Slavery by Another Name

From NYT:

Mark Melvin, who is serving a life sentence at Kilby [Correctional Facility in Alabama], filed suit in federal court against the prison’s officials and the state commissioner of corrections, claiming they have unjustly kept a book out of his hands.

[…]

Last September, [Melvin’s lawyer, Bryan Stevenson,] sent Mr. Melvin a couple of books, including “Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II,” by Douglas A. Blackmon….

The book chronicles the vast and brutal convict leasing system, which became nearly indistinguishable from antebellum slavery as it grew. In this system, people, in almost all cases black, were arrested by local law enforcement, often on the flimsiest of charges, and forced to labor on the cotton farms of wealthy planters or in the coal mines of corporations to pay off their criminal penalties. Though convict leasing occurred across the South, the book focuses on Alabama.

Mr. Melvin never received the book. According to his lawsuit, he was told by an official at Kilby that the book was “too incendiary” and “too provocative,” and was ordered to have it sent back at his own expense.

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  • Domino

    Wow that’s just ridiculous..

    • Hey Domino — Happy Thanksgiving to you!  Hope you have a great weekend. :)

      • Domino

        Thanks Seeta!  Yes it will be great to have a long weekend – hope your weekend is great too :)