~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ THE WASH RAG published by Women Against Sexual Harassment ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Available on-line ASAP at http://www.washrag.org/ or http://members.tripod.com/~WASHRAG/ along with earlier issues ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Subscribe to e-mail version of this newsletter by going to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WomenAgainstSexualHarassmentNationaland and joining the group. Recent issues are posted here immediately when completed. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Issue 9, Number 3 August, 2001 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Index ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ LADIES, WE’VE BEEN HAD . . . AGAIN CONSENTUALITY AND SEXUAL INJURY— Humanitas FROM HUMANITAS -- SEXUAL ABUSE IN PRISONS LEGISLATIVE NEWS STORY UPDATES IN THE MEDIA OPPORTUNITY FOR THEATER-LOVERS SPECIAL REQUEST AND HEALTH WARNING ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ LADIES, WE’VE BEEN HAD . . . AGAIN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When I was young, I recall sitting at the table eating what was then called "supper." There were two pieces of pie left, a big one and a little one. I had been told I had to finish my peas before I could have any pie. My brother, seven years older than me, had scarped down his supper, AND a piece of pie. Now he took another piece -- the biggest one -- and started to eat it, too. To protest was pointless, as he had been shocking oats all day and he was a MAN. Regardless of the fact that I had begged Pop to let me shock and had even done a free shock to demonstrate that I could do it as well as my brother, Pop said that girls did not shock grain, and that was that. I finally got my piece of pie and was eating it when my brother finished bolting down his second piece and got up to leave the table. He gave me a parting slam on the top of my head with his fist and said, "You are lucky you got the small piece. If you got the big piece, it would just make you fat." That is what is known as "glad-handing" someone. I have finally gotten statistics for the 1991 census in India as they refer to women from Hasina Kharbhih, and one category is "Crimes Against Women." The three most numerous are listed: dowry killing, rape and what we would call domestic abuse. The figures were a huge shock to me, as I had really expected them to be commiserate with U. S. figures -- but they were not. They list 6917 dowry deaths in 1991. But wait just one minute, folks, before you tsk, tsk, tsk. That is out of 407.07 MILLION women counted in that census. That figures out, unless my calculator is malfunctioning, to around one dowry death in every 58,851 women living in India in 1991. Compare that to the US Justice Department survey of intimate violence which found that one U. S. woman in 1008 was murdered by an intimate in 1996. I realize that it isn’t scientific to compare dowry deaths in 1991 in India to deaths from intimate violence in the US in 1996, and I even recognize that the Indian Census figures include girls while the U. S. Census figures are calculated on women over 12. But the statistics from India are not available for how many women there were over 12 in 1991. This is just a rough comparison. Even assuming the rate of dowry killings has possibly escalated between 1991 and 1996, they would still have a long way to go to come close to the rate at which U. S. women are murdered by intimates. Almost half of the dowry killings were in two of the twenty-six provinces and seven territories of India, Uttar Pradesh and Biher. Furthermore, the chart lists the percentage of total cognizable crimes against women and there was one crime against a woman for every 3099 women in India that year. That would include rape, assault, robbery, I suppose. I am in no position to question how the Indian Government collects statistics or operates its census any more than I can do so with the U. S. Government. I must either accept or reject their data, and I have to believe they have an interest in collecting information for the use of their government and do so professionally. If anyone knows otherwise, they should challenge the government of India, not me. Because I have such limited resources, I am astounded that the American media has spent so much effort in discussing the problem of dowry killings in India when U. S. women are dying from domestic violence at 58 times the rate of women in India. It is irresponsible of them to give the dowry deaths so much media attention while giving the intimate abuse problem in the U. S. virtually no coverage. The fact is, ladies, we’ve been glad-handed. Aren’t we lucky nobody is pouring kerosene on us and setting us on fire, when a U. S. woman is hardly less dead because she had the crap beaten out of her and has a huge likelihood of meeting that fate as compared to a woman in India. Do I wish I lived in India? Not at all, my interest was curiosity as to how dowry killing was apparently so prevalent there when the men from India I had met were all so polite and gentlemanly. After all, the first place in the world where women were permitted to vote was in Wyoming in the U. S., and the U. S. was the first country in the world to allow women to vote. The Clinton administration placed more women into powerful, visible positions than all of his predecessors combined. My opinion is that certain American males have been severely threatened by this and have declared war on the women of this country. No wonder the U. N. kicked our country off its Human Rights Commission. American women are being targeted for assassination on the basis of their activism, I am 100% convinced of it. Those women who don’t challenge the system or who are under