Corrections Department Returns Women Held In New Jersey Men's Prison To Women's Prison After ACLU Lawsuit (9/4/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.orgTRENTON – Nine months after the American Civil Liberties Union filed a
lawsuit challenging the transfer of women prisoners from Edna Mahan Correctional
Facility, the state's prison for women, to New Jersey State Prison (NJSP), a
men's supermax prison, the Department of Corrections (DOC) has transferred the
women back to the women's prison.
The ACLU and the ACLU of New Jersey filed the lawsuit in December 2007
challenging the DOC's transfer of a group of women prisoners to NJSP where women
were held in lockdown conditions, denied basic movement in the prison, deprived
of access to the prison law library and the prison school, barred from the
prison's main yard and denied access to basic hygiene. In July, the New Jersey
Superior Court stopped the DOC from moving more women to the men's prison and
also granted the women's request to pursue their claims as a class action.
The following can be attributed to Ed Barocas, Legal Director of the ACLU of
New Jersey:
"This is a victory for those women who suffered grossly unfair treatment and
who wished to return to the women's prison. But this fight is not over. Indeed,
a number of women have raised concerns about returning to Edna Mahan, which is
often far from their families and has problematic conditions of its own."
The following can be attributed to ACLU Women's Rights Project staff attorney
Mie Lewis:
"We and many community members have asked the DOC for a viable plan to house
women prisoners and meet their needs, but they have not produced one. We will
therefore continue to keep an eye on women incarcerated in New Jersey and will
challenge unconstitutional conditions and arbitrary transfers."
More information on the case, Jones v. Hayman, including statements from
women prisoners is available online at: www.aclu.org/womensrights/nj_prison/index.html
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