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Reconstructive Justice — Public Health Policy to End Mass Incarceration

  • Article
  • Feb 9, 2023
  • #Law #Crime #HealthCare
Eric Reinhart
@_Eric_Reinhart
(Author)
www.nejm.org
Read on www.nejm.org
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1 Mention
In 1994, at 26 years of age, Dennis Wayne Hope was placed in solitary confinement in a Texas prison after he had escaped and remained free for 2 months. Until he was recently hospit... Show More

In 1994, at 26 years of age, Dennis Wayne Hope was placed in solitary confinement in a Texas prison after he had escaped and remained free for 2 months. Until he was recently hospitalized, he had been confined to a dark cell not much bigger than a king-size mattress for the past 27 years. In that time, he had been permitted one personal phone call — in 2013, after his mother died — and had seen virtually no one other than the guards who strip-searched him whenever he was taken, handcuffed, to another room to exercise by himself. According to court documents, he now faces severe depression, paranoid auditory and visual hallucinations, and suicidality. He has written to his lawyers that he fears he may be losing his mind.

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Gregg Caruso @GreggDCaruso · Feb 9, 2023
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Reconstructive Justice — Public Health Policy to End Mass Incarceration | A must read!
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