Can a Court Order You To Delete a Facebook Account?
First time accepted submitter jaymz666 writes "Can a court really order you to delete a Facebook account? When Asher initially appeared in court after the July 20 accident, the judge told her to delete her Facebook account, Kittinger said. Asher did not take it seriously, and was charged with contempt of court when the judge learned her Facebook page was still active. Seems like a big overreach."
A court can order your execution, I'd imagine they can order the deletion of an online account.
n/t
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
Never apologize to these scum. There are penalties in place, already on the books, to cover DUI charges. Sentence this woman to her time or fines and let it go at that. Trying to micromanage people's lives is what the system now does, judges and the whole corrupt group of them on a sociopathic power trip.
Never bow to these megalomaniacs.
Never mind you being forced to delete an account, will Facebook wipe an account of their servers?
Take Nobody's Word For It.
It's like constitutionality and the supreme court. What the court says is constitutional IS constitutional, regardless of what anybody else thinks.
The same applies here (except for the fact that a higher court can say otherwise).
Of course, a court can order you to do anything -- and if it's upheld on appeal then you MUST comply.
She got off easy, after a DUI collision she should be in jail for a year or two.
Last I checked, it wasn't possible to delete a facebook account. You can only deactivate them. I realise it's a technicality, but in a system based upon technicalities, it could serve to be an adequate defence?
If you don't do what the judge says, you're in big trouble.
Is deleting a Facebook account really that big a deal?
How do I mod the judge a Troll?
Did they also hit the gym?
I had always wondered what "LOL" meant.
A judge ordering a defendant to delete evidence of a crime... Well, I must say that's a new one for me.
When you taunt the victims of your drunk driving accident with a flippant post, I am glad a judge can make you take it down, or even your whole FB account if you've shown that you're not responsible enough to use it wisely. If the judge can put you in jail I don't see why it's worse if he tells you to stay off of FB.
I'm going to just hope that she AGREED to deactivate her FB account as part of some agreement to be released.
If so, then I'm having a hard time caring.
"And then remade an account with the same name and readded all my friends and reposted everything I had on my old account."
(Yes I realize this is both unlikely and impossible due to timestamps, shut up D:)
Sounds like she agreed to get off facebook as part of deal for less jail time. Other deals you might make with the judge. "Less time in exchange for serving in the military", "Less time in exchange for community service", "Less time in exchange for entering into rehab", "Less time with an agreement to avoid certain people"
It is still kinda of awful. Judges should avoid restricting peoples first amendment rights.
The judge can, during the proceedings, probably do nearly anything he likes. However, once punishment is decided, I don't think he can do anything else. I'm 99% sure he can't permanently ban you from Facebook forever. She should have just disabled her account, then re-activated it when sentencing was complete.
My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
Complied with order, ask for restore, back online.
Judge didn't tell her she couldn't make a new one, or restore the current one, just to delete it.
Idiot judge.
Captcha appropriate - Despots
Yes.
This is Facebook, not e-mail, your Internet connection, or your telephone service. If you are completely dependant on the services of one social media platform you really should really rethink the way you live your life.
I think the judge's order should include instructions on how to remove a Facebook page. I tried to delete mine once, and couldn't find a way to make it go away completely. I had to settle for removing all the personal info from it....
At first, I thought this was part of a plea deal. Shut down your Facebook account and do some other things and get your sentence reduced. However, it actually sounds like she went before the judge and he just said "Shut down your Facebook account." Now, ordering her not to post on Facebook for the duration of the trial, I could see. Given her posting a "lol" comment about her car crash, I'd say banning her from social media until the trial was over would be appropriate. Once the sentence came in, she might even face a more permanent (or at least longer) ban. But telling her right off the bat to delete her Facebook account seems like it goes a bit too far.
That said, it's stupid to just ignore a judge's orders. This person is going to decide your fate and has the power to make your life miserable. You can have your lawyer protest the order. Perhaps he might even find some way to change the judge's mind. However, you don't just ignore it outright and then act surprised when the judge comes down hard on you.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
The State has every right to deprive you of your rights through due process. A court can compel you to do just about anything, because the judicial process is due process.
