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ACLU says jail in South Carolina is banning books 'for no good reason'

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-11-11 06:14 AM
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ACLU says jail in South Carolina is banning books 'for no good reason'
Edited on Wed May-11-11 06:35 AM by babylonsister
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/may/10/us-prisoners-refused-books-bible

US prisoners refused all books except Bible

American Civil Liberties Union says jail in South Carolina is banning books 'for no good reason'



Prisoners at a jail in South Carolina are being denied any reading material other than the Bible, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

The ACLU filed a lawsuit challenging the "unconstitutional" policy at Berkeley County detention centre in Moncks Corner on behalf of monthly journal Prison Legal News last autumn. Last week a request by the US Department of Justice to stand alongside Prison Legal News as a plaintiff in the lawsuit was granted by a federal judge, and the ACLU has now asked a federal judge to block enforcement of a policy which it claims sees the jail's officials "unconstitutionally refusing to allow prisoners to receive any materials that contain staples or pictures of any level of nudity, including beachwear or underwear", effectively banning most books, magazines and newspapers.

snip//

"This is nothing more than an excuse by jail officials to ban books and magazines for no good reason," said David Shapiro, staff attorney with the ACLU national prison project. "There is no justification for denying detainees access to periodicals and in the process cutting them off from the outside world."

"Jail officials are looking for any excuse they can come up with to obscure the fact that they are unconstitutionally censoring materials sent to detainees
," added Victoria Middleton, executive director of the ACLU of South Carolina. "And in so doing they are failing to serve the detainees and the taxpayers of South Carolina. Helping prisoners rehabilitate themselves and maintain a connection to the outside world by reading books and magazines is a key part of what should be our larger and fiscally prudent objective of reducing the number of people we lock up by lowering recidivism rates."
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Historic NY Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-11-11 07:23 AM
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1. A return to the failed 19th century penalogy.
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