|
|
| High Court Eyes Limits on Inmate Visits |
| By Associated Press |
| Published: 03/25/2003 |
|
The lights aren't on, the phone doesn't work and five people are squeezed on one chair in a space the size of a coat closet. The man they call son, brother and uncle looks at them from a behind a pane of glass. Two of the visitors, 5 and 7, are seeing the inmate they know as Uncle Mario for the first time. Mario Bueno went to prison for murder before they were born, and they'll probably be driving before he gets out. 'We were all crying,' said Ysabel Benejam, Bueno's mother and the children's grandmother. 'We want to hug, he wants to hold them and here they are behind the glass.' This is the only way Bueno can see his nephew and niece because a Michigan Department of Corrections policy restricts who can have contact with inmates. Before last year, they weren't allowed to visit at all. On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on just how far Michigan can go in restricting visits to prison inmates. The court will weigh a state's ability to control its prisons against the rights of inmates, a balancing act that in the past has tilted in favor of government. For Bueno and the more than a million other inmates in the United States, its decision could mean greater access to visitors - or more restrictions. The last time the high court handled a major prison visitation case was in 1989, when justices upheld Kentucky's right to prevent inmates from having certain visitors without having to explain why. In Michigan, the state imposed stricter rules in 1995 to better protect visitors and to stop the smuggling of drugs and weapons. Minors who weren't an inmate's child or grandchild were no longer allowed to visit nor were former prisoners, unless they were immediate family. Inmates with two substance abuse violations in prison could have visitation privileges taken away altogether. That same year, a group of inmates challenged the rules in court. The lawsuit was dismissed, but the inmates appealed and won a favorable decision from the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Even those imprisoned for serious crimes still have basic constitutional rights, the appeals court said. Since the court battle began, the state has eased up on the rules. Contact visits by children who are siblings and non-contact visits by child nieces and nephews have resumed, and prisoners with one drug violation now can have non-contact visits. The lower court's ruling was welcomed by those who have argued for less restrictive visitation policies. They say inmates need family contact to prepare them for life after prison and reduce repeat offenses. 'In order to come back and be a citizen of our society you need assistance and there's no assistance out there but family,' said Deborah LaBelle, an attorney for the inmates. LaBelle said the burden for protecting visitors is on prison officials, not inmates. Restrictions should be applied case by case and should take into account nontraditional families, she said. 'Do you want the state to pick what relatives you feel close to?' LaBelle asked. The Corrections Department believes the rules are fair and constitutional, said spokesman Russ Marlan. 'The real issue is that we believe the corrections professionals should be deciding visitation policy and not the courts,' Marlan said. The case before the Supreme Court is Overton v. Bazzetta, 02-94. |

If you’re looking for a lawyer in Waco, you’ll need to know that the first to hire Dunnam & Dunnam usually wins. If you have a personal injury claim, an insurance claim, or other matter involving a court or business transaction you should contact the Best Waco Law Firm to explain your legal rights. You can contact them on the website link above.
Have you been looking for the latest content from blogs from January 2019? There are a lot of great blogs out there. What is of interest to many people right now is entrepreneurship and leadership. Hamilton Lindley has the Hammer Blog, which is devoted to the best in leadership and entrepreneurship that is happening right now. Check out Hamilton Lindley January 2019 archives for more detail about what is going in the world of leadership and entrepreneurship right now.