He's not a person, he's a prisoner!
Pastor Nate
was making the point that all humans are created in the image of God. That’s
when he made reference to the shameful period in US history when we had the Three-Fifths
Compromise. The Three-Fifths Compromise was a compromise reached
among state delegates during the 1787 United States Constitutional
Convention…a plan to count three out of every five slaves as people for
this purpose. In other words, the votes of 5 blacks totaled 3.
Today, I’m
accusing the State of Michigan of reducing the status of prisoners to the “non-person”
level.
Blacks were
not three-fifths of a person back in 1787, just as prisoners are not
“non-persons” today in Michigan.
Our state
refuses to allow prisoners the right to file requests under the state’s FREEDOM
OF INFORMATION ACT, and that’s a step in the wrong direction. The Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA)---signed into law in 1976---provides for public access
to most records of public bodies. Here’s how it was originally worded:
It is the public policy of this state that all
persons are entitled to full and complete information regarding the affairs of
government and the official acts of those who represent them as public
officials and public employees… .
This was a
huge help for prisoners, many of whom cannot afford lawyers. With information
gleaned from visits to prison law libraries, and documents obtained through
FOIA requests, inmates were able to prepare much of their own legal work. But
then came the complaints. Some prisoners were abusing the system, and all of
this was costing the state money.
I’m making a
very long story very short here, but in 1994 the state legislature’s knee-jerk
reaction to those complaints was an amendment to the bill, so that it would
read:
It is the
public policy of this state that all persons, except those persons
incarcerated in state or local correctional facilities, are entitled to
full and complete information, etc., etc.
Among those
strongly disagreeing with the state’s position was Dan Manville, Clinical
Professor of Law & Director, Civil Rights Clinic at Michigan State
University’s School of Law.
“There’s
always some people who will abuse anything that exists,” said Manville. “We
have legislators that have affairs, and then they force their staff members to
lie, but we never see the legislature imposing restrictions so that married
people cannot get elected to the legislature. What we’re asking for is the use
of common sense.”
In researching
the subject, our staff discovered this: Michigan appears to be the only
state refusing to allow prisoners the right to file FOIA requests!
It’s past
time to remedy this situation. As Professor Manville puts it, it’s time for
some “common sense.” Time to prove that, here in Pure Michigan, prisoners are
persons.
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