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Little State, Big Problems: Maine’s Prison Crisis Continues Unabated by Lance Tapley Little State, Big Problems: Maine?s Prison Crisis Continues Unabated by Lance Tapley Only big prison systems mistreat prisoners, right? Only prison systems where racism, right-wing tough-on-crime attitudes, or prison-industrial-complex power have full reign, like in California or Texas, …
Article • October 15, 2007 • from PLN October, 2007
Old Media Access Consent Decrees Violated in Maine by Lance Tapley The Maine Department of Corrections has been violating at least two of three 35-year-old federal court orders that grant prisoners access to the press, allow them to write to newspapers, and prohibit prison officials from arbitrarily transferring prisoners out …
Article • May 15, 2007
Procedure Required for Sending/Receiving Sealed Media Mail by Procedure Required For Sending/Receiving Sealed Media Mail The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas held that the Arkansas DOC must implement policies regulating incoming mail from, and outgoing mail to, media representatives similar to those governing privileged legal mail. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Visiting, Access to Media
Prisoners Have No Right to Face-to-Face Media Interviews by The Supreme Court held that neither prisoners nor the media have the right to conduct face-to-face interviews with specific prisoners designated by members of the media. California state prisoners and media members sought permission for face-to-face interviews. Prison officials denied permission …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Media, Access to Media
Broadcast Company Denied Special Access to Jail by The Supreme Court ruled that a broadcasting company had no more rights of access to certain areas of Alameda County Jail (California), or to interviews with its prisoners, than any other person. The decision stemmed from a suit filed by KQED alleging …
Confiscation of Prisoner Author's Book on Anarchy States Claim by The plaintiff alleged that he was attempting to write a book titled "A for Anarchy," and his materials were confiscated and destroyed. On initial screening, the court declines to dismiss at the pleading stage. The Seventh Circuit has held that …
Challenge to Prison Library Purge Properly Exhausted by Plaintiff challenged prison censorship on the ground that similar books to those he was denied were in the prison library; so they purged the prison library of 21% of its contents, e.g., Sophie's Choice, Myra Breckinridge, and "a number of works by …
Article • May 15, 2007
Lawsuit Challenging BOP's Reporter/Writer Pay Ban Regulation Remanded to District Court by David Reutter Lawsuit Challenging BOP's Reporter/Writer Pay Ban Regulation Remanded to District Court By David M. Reutter The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that it does not have jurisdiction to hear an appeal of a partial …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Media, Access to Media
BOP Media Access Rule Upheld by The court of appeals for the Eleventh circuit held that the Bureau of Prison's media access rule, 28 C.F.R. § 540.2(6)(4) that limits prisoner media access only to people employed full time as journalists is constitutional. The court noted that neither prisoners nor the …
Maryland Son of Sam Statute Violates First Amendment by The Court of Appeals of Maryland vacated the judgment of the Anne Arundel County Circuit Court in an action brought by the state attorney general against a prisoner for allegedly violating the state's Son of Sam' statute. Ronald W. Price was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Florida Reporter Criminally Charged for Receiving Written Communication from Prisoner by Florida Reporter Criminally Charged for Receiving Written Communication from Prisoner Florida's First District Court of Appeals held that a state statute that prohibits a news media reporter from receiving a written communication during a prison visit interview of a …
Prisoners Have Right to Send Letters to News Media by The First Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a prisoner has a right to send letters to the news media. This action was filed by two prisoners at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole, challenging the prison's total ban …
Article • May 15, 2007
Sheriff's Mass Purchase of Newspapers to Suppress News Unconstitutional. by The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the mass purchase, on election day, of the St. Mary's Today Newspaper by sheriff's deputies in St. Mary's County, Maryland, to prevent the dissemination of articles they anticipated would be critical of …
Article • May 15, 2007
BOP Regulation Barring Prisoner Reporters Constitutional; Ruling Later Vacated by A California federal district court held that a federal prison regulation that prohibits a prisoner from acting as a newspaper reporter does not violate the First Amendment, and the newspaper is not affected by the regulation. This action was filed …
Punishment for Publishing Newsletter Unconstitutional by The court of appeals for the Third circuit held that a district court erred when it dismissed a suit filed by Pennsylvania prisoners who were placed in segregation for publishing a prison newsletter. In reversing, the appeals court held that it is unconstitutional to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Legal/Media Mail and Attorney Visits Protected by The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit upheld a district court injunction prohibiting Dallas, Texas, jail officials from opening prisoners' mail from and visits with attorneys. While Texas state law did not provide for confidential media mail, it does provide for confidential …
Article • May 15, 2007
Stamp Ban, Mail Denial in Segregation Upheld by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit upheld an Arkansas prison ban on postage stamps since embossed envelopes could be purchased from the prison commissary. The court upheld a 30 day ban on the receipt and sending of personal mail to …
Denial of Continuance on Summary Judgment Proper, Summary Judgment Improper by The U.S. Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that a Florida federal district court's denial of a Florida Department of Corrections (DOC) prisoner's motion to stay consideration of DOC defendants' motion for summary judgment was not abuse of discretion. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Supreme Court Holds No Special Access to Prisoners for Media by The U.S. Supreme Court held that reporters have no more right of access to individual prisoners than does the general public. Action was brought against Federal Bureau of Prisons by the Washington Post newspaper alleging the Bureau's ban on …
Florida DOC Clamps Down on Prisoner Writers by David Reutter by David M. Reutter In an effort to limit prisoners' free speech rights, the Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC) has taken steps to prohibit prisoners from engaging in a business or profession. For some years now, the FDOC has had …
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