Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Prisoners’ Voices Blocked and Censorship in U.S. Prisons
Jaan Laaman
25 May 2016
🖨️ Print Article

by Jaan Laaman

Like many political prisoners, the author’s freedom of speech rights are routinely curtailed. “While prisoners do have a legal right to express their thoughts and report on issues and abuses, actually getting your words out is often very hard or impossible.” U.S. prisons operate their own “kangaroo courts” that often shut down inmate communications “even if the prisoner ultimately wins appeal and has his or her communications restored.”

Prisoners’ Voices Blocked and Censorship in U.S. Prisons

by Jaan Laaman

“Sometimes a prisoner has all his or her phone or email communications arbitrarily shut off for months.”

The United States is often called the country of prisons because we are five percent of the world’s population, but the U.S. holds 25 percent of all the prisoners in the world. Recently we have heard talk from the White House and Congress about the need to reduce this huge prison population, which is costing the taxpayers billions.

 Occasionally you might hear a prisoner’s voice on some media platform, usually a Human Rights or community outlet. These present words are written by Jaan Laaman. I am a long held political prisoner presently locked up in the U.S. Penitentiary in Tucson, Arizona. Let me be very clear, prisoners have a hard time getting our words and thoughts out from behind America’s many, many prison walls. While prisoners do have a legal right to express their thoughts and report on issues and abuses, actually getting your words out is often very hard or impossible.

All incoming and outgoing prisoner communication, postal mail, phone calls and some restricted email services that some prison systems allow, are all opened and monitored. This is authorized by regulations and law. Further censorship and outright blocking of communications and publications, also routinely occurs in prisons throughout this country.

Letters, magazines and books critical of government policies and wars are often not delivered, even if official policy states that prisoners are allowed these materials. Sometimes a prisoner has all his or her phone or email communications arbitrarily shut off for months. While an official appeal channel is usually available, these are biased at best and could easily be labeled a kangaroo court process. Communications would be shut down for months, even if the prisoner ultimately wins appeal and has his or her communications restored.

Censoring, restricting and flat out blocking communications, especially of political prisoners, is a harsh and dangerous reality going on now, in prisons all across this country. My own voice, which has previously been heard on radio and in print over many years, has been almost totally cut off since February. No official explanation has been given, other than, that prison authorities do not like my commentaries and essays. Freedom of speech---Freedom of expression, for America’s prisoners is a constant struggle!

These words are from Jaan Laaman and I hope I can, once again, speak more directly to you in the future.

Jaan Laaman was sentenced to 53 years in prison while a member of the United Freedom Front. He can be contacted – if the authorities allow – at Jaan Laaman (10372-016), P.O. Box 24550, Tucson, AZ 85734.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    INTERVIEW: “We have to be together to withstand the fury of this wounded beast…” Shirley Graham Du Bois, 1975
    10 Dec 2025
    “...the point was to come together to stand against the common enemy. And this is the lesson that I hope we learn…”
  • Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
    Women for Peace Collaborate to Support Rwanda, Congo, and Rwandan Political Prisoner Victoire Ingabire
    10 Dec 2025
    CODEPINK is collaborating with the International Women’s Network for Democracy and Peace, which works for peace and democracy in Africa, on a webinar on Rwanda, Congo, and the case of Rwandan…
  • Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    DUI Hire
    10 Dec 2025
    "DUI Hire" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Afro-Venezuelan Organizations Network , Regional Articulation of Afrodescendants of Latin America and the Caribbean
    Afrodescendants: Casting Off Illusions, Preparing For Struggle
    10 Dec 2025
    Drawing on a history of resistance, Afro-Venezuelan organizations are mobilizing their communities to meet the threat of military action by the Trump administration and calling on the people of the U…
  • James Bovard
    Obama’s PowerPoint Death Parade Led to Trump’s Venezuelan Killings
    10 Dec 2025
    The legal framework for Trump’s war on Venezuela was built by his predecessor, Barack Obama. His remote-control assassinations set a precedent that Trump adopted and escalated.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us