RESENTENCING ADVOCATE FELLOWSHIP

Dear CCWP Community,

We are thrilled to announce the launch of the Resentencing Advocate Fellowship, a transformative collaboration between the CA Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP) and Unapologetically HERS (UAHERS). Building off the success of UAHERS’ Participatory Action Research Leadership Program (PARLP) and its comprehensive “Pathways to Freedom: A Toolkit on the State of Resentencing at Central California Women’s Facility,” CCWP has promptly acted on internal recommendations to establish Paid Peer Support Positions.

These positions, filled by our inaugural fellows Carmel Murphy and Amber Bray, are designed to disseminate critical information about resentencing options and provide comprehensive training and support. Our fellows will guide community members through the complexities of the resentencing process—from identifying the appropriate legal forms, navigating court procedures, to achieving successful outcomes. This project underscores our commitment to empowering the CCWF community, ensuring every individual is equipped with the necessary tools and resources to pursue their path to liberation.

Our Inaugural Fellows – 

Carmel Murphy has dedicated 19 years to legal education and mentorship, helping others achieve freedom and sentence reductions. With her deep commitment to community service and her goal to become a defense attorney, Carmel is a beacon of hope and transformation within the community.


Amber Bray is an exceptional advocate with over 28 years of experience in the legal field, starting her journey while incarcerated. She obtained a paralegal degree and has actively contributed to legal reforms and resentencing successes. Amber is also the chairperson for the inmate advisory council, advocating for women’s rights and restorative justice.

Joining them in fostering the growth and development of the fellowship are:

Angela Zuniga, our esteemed Peer Mentor, brings her invaluable experience and insight to provide continuous support and guidance to our fellows. Angela is a PARLP alumna and her role is crucial in ensuring the success of our fellows and the overall impact of the fellowship.

AE Bio Pic 2023.jpeg

Aminah Elster, CCWP Leadership/Executive Director of UAHERS, will be serving as the Fellowship Coordinator, overseeing the program’s execution and ensuring that our fellows receive the best possible training and development opportunities. Her leadership is key to the smooth operation and strategic direction of the fellowship.

The fellowship includes a comprehensive year-long training program focusing on:

  • Monthly Scenario Exercises – Targeted exercises on legislative processes, legal research, and community engagement.
  • Weekly Peer Coaching and Check-ins – Continuous learning and support sessions guided by our peer mentor.
  • Quarterly Reviews – Assessments to integrate learnings and refine future strategies.

We are enthusiastic about the potential of this fellowship to challenge and transform how we engage in inside/outside organizing. We invite you to join us in supporting Amber, Carmel, Angela, and Aminah in their impactful work.

AS INMATES SWELTER, CALIFORNIA PRISONS REMAIN UNPREPARED FOR EXTREME HEAT

L.A. Times

Hayley Smith
July 13, 2024

The potential heat-related death of a prison inmate in California’s Central Valley this week is focusing renewed attention on conditions within correctional institutions as extreme heat, wildfire smoke and flooding pose increasing threats to incarcerated people.

Read more from the 

Though extreme heat endangers residents throughout the state, experts say California’s prisons are uniquely unprepared for climate change because of a variety of factors, including their remote locations, aging infrastructure and overcrowding.

Many facilities are not equipped with central air conditioning, updated ventilation, shade structures or backup generators to power fans and other cooling devices during outages, according to a 2023 report by the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs and the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.

Read more from the L.A. Times.

Incarcerated Women Plead for Help After Central Valley Prison Death Amid Extreme Heat

The Madera County coroner’s office is investigating the death of a woman imprisoned at the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla over the weekend as temperatures continue to reach into the triple digits.

California Coalition for Women Prisoners, an advocacy group for incarcerated women, said the woman suffered from heat-related illness after she had become incoherent and collapsed in a shower while trying to cool off.

“It was heat exhaustion,” CCWP said in a statement, quoting a fellow inmate who wished to remain anonymous out of fear of reprisal. “She dropped to the ground and her legs started shaking and wouldn’t stop.”

Read more from KQED.

‘Like an oven’: death at US women’s prison amid heatwave sparks cries for help

The Guardian

 in Los Angeles

July 9, 2024

An incarcerated person at California’s largest women’s prison has died amid a brutal heatwave that has left prison occupants without air conditioning begging for relief and warning of dire consequences for their health.