About the only saving grace is the 8th Amendment protection against cruel and unusual punishment. But, deleting your Facebook account certainly wouldn't fall under the scope of this protection.
In America (and many other countries), judges get to be petty tyrants with few restrictions or consequences for rulings no matter how nutbar they may be.
Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
Why was the order issued to her and not ot Facebook?
Last time I tried to delete a facebook account Facebook openly defied my request, so this order may well be impossible to obey.
Facebook sucks. They hold your data hostage and flat out refuse to let go of it.
What if the site did not allow for account deletion? Facebook arguably doesn't allow this. Maybe you can deactivate, but never delete. Even if it did allow deletion, what if it were some other site that did not allow it. How could the judge order something that isn't (easily) possible?
Now, suppose the judge orders you to give your password, but the site TOS forbids you from giving out the password? Can a judge order you to violate a TOS?
“Apparently it was a condition, and they said she did not get it off, and so they charged her with contempt of court,” Kittinger told ABC News.
If you were to delete your account, there would still be so many things related to you on other accounts that it would be pretty meaningless. And that is assuming that facebook would actually obey your wishes and get rid of everything you posted....
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
She got off easy, after a DUI collision she should be in jail for a year or two.
DUIs here are a joke, at least the first 7 or 8 of them. She might serve jail time if she kills a few people doing it again. Hell every town in this country has at least one (if not several small armies of) lawyer who specializes just in getting DUI scum off the hook.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
The judge offerred her a reduction in sentence with the condition that she delete her Facebook account. She was free to reject the condition and receive a full sentence in accordance with the law, but instead she accepted the condition. However, she failed to comply. Back to jail! Simple.
Can a Court Order You To Delete a Facebook Account?
the judge told her to delete her Facebook account,
So, yes, then. Also, when you copy-and-paste to create your summary, at least out for things like:
after the July 20 accident
where there has been no previous mention of any accident.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Frankly, this would be doing a favor to anyone with an already existent account. Last I heard it takes a year for an account to disappear if it's not legally forced to.
You can NOT delete a Facebook account. You can remove wallposts, but they remain on the database. You can deactivate the account but it will persist for several weeks. but you CANNOT delete the account!
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
The death penalty should be abolished forever, but not because the death penalty is "uncivil" -- because government cannot be trusted. There are many accounts of inmates on death row -- even those already scheduled for execution -- being aquitted due to new evidence. Common sense tells us that government has already executed an innocent man, probably more than one.
THAT is what invalidates the death penalty: objective analysis. Your own subjective opinion is irrelevant.
If I delete my Facebook, I end up on a few watch lists :(
The greatest right given is the right to be wrong...
Just don't piss off the judge or a "Moron Alert" will flash over your head.
Sorry, but gray text on gray background is making my eyes bleed.
separate them from yourself
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coventry_(short_story)
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
Ask a lawyer hes the only one who can give you legal and correct answer.
Jack of all trades,master of none
Don't EVER scorn a judge. You WILL suffer.
So, you are jailed for an irresponsible, irrespective comment on FB. On another hand, you can produce a bad movie offending thousands of people and it's free speech. The movie will result in killing of half a dozen people and you are free and protected by the Constitution. Someone can explain this one?
Achille Talon
Hop!
This only applies to the USA.
I'm not a lawyer. But lucky for me my best friend is. He has taught me a lot about how the law really works in the USA. Most lay people have the mistaken belief that all rights are absolute. For example, they think that the right to free speech means you cannot have that restricted. That is simply not true as there is another thread on Slashdot just below this one about a guy who is now in jail facing a one million dollar bail request to get out for exercising his "rights to free speech" on an ESPN website. Your "right to free speech" does not trump copyright law is another example. You can't threaten to kill or harm people and then say "Free speech!" or "I was just kidding" and necessarily get away with it. The Supreme Court has consistently ruled against gun restrictions but they have also been clear to state that such rulings should not be interpreted to mean that there can't be any restrictions on guns.
...are only used in about 2% of the gun related crimes. The overwhelming majority of crimes takes place with unregistered guns. At least, that's what I read some time ago in a commentary piece somewhere.
"Trump!!", the new Godwin.
