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Voice of the Monitored

Keeping an eye on the monitors

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parole

Interview with Jean-Pierre Shackelford

(Link to interview: “21st century slavery, electronic style” (2 min.) to hear the rest of the video:Part 1  (12 min) Part 2: (12 min.)

Jean-Pierre Shackelford wore an ankle bracelet for almost three years as a result of an unfortunate criminal case. Although he had a Masters’ degree and a successful career, he found electronic monitoring a huge obstacle to getting his life back on track. Here he talks about his experience and dispels some of the myths about how electronic monitoring automatically grants people the freedom to work, participate in family activities and do whatever they must do to get their life back together post-incarceration.

His is but one of many stories that will eventually appear here to show how electronic monitoring needs to take into account the “rights of the monitored” if it is to live up to the promise of providing people with enough freedom to move ahead. It is not good enough to simply tell people they should be grateful that they are not in prison or jail. They need support plus some rules and regulations which guarantee them some rights to do what is necessary to be successful.

Welcome to Voice of the Monitored

Welcome to Voice of the Monitored, a website dedicated to waking people up to the realities of electronic monitoring in the US criminal justice system. Every day about 200,000 people face their day wearing an ankle bracelet. But with prison overcrowding and rising state budget deficits, those numbers will grow. Electronic monitoring is the wave of the future. It’s time for everyone to find out more about this-to make sure it doesn’t become a technological ball and chain. Here’s some links to begin to help you to know what’s up:

Link to the web page of Robert Gable, inventor of electronic monitoring who wanted it to be used as a way to send positive information, not increase surveillance and control. Read about how he feels betrayed by the way monitoring is used today:

http://rgable.wordpress.com/electronic-monitoring-of-criminal-offenders/

Is electronic monitoring an alternative to incarceration or a technological ball and chain?

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/04/30/the-rise-of-electronic-monitoring-in-criminal-justice/

Is the rise of electronic monitoring the result of the failure of our prison system? Graeme Wood of The Atlantic magazine thinks so. Read his story here:

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/09/prison-without-walls/308195/

Read the story of big money in electronic monitoring: the $372 million contract BI Incorporated, now owned by private prisons firm the GEO group, signed with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to supervise 27,000 immigrants awaiting court decisions.

http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2010/03/16/who-profits-ices-electronic-monitoring-anklets-0

Should high school students with records of truancy be put on electronic monitors? Some schools in Dallas think so. Read about it at:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/12/education/12dallas.html

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