Inmates’ advocates press Maryland to scrap book restrictions
BALTIMORE — Advocates for Maryland’s prisoners are pressing the mid-Atlantic state to scrap “senseless and harsh” regulations they say restrict the ability of inmates to access books and violates their constitutional rights.
As part of a new effort to block inmate access to Suboxone, a drug sold in thin strips that are easily concealed inside envelopes, prisoners in Maryland can now only order books from two vendors that the American Civil Liberties Union says offers only “extremely limited” selections.
In a letter sent this week to Maryland’s secretary of correctional services, the ACLU’s Maryland chapter says the state’s “draconian new restrictions” makes Maryland an outlier when it comes to book access in prisons. They say a recently published bulletin also bans any third-party orders and prohibits inmates from possessing more than 10 titles.
Sonia Kumar, a staff attorney for the ACLU of Maryland,said it’s “deeply disturbing” that the state’s correctional officials don’t “recognize that in nearly every instance, a person attempting to send or receive a book is doing so for a good reason, not a bad one.”


