The ACLU of South Carolina is Suing To Publish Interviews With a Death Row Inmate
South Carolina bans all media interviews with incarcerated people, a policy the state's ACLU chapter says is the most restrictive in the country and infringes on its First Amendment rights.

A federal appeals court will soon decide if there is a First Amendment right to interview people in prison in the case of a South Carolina death row inmate with weeks left to live.
The American Civil Liberties Union of South Carolina (ACLU-SC) is fighting a lawsuit on fast-tracked appeal before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit seeking to overturn a state policy that bars it from recording and publishing a face-to-face interview with Marion Bowman, who is scheduled to be executed on November 29. Bowman was convicted of murder in 2001.
In its appeal, the ACLU-SC says it intends to publish interviews with Bowman to support his clemency petition. The group says it is not simply a matter of right of access—it already has access to phone and face-to-face interviews with Bowman—but that the interview ban infringes on its First Amendment right to publicly advocate for its clients.
"By prohibiting ACLU-SC from publishing its incarcerated clients' speech, the policy restricts its right to speak on matters of importance," the ACLU-SC writes in an October 4 brief to the 4th Circuit.
The ACLU of South Carolina first filed a federal complaint in February challenging the South Carolina Department of Corrections' (SCDC) policy banning anyone—reporters, lawyers, advocacy groups, or family members—from recording and publishing an interview with an inmate. While other states and the federal prison system restrict interviews and generally stonewall media, the ACLU-SC says South Carolina is the only state that categorically bans publishing recorded interviews.
The SCDC has argued that its policy is necessary to protect crime victims from emotional harm and prevent security threats, such as inmates using interviews to slip coded messages to conspirators outside.
The SCDC also noted that it allows the media to print written correspondence from incarcerated people, but the ACLU-SC says this is an inadequate substitute for seeing and hearing someone.
The ACLU-SC argues that the state's policy is overbroad, that its justifications are too vague, and that all of the hypothetical problems could be addressed by less restrictive rules.
"The denial of access in South Carolina is the most aggressive, egregious suppression of speech of any present prison system in the country," ACLU-SC legal director Allen Chaney said in a recent interview with First Amendment Watch. "And so the fact that all 49 other state prison facilities and the federal prison system can all protect their own interests in prison, security and rehabilitation and order without categorically suppressing prisoner speech in the media, is pretty good evidence that it's not necessary here either."
That lawsuit took on an added urgency after the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled in July that all three execution methods available to the state—lethal injection, electrocution, and firing squad—were permissible under the state constitution. South Carolina immediately started planning to resume executions for the first time since 2011.
However, a U.S. District Court judge dismissed the ACLU-SC's lawsuit in August and held that, despite the advocacy group's insistence, the legal issue remained whether it had a First Amendment right to unfettered access to inmates. In 1974, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the California prison system's ban on face-to-face interviews, ruling that the First Amendment did not grant journalists any special access beyond that afforded to the general public.
Earlier this month, the 4th Circuit granted the ACLU-SC's motion to expedite its appeal, and both sides will now file briefs in support and opposition of an injunction.
"The public deserves a chance to meaningfully encounter the person being murdered on their behalf," Chaney said in a press release. "We aim to give them that."
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Isn’t Suge Knight a Death Row inmate?
For the record, the man isn't exactly known to be sweet.
Given his actions, he had to face the music.
They're seriously claiming to be worried about coded messages? Inmates have a right to send regular letters out. Why would anyone bother with a coded message in an interview?
The victim-distress claim is at least a legitimate concern even if it falls far short of First Amendment standards.
This is about not letting a sympathetic PR campaigns get in the way of state executions. Putting a rational and emotional face on an inmate puts a damper on the public's murder-boner. Authoritarian stooges can't allow that kind of thing to happen.
So, now not only should they be tried in the court of public opinion, they should be jailed and executed in the prison of public opinion???
Does that work both ways? I mean, suppose instead of putting a damper on it, it only further intensifies it? That's cool too, right?
If we instead pander emotionally to the public highlighting the heinousness of the crimes of a convicted child rapist, like some interview where he illustrates just how unrepentant he is, and it enhances the public's outrage and demand to see him executed - instead of a public call for clemency is there going to be an option to call for expedited execution at the governor's discretion?
Because if we're going to do this it should at least not be one-sided in its application, don't you think?
Hey, even convicted murderers deserve as much social media attention as everyone else!
Death row influencers. Don't forget to like and subscribe.
They also don't want the inmates sharing with the media stories about being beaten and raped by the prison guards.
Over two decades, and still alive.
Not really a death sentence.
ACLU-SC says this is an inadequate substitute for seeing and hearing someone.
Why?
Seriously, I read their complaint and skimmed their brief, but I didn't see that explained. (And it's not like we can expect LoL JoUrNaLiSts like Ceej here to bother.)
I mean, 1A allows for freedom of speech. It doesn't guarantee you a stage and an audience. It doesn't do that for anyone, let alone an inmate. And it's established Constitutional law that an inmate doesn't have an absolute 1A right to access to the press (either incoming or outgoing). Certain limitations are reasonably imposed for very legitimate and practical reasons.
And the media already has access to inmates' print communication and authority to publish it. Why does the ACLU think it needs more than that, or that inmates are/should be entitled to it? How is it an inadequate substitute?
I mean, my Last Will and Testament is a print communication. Does that not satisfactorily convey what I want to those who read/hear it read by someone other than me? Is it an inadequate substitute for a video will? If so, how? Why?
Further, doesn't this absurd interpretation of a "right" come with a temporal assumption? I mean, we didn't always have televisions and radios. Did the fact that an inmate's communications were incapable of being "seen and heard" somehow abridge their 1A rights when the means for people to see and hear them didn't exist? Or is ACLU's position that 1A was violated every time we didn't roll an inmate out to the town square so he could exercise his freedom of speech?
But, y'know what? As is often the case in such matters, I think there's room for compromise here. A death row inmate wants to have his communications broadcasted? Then let's bring back public executions. I'm not personally in favor of the death penalty, mind you - but in the spirit of compromise we should at least discuss options. We gave the guy in the public square gallows his "any last words" - if a death row con wants to be seen and heard, it can be done so in the same fashion. Seems like a fair tradeoff, no?
There just doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to this. And I think the Court's are likely going to agree that whatever the heck the ACLU is babbling about doesn't have any legs.
About a decade and a half ago ACLU Arizona under Dan Pachoda represented me in my lawsuit against the State of Arizona for having fired me from my State job for my having publicly supported in my off duty time the legalization of the recreational use of cannabis in a State of California ballet proposition.
Pachoda and aclu fucked me over in the most underhanded way possible.