-Caveat Lector-

In a message dated 2/22/99 2:58:31 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Neither jail officials nor Goldberg could be reached for comment. A call to
 the home of Tyson's Washington, D.C., attorney, Paul Kemp, was not
 returned.

 Tyson was in a common area with other prisoners on Friday and was
 talking on the phone when a guard came in and hung the phone up, the
 source said. >>

I'm curious about this.  Why would the guard hang up the phone, and what right
have jail officials to deny medication to an inmate?  I wondered about this
use of medical care as a punishment in the McDougal matter.  Is it standard
practice in our judicial system to use denial/access of medical care in this
way?  Anyone?  Prudy

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