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12 comments

[–] [Deleted] 2 points (+2|-0)

There's something seriously wrong w/ that. I get they're prisoners and other calls will be recorded but why was the recording apparatus even running on a conversation w/ their lawyer in the first place?

[–] OeeThaGreat 3 points (+3|-0)

That's what is so fucked up about it. This stuff isn't even supposed to be recorded and it's a direct violation of these citizens rights.

[–] [Deleted] 1 points (+1|-0) Edited

What I meant to ask was what are the repercussions in place for the prison officials? I feel that a court settlement isn't adequate for an organization routinely abusing prisoner rights. Like shouldn't at least someone get fired or perhaps charged?

[–] OeeThaGreat 3 points (+3|-0)

As for the consequences for recording these conversations, I am not sure if there are any. But from what I understand, the company has had legal issues about recording these confidential conversations in the past and they were ordered to stop.

[–] CDanger 1 points (+1|-0)

Accountability in 2018 is a completely foreign concept--especially when there is money that could be made for a company and power to be gained by the state.

Also I'm not entirely sure that recording the calls even is illegal: government officials/law enforcement are probably prohibited from doing that, but there can be huge loopholes. A good one is general cell phone surveilance. Private companies collect GPS information and hand it over to law enforcement even though LE can't collect it legally themselves. No warrants needed.