ACLU of RI Files Lawsuit That Challenges 106-Year-Old Statute

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ACLU of RI Files Lawsuit That Challenges 106-Year-Old Statute

The ACLU of Rhode Island filed a federal lawsuit earlier today that challenged the constitutionality of a 106-year-old statue that declares inmates serving life sentences at the Adult Correctional Institute (ACI) to be “civilly dead”.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court by ACLU volunteer attorney Sonja Dee on behalf of East Providence resident Shelby Ferreira and Cody-Allen Zab, and Warwick resident Sharen Underwood and John Pacheco, Jr. The males are ACI inmates and were barred from marrying their partner as a result of the “civil death” law. 

The lawsuit seeks a court order that declares the civil death law to be unconstitutional as applied to marriage between an inmate serving life and a non-prisoner. It also seeks to prevent Warwick city officials from denying a marriage license based on the law

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“This law is an antiquated vestige of an ancient era,” said ACLU of Rhode Island executive director Steven Brown." If inmates given a life sentence can remain married while in prison, there is no legitimate reason to bar them and those who want to marry them from doing so after they are sentenced. Prisoners lose many rights, but the fundamental right to marry should not be one of them.”

A copy of the lawsuit can be found here


New England's Strangest Laws

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