male domination are left to operate without interference. They expect eventually to eliminate all of the troublesome women, but what they don’t anticipate is that they will eliminate all of the intelligent women at the same time. They will be sentencing future generations to having stupid mothers, eventually degrading our whole society to mass stupidity. Afghanistan, here we come! Moreover, I am suspicious that the statistics for honor killings in Moslem countries and genital mutilations in Africa would show similar discrepancies, but I don’t have time to pursue that. I prefer to try to track down the statistics for how many firefighters there were in the US in 1996 and how many of them were killed in the line of duty and compare that to the 1996 Intimate Abuse Statistics. After that has been done, maybe someone will suggest a wall in Washington to honor victims of intimate abuse. That should wrap around the capitol building three or four times. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CONSENTUALITY AND SEXUAL INJURY -- Humanitas ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "That the level of the penalty meet the nature of the harm: Amnesty International believes that cases meeting the state standards of criminal first and second degree assaults require a felony punishment, and those that fit a degree of little or no coercion merit misdemeanor level punishments. In cases of actions not meeting standards of Criminal prosecution, appropriate actions, including administrative penalties, should be authorized." http://www.amnesty-usa.org/women/custody/custody_intro.pdf The Amnesty line of reasoning (in that recent document) seems to be suggesting that some degree of consentuality is possible. I'd suggest that is not the case. Most allegations of rape or sexual abuse which are made, whether by free or detained or imprisoned females in the USA (whether in hospital, INS custody, Jails or prisons) are true, with no significant distinction being found (by anybody) between one and the other. Therefore the UN Rules s53 is the only game in town. However if Amnesty has information which has defined a distinction I'd be pleased to learn of it. Also a 'little coercion' in my opinion can't be adequately measured. The very notion is without respectability and would not be flattered with very much by way of global acceptance. Any sex in a prison between the empowered and disempowered has a real sex criminal for the first part and a real victim for the second part. I'd suggest the wording of that paragraph was unfortunate. The USA doesn't measure or 'grade' the sexual injury relative to corrections staff misconduct, it usually puts the victim in the hole as item one on the 'to do' list. Additionally many female inmates would not know what sexual assault was these days, it is just another day or unpleasant event in their lives. I think you'll find that most studies reflect that latter perspective and have reliably done [so] for the last twenty or thirty years. I'm sure that HRW (in one of their reports) mentioned that phenomena with respect to Georgia and the last study into female juvenile[s] in California came to the same conclusions if I recall correctly. The victims are frequently unable to define sexual abuse or assault. That scenario might also work for parental abuse as well by the way, Utah being the obvious geography. Many children frequently don't appreciate that a parent or step parent is sexually exploiting them. Female prisoners and especially juveniles are frequently 'pimped' to accept the unacceptable. Parents might tell kids in Utah that they're going to hell if they tell folks they're married to their step dads or whatever. They're unlikely to think of it as sex abuse. Greagoir O'Cearullain ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FROM HUMANITAS -- SEXUAL ABUSE IN PRISONS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Greagoir O'Cearullain from Humanitas has reported complaints against prison guards and other personnel in a number of prisons: Oklahoma (women sent from Hawaii to serve their sentences) where there were allegations of rape and sexual assault. One woman claimed she became pregnant after being raped and was forced to undergo an abortion. Of course, the allegations could not be confirmed and there were no records of any therapeutic abortions being performed at the facility, but six employees of the privately run institution accused in the affair are no longer employed there, including a psychiatrist in charge of that woman’s counseling, who was found not to be licensed to work in Oklahoma. . . Humanitas also claims that police in Michigan have used their state’s law enforcement database to harass motorists, stalk women and settle personal vendettas. . . Humanitas says that the USA has systemic sexual abuse of female prisoners and the federal system is just as bad as the County Jail or State systems. . . A female inmate at the Taycheeda Correctional Institution, Ms. Sommer Whitney, #327545 a prisoner in the State of Wisconsin alleges that she was raped and forced to perform sex acts by a prison guard, on the morning of June 16, 2001, (around 2 am), in the barracks. . . Quoted from the Nashua, New Hampshire Telegraph, Russell Solsky was accused of kissing and fondling a 26-year-old inmate, groping a 23-year-old inmate’s breasts and buttocks and trying to put the younger woman’s hand on his crotch. He also was charged with exposing himself to a 19-year-old inmate. . . Humanitas says that using the women and kids for sex in Connecticut is very far from unusual and that working in that prison [Danbury] is VERY unpopular because of the sex abuse and torture. Decent men hate the place. . . "Amnesty International today renewed its call for an urgent investigation into allegations of sexual abuse at