10 MOTHER JONES |^ JULY / AUGUST 2019
OUTFRONT
PETER RYAN
at Santa Rita. The jail gives those with
less than $7.05 in their pockets one or
two transit tickets. There are electri-
cal outlets in the lobby, but no phone
chargers or pay phones. (The infor-
mation desk officer will make phone
calls for people who ask.) Outside, taxis
circle the parking lot, charging $10 for
the two-mile ride to the train station.
Drivers have a reputation for offering
women rides in exchange for sex. Sev-
eral times a month, volunteers from
the Incarcerated Workers Organizing
Committee set up near the bus stop,
offering free pizza, carpools to the sta-
tion, and cigarettes until 1 a.m.
Kelly, the sheriff ’s spokesperson, tells
me it’s the role of such groups, not law
enforcement, to help inmates once
they hit the streets. “Where does our
responsibility stop and where does so-
ciety’s, the community’s, responsibility
start?” he asks. “Where does personal
responsibility start?”
“It is always the sheriff ’s responsibility
to think about community safety,” says
Susan Burton, the founder of A New
Way of Life, a nonprofit that provides
food, clothing, shelter, and legal sup-
port to women released in Los Angeles
County. “Anybody getting released—any
woman getting released in the middle
of the night—her safety is threatened.”
Burton has been through it herself. After
a police cruiser ran over and killed her
five-year-old son, she cycled in and out of
the LA jail system for two decades, deal-
ing with grief and addiction. Rather than
walk home alone when she was let out,
she’d call a pimp. “That was the option
I had,” she says. She recalls inmates tell-
ing stories about women getting killed
after late-night releases: “I remember
how scared we were.”
Similar tales now circulate at Santa
Rita: rumors that St. Louis was raped
and murdered, and that other women
have met the same fate. At the bus stop
on the night I meet Leah, a middle-aged
woman who has just been released
stares down the dark road in confusion.
She asks a young man who’s just been
released how to get to the station. He
points down the road, but then he tells
her about St. Louis: “They said she over-
dosed. You know that was a cover-up.”
The woman decides to walk anyway. n
if you’ve spent enough time on the in-
ternet over the last three years, you’ve
probably come across Scott Dworkin,
a.k.a. @funder. The 36-year-old is the
cofounder of a super-pac called the
Democratic Coalition Against Trump, a
podcast host, and an occasional guest on
msnbc who devotes much of his life to
tweeting about, and sometimes at, Pres-
ident Donald Trump. In Dworkin’s feed,
Republicans are guilty of “treason,” the
resistance is always winning, and the end
of the Trump presidency is imminent.
(August 20, 2017: “My guess: Trump will
resign in the next 2 weeks.”) When I told
him I was working on a story about his
group, he emailed back almost immedi-
ately with a link to a Medium post doc-
umenting its successes—including a list
of dozens of trending hashtags it started.
FLEECE DE RESISTANCE
PATRIOT GAMES
The anti-Trump resistance has spawned a crop of hucksters.