GENEVA (AP) A U.N. human rights expert on torture urged U.S. authorities Monday to end four decades of solitary confinement for a former Black Panther convicted of murdering a Louisiana prison guard.
U.N. special rapporteur Juan Mendez said the indefinite solitary confinement imposed on Albert Woodfox "clearly amounts to torture and it should be lifted immediately."
Woodfox, 66, and fellow prisoner Herman Wallace were serving unrelated sentences for armed robbery in 1972, when they were charged and convicted with fatally stabbing a guard.
The two men were moved to isolation in Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, then to "closed-cell restriction" at other state jails. Wallace died Friday at 71, only days after a federal judge freed him and ordered a new trial for him on the murder charge.
Mendez, who reports to the U.N.'s top human rights body in Geneva, said in a statement their cases "clearly show that the use of solitary confinement in the U.S. penitentiary system goes far beyond what is acceptable under international human rights law."