Capitalist innovation comes up with a new, pointless way to be cruel to incarcerated people!

The printed scans I collected were low-quality, including blurry, darkened family photos that left incarcerated people unable to make out their loved ones’ faces. Even the more readable scans left much to be desired—because, after all, physical mail is rarely just about reading. Incarcerated people couldn’t run their fingers over their loved ones’ handwriting, or grasp a piece of paper that had been held by someone familiar.

. . .

Thus, it’s doubly alarming that more facilities are moving toward restricting traditional physical correspondence in favor of scanning and printing or electronically delivering letters. The Florida Department of Corrections, for example, is considering adopting a policy that would digitize incoming (nonlegal) mail, forcing incarcerated people pay for printouts or to view their correspondence on a tablet or kiosk operated by the private company JPay, the Gainesville Sun recently reported. The Smart Communications’ MailGuard program, launched in Pennsylvania prisons in 2018, now operates in more than 110 facilities in 25 states, according to the current listing of facilities on the program’s portal for family members.

. . .

While physical mail has long been subject to surveillance by corrections officers, bringing in a private company to process correspondence, and storing that correspondence in electronic databases, changes the game.

And this surveillance is part of the point—”MailGuard® creates a searchable database and opens a whole new field of intelligence for your agency,” notes the Smart Communications website.

Death to America.

  • ComradeSankara [he/him]
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    edit-2
    3 years ago

    The Article references an event that happened in 2018 where a "Mass-sickening" happened of LEO staff handling mail I guess?

    https://www.inquirer.com/philly/news/pennsylvania-department-corrections-prison-lockdown-drugs-k2-fentanyl-guards-sickness-20180907.html

    An actual toxicologist doesn't agree and this is sounding more and more like Havana Syndrome

    • Wertheimer [any]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      Here's another weird one with that kind of fearmongering - a San Diego County video that pretends that you can overdose from fentanyl just by looking at the stuff. Archive link followed by the original:

      https://archive.is/oJlDi

      https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-08-08/im-not-going-to-let-you-die-deputy-overdoses-after-coming-in-contact-with-fentanyl

      Edit:

      Good Lord, cops are cowards. From your link:

      "Mass psychogenic illness happens all the time. We see it all the time with law enforcement," Perrone said. "Police pull someone over and find an unknown substance. Suddenly their heart's racing, they're nauseated and sweaty. They say, 'I'm sick. I'm gonna pass out.' That is your normal physiological response to potential danger."

      From the LA Times story:

      "I have never once seen a toxicology report from any of these [first responder] cases that showed that the ‘victim’ had actual fentanyl in their system.” The San Diego video, Faust said, is “not diagnostic of anything. It shows that someone had an altered level of consciousness and got better but not why.”

      • ComradeSankara [he/him]
        ·
        3 years ago

        https://www.ems1.com/opioids/articles/toxicologist-you-cant-just-touch-fentanyl-and-overdose-qCP7P9puLCouxYbr/

        This toxicologist takes it a step farther and says "You can't just touch fentanyl and overdose"