Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 13
California Inmates Use 90,000 State-Funded Tablets for Pornography as Contract Could Reach $315 Million
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 13

California Inmates Use 90,000 State-Funded Tablets for Pornography as Contract Could Reach $315 Million

4 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 13
  • Death row inmates in California are allegedly using prison-issued tablets to watch pornography, receive nude images and conduct sexually explicit chats, according to interviews published by The California Post.
  • Around 90,000 tablets were distributed under a program meant to connect inmates with family and provide education, but prisoners told the paper they can bypass controls through messaging and video calls.
  • One cited case involved Nathaniel Ray Diaz, a convicted child sex offender, who authorities said made thousands of calls from prison and sought explicit images from a girl he was accused of abusing.
  • CDCR defended the devices as tightly controlled educational tools that offer Bible, education and reentry resources, while former parole official Douglas Eckenrod warned they created a pathway for inmates to groom victims.
  • The scrutiny lands as California expands its Norway-inspired rehabilitation model and has signed a Securus contract worth $189 million over six years, with extensions that could raise the total to $315 million.
With millions spent on inmate tablets now linked to misuse, is California's rehabilitation model creating new victims instead of reformed citizens?
Are private tech companies exploiting a captive market, turning California's prison reform efforts into a for-profit surveillance enterprise?