~terry
Mon, Mar 2, 1998 (07:49)
seed
This is for all those homeboys out there who may be serving their
mandatory minimums of 20 years for a joint or who got entrapped and are
doing time unjustly. And just for all the homeboys and women in prison in
general. There are a couple of million of 'em in the US, which
encarcerates many more people than any other nation on the planet.
We don't expect these folks to check in, unless via paper mail, as I
doubt they have access to a web browser, but we can connect ourselves
with some of their concerns. And we can visit.
1 new of
~terry
Mon, Mar 2, 1998 (07:51)
#1
December 29, 1995
CONTACT:
Peter Y. Sussman, President
Northern California Society of Professional Journalist
(510) 845-1311
PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS DECRY PRISON CENSORSHIP
The Northern California chapter of the nation's largest and
oldest association of journalists today (12/29/95) denounced the
decision by
state officials to cut off all media interviews with state prisoners for
an
unspecified period of time.
"Our entire system of government is based on the public's right
to know about the operation of public institutions," said Peter Y.
Sussman,
Northern California president of the Society of Professional
Journalists.
"Prisons are public institutions - in California right now they are both
newsworthy and controversial institutions - and no law or court ruling
gives prison officials the right to hog-tie news media reporting for
capricious reasons. Judging from the public comments of state prison
officials, the reasons for the current ban on interviews are capricious
in the extreme, based on political motivations not grounded in security
or other legitimate penological concerns."
State officials, in revealing the ban on prisoner interviews by
news organizations, claimed that the ban is temporary, pending review of
current policies to separate "mainstream" or "legitimate" news
organizations from "entertainment news, like radio or TV talk shows."
SPJ's Sussman responded that there was no authority for prison
officials to decide which journalists were worthy of reporting on prison
issues. "Freedom of the Press was enshrined in our Constitution
specifically to guarantee the independence of the news media to report
on
issues of public concern," said Sussman. "That independence does not
exist when the very officials whose actions are being scrutinized are
allowed to direct the news coverage. Especially at a time when prison
issues are near the top of the public agenda - and when the state
Department of Corrections has lost high-profile court suits challenging
treatment of high-security and mentally ill inmates - it is imperative
that the media have unfettered access to the prisoners whose rights have
been
upheld in court. Filtering of those reports through the prison
bureaucracy is inimical both to the press' constitutional right to
report
on government affairs and the public's right to know how its government
is conducting its business.
"It is true," Sussman continued, "that some Supreme Court rulings
give prisons a narrow right to limit media access to prisoners, but that
right is based on the special security concerns of prisons and not on the
political or personal whims of state officials. And even where security
is a
legitimate issue, the Supreme Court has highlighted the special and
protected role of the media in covering prison issues."
The assistant secretary of California's Youth and Adult
Correctional Agency, J.P. Tremblay, has been quoted in media reports as
defending the interview ban. Tremblay said, according to the reports,
"Why should some guy benefit from committing a crime? We did this
because
we didn't want to have inmates becoming celebrities and heroes." He also
is quoted as saying, "Our concern is that we do not want to have
criminals glamorized or made celebrities by these types of shows. It
goes
counter to the purpose of incarceration, which is punishment for crime."
Sussman, a longtime San Francisco journalist who has co-authored
a book dealing in part with media-prisoner First Amendment issues,
maintained
that Tremblay's stated concerns were political in nature and therefore
illegitimate. "He appears to be concerned about prisoners' glamor,
whatever that means, and for this reason - and not for the security
reasons that might arguably justify such actions - he is willing to
discard the public's and the media's cherished First Amendment
guarantees. Well, the members of the Society of Professional Journalists
- and I believe the public - are not willing to so easily relinquish
their rights of citizenship."
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