De-Bug The System

Silicon Valley De-Bug
De-Bug The System

Silicon Valley De-Bug is a story-telling, community organizing, and advocacy organization based in San José, California.

Episodes

  1. California's Mandela Act Can Change the Inhumane Practice of Solitary Confinement

    08/27/2024

    California's Mandela Act Can Change the Inhumane Practice of Solitary Confinement

    On this episode of the De-Bug the System Podcast, we discuss California's Mandela Act (AB 280) and the history of solitary confinement in California and how this new law, if passed, will end the inhumane practice. We will listen to excerpts from a recent rally in Sacramento, CA where people from around the state came together to demand that Governor Newsome sign AB 280 into law. Today's episode features Jose and Melissa from De-Bug who have been a part of this legislation push for AB 280. Our host is De-Bug organizer Xavier. More about California's Mandela Act (AB 280): Historically, solitary confinement in California has been used indefinitely on our loved ones in CDCR due to gang allegations, confidential information and social justice/political beliefs. This all changed in 2015 after 30,000 incarcerated people went on a historic hunger strike to end indefinite solitary confinement based solely on gang allegations, not conduct, sentencing or due process. The hunger strikes were followed by the Ashker V Governor Brown settlement. Although changes have been made, solitary confinement is still being used for long periods of time against our people. AB 280, the California Mandela Act has already made its rounds through legislation and is currently waiting on the governor to sign. Join us with folks statewide to raise the governor’s attention to sign the bill! If he does, AB 280 WILL: Ban solitary confinement for specific populations includingIndividuals with mental, physical and developmental disabilitiesPregnant peoplePeople under 26 or over 59 years oldLimit the use of solitary confinement in jails, prisons and private immigration detention facilities.Sets limits for confinement to not more than 15 consecutive days, or 20 days total in any 60-day periodRequires facilities to keep clear records on the use of solitary confinement in order to provide public transparencyDefines segregated confinement in California lawAB 280 does not eliminate individual housing when appropriate or necessary including after the 15-day solitary confinement limit. Instead, the bill allows individuals to be held in alternative housing units including transition pods or residential rehabilitation units if and when appropriate to ensure their safety and the safety of others, with access to out of cell time and support services.

    32 min
  2. Youth Travel to the State Capital to Advocate for Families Impacted by Police Violence

    07/03/2024

    Youth Travel to the State Capital to Advocate for Families Impacted by Police Violence

    Jordyn and Jules, granddaughters of Rudy Cardenas who was killed by an undercover state agent in San Jose, traveled to the California state capital to advocate for AB 3021, a bill to protect grieving families from coercive police interrogations. They talk about traveling to Sacramento and the experience during the Senate Public Safety Committee Hearing for AB 3021. They also reflect on going door to door to do "drop offs" on California State Senators to talk more about why AB 3021 is important. More about AB 3021: Moments after loved ones are injured or killed by police, families are often “interviewed” by police who intentionally withhold the information that their relative was dead until the end of the “interview”. What was initially thought of as an isolated experience by families during some of the darkest moments of their lives turned out to be a police interrogation tactic espoused by a private company called Lexipol that trains police officers on how to squeeze information from families to protect police from lawsuits and criminal charges.  This bill comes directly from the experiences of Silicon Valley De-Bug families who have lost loved ones to police. AB 3021 (sponsored by Ash Kalra, D-San Jose) will require law enforcement to inform families of loved ones harmed or killed by police of their right to ask about the status of their loved one prior to answering questions, their right to remain silent, and that before speaking with law enforcement, they can consult with a trusted support person or attorney and can have that person with them while they speak to the interviewer.

    26 min
  3. 02/06/2024

    Organizing to Stop Police From Preying on Families After Their Loved One Is Killed

    We sat down with some of our justice families to discuss the disturbing similarities they experienced in the aftermath of having their loved ones killed by law enforcement. In their most vulnerable moment, law enforcement withheld information, interrogated, lied, and manipulated these families into making statements that were eventually used against them in court, resulting in criminalization of their loved ones and exoneration of the officers who did the killing. Over the last 20 years, De-Bug families have embarked on a mission to challenge the way police act in these situations, creating the First 24, a guideline of what families should know, in the event that the police kill or seriously injure a loved one that was based on the experiences they went through. Now, as California enters its new legislative cycle, these families are pushing to change the law so that law enforcement will no longer be allowed to manipulate families. In this conversation you'll hear: Corina Griswold & Regina Cardenas, daughters of Rudy Cardenas. On February 17, 2004 Rudy  was shot in the back & killed by undercover state narcotic agents in downtown San Jose. A case of mistaken identity. Rudy was unarmed. He was 43 years old and a loving father of 4. SJPD held off paramedics, witheld information, & interrogated Rudy's family in the hours after his killing.Jim Showman, father of Diana Showman. On August 14th 2014, Diana was having a mental health crises. She needed help and the San Jose Police Department did the complete opposite, they took her precious life. Diana was a loving daughter to Jim & Vickie, a sister who loved to play softball. Today and everyday we remember Diana.Chandra Jacquez, daughter of Richard "Harpo" Jacquez. On August 17, 2015 Harpo's life was taken by SJPD Officer Jacob Morris. Harpo was unarmed, back against the officer, when he was first hit by the police car and then shot 5 times in the back. Harpo is remembered as a father, grandfather, son, brother, uncle, cousin, and beloved friend and community member to so many in San Jose. At his memorial, so many shared stories of how giving and unselfish he was, and just loved his family. His star shines brightly in all the loved ones left behind, especially his daughter and Debug organizer Chandra ❤️Raj Jayadev acted as host for this convo, founding De-Bugger and longtime community organizer. Daniel Zapien on the 1s & 2s, recorded and edited this episode, also long time De-Bugger and San Jo visual artist.  For more information and resources on De-Bug families that have been impacted by police brutality visit Protect Your People SJ.  Listen to Jim Showman on the Reveal Podcast

    51 min

About

Silicon Valley De-Bug is a story-telling, community organizing, and advocacy organization based in San José, California.

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