FCC approves measures intended to combat prison cellphones
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Federal officials have taken what they say is a step toward increasing safety in prisons by making it easier to find and seize cellphones obtained illegally by inmates.
The Federal Communications Commission unanimously voted Thursday to approve rules to streamline the process for using technology to detect and block contraband phones in prisons and jails across the U.S.
The vote came in Washington after testimony from Robert Johnson, a former South Carolina corrections officer who was nearly killed in a shooting orchestrated by an inmate using an illegal cellphone.
Johnson has become an advocate on the issue. He wants state prisons to be able to jam cell signals, but that would require congressional changes to a decades-old communications law.