A page from House Oversight documents (Bates 015288) detailing various prison censorship rules and regulations regarding publications, photographs, and educational materials. It cites specific examples from Utah and Louisiana (Angola) prison systems, mentioning the banning of 'Rolling Stone' and 'A Revolution in Kindness,' and references Herman Wallace of the Black Panthers/Angola Three. The text highlights the inconsistencies in prison policies, such as allowing Playboy but banning personal nude photos.
This document page discusses the banning of a publication titled "Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice, Publication Review" from Death Row due to fears it would cause prison disruption. It specifically cites two passages as problematic: an excerpt from Jackie Robinson's autobiography expressing anger at racism, and a historical account of race riots following Jack Johnson's boxing victory over Jim Jeffries.
This document appears to be an excerpt from a larger text titled 'Trashing the Right to Read.' It details a correspondence between death row inmate Kenneth Foster and author Dave Zirin following the revocation of Foster's death sentence in August 2007. The text focuses on Foster's analysis of sports as a survival mechanism in prison and Zirin's emotional response to Foster's letter. While part of a House Oversight production (indicated by the Bates stamp), this specific page does not mention Jeffrey Epstein.
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