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  • 2018-10-12 (xsd:date)
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  • Are Visitors to Virginia Prisons Barred from Wearing Tampons? (en)
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  • In September 2018, corrections officials in Virginia briefly implemented new limits on female visitors to prisons, citing concerns over incoming contraband. But after activist groups highlighted the policy, it was dropped before it actually went into effect. David Robinson, chief of operations for the state Department of Corrections (DOC), announced the controversial policy on 17 September 2018, telling staffers in a memo that As a result of recent inquiries about feminine hygiene products being an ideal way to conceal contraband ... offender visitors shall be notified that the use of tampons or menstrual cup products are no longer permitted to be worn during visitation. On 22 September 2018, the activist group the Prison Reform Movement brought the change to light, posting a similar memo to employees of the Nottoway Correctional Center issued by warden David Call: DOC spokesperson Lisa Kinney said at the time that employees would be exempt from the ban, which was to have taken effect on 6 October 2018. According to Kinney, prison visitors accounted for 58 of 62 instances of contraband smuggling between 1 February 2018 and 31 August 2018, and the policy change would cut down on prisoner overdoses. There have been many instances in which visitors have attempted to smuggle drugs into our prisons by concealing those drugs in a body cavity, including the vagina, Kinney said. Besides the Prison Reform Movement, the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia also condemned the policy. The latter group's executive director, Claire GastaƱega, said in a statement that: On 25 September 2018, Secretary of Public Safety Brian Moran announced that he would suspend the ban until a more thorough review of its implementation and potential consequences are considered. (en)
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