1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

"Nation's toughest sheriff" adds Web cam to county jail in Phoenix

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by JuanValdez, Jul 19, 2000.

  1. JuanValdez

    JuanValdez Member

    Joined:
    Feb 14, 1999
    Messages:
    35,057
    Likes Received:
    15,231
    From CNN (http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/07/18/jail.webcam.ap/index.html):

    PHOENIX (AP) -- Anyone who wants a peek behind the walls of the Maricopa County Jail can do so by way of the Internet starting next week.

    Sheriff Joe Arpaio, the man dubbed the "nation's toughest," is installing two video cameras at a cost of $2,000 that will show hundreds of inmates booked each day.

    "It'll be educational," Arpaio said. "It'll be a deterrent. Maybe those guys who get busted on Van Buren Street (for soliciting prostitutes) can wave to their wives."

    Not everyone is amused.

    "Sheriff Joe often seems to forget that a lot of people in his care haven't been convicted of a crime," said Eleanor Eisenberg, executive director of the Arizona Civil Liberties Union. "Putting them on the Internet for all the world to see is an invasion of privacy that is not warranted."

    Online viewers will be warned that anything can happen as the cameras follow inmates through parts of the Madison Street Jail.

    Arpaio has gained national attention for his methods. He has housed prisoners in sweltering tents, dressed them in pink underwear and dispatched chain gangs in old-style striped uniforms to cut weeds and paint curbs. He has banned coffee, R-rated movies and -- in a move upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court -- nude magazines.

    His title as "America's toughest sheriff" came from a tabloid magazine after his 1992 election. But his jails have also been the subject of investigations into alleged brutality.

    The jailhouse death of inmate Scott Norberg in a restraint chair in 1996 ended in with Norberg's family settling a wrongful death suit against Maricopa County for $8 million.

    "Everybody says we killed Norberg," Arpaio said. "I'm getting tired of all these allegations. Now everybody can see."

    **

    It might help curb police brutality, but I doubt it since the cops can control the cams. This looks like a lawsuit waiting to happen. There already has been some fuss about showing arrests on television before a conviction.

    ------------------
    Rockets Draft Obligations Summary

    http://www.gaffordstudios.cjb.net/
     

Share This Page