NY Considers Law to Ban Shackling Pregnant Inmates

Posted September 6, 2009

NEW YORK (AP) -- For nearly four hours before she gave birth, Venita Pinckney had a chain wrapped around her swollen abdomen. Her ankles were shackled together and her hands were cuffed.

The 37-year-old was in a maximum-security prison for violating parole. An officer told her the use of restraints on pregnant inmates was ''procedure.''

''I'm saying to myself, 'I feel like a pregnant animal,''' said Pinckney, who was taken from the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility to a hospital for the birth of her boy last year.

At state prisons around the country, jailed women are routinely shackled during childbirth, often by correctional staff without medical training, according to civil rights organizations and prisoner advocates. The practice has been condemned by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists for unnecessarily risking women's health, and court challenges are pending in several states.

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No more room, no more money

Posted July 5, 2009
Prisons are too crowded. They have been this way for a while now. But as the economy deteriorates States are faced with new challenges and realities.

Lion's Den

Posted July 3, 2009

This Argentinian Cannes Selection has just been released in the United States.

Sent to prison for allegedly killing her lover, Julia discovers she is pregnant and is sent to a high-security maternity ward to serve her time. Julias only concern now is her son. Her fellow inmate Marta becomes her ally; her mother Sofía, her opponent. One attempts to teach her how to be a mother; the other wishes to take over rearing the child. The film, shot in a real prison with inmates as extras, shines a light on a little known aspect of prison life: motherhood behind bars. An official selection of Cannes Film Festival.


Panel to Issue Standards To Reduce Prison Rapes

Posted June 23, 2009

By SOLOMON MOORE Published: June 22, 2009

A Congressional commission plans to issue recommendations on Tuesday for standards to reduce sexual assaults in the nation’s jails and prisons.

The commission cited an estimate by the Bureau of Justice Statistics that 60,500 state and federal prisoners were sexually assaulted in 2007.

Congress authorized the National Prison Rape Elimination Commission to conduct the study and to issue binding standards for corrections agencies that will have the force of law. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. will have one year to codify anti-sexual assault procedures, and state governors will have an additional year to signal their compliance with those standards or risk losing up to 5 percent of federal financing for corrections.

Read the rest of the article.

The Released

Posted April 29, 2009

In "The Released" PBS' Frontline documents what happens to mentally ill offenders when they leave prison. You can watch the whole episode online.

Wander around. PBS's website is full of great resources.

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