A woman in the Central California Women’s Facility, located in the Central valley city of Chowchilla, died on Saturday as temperatures in the region climbed above 110F (43.3C). The California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP), an advocacy group, said it appeared the woman suffered a preventable heat death. The woman’s daughter told the Sacramento Bee that her mother had complained about the physical toll of the summer weather for years.

Mary Xjimenez, a spokesperson for the state corrections department, said in an email that the woman was transported to a medical facility on Thursday and died on Saturday and that the “death appears to be the result of an ongoing medical condition and not heat-related, but will be determined by the coroner’s office”. Tyson Pogue, the local sheriff-coroner, said it was too soon to say whether the death was due to heat and his office would conduct an autopsy.

News of the death comes as more than 146 million Americans were under extreme heat alerts across the nation, leaving people incarcerated in aging prison facilities without air conditioning particularly vulnerable. There have been reports of potentially fatal conditions inside jails and prisons during heatwaves across California and in NevadaIllinoisTexasFlorida and other states this year.

The Chowchilla fatality has escalated fear and panic throughout the prison, advocates and incarcerated people said. The cells in the overcrowded facility, which houses more than 2,000 people, lack air conditioning, and occupants said officials have failed to provide enough cold water and other supplies that would alleviate their suffering and reduce heatstroke risks.

“Please help us, they’re not doing anything for us,” Trancita Ponce, a Chowchilla resident, said in a statement shared by the CCWP. “There is hot air blowing inside of our rooms, I have a huge migraine and I feel sick and other girls are throwing up.”

Another CCWF resident, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation, told the Guardian she’s been struggling with nausea and headaches, and that she had a thermometer in her area that recently showed it was 103F (39.4C). After residents’ complaints, the facility gave out ice water on Tuesday, but residents were only given two cups each, she said: “I’ve seen people passing out. This is inhumane … You feel like you’re dirt, like you’re nothing. If we were animals, they’d be treating us better.”

Elizabeth Nomura, state membership organizer for the CCWP, who has been in contact with Chowchilla residents, said the facility has swamp coolers meant to lower temperatures in the cells, but that they weren’t working properly – an issue documented by the Modesto Bee during a period of extreme heat last year.

“My friend said, ‘Help us, we can’t breathe,’” said Nomura, who was previously incarcerated at Chowchilla. “I’ve had heatstroke before [while incarcerated] and I know what it feels like to be so dehydrated that you can’t see. They are sitting in a room, toasting in what feels like an oven. They’re all suffering.”

Nomura said the death in the institution created a “dark cloud” for residents: “It brings that harsh reality forward for so many – that they could very well die in prison. Everyone in there is frantic, locked in these death chambers. It’s nothing short of cruel.”

Xjimenez said each state prison has a “heat plan coordinator” who monitors conditions and temperatures, and that housing units have some form of “cooling relief”, typically evaporative coolers and fans. During extreme heat, prisons will sometimes provide additional access to air-conditioned areas and increased access to water and ice, she said, and when temperatures exceed 90F (32.2C), some vulnerable residents are moved to air-conditioned rooms.

At Chowchilla, staff are providing ice water to all residents and “industrial floor fans” are cooling the housing units, she said.

“The California department of corrections and rehabilitation is closely monitoring the current heatwave and is coordinating with our state partners and the leadership in each of the state’s 32 prisons to ensure there are appropriate resources and response,” she said in a statement. “We are paying special attention to medically vulnerable incarcerated people, and will be providing additional water, ice, cooling areas, and information to our staff and incarcerated population on ways to prevent heat-related illnesses throughout this heatwave.”

A California inmate died during the heat wave. What do state prison conditions look like?

A woman incarcerated at the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla died Saturday amid the heat wave, raising concerns over extreme heat conditions in regional correctional facilities.

Adrienne Boulware’s family said that they were informed by prison staff that she had died from a heat stroke. In a statement, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation public information officer Mary Xjimenez said that the cause of death appears to be related to pre-existing health conditions, not the heat. The coroner’s office is still determining an official cause of death.

Boulware’s daughter Michela Nelson said her mother had complained of exhaustion and physical tolls from summertime extreme heat for years. The prison is not equipped with air conditioning or other cooling systems in residential areas needed to adequately preserve the health of its incarcerated residents, according to Nelson.

Read more at the Sacramento Bee