Talk to Kevin Mitnick. As a young teen he was prohibited by court order from owning a computer or operating a touchtone phone until his 18th birthday.
Source: The Fugitive Game
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
... if the perpetrator is kept in a 'death row' cell until almost dying from high age?
"Trump!!", the new Godwin.
She should have been ordered to use Google+
In yet other news... abortion is murder: the killing of an innocent human for the desire of the one who does it.
Gun proliferation, while bad [and in some cases indicative of murderous thoughts], is not necessarily murder.
Go on, get some grounding. You sound like a soundbite.
I'm libertarian on most things. But if the whole purpose of the law is to protect the interests of the strong, while ignoring the weak, then I really don't see the point of it. When you approve of abortion, you cut the logical feet out from under the disapproval of any other murder. In point of fact, regardless of what a currently-insane society says, murder is evil, and should not be committed, no matter what the flavor.
Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
Don't they know that we couldn't delete our Facebook accounts no matter how hard we try?
Facebook data is FOR-EH-VURRRRRRRRRR .
Last time I checked we ordinary schlubs are merely allowed to "deactivate" our accounts.
Example:
Are you sure you want to deactivate your account?
Deactivating your account will disable your profile and remove your name and picture from most things you've shared on Facebook. Some information may still be visible to others, such as your name in their friends list and messages you sent.
Reason for leaving (Required):
My account was hacked.
I get too many emails, invitations, and requests from Facebook.
I have another Facebook account.
This is temporary. I'll be back.
I don't feel safe on Facebook.
I spend too much time using Facebook.
I have a privacy concern.
I don't find Facebook useful.
I don't understand how to use Facebook.
Other
Please explain further:
Email opt out: Opt out of receiving future emails from Facebook
Note: Even after you deactivate, your friends can still invite you to events, tag you in photos, or ask you to join groups. If you opt out, you will NOT receive these email invitations and notifications from your friends.
Tell me what those subcultures are.
You cannot delete your own account, you merely hide it. Facebook deletes nothing. What I'd be more interested in is whether or not a court order can force facebook to delete all of its private data about you.
I can see possibly ordering the deletion of a Facebook posting, but an entire account? Not as long as the person isn't violating FB's TOS.
You know, I don't think I've ever suggested a 'cheap' way of actually doing the execution? I've suggested nitrogen asphixiation as a method that's painless and doesn't mess the body up, require somebody with medical training(and thus Hippocratic Oath to deal with), or restricted, hard to obtain chemicals. You just need a reasonably airtight room and some tanks of nitrogen(available from the local welding supply).
I've mostly suggested streamlining the appeals process, eliminating some of the duplication of effort, and restricting the death penalty to the 'worst offenders'. We're not just talking 1st degree murder. My general standard is '3 or more killed, or deliberate torture in addition to the murder'. You don't try to sentence a 60 year old doctor who killed his wife by poison after catching her cheating to death. You go for the under 25 year old gangbanger 'executioner' who killed 6 people with his bare hands with that sentence. The second isn't containable in a minimum security prison, the first is.
Plus, one thing to realize is that prison costs can vary wildly. A Life in prison without possible parole sentence is the normal replacement for death, but those who receive it are often not 'average' convicts. You might be able to warehouse them cheaper than maintaining them on a death row, but I will call 'foul' when anti-DP groups cite costs and use average incarceration figures, incuding minimum security prisons*, when most of those being convicted of murder are going straight for max, which costs 3-10 times as much as minimum. Even then, you have the problem that when they hit 60 and start needing medical care provided by the prison system... In the end, I conclude that any savings are 'it depends on the specific case', and shouldn't really be considered that much. The decision should be on the basis of 'the dudes just that dangerous', or 'what they did was just that wrong'.
*Though I'll admit that not all do.
I don't read AC A human right
Not true at all. If a judge simply says, "I'm going to make you stand on your head because I think that's a fair punishment for what you did" it will certainly be overturned on appeal, and there's a good chance the judge will be censured.
On the other hand, if the judge says, "Well, I can send you to jail for a year and fine you up the wazoo. But I think making you stand on your head is a more effective punishment. Which do you prefer?" he's certainly acting within his discretion.
