- Protective custody
Protective custody is a type of imprisonment (or care) to protect a prisoner (or other person) from harm, either from outside sources or other prisoners.
Prison usage
In a prison context, protective custody is used mainly in the following cases:
*Those who are at high risk of being harmed or killed by other prisoners either for their crime or their group (ethnic or otherwise), such as
pedophiles ,child murderer s /child abuse rs,gang members in a prison containing rival gang members, or prisoners who aregay ortransgender . [" [http://www.gay.com/news/roundups/package.html?sernum=1341 Part four: The myth of "protective custody"] " - (from "Arrested justice: When LGBT people land in jail", article series ongay.com )]*Those criminals who are themselves
witness es to a crime, and might be harmed by other prisoners to either prevent them from speaking out, or for revenge.Protective custody might simply involve putting the person in a secure prison (if the threat is from the outside), but usually protective custody involves some degree of
solitary confinement . In the case of a person being threatened due to his association with a certain group, moving that person to another section of the prison may be sufficient.Other usages
Protective custody does not "necessarily" imply a prisoner or a prison setting. In some usages, it might simply involve placing a person in a secure setting, with no implication of imprisonment, such as when a child is placed in temporary foster care. [ [http://childlaw.sc.edu/frmPublications/epcinforpak_114200430207.pdf Emergency Protective Custody: Checklist for Law Enforcement Officers] (from the Children's Law Center, South Carolina, website)] In some cases, non-criminals (or
defendant s in pending trials) have also been placed in protective custody in a prison setting, for example to protect them from being lynched.In
Nazi Germany , the German equivalent term, 'Schutzhaft', was used as aeuphemism for the extra- or para-legal rounding-up of political opponents and especially Jews, sometimes officially defended as being necessary to protect them from the 'righteous' wrath of the German population. The victims were then sent toconcentration camp s, where most were later exterminated. [ [http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005467 Law And Justice In The Third Reich] (from theUnited States Holocaust Memorial website)]References
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