WATCH: How the U.S. Became the World Leader in Solitary Confinement

Share:
April 17, 2017

Around 80,000 prisoners across America are being held in solitary confinement — many of them for months or years at a time.

Critics call the prolonged use of solitary confinement torture, pointing to research on its heavy mental toll.

But when solitary was first introduced in America in the late 18th century, it wasn’t intended to be a punishment. In fact, solitary was first put into practice at U.S. prisons by a pacifist spiritual community called the Quakers, as part of an experiment to improve prison conditions and rehabilitate inmates.

“There was a belief that you could put a prisoner in his own solitary cell, freed from the evil influences of modern society, and if you put them in that cell, they would become like a penitent monk, free to come close to God and to their own inner being, and they would naturally heal, heal from the evils of the outside society,” Stuart Grassian, a clinical psychiatrist who has studied the long-term impact of isolation in prison, says in Last Days of Solitary, a new FRONTLINE documentary premiering Tues., April 18.

Explore how that “noble experiment” became an “absolute catastrophe,” in Grassian’s words, in the above excerpt — which unspools the 200-year history of solitary confinement in the U.S.

Though the U.S. remains the world leader in the use of long-term solitary confinement, in recent years, more than 30 states have begun to experiment with reforms aimed at reducing its use — a trend whose risks and rewards are explored up-close in Last Days of Solitary.

Filmed inside Maine State Prison’s solitary confinement ward by Dan Edge and Lauren Mucciolo over the past three years, Last Days of Solitary traces the prison’s experiment to scale back its use of solitary, and follows the experiences of five men who have spent considerable time in isolation — one of whom goes on to murder another inmate after being released back into the prison’s general population.

Gripping, immersive, and raw, the film also delves into the latest research on the psychological impact of long-term isolation, and what effects offenders carry with them back into the community.

“It leaves a scar on you that you won’t forget, and you can’t heal it no matter how good you are,” one inmate tells FRONTLINE of his time in solitary.

Last Days of Solitary premieres Tues., April 18 at 9 p.m. EST/8 p.m. CST on PBS stations (check local listings) and online.


Patrice Taddonio

Patrice Taddonio, Senior Digital Writer, FRONTLINE

Twitter:

@ptaddonio

More Stories

U.S. ‘Virtually Never Held Anyone Accountable’ for Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan War, Former White House Official Says
A new FRONTLINE series probes mistakes behind the U.S. failure in Afghanistan — including errant raids and other military operations that repeatedly killed Afghan civilians, and for which, according to former deputy national security adviser and retired Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, ‘we virtually never held anyone accountable.’
April 11, 2023
The Fight Over the Abortion Pill Mifepristone and the Financial Impact of Abortion Access
The battle over abortion in America continues to escalate, with competing rulings from two different courts over abortion pills. FRONTLINE looks at the latest developments and the potential implications for people trying to access abortions.
April 10, 2023
What the Wisconsin Supreme Court Election Could Mean for the 2024 Election, Gerrymandered Maps and Abortion
FRONTLINE takes a closer look at the potential state- and national-level ramifications of Wisconsin Supreme Court’s judicial election.
April 7, 2023
Remembering Marian Marzyński (1937-2023)
Read FRONTLINE founder David Fanning's message about the passing of filmmaker Marian Marzyński and his legacy.
April 6, 2023