ACLU Petitions Court for Release of Richard Hatch (9/9/2009)
Winner of "Survivor" television show jailed in Barnstable County after
criticizing his prosecution for tax offenses
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
BOSTON -- The American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts today filed a
habeas corpus petition asking a federal court to release Richard Hatch from jail
in Barnstable County. Mr. Hatch gained notoriety for having won the first
season of the television show "Survivor," and for the legal battle regarding his
taxes that ensued.
While serving his sentence under home confinement in Rhode Island, Mr. Hatch
conducted three television interviews, including one with the Today Show, during
which he stated his opinion that he was prosecuted, in part, because of his
sexual orientation (Mr. Hatch is gay) and his TV notoriety. The day after
the interview, the prosecutor on his case called in to a radio station and said
on the show that Mr. Hatch was "delusional" and his theories "ludicrous."
Mr. Hatch then called in to the radio show to defend himself against the
prosecutor's comments.
The day after the radio show aired, the Bureau of Prisons had Mr. Hatch taken
into custody in his home and placed him in solitary confinement at Barnstable
County Jail, as punishment for what they say was "unauthorized contact with the
public."
"The First Amendment protects people's right to publicly criticize the
government -- even when they are incarcerated or serving a sentence. The
Supreme Court has held that security needs inside a prison may justify
limitations on media access, but those security concerns did not apply to Mr.
Hatch while at his home," said Laura Rótolo, a staff attorney with the ACLU of
Massachusetts.
"Our Constitution protects a marketplace of ideas, in which individuals can
criticize public officials, and in which members of the public can form their
own opinions about what is true and what is false," said Carol Rose, executive
director of the ACLU of Massachusetts. "The arrest and jailing of Mr. Hatch
following his recent interviews suggest that he is being punished for comments
that he had every right to make."
The habeas corpus petition argues that the government had no right to
re-imprison Mr. Hatch, and that doing so violated his First Amendment rights.
Mr. Hatch is represented by attorneys at the ACLU of Massachusetts and
cooperating counsel Michael Schneider and Ryan Schiff of the law firm Salsberg
& Schneider.
For more information, go to: www.aclum.org
|