EVOTAB and Officer T80 offer enhanced durability and safety, while simplifying connectivity requirements for facilities, creating more options to bridge the digital divide in correctional facilities ...
NIAGARA COUNTY, N.Y., June 26, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Securus Technologies, an Aventiv company and leader in innovative correctional technology solutions, announced the results of a case study on the ...
Securus Technologies® announces Securus Video Connect™ on Tablets, a new, convenient option for incarcerated individuals to communicate with family and friends. This digital tool is exclusively ...
Inmates at the Sedgwick County Jail have a new way to stay educated, entertained and in touch with their family members. Thanks to a partnership with prison communications firm Securus Technologies, ...
A man plays a game in the Brothers in Arms cell block, a new veteran-focused program, at the Harris County Joint Processing Center, part of the county jail system, on Tuesday, April 16, 2024, in ...
After they’re given a uniform, a bunk and a blanket, Kentucky prison inmates get a sturdy computer tablet from which they can buy digital media products, such as email and video visits with their ...
In a hyper-connected world where digital tools are essential, the nearly two million incarcerated individuals in the U.S. face a stark reality. Access to technology is limited due to decades of ...
June 2, 2020 - In the fifth installment of the profile series, “Improving Lives From the Inside Out”, the story features interviews with incarcerated individuals who have been empowered with ...
Prisons aren’t usually thought of as high-tech environments, but increasingly, when U.S. inmates connect with the outside world, they’re doing so through a digital screen. Vendors are offering tablets ...
Inmates in the Oklahoma Department of Corrections (ODOC) began receiving tablets this week as part of a plan to supply all state prisoners with secure tablet computers. More than 21,000 inmates at ...
In 2021, Bryan Collier, executive director of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice said that tablets would “fundamentally change” communication for the state’s more than 100,000 prison inmates.
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