In U.S. prisons, tablets open window to
the outside world
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[July 18, 2018]
By Diana Kruzman
RAHWAY, N.J. (Reuters) - Marvin Worthy,
confined to a New Jersey state prison since 2004, cannot watch his son
play basketball or visit him in college. But for the past three years, a
tablet computer has kept their relationship alive.
Eight years after Apple <AAPL.O> introduced the iPad, specially designed
tablets are reaching thousands of prisoners in state and county lock-ups
around the United States. In the last year alone, at least 19 states
have made tablets available to inmates, saying they reduce violence
while providing education and job training.
"We talk about school, what he does every day," said Worthy, 37, who is
serving the last 13 years of his sentence in East Jersey State Prison in
Rahway. A picture of his son on prom night glowed on the small screen in
his hands.
The tablets, which are tamper-proof and unable to access the internet,
allow inmates to exchange emails with people on an approved list of
contacts. But some advocacy groups say their charges are too high and
fear they may be used to replace family visits.
"Having tablets to help people in prisons use email and technology is a
good thing," said Caroline Hsu, an attorney at the Prisoners' Rights
Project. "But I'm worried about these services being considered
replacements and not additions."
In some states including Colorado, New York and Virginia, companies
provide the tablets for free. But in all cases, inmates have to pay for
the services they use, which include email, video calls, and downloads
of games, music, movies and books from a limited selection. They can
also file prison grievances, access a law library or take job training
courses.
All messages are limited in length and screened for security to prevent
any unauthorized contact with the outside world.
Two of the big players in the field are Global Tel Link (GTL), a tablet
provider based in Reston, Virginia, and Dallas-based Securus
Technologies and its JPay unit, which have long sold other prison
services such as pay-phone calls and money transfers.
The privately-owned companies design their own tablets and software and
sell them to inmates or facilities through contracts with correctional
departments.
JPay and GTL told Reuters they factor in the high cost of creating a
closed network for emails when setting prices. They said they do not
encourage facilities to cut in-person education, visits or physical
mail.
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Inmate Steven Goff connects his JPay tablet device to a kiosk inside
the East Jersey State Prison in Rahway, New Jersey, U.S., July 12,
2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
'CAPTIVE CONSUMER BASE'
About 30 states say they offer tablets to all prisoners, along with
numerous county jails. Many say the computers keep inmates occupied,
lowering the risk of fighting, while email and video-calling cuts
the cost of hiring staff to sort mail or screen visitors.
Tablets are especially useful for inmates whose families are unable
to travel to see them, said Brian Peters, a vice president at GTL.
And family contact reduces the chance inmates will commit crimes
after being released, according to studies from the nonprofit Vera
Institute of Justice.
But because many states sign exclusive contracts with one company,
tablet providers can freely set prices.
"These vendors have specialized in making money off of people in
prison and their families," said Hsu. "They have a literally captive
consumer base."
She said New York's contract with JPay, which will provide tablets
for some 50,000 prisoners, does not allow prisoners to send free or
confidential emails to attorneys. JPay confirmed that was correct.
Each email costs 40 to 50 cents to send, as much as five hours of
work for New York inmates, according to 2017 data from the nonprofit
Prison Policy Initiative.
"This is just a means to monetize human contact," said Paul Wright,
executive director of the Human Rights Defense Center, a nonprofit
that campaigns on behalf of prisoner rights.
Ignacio Rodriguez, 32, who has been incarcerated at East Jersey
State Prison since 2014, said he had to choose "between writing
emails and purchasing food or other essentials from the commissary."
"At times the cost can be a burden," he said.
(Reporting by Diana Kruzman, Editing by Frank McGurty and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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