I've mostly suggested streamlining the appeals process, eliminating some of the duplication of effort, and restricting the death penalty to the 'worst offenders'. We're not just talking 1st degree murder. My general standard is '3 or more killed, or deliberate torture in addition to the murder'. You don't try to sentence a 60 year old doctor who killed his wife by poison after catching her cheating to death. You go for the under 25 year old gangbanger 'executioner' who killed 6 people with his bare hands with that sentence. The second isn't containable in a minimum security prison, the first is.
The reason the death penalty is flat out wrong is quite simple. It isn't just that you are being hypocritical about the morality of killing, it is also that you are murdering innocent people.
In any group of convicted murderers, there are going to be some people who are innocent. That's just a fact. People (juries) make mistakes. So some number of people you put to death are going to be innocent. It might be one in a hundred or one in ten thousand, but they are going to be there regardless of your degree of diligence. And when 15 years later, when new evidence comes to light as it seems to with alarmingly frequency, you can't just let them out of jail with an apology.
Whenever I talk to pro-death penalty people, I ask them if they would still support the death penalty if they or one of their loved ones was one of those one in a thousand cases where an innocent person was wrongly convicted, I have yet to hear a convincing 'yes'. Are you so strong in your belief of the value of capitol punishment that you would be willing to die to support it? Would you stand outside the prison when your child was executed with a sign that says, 'Fry the bastard', when you knew they were only guilty of not having a good alibi and a good lawyer?
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
Obviously as there are zero murders in any country that has the death penalty. Of course a law will stop anyone from doing anything illegal. Oh wait...
While I am in agreement with your point of view, this is a weak argument against the death penalty. You could also make the same claim about how prison sentences have not effectively deterred common theft to the point of non-occurrence, and therefore should be abolished. (Reductio ad absurdum argument)
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
...she ought to have been publicly executed.
What if the judge is a complete tosser, but the court as a process fine?
What if this judge made a court ruling to do something he had no power to compel under his enumerated powers? Would not obedience to this illegal request BE CONTEMPT? Woud not the judge be the one not only in contemt but also in breech if his legal duty?
I wouldn't have made delete her account, and I wouldn't have given her 2 days in jail, but I WOULD have given her a good spanking for not removing that comment, and doing the prosecutor's job for him. :-)
If you had been told you were facing charges of causing the holocaust YES.
What's the judge going to do next, tell her to cancel her fitness club membership because she doesn't feel she was "fit" enough to be driving?
There is no basis on how a facebook account interacts with the accident in question.
If she was using the account to repeatedly hassle someone or threaten someone, then yes, but otherwise it is merely a ticked off judge taking her irritation out on someone.
I hope dearly that someone does something about this, the judge is clearly NOT fit to be a decision maker in our court systems.
What's next? Baseless claims and judgements about which supermarkets you can buy groceries at?
This judicial carelessness that has been cropping up about interaction with the internet needs to stop.
Again, what is the basis for even ordering in the first place anything to do with fb?
IANAL; however, I see this take down order as a direct violation of her freedom of speech. It's that same speech in which she incriminates herself, so in essence, the judge is ordering her to destroy evidence.
Regardless of how offended the victims of her DUI are, and regardless of her flippant remark, there is still a restriction of her freedom of speech.
Was she in poor taste? ABSOLUTELY. But at most, I think it would have sufficed to have her remove the offending post, not the complete account. What is to stop her from creating a brand new account and re-posting after she's served her time? Nothing.
Frankly, I find crap like that offensive, but the other key thing to remember is that people don't have to go to her Facebook page. It's the same argument for TV, if you don't want to be offended, don't watch stuff that can offend you.
Life takes interesting turns, but the most interest is when you're off the beaten path.
No a judge can't order anyone to delete their Facebook account, because of the First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution freedom of speech.
There are a bazillion other ways you can exercise your freedom of speech other than posting on Facebook. Could you please give arguments why denying someone to use Facebook and not censoring them any other way would be a violation of freedom of speech?
Deleting an entire profile may be excessive, but being ordered to at least delete any reference to a crime so the victims will not be constantly reminded sounds like a valid thing to demand by a judge.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
The government can't even get Facebook to completely delete your account when you ask to them deleted.
