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to use "special administrative measures" regarding housing of and correspondence and visitors to specific inmates. It includes prisoners awaiting or being tried, as well as those convicted, when it is alleged there is a "substantial risk that a prisoner's communications or contacts with persons could
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As of May 22, 2009, 44 out of 205,000 federal inmates were subject to SAMs, 29 incarcerated on terrorism-related charges, 11 on violent crime-related charges and four on espionage charges. Well known individuals who have been under special administrative measures include
American
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result in death or serious bodily injury to persons, or substantial damage to property that would entail the risk of death or serious bodily injury to persons." Such measures are used to prevent acts of violence or terrorism or disclosure of classified information.
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of designated prisoners. Initiated in
November 2001, the Department of Justice considered this an expansion of an existing regulation; formerly, such restrictions had only been allowed through court orders. The law specifies that information protected by
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and his supporters in violation of a special administrative measure against communications. After her conviction, sentencing and re-sentencing to 10 years in prison, she appealed on
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cannot be used for prosecution; however, communications related to ongoing or contemplated illegal acts are not covered.
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Fact Sheet: Prosecuting and
Detaining Terror Suspects in the U.S. Criminal Justice System
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Restrictions on prisoner communication, including monitoring talks with their attorney
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Johnson, Carrie, "Prison
Officials Are Loosening Restrictions On Taliban Supporter",
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Perhaps the best known application of this provision was the prosecution of attorney
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The law is considered particularly controversial because it permits monitoring of
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Monitoring
Attorney–Client Communications of Designated Federal Prisoners
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for three years, mostly under
Special Administrative Measures.
273:"Legal battle flares over Dzhokhar Tsarnaev security measures"
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47:— Requests for Special Confinement Conditions) whereby the
255:"Stewart Challenges Resentence, Claims Penalty for Speech"
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Justice to monitor some attorney-client communications
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Thomas F. Gede, Kent S. Scheidegger, William G. Otis
116:, who never could speak privately to his attorneys.
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215:Convicted mob boss complains about prison
311:ECL Submission for Solitary Confinement
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336:Civil liberties in the United States
126:Civil liberties in the United States
187:United States Department of Justice
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331:Penal system in the United States
131:Human rights in the United States
253:Hamblett, Mark (March 1, 2012).
53:United States Bureau of Prisons
61:attorney–client communications
49:United States Attorney General
21:special administrative measure
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100:grounds. Other cases include
92:for passing messages between
294:My Student, the 'Terrorist'
80:and organized crime figure
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316:Counsel complaint re SAMs
232:""Department of Justice""
66:attorney–client privilege
204:, March 18, 2009, p. 6.
114:Boston Marathon bomber
27:) is a process under
305:solitary confinement
259:New York Law Journal
221:, November 17, 2010.
82:Frank Calabrese, Sr.
279:. November 7, 2013.
173:, November 9, 2001.
157:, December 3, 2001.
155:Federalist Society
45:title 9 chapter 24
298:Syed Fahad Hashmi
277:Los Angeles Times
110:Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
106:Syed Fahad Hashmi
98:freedom of speech
94:Omar Abdel-Rahman
78:John Walker Lindh
29:United States law
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234:. Usdoj.gov
40:; see also
34:28 CFR
325:Categories
137:References
302:pre-trial
238:March 18,
219:ABC News
120:See also
76:fighter
74:Taliban
112:, the
108:, and
37:501.3
240:2010
42:USAM
171:CNN
25:SAM
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