York Correctional Institution for women. Over the past two months, the human rights organization has received numerous testimonies from inmates and former employees alleging sexual misconduct and general abuse by male guards. . . Mixing female victims and dangerous rapists in the State of Connecticut certainly took place. One little metal box with a frightened girl and delighted rapists. Not the way civilized Countries do it. Only barbarians would stoop so low. . . can you tell us why this Maria Houser person was fired, or get the DOC to tell us that Ms. Houser didn't make that sordid and unfortunate little speech at the capitol? . . . The USA is the biggest culprit on earth for State sanctioned Police Sexual Violence. I've had very senior officials tell me privately for example that using detained children for sex in Texas is not only part of the salary but it was by tradition often actively encouraged . . . Story: ARIZONA SHERIFF BROADCASTS JAIL SCENES OVER THE INTERNET, LIKE POLICE OFFICERS FRISKING FEMALE PRISONERS IN FRONT OF MALE HOLDING CELLS; PORN SITES ARE HAVING A FIELD DAY Picture a computer screen broadcasting the following images: a prisoner sleeping on a concrete floor, or sitting bound in a restraint chair. Police officers frisking female prisoners in front of male holding cells, while male prisoners press up against the windows for a better view. Police officers strip-searching prisoners; female prisoners using the toilet. You might think that these are some of the many images that prison security guards see every day. Or perhaps human rights advocates see such images when investigating prison conditions. Actually, these live images of real people in real prisons are available to anyone at the click of a mouse. Last July, the controversial Phoenix, Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio introduced the world's first live Internet broadcast from inside a jail. Cameras provide footage from holding and searching cells of Phoenix's Maricopa County jail. The Sheriff calls the project educational, because kids could tune in and see what it is like in jail. The Sheriff's website received so many hits after its unveiling that he was approached by the Internet company Crime.com, which now handles the webcasts. Pornography sites now link to the site. Prisoners and prisoners rights advocates are not happy. The prisoners and detainees (people who have been arrested but not yet convicted) are not asked or even told that they are being filmed and broadcast on the Internet. Donna Leone Hamm, a retired lower court judge, sued Maricopa County and Sheriff Arpaio, charging that they are violating detainees' basic privacy rights. MIDDLE GROUND FILES $1.3 BILLION LAWSUIT AGAINST MARICOPA COUNTY SHERIFF Press Release: seeks monetary damages in the amount of $25,000/plaintiff from each defendant in Maricopa County at the Estrella facility, they have locked the women up with the men in the same cell at the same time. MIAMI -- Immigrant advocates are scrambling to prevent the deportation of two women who said federal guards at the Krome Service Processing Center sexually harassed and assaulted them. The United Nations and the International Labour Organization both Report that child sexual slavery affects at least 300,000 children in the United States. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ LEGISLATIVE NEWS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ NOW reports that "currently, there are efforts being made by a coalition of individuals and organizations to enact the Local Law Enforcement Enhancement Act, S. 625, formerly Hate Crimes Prevention Act (http://www.hrc.org/issues/federal_leg?lleea/index.asp), which would strengthen the current federal statues by including gender, sexual orientation and disability on the list of bias-motivated crimes." From NOW: On March 21, 2001, five members of the U.S. Supreme Court said in Circuit City v. St. Clair Adams that employers could require employees to check their rights at the door as the price of admission to the workplace. Unless overturned by Congress, the Circuit City decision will restrict workers' rights to sue for damages related to job discrimination, harassment and other abuses. From the Miles Foundation: The following statement is being issued by The John Marshall Law School: The U.S. Supreme Court today denied military personnel the right to bring sexual harassment charges against the government or individual harassers when it let stand lower court rulings that sexual harassment was within the "scope of employment." Former Air Force Captain Dorothy Mackey, a highly honored Air Force officer, charged that the U.S. Supreme Court decision today not to take her case has "proven out a theory I had held for a long time that no military person abused by our military can get justice in this country." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ STORY UPDATES ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Received from Ruby Starr: Sandra-Kay Ricei quoted in an item from The Street-News, "In November 1989, my son of 14 was shot point blank in the center of his forehead. Sundance’s death came less than 24 hours after he disclosed to his therapist that he was being molested by the Chief Judge of the Second Judicial Court, John W. Brennan, at the court clinic. Video evidence surfaced proving Sundance’s allegations against Chief Judge Brennan and was distributed to everyone from the entire national media to the justice department. NO ONE pursued the facts except to prosecute Sundance’s father for distributing child pornography." The entire story, quite lengthy, is one of a justice system run amuck, and Ruby says it is exactly the same way her case against Kirkland Air Force Base Albuquerque, New Mexico was handled. Lisa Adams, the truck driver from Texas