This little straw man is always a fun one. Let me turn it around on you. If I knew for a fact that my child committed a crime that merited the death penalty, heck, even if I am the one who turned him in, I still wouldn't stand outside the prison with a sign that says, 'Fry the bastard.'
You still didn't answer the underlying question. Would you be willing to die for a murder you didn't commit?
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
Enough people believe there are certain actions that are unacceptable enough to warrant people dieing for committing them.
Enough people feel that killing in wrong that it is questionable whether the government should kill people, judicially or not.
Take some personal responsibility here. Ban the death penalty categorically. The government will no longer execute anyone for anything. Police and courthouses are permeable enough that death penalty advocates (and distraught family members) will get weapons into the facility. If you feel someone is beyond the pale, you execute them. But expect to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and spend the rest of your life in jail.
Setting aside all the off-topic death penalty trolling, this seems like open and shut prior restraint.
She could have deactivated the account which, at least for 30 days, would've probably satisfied the judge/idiot.
Think of me when you shave your legs...
Don't think this means what you think it does. Most definitions define it as the The unlawful premeditated killing of one human. Just because you don't like it doesn't make it unlawful.
Links or it didn't happen.
Simple.
First of all, the producer of the movie wasn't the one that pulled the trigger.
Second, wasn't there something about a terrorist plot already in the making and perhaps the terrorists used the movie as a convenient excuse?
Typical of what passes for "law" in this administration. Throw freedom of speech under the bus... Can't wait to throw them all out of office come November...
The recent shooting death of two unarmed police women only serves to deepen the image of Britain as a nation of good for nothing pussies
While the House of Lords (they still have the gumption to continue call themselves "lords") debates on, the victims continue to be victimized, while the bullies ... there's no justice left in UK
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
A person is entitled to unfettered free speech, as long as it does not create a clear and present danger, i.e. the yelling of "Fire" in a crowded theater.
This case involves a DUI, not a computer-related crime. A district judge handles criminal misdemeanor cases, not felonies. laws as to punishment are very specific, such as dollar amounts and time in jail. Granted some have additinal latitude, but for the most part, the judge in this case appears to have abused her discretion.
undo = = UNDUE! What kind of society have we turned into?
This may be the best place to reduce this to some
absurd level.
First off I am of the opinion that the Judge has overreached at
a number of levels.
* free speech,
She might be in contempt of court but her right to free speech is
not within the reach of his court. i.e. the constitutional issue is
bigger than his court. I am not an attorney but I would assert(
that contempt of court has specified consequences under the law).
Fines, jail time, printed retractions and apologies come to mind.
* deletion is forever
His order to delete might be overruled but in the world of computers
deletion is forever. Since his ruling contains irreversible actions it
is beyond review and for that reason that is not within the reach of his
court. This is in part why capital punishment rulings have mandated reviews.
He is denying higher courts the ability to act in review... and that
is an overreach.
* Facebook incorporated in Delaware
His order has implications on a Delaware corporation to carry
out the deletion click that he ordered. His court does not
cross state borders (or national ones). An employee managing
a backup archive in a cave in Switzerland may be enjoined to
act on the deletion by Swiss law or contract law...
Now for the absurd bit... Let us look at this ruling and take it
to the Supreme court. I believe he is overreaching to the point
of contempt on the rights of this individual. His blanket deletion
of the account is too close to an ruling that finds him in
contempt of her rights and ruled that all his writing and rulings in the court
he now sits be "deleted" his name on the door, his records in
payroll, his retirement, his diploma on his office wall and all the contents
of his "Office", all his ruling in previous (and future) cases.
What this girl said/ posted six months before the infraction
is not an issue in front of the court, nor is what she will say
(good or bad) in the future. Deleting her history and future
on Facebook is an overreach. Ignore Dr. Who for now.
This is like the New York Times writing something that the court
does not like. The courts knows that it cannot delete the
NYT full history and it knows that it cannot kill its future by
mandating that all copies of the NYT be destroyed and the
existence of the NYT be dissolved. It can fine, it can demand
a retraction, it can jail individuals.... But not delete the NYT.
