Denver judge rules Department of Corrections violates state constitution

A Denver judge on Friday ruled that the Colorado Department of Corrections has been violating a 2018 amendment to the state constitution by requiring people in state prisons to work under the threat of solitary confinement and other punishments.

The ruling comes as part of a class action lawsuit filed four years ago by Harold Mortis, who’s serving a 40-year sentence at the Sterling Correctional Facility for a 2016 second-degree murder charge, to which he pleaded guilty. The suit was filed on behalf of thousands of people who are incarcerated in Colorado state prisons.

Denver District Court Judge Sarah Wallace ruled that CDOC, its director Moses Stancil, and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis are violating people’s rights under Article II, Section 26 of the state constitution, which was amended in 2018 to prohibit slavery or involuntary servitude. Before the amendment, which over 66% of Colorado voters approved, that section of the state constitution prohibited slavery or involuntary servitude, “except as a punishment for crime.”…

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