writes: ". . . it has become such a nightmare. I doubt my own sanity. . . . I was attacked on the Truckers Justice Center website . . . for asking for other women’s accounts of s/h in the industry, and I was left me to the wolves . . . I have been ripped off yet again by another detective in VA. . . The Commonwealth [of Virginia] has played games on the Freedom of Information Request. . . I am in deep despair and desperation. If anybody had ever told me this could go like it has, I would've thought they were nuts. From Theresa Dressler, the nurse from Delaware: Hi. Lately, I've been dealing with just the harassment portion of it. He has made several threatening phone calls to me and family members, and has been arrested several times. Now he is on a leave of absence from work and no one seems to know where he is. Kind of scary. I keep waking up expecting it all to have been a terrible nightmare, but it just continues on. Thanks for your interest and your great magazine. Teresa ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IN THE MEDIA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Locally: Sioux City Iowa station KTIV reported on April 12 that Hull Iowa businessman and founder of the Pizza Ranch chain, Lawrence Vander Esch, had been accused of sexually abusing three teenaged male employees of Pizza Ranch between 1998 and 2000. Among other civic positions he had held was being on the Jail Committee. This story was widely reported and was a huge embarrassment to the extremely Conservative community. The May 2 Argus Leader carried a story about Jodee Flockhart’s sexual harassment action against Iowa Beef Processors in Waterloo, Iowa. She complained that she had been the target of derogatory jokes and was groped by men who even tore her clothing. The Sioux Falls TV Station KELO carried a story on May 23 about Brenda Jarles who had sued Lodgenet for Sexual Harassment. She had complained to Human Resources without any effect. KCAU in Sioux City carried a story on June 26 about a Sexual Harassment claim against IBP there. The decision which favored the victim was upheld. She had claimed she was sexually harassed because she was in an inter-racial marriage and had children. Various sources including Sioux City Lawyer Shelley Horack reported about a case in which a Sioux City lawyer, Furlong, was suspended for 18 months from practicing with no chance for reinstatement for sexual harassment of a Sioux City woman. Another client also accused him. National: 48 Hours on March 5 carried a story about Domestic Abuse. They examined programs to help men stop abusing, and found that only 15% of those who were put in them did not re-offend. The rest dropped out, went to jail or re-offended. The District on March 10 was about a drug tip that led police to a truck full of Vietnamese women who had been brought into this country for the sex trade. Dateline on March 18 with Geraldo Rivera was also about women and children brought into the US for the sex trade. Pimps lie to them about why they are coming to the US. Various victims related that they were told they would work in spas, as maids, in modeling agencies or marry American men but ended up working in brothels. Paul Wellstone of Minnesota has sponsored a bill to help protect victims and give tough punishment to traffickers. A May 30 film on NBC, Disclosure, was about a man who was the victim of sexual harassment. This was interesting because another woman executive helped him get the goods on his harasser and keep his job. If only more men would take this kind of a position, women would have less to complain about. Most just want to keep their jobs without prostituting themselves. On April 3, Dateline carried a story about women sexually harassing men. Law and Order, Special Victims Unit carried a story about foreign women imported into the US for the sex trade on April 27. Some were abused by the men who imported them. KSFY in Sioux Falls carried a story about three women who claimed their supervisors at TWA sexually harassed them. TWA settled. A Primetime segment on June 21 was very critical of the treatment of sexual predators, especially in Massachusetts. In one case, a violent sexual criminal with a long history of violence against children was released from a mental hospital on the condition that he move to Montana, where he re-offended. Charisse Shumate died on Saturday, August 4 at the Madera County Hospital. Charisse was a life term prisoner incarcerated for 16 years at the Central California Women's Facility and was dying of complications from sickle cell anemia, cancer and hepatitis C. She was the reason that many activists and advocates got involved in defending the right of women prisoners to medical care and adequate treatment inside. She was the inspiration that kept us in this battle year after year despite the constant setbacks, the losses and the deaths. We thought she was indefatigable. From Judy Greenspan. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ OPPORTUNITY FOR THEATER-LOVERS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I am looking to interview victims/survivors of sexual harassment in order to create a one woman solo performance play to be produced in New York City next year, as well as on tour at regional theatres. I myself am a survivor. I was the victim of sexual harassment while I was a university professor; I lost my job when I made a formal complaint against my boss, and then I successfully sued this university and my ex boss. My goal is to use my creative skills as an actor and writer of solo performance to bring this important issue to the public through the immediacy of live theatre; my goal is to honor the experiences of fellow victim/survivors through embodying their stories/personas in performance. I will create this performance by doing