By D. Kevin McNeirSpecial to the AFRO
As a tribute to George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery on the fifth anniversary of their mindless deaths, the AFRO just lately revealed an informative complement on Might 23, 2025, underneath the banner, “Remembering George Floyd.”
The complement included articles on quite a lot of subjects, together with modifications which have occurred throughout the metropolis and police division of Minneapolis, Minnesota, the place Floyd died by the hands of cops; urgent considerations about police reform as famous by legal professional Benjamin Crump, also known as “Black America’s Legal professional Common;” elevated pessimism amongst Blacks associated to the shortage of racial equality in U.S. cities; and the necessity for higher transparency and police accountability.
One week later, on Might 30, the AFRO obtained correspondence from Warden David Allen, who heads the Division of Corrections state jail in Florida, extra also known as Raiford Jail, which indicated that the complement had been impounded by the jail and subsequently not delivered to an inmate who recurrently receives the print version.
The AFRO reached out to the warden to debate the jail’s coverage however didn’t obtain a response. Nonetheless, the doc issued by the jail indicated that the publication had been withheld as a result of it was deemed to be a safety menace and a detriment to the jail’s rehabilitation applications. 5 articles had been particularly referenced.
Melba Pearson, a Miami-based legal justice coverage and civil rights legal professional, mentioned such actions are commonplace in Florida, as jail officers routinely deny entry to an intensive record of books, newspapers and magazines which they are saying embrace content material that “as soon as learn, would make inmates indignant and need to lash out on the officers.”
“Extra usually, the justification for preserving supplies off jail cabinets will not be reduce and dry. However what is evident is that they don’t need inmates to examine any reform efforts inside America’s prisons and jails or in society,” mentioned Pearson, who beforehand labored on the ACLU the place she routinely addressed insurance policies that threaten or restrict the constitutional rights of inmates.
“Jail officers don’t need inmates to have entry to articles that target returning residents who’ve been assisted by restorative justice applications positioned of their hometowns and communities and who’ve efficiently turned their lives round,” she mentioned. “Of their protection, Florida’s prisons are understaffed, and most officers are each overworked and underpaid. So, considerations about sustaining order and preserving everybody secure are legitimate.
“However over the previous decade, a minimum of, many rehabilitation applications have been eradicated attributable to funds cuts,” she continued. “Inmates at present have few choices in relation to turning into higher educated, studying expertise or simply preserving themselves occupied in optimistic methods.”
Have jail inmates change into a forgotten neighborhood?
Whereas prisoners retain some First Modification rights, together with the correct to obtain studying supplies, these rights should not absolute and are topic to restrictions associated to jail safety and order. Courts have typically upheld the correct of jail officers to censor studying supplies that pose a severe menace to jail safety.
Florida bans probably the most books with over 22,000 titles restricted. Texas will not be far behind; its prisons have banned over 10,000 titles, together with books on laptop coding and profession preparation.
On the identical time, racial and ethnic disparities in regulation enforcement proceed to abound in Florida, as addressed in “Unequal Remedy: Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Miami-Dade Legal Justice, ACLU Florida Larger Miami, July 2018.”
Nationwide, Black males are presently imprisoned at a fee that’s practically six occasions higher than the speed of White males, and Black girls are imprisoned at a fee about twice that of White girls (The Sentencing Venture, 2017).
In Florida, 48 % of the state’s jail inhabitants is Black, although they characterize solely 16.8 % of the inhabitants (Florida Division of Corrections, 2017; US Census, 2017). And Black defendants who should not Hispanic are sentenced to longer jail phrases than another racial or ethnic group.

Broadway Cuthbert Harewood, a Miami native, mentioned the state legal justice system must be revamped – from the highest down.
“I believe the police generally get a foul rap throughout the Black neighborhood, but it surely solely takes one clown – one unhealthy policeman – to affect relations between Blacks and regulation enforcement,” Harewood mentioned. “As for the police, they comply with orders to maintain their jobs. However given the disparities, many Blacks nonetheless worry the police they usually have good cause. We don’t imagine we’ll be handled pretty. As soon as we’re despatched to jail, that feeling continues.”

When requested if incarcerated folks of colour characterize a forgotten neighborhood, Pearson mentioned, “Sure, 110 %.”
“Florida wants a coordinated community for reentry providers as a result of at present, it depends upon what space of the state you’re returned to as as to whether returning residents will probably be robustly embraced or not, and if there are applications that present help for them,” she mentioned.
Justice Thurgood Marshall as soon as mentioned that the “want for id and self-respect are much more compelling within the dehumanizing jail surroundings.”
“When jail gates slam behind an inmate he doesn’t lose his human high quality, his thoughts doesn’t near concepts, his mind doesn’t stop to feed on a free and open interchange of opinions, his craving for self-respect doesn’t finish, nor his quest for self-realization conclude,” Marshall mentioned.
Marshall’s sentiments are echoed at Howard College’s Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Heart Faculty of Regulation. In keeping with its web site (www.thurgoodmarshallcenter.howard.edu.), the Heart envisions a future the place our present jail establishments are rendered out of date — a future the place the caging of our bodies and minds is now not normalized — and is dedicated to working in direction of actualizing that imaginative and prescient.
As a result of prisons have distinctive safety challenges, U.S. courts make room for the curtailment of some First Modification rights in prisons. Nonetheless, prisons don’t have unfettered discretion to censor publications.
Because the Supreme Courtroom articulated in Turner v. Safley, “jail partitions don’t kind a barrier separating jail inmates from the protections of the Structure. Freedom of speech will not be merely freedom to talk; it’s also freedom to learn. Forbid an individual to learn and also you shut him out of {the marketplace} of concepts and opinions that it’s the goal of the free speech clause to guard.”

Advocacy requires training `
Brother Lyle Muhammad serves as the manager director for Circle of Brotherhood, a Miami-based group of largely Black males from all walks of life devoted to neighborhood service, crime prevention, and battle decision and mediation.
Muhammad mentioned he’s not shocked that the officers at Raiford Jail impounded the publication produced by the AFRO.
“As a former reporter for The Closing Name, I’ve discovered that any publication that tends to boost the acutely aware stage, significantly for Black inmates, has traditionally all the time been underneath increased scrutiny,” he mentioned. “Relating to publications being blocked and banned from establishments… that’s an indication that their thought of rehabilitation has nothing to do with elevating one’s stage of consciousness.”
Muhammad mentioned any advocacy on this matter has to start with understanding the regulation.
Whereas courts do give some leeway to prisons to curtail First Modification rights attributable to their distinctive safety challenges, they don’t have unfettered discretion to censor publications.
Because the Supreme Courtroom articulated in Turner v. Safley, “jail partitions don’t kind a barrier separating jail inmates from the protections of the Structure. Freedom of speech will not be merely freedom to talk; it’s also freedom to learn. Forbid an individual to learn and also you shut him out of {the marketplace} of concepts and opinions that it’s the goal of the free speech clause to guard.”
Muhammad mentioned, “Jail officers say sure publications or books should not allowed and we comply. However that’s as a result of we don’t actually perceive the requirements of regulation to get previous their denial. Our group has been profitable as a result of we embrace advocacy as a part of our sport plan. If you mix data of the regulation and advocacy, you stand a much better probability of overcoming injustice.”