New York City is finally ending its practice of solitary confinement for young inmates |
New York City on Tuesday took the lead in a national movement to ban the use of solitary confinement as punishment for young inmates. A deal approved unanimously by the Board of Corrections will protect prisoners under the age of 21 from what a growing chorus of critics calls a violation of their basic human rights. + As part of the agreement, which comes into effect in 2016, correctional facilities will also be forbidden from holding inmates of any age in isolation for more than 30 consecutive days. + The concessions come under pressure from civil rights groups that have brought a series of lawsuits against the city in response to gut-wrenching reports of abuse and neglect at the Rikers Island jail, which holds an average of 11,000 people. + "An institution as profoundly broken as Rikers Island will require wholesale reform to transform into a humane environment that emphasizes treatment and rehabilitation over punishment and isolation, and these rules are a major step forward," NYCLU executive director Donna Lieberman said in a press release. |
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