Or can it... under the new paranoia rules?
Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. Mark Twain.
26A.080 Judicial officer to report unprofessional conduct of justice, judge, or
attorney.
When it comes to the attention of any judicial officer that any justice or judge of the
Court of Justice or any attorney may have been guilty of unprofessional conduct, he shall
at once report the matter to the proper investigating and disciplinary authorities.
History: Created 1976 (1st Extra. Sess.) Ky. Acts ch. 18, sec. 1.
...that a comment on a social website about an incident that didn't put you in jail, would land you in jail, and get you banned from the website.
I mean if the crime wasn't serious enough to put you behind bars, how in the world could a comment about it be? Especially one that was self-mocking and basically said; "I'm such a dumb bass! LOL!".
It might be rude, it might tasteless, it might even be highly offensive. But if those are crimes, out prisons should be a LOT fuller
In other countries there are prohibitions against hate speech, speech against the government, and / or just downright rude speech (In Germany you can be arrested for just gesturing at a driver, let alone yelling at him, because it's considered distracting). But we supposedly cherish free speech, and are willing to tolerate it's drawbacks in order to derive it's benefits. If we can't arrest that jackass who recently released that anti-Islamic video for criminal negligence or inciting a riot in association with the very foreseeable deaths and property damages resulting from it's release, then what business do we have jailing someone for offensive speech that harmed no one?
THINK! It's patriotic
Our rights are stooped there others rights are begins...
On what basis to do you imagine that? Why is it that in this country, where we assume the government can't do anything right, somehow we assume it is near *perfect* when it comes to condemning people to death?
That's why juries are involved. Still, I agree with you somewhat; which is why I proposed a higher standard for the Death Penalty - in general 2nd degree(no to 20 premediation, provoked, mutual combat) would be up to 20 years. 1st degree would be pre-meditated. 0th degree, DP eligible, would require 3 or more murders and/or 'deliberate torture' to be involved. A bit of a higher standard.
Also, while it might not be 'right', in general those who end up in court aren't innocent. To bring up a fictional example, it's like the Batman helping the Joker to beat a murder rap - because he was actually innocent of *that* murder. Given the Joker's record in the comics, that's a bit like exonerating Saddam of 1 murder - you still have a few thousand to hang on him.
I've called my support for the DP the 'Joker Rule' before; it's for people who are 'just that dangerous'. I'd call it the "Anders Breivik" rule, but in containment the dude isn't as dangerous as many of the gangbangers here in the states. Of course, when I go 'evil overlord' I worry less about guilt than actual danger - a gangbanger thug might end up executed for being dangerous and 'not worth it to society' for being caught with drugs, while a doctor who murdered his cheating wife might actually see the light of day again.
Alright, how did you decide that 1/100 is unacceptable, but 1/10000 is? Do you have a rational basis for where you draw the line, or are you going by your gut feeling? If you are going by your gut feeling, what makes you think that's a reasonable basis for deciding to execute somebody?
My standard would be finding the best 'life saving' zone. Note, this would be for the trials themselves. You'd have to look at how likely an unconvicted murderer is to kill again, how public perception works for murders, etc... Note: DP is a sentence, not a trial. I don't have enough data, but I figure it's probably closer to the 1/100 rate, as to get to 1/1000 for false convictions you'd have to let an awful lot of real murderers go. It's still within the old 'better to let 10 guilty free...' saying.
I'll go out on a limb here and guess you don't actually have any children.
He might. Parents have turned their kids in for crimes before, sometimes extremely serious ones. That doesn't mean that, even if they witnessed a crime, that they're going to be standing outside the prison with a 'fry the bastard' sign. I know of parents who'd turn their kid in, then sit there 'being supportive' as they put the death drugs in his arm.
I don't read AC A human right
California taxpayers pay $90,000 _more_ per death row prisoner each year than on prisoners in regular confinement.
Addressed this in my first post - Inmates that are sentenced to life instead of the DP are generally not put into 'regular confinement'. They're generally put into Max, which is also far more expensive. It's also a reason to study why we have a separate death row anyways. The disparity in cost wasn't always there.
I don't read AC A human right