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Crime and Public Safety |
Technology from 1964 keeps Colorado’s deaf inmates from communicating with the outside. A judge’s ruling just changed that.

The Colorado Department of Corrections will have to add videophones

A teletypewriter machine at the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility.
Courtesy Amy Robertson
A teletypewriter machine at the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility.
DENVER, CO - NOVEMBER 8:  Elise Schmelzer - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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Deaf inmates in Colorado’s prisons will soon be able to communicate with loved ones and attorneys with ease for the first time in decades thanks to a federal lawsuit.

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Colorado Department of Corrections must make videophones available to all deaf and hard of hearing inmates as well as those who have family members who are deaf. The decision follows a lawsuit by inmates and inmates’ family members arguing that the current technology is so outdated that it is effectively useless.

“The order yesterday made clear that the Department of Corrections violated the Americans with Disabilities Act,” said Amy Robertson, attorney for the five people who sued.

Corrections department spokeswoman Annie Skinner said the prisons started implementing videophones in two facilities before the ruling. The department plans to install the videophones in all facilities, she said.

Prison is especially isolating for deaf or hard of hearing inmates because there are few people they can communicate with inside. In Colorado, lack of outside communication intensified that loneliness because it blocked deaf inmates from family and friends, Robertson said.

The prisons’ default technology, the teletypewriter, was created in 1964 and allows people to type written messages back and forth. It requires people to use written English, which is not a native language to many deaf people. American Sign Language uses its own syntax and grammar.

The teletypewriter process is burdensome, especially if both parties don’t have access to one, Robertson said.

For example, a deaf inmate trying to talk with a deaf person outside must first type a message into the teletypewriter. An operator then reads the typed message out loud to another person. That person then listens to the typed message, translates it into American Sign Language and signs it for a person using a video phone.

“It’s literally the children’s game of telephone,” Robertson said.

The devices often misfire, inserting random characters or punctuation into messages, Robertson said.

The department’s own attorney acknowledged in 2013 that the teletypwriters were antiquated. But the department’s attorney argued that the lawsuit became moot after the department installed a videophone at the Denver Women’s Correctional Facility in 2018 and two videophones at the Cañon City prison this year. But the judge didn’t buy that argument, in part because the department appeared to be providing the videophones only in response to litigation.

The lawsuit is still scheduled to go to trial in December, where a jury will decide how much money to award the five plaintiffs.