live interviews and then recreating the people I interview in a solo performance. I have been a successful professional actor, university professor, and performance artist for the past 20 years, having appeared in Broadway/Off Broadway plays, feature films, television, and many, many regional theatre productions. I have an undergraduate theatre degree from Northwestern University, a Masters degree from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, and I am currently teaching, acting professionally, and working towards an MFA in Creative Writing at Sarah Lawrence College. Interested parties may contact me through my e mail address for more information: marylisbeth(bleep)aol.com Thank you!!!!!! Lisbeth Bartlett ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SEXUAL HARASSMENT OF INCARCERATED WOMEN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It may seem to some that I am including a lot of information about the abuse of prisoners. Unfortunately, there seems to be a lot of it. This only serves to emphasize that sexual harassment is an activity of people who abuse power over others. Although there is sexual harassment of women in all stratum of society, it is more prevalent and more lethal when it is directed to women in poverty, and imprisoned women are the most impoverished of all. I have criticized organizations like NOW and AAUW for their focus on abuses against successful women. I understand that their interest is to provide role models for young women and girls so that they will try to achieve. I understand that this is important, and I really do support their interest in this area. But the truth is that most sexual harassment is directed toward women in poverty, and it is impossible for women in poverty to do anything to correct the wrongs directed towards them. Over and over and over the same story is told to us, if women in the very low pay scales complain, they end up losing their job and they are unable to get another. Employers have their own ways of passing the word around that "this one won’t cooperate." So I applaud humanitas and Greagoir O'Cearullain’s efforts to get humanitarian treatment for female prisoners. Our local and Federal governments should be ashamed of some of the situations brought to our attention, and for that, our government deserved to lose its seat on the U. N. Human Rights Commission. I also believe that if such treatment goes unchecked, it will become more and more prevalent in society as a whole. This year, it may be only incarcerated prisoners, next year, it may also be mothers on welfare, and after that, fast food workers, cleaning personnel, clerical and so on up the food chain. We should stop it before it reaches to the top as it has in Afghanistan. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A Special Request from Women Against Sexual Harassment As events have unfolded, it has seemed that having non-profit status would be a benefit to some of the individuals who come to us for services and support. Sandra Mallie our representative in Texas has offered to file the papers to get this, but we need some donations to cover the filing costs. If you can chip in a little bit, no matter how small, send a check to her at 7361 Buggy Hub, Athens, TX 75751. Some new sites for Sexual Harassment in the Military: Survivors Take Action: [link no longer valid]; Department of Defense Task Force: http://www.mfrc.calib.com/domestic_violence.htm/; The National Training Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence: http://www.ntcdsv.org/ HEALTH WARNING If you have been involved in a sexual harassment complaint and you are having health problems that the medical profession is having trouble finding treatments for, you should be aware that low level arsenic poisoning does not kill, but causes a myriad of symptoms like diarrhea, vomiting, skin lesions, thick peeling skin, black and blue marks, fast heart beat, leg edema, respiratory disturbances, disturbances of the circulatory system, Neurological symptoms, auditory disturbances, discoloration of the skin and more. Many of these symptoms were experienced by a small fraction of the exposed individuals. Because I have personally suffered from all of these for as long as 40 years, and wrote a book, When Medicine Failed discussing them, I don’t think the medical profession can be of any help. You can read more about this problem at http://www.kfunigraz.ac.at/fwiwww/aan/newsl1/affects.html and at http://www.hvr.se/nov97/arsenic.html. I also have information about this at http://www.janetleih.com/, which is temporarily off-line because the server went belly-up. It should be back up within a couple of weeks. None of the men who harassed me would have hesitated to poison me so I would either be too sick to pursue the complaint or die of one of the symptoms. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WE’RE ON THE WEB http://www.washrag.org/ and at http://members.tripod.com/~WASHRAG/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This on-line version of THE WASHRAG is being sent to you free. A print version can be obtained by subscribing. In the US, send $10.00 to Women Against Sexual Harassment, P. O. Box 164, Canton, SD 57013-0164. Outside the US, send $20.00 to join. For a sample issue, send a #10 sized SASE. For a Publisher98 print module, e-mail washragezine(bleep)yahoo.com E-mail comments can be sent to washragezine(bleep)yahoo.com. If you know of anyone you think might be interested, just send us their e-mail address and we will put them on our e-mail mailing list. If you do not wish to receive further copies of this newsletter, indicate your preference to washragezine(bleep)yahoo.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ copyright 2001 Tesseract Publications, P. O. Box 164 Canton, SD 57013-0164 (605) 987-5070.