney General’s counsel Alexander Carlisle pleading with him to empathize with Richardson. According to Dr. Levine, Richardson’s condition “is a product of the need to find coherence, consistency, and stability”. The “countless traumas” experienced by Richardson, the gender clinician said, “began with her birth (actually with her pregnancy)”, indicating his belief that a transgender identity develops in utero.
As noted in court documents, in recent years Dr. Levine derived between 40% to 50% of his income from serving as an expert witness in litigation regarding the treatment of patients with “gender dysphoria”.
Tumblr media
The ruling issued by Judge Richard Young on September 17 has far-reaching implications and sets a precedent for further surgeries and hormones to be doled out at taxpayers’ expense. The verdict declares that the statute added to Indiana’s legal code in 2023 barring the DOC from facilitating “medically necessary gender-affirming” surgeries for inmates qualifies as “sex discrimination.”
In a statement on Richardson’s legal win, ACLU of Indiana Legal Director Kenneth Falk said: “Today marks a significant victory for transgender individuals in Indiana’s prisons. Denying evidence-based medical care to incarcerated people simply because they are transgender is unconstitutional. We are pleased that the Court agreed.”
The ACLU has pursued multiple lawsuits in several states against the US prison authorities on behalf of men convicted of horrific crimes. As revealed by Reduxx, a 2019 ACLU lawsuit against the New Jersey Department of Corrections which required the state to allow violent male inmates to self-identify into the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women was lodged on behalf of a self-admitted diaper fetishist and convicted terrorist.
Last year, the ACLU of Florida criticized officials for not providing “gender-affirming care” to a convicted rapist and murderer prior to his execution. Duane Owen had been handed a death sentence after brutally murdering a 38-year-old mother and a 14-year-old girl in 1984. Owen claimed that he sexually assaulted women as part of a ritual to harvest their hormones, and that he was a transsexual who carried out the sexual violence to “turn himself into a female.”
3 notes · View notes
sergeant-spoons · 2 years
Text
in other news, after several weeks of brainstorming and internal debate, Kate’s fic finally has a title! look out for Summer of the Hesperides, coming in the New Year...
2 notes · View notes
manyblinkinglights · 5 months
Text
okay I’m going to bathe and then sleep and then go to work, where I will complete initial demonstrations of competence. Except that’s definitely not what they’re called. Capacity? IDOC…
6 notes · View notes
jonty-10 · 7 months
Text
0 notes