🔥🔥 Denver jail inmates receive tablets to make calls, access education

Inmate Vincent Fulton views an educational program on a newly issued Securus Technologies tablet at the Downtown Detention Center in Denver on March 16, 2023. The tablets do not have a camera and are equipped with shatterproof glass, security screws and a double shield to prevent misuse. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)


People in Denver’s jails will no longer have to wait their turn to call family members after the sheriff’s department introduced hundreds of tablet computers that also allow access to books, podcasts and other resources.

The Denver Sheriff Department expanded its contract with Securus Technologies to provide 1,729 tablets to the approximately 1,700 people incarcerated in its two jails. Nearly every person will have access to a tablet, which can be used to make phone calls, send emails, read books, study for the GED and look for jobs.

The goal is to help people stay connected with their families and find resources that might help them after they are released from jail, Sheriff Elias Diggins said.

“We are a progressive sheriff’s depart that believes in helping people get back to the community better than how they were when they got here,” he said.

Inmate Vincent Fulton views an educational program on a newly issued Securus Technologies tablet at the Downtown Detention Center in Denver on March 16, 2023. The tablets do not have a camera and are equipped with shatterproof glass, security screws and a double shield to prevent misuse. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

Before the tablets were introduced last week, people in the jails often had to wait their turn to make calls from the facilities’ phones. Each housing unit has up to six phones to be shared by up to 60 people.

The tablets don’t give users direct access to the internet and are built so they can’t be taken apart. Previous versions of tablets introduced into prisons and jails had been taken apart and turned into weapons, Diggins said.

“They are now very safe,” he said.

Other jails in the state previously introduced the tablets, including those in Jefferson and Douglas County.

Some of the content, like educational material and books, is free while some cost money, like music and games.

“Premium media prices vary by category, but we mirror the same purchasing model as consumers buying from iTunes or any other online entertainment provider,” Securus said in a statement.

Denver Sheriff Elias Diggins speaks during a press conference announcing a partnership with Securus Technologies to provide inmates with JP6S Securus tablets to support rehabilitative and reentry efforts at the Downtown Detention Center in Denver on March 16, 2023. People in custody can access approved educational content, a law library, mental health resources, faith based programing and other applications within a secure network. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Denver Sheriff Elias Diggins speaks during a press conference announcing a partnership with Securus Technologies to provide inmates with JP6S Securus tablets to support rehabilitative and reentry efforts at the Downtown Detention Center in Denver on March 16, 2023. People in custody can access approved educational content, a law library, mental health resources, faith-based programming and other applications within a secure network. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
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