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More Jails Replace In-Person Visits With Awful Video Chat Products

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: After April 15, inmates at the Adult Detention Center in Lowndes County, Mississippi will no longer be allowed to visit with family members face to face. Newton County, Missouri, implemented an in-person visitor ban last month. The Allen County Jail in Indiana phased out in-person visits earlier this year. All three changes are part of a nationwide trend toward "video visitation" services. Instead of seeing their loved ones face to face, inmates are increasingly limited to talking to them through video terminals. Most jails give family members a choice between using video terminals at the jail -- which are free -- or paying fees to make calls from home using a PC or mobile device.

Even some advocates of the change admit that it has downsides for inmates and their families. Ryan Rickert, jail administrator at the Lowndes County Adult Detention Center, acknowledged to The Commercial Dispatch that inmates were disappointed they wouldn't get to see family members anymore. Advocates of this approach point to an upside for families: they can now make video calls to loved ones from home instead of having to physically travel to the jail. These services are ludicrously expensive. Video calls cost 40 cents per minute in Newton County, 50 cents per minute in Lowndes County, and $10 per call in Allen County. Outside of prison, of course, video calls on Skype or FaceTime are free.
These "visitation" services are often "grainy and jerky, periodically freezing up altogether," reports Ars. As for why so many jails are adopting them, it has a lot to do with money. "In-person visits are labor intensive. Prison guards need to escort inmates to and from visitation rooms, supervise the visits, and in some cases pat down visitors for contraband. In contrast, video terminals can be installed inside each cell block, minimizing the need to move inmates around the jail." The video-visitation systems also directly generate revenue for jails.

13 of 260 comments (clear)

  1. US prisons = labour camps by Quakeulf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're all private labour camps at this point. Not that they never were either (chaingangs etc. building roads and railways), they just got more corporate.

    1. Re:US prisons = labour camps by whoever57 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They're all private labour camps at this point.

      Use the right word: slavery. Yes, slavery was not abolished by the 13th amendment, merely limited.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    2. Re:US prisons = labour camps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its the latest version of slave labour in the USA.

      The USA is one of the last countries that should talk about human rights to any other nation.

  2. You know what would save f--king money? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Know what would save money? Not locking up almost 1% of your adult population, often for victimless crimes or for being unable to pay excessive fines. Start treating addiction as a disease. If it doesn't pose a danger to yourself or others, it shouldn't be the government's business what you put into your body. If it endangers yourself or others, then you should be committed for treatment, same as any other psych illness. Same goes for criminalization of sex workers (instead of going after pimps or customers). End excessive fines and policing for profit. Require fines to be proportional to income. For someone who's a poor working Joe or Jane, a $500 speeding ticket can be a week's income. For a rich person, it's pocket change, and they can probably take a few hours off of work to fight it as well.

    1. Re:You know what would save f--king money? by dex22 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's no profit margin on decency, apparently...

    2. Re:You know what would save f--king money? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Not in America, anyway.

  3. Prison Industrial Complex by jargonburn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The video-visitation systems also directly generate revenue for jails.

    And that, right there, summarizes one of the greatest problems with our penal system. The pursuit of profit. That is not their role. Well, I mean, we've allowed that to become a part of their role, but it's utterly reprehensible.

    I hate that about this country.

  4. Cruel and unusual by RickyShade · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Cruel and unusual punishment is carried out in American jails on a daily basis. I wish prison reform was a bigger point of focus for people.

  5. Big problem I see is lack of privacy by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read the article but it didn't talk about my biggest concern - are these video calls monitored/recorded? I expect that they are...

    Even if they were not, there's no way I'd want to tay things over this service that I might want to say in person.

    I think it's a great idea to offer this as an additional service, maybe curtailing personal visits or making that a charge - but it seems really wrong to do away with in-person visits altogether.

    I also wonder if it would have a dehumanizing aspect on inmates not to see friends and families in person on a regular basis....

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Big problem I see is lack of privacy by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I read the article but it didn't talk about my biggest concern - are these video calls monitored/recorded?

      In-person visits are also monitored. So are phone calls.

      There is no right to privacy in prison, unless you're speaking with your attorney.

  6. Re:I don't get it by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And remember to degrade and humiliate them in jail, before trial, because all people merely accused of a crime are guilty as sin.

  7. Re:Why allow visits at all? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've got to wonder, if visitation is so expensive, why allow visits at all, unless required by law?

    Basic human decency?

  8. Re:Why allow visits at all? by Ken+McE · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've got to wonder, if visitation is so expensive, why allow visits at all, unless required by law?

    In practice, the men who get more visits have less recidivism. I don't know which way the finger of causality points on this one.