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Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates


Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge rules

A federal judge dismissed the ACLU's case, saying free speech rights in the Constitution don't extend to prison interviews.

Federal judge tosses lawsuit over ban on recorded inmate ...

But in a ruling last week, federal Judge Jacquelyn Austin said the government can restrict free-speech rights in areas it controls that aren't ...

Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge rules ...

Department of Corrections Director Bryan Stirling speaks to reporters following a bond hearing at the Richland County Courthouse on Wednesday, July 31, ...

Appeals Court weighing whether SC death row inmate can give ...

The judge ruled that constitutional free speech doesn't extend to prisoners ... Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge ...

News from the States on X: "The First Amendment does not give ...

The First Amendment does not give anyone the right to record prison inmates ... Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge ...

Appeals Court weighing whether SC death row inmate can give ...

The judge ruled that constitutional free speech doesn't extend to prisoners ... Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge ...

A federal judge tosses a lawsuit over the ban on recorded inmate ...

But in a ruling last week, federal Judge Jacquelyn Austin said the government can restrict free speech rights in areas it controls that aren't ...

SC Daily Gazette on X: "Free speech rights don't extend to recording ...

Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge rules https://t.co/5s5gw9Fk8N via @SCDailyGazette from @sky_latte_.

S.C. Federal Judge Finds No First Amendment Right to Inmate ...

The Corrections Department policy, the ACLU argued, “violates [its] First Amendment right to publish the speech of others, including ...

Week in review: USC gets high marks for free speech as controversy ...

Free speech rights don't extend to recording S.C. inmates, judge rules. The First Amendment does not give anyone the right to record prison ...

South Carolina ACLU's Legal Director on Alleged 'Suppression' of ...

The Supreme Court has ruled that “prison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution,” but ...

Democrats for Life of South Carolina - Facebook

The First Amendment does not give anyone the right to record prison inmates for publication, a federal judge decided in dismissing a lawsuit ...

Can You Hear Me Now? The Impacts of Prosecutorial Call ...

By monitoring inmates' phone calls, solicitors compromise the Sixth Amendment rights of pretrial detainees by diminishing the efficacy of their counsel, ...

Your Rights in Prison | Jailhouse Lawyers Handbook

Martinez, 416 U.S. 396 (1974), and it gave people in prison fairly strong protection of their right to get books. However, since then the Supreme Court has ...

Florence is among several cities where... - SC Daily Gazette ...

Read more in SC Daily Gazette from Skylar Laird. SCDAILYGAZETTE.COM. Free speech rights don't extend to recording SC inmates, judge rules • SC Daily Gazette. A ...

Does the First Amendment right to free speech apply in prison or in ...

People in prison or in the military in the United States have diminished rights to free speech and free expression, but are not entirely ...

Know Your Rights: Free Speech, Protests & Demonstrations

Both the California Constitution and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protect your right to free expression.

South Carolina Prison Media Interview Ban is Illegal, Lawsuit Says

The ACLU says in a new lawsuit that South Carolina's ban on prison media interviews violates the First Amendment.

For journalists covering prisons, the First Amendment is little help

The press had asserted the right to interview any prisoner willing to participate, in the absence of a finding that a given interview presented ...

Know Your Rights | Prisoners' Rights | ACLU

Your rights · The First Amendment of the Constitution entitles prisoners to send and receive mail, but the prison or jail may inspect and sometimes censor it to ...