The PROTECT Act, S.B. 459, An Act Concerning the Commisison for Correctional Oversight, the Use of Isolated Confinement, Seclusion, Restraints, Strip Searches, Social Contacts for Incarcerated Persons, Transparency for Conditions of Incarceration ...

  • Position: Support
  • Bill Number: S.B. 459
  • Session: 2022
  • Latest Update: April 1, 2022
ACLU of Connecticut ACLU-CT Legislative Testimony

S.B. 459, An Act Concerning the Commisison for Correctional Oversight, the Use of Isolated Confinement, Seclusion, Restraints, Strip Searches, Social Contacts for Incarcerated Persons, Transparency for Conditions of Incarceration and Correctional Officer Training

The PROTECT Act is critical to ending unnecessary, harmful, and punitive methods – like abusive restraints – used in the Connecticut Department of Correction. By ending extreme isolation, all the harms listed above, including racial disparities, can be avoided. Pro-social guarantees with respect to correspondence and visitation will give people harmed by isolation, and the threat of it, important outlets and community ties, measures deeply linked to success after incarceration.8 By promoting the wellness of correctional officers, the PROTECT Act works to ensure that the people who have worked in harmful systems have the resources they need to stop perpetuating the cycle of abuse. And by requiring data collection, accountability, and oversight, the PROTECT Act contains strong measures to ensure that segregation and solitary confinement are not just brushed under the rug, reformulated, or rebranded. The ACLU-CT supports Senate Bill 459, and strongly urges this Committee to support Senate Bill 459 as well.

No results.

Smart Justice leader Curtis B. Hudson speaks out for the PROTECT Act with Stop Solitary CT

"It is a shame that we have to be here still fighting for a bill that was passed last year, but here we are and the barbaric use of solitary confinement in prison must end."

ACLUCT smart justice leader Curtis B. Hudson stands in front of the CT Capitol steps. He is wearing a black and white fedora, sunglasses, black mask, black trenchcoat, and blue Smart Justice shirt, and black gloves, and he is holding a clipboard.

Solitary confinement drives the human spirit to despair.

The most abuse happens in the darkest of places. Connecticut needs the PROTECT Act to become law.

By Tracie Bernardi

ACLUCT smart justice leader Tracie Bernardi stands facing the camera and smiling. She is wearing a blue Smart Justice zip-up and a yellow People Not Prisons pin. To her left is an ACLUCT banner that says we the people dare to create a more perfect union

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