I don't know of any jail anywhere where you can schedule "visiting time" with other inmates.
What’s being said is that these prisoners are kept in solitary confinement and not allowed to see the other prisoners in the general population including their brothers.
Now I think I understand why you consistently came after my posts related to the Patriots trying to free the land from federal control in the West.
You’re perfectly happy I guess with the Hammonds from Oregon being jailed as terrorists and jailed twice after serving their original sentence for lighting a backfire to protect their property from a backfire.
And you’re perfectly happy with those who protested the second jailing without using violence (unlike the first shooters from the FBI and then the shooters from the Oregon State Police who killed LaVoy Finicum) being thrown in jail and put in solitary confinement.
Jail those Patriots, go after them “Bundy Boys” as Harry Reid call them the other week on the Senate floor.
‘Lock em in jail and throw away the key’ you mutter? This Nevada jail must be listening to such a notion.
Not normally, no, I don’t either. But I hear prisoners have to make a visitor list of potential visitors or similar. Suppose each one was asked that question and each named the other as a “potential visitor”. Wouldn’t one expect the prison to do the same kind of accommodation to that as it would to a normal prisoner with a visitor (i.e., they take the prisoner to a visiting area. In this case it would be the other’s cell. Just a thought.
“they’re not letting these people see their brothers.....”
I agree with you. Typically, if you are in prison, you are a prisoner. There are not a lot of liberties when you are a prisoner.
That being said, it is interesting that the article claims, “they’re not letting these people see their brothers.....” And a sentence or two later, he discusses being led by a guard to see his brother....
Some inconsistencies here.