Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 9
BOP Awards Tablet Contract for 138,000 Inmates as Comer Targets California's $190 Million Program
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 9

BOP Awards Tablet Contract for 138,000 Inmates as Comer Targets California's $190 Million Program

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jul 9

Summary

  • Federal prisons will phase in tablets for more than 138,000 inmates under a new Bureau of Prisons contract covering facilities nationwide.
  • The devices will offer secure messaging, video calls, education, literacy, health and job-prep content, which the agency says can support rehabilitation and reduce recidivism.
  • BOP Director William K. Marshall III said the rollout will also shift paper-heavy tasks such as commissary orders and program registration onto a digital platform, easing staff workload under strict security oversight.
  • The move lands as House Oversight Chairman James Comer criticizes California's $190 million prison tablet program over alleged misuse, highlighting scrutiny around inmate technology even as adoption spreads.
  • Tablet programs now exist in nearly every state prison system; Oregon recently cited contraband control as a key benefit by digitizing inmate mail delivery.

Insights

How will the new federal tablet program prevent the financial exploitation of inmates seen in state prisons?
As tablets bring mass surveillance into prisons, what new rules will protect the privacy of inmates and their families?
Will this program destroy priceless family mail and photos in the name of digital security and modernization?