Reston, Virginia (PRNewsWire) – June 20, 2017 – GTL an innovation leader in correctional technology, education solutions that assist in rehabilitating inmates, and payment services solutions for ...
The Inspire tablets benefit both inmates and correctional facilities. For example, in addition to paper-saving features, such as commissary ordering and grievance and administrative request processing ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Until February, Andrew Stiern could only speak with his girlfriend on a phone in a prison day hall while 10 other inmates listened in and waited impatiently ...
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily. Wayne Snitzky was 18 years old when he was sentenced to prison for murdering a girl ...
CHARLESTON — An effort to provide tablets for inmates in state prisons will cost taxpayers no money, but it will cost inmates for access to electronic books, email and other services, raising concerns ...
Prisons aren’t usually thought of as high-tech environments, but increasingly, when U.S. inmates connect with the outside world, they’re doing so through a digital screen. Vendors are offering tablets ...
“Other vendors typically force inmates to purchase and download games individually,” said Brian R. Peters, Executive Director of Inmate Applications & Hardware at GTL. “We've taken a different ...
Reston, Virginia – June 3, 2019 – GTL, a leader in transformative corrections technology that improves outcomes for inmates and facilities, today announced the latest model of the Inspire® tablet is ...
Free electronic tablets have been distributed to those incarcerated at the Allegheny County Jail as a way to connect them to the outside world through video calls, movies, eBooks and messaging. But ...
GTL's continued investment in building products designed to endure the rigor of a corrections environment separates company from competitors RESTON, Virginia, March 28, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- GTL, an ...
Inmates at several West Virginia prisons are getting free electronic tablets to read books, send emails, and communicate with their families—but there's a catch. Any inmates looking to read Moby Dick ...
After a six month pilot program, the Pima County Sheriff's Department is giving tablets to nearly all of the roughly 2,000 inmates at the jail. The personal devices aren't iPads, you can't use them to ...