U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) | Senator Jon Ossoff/Facebook
U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) | Senator Jon Ossoff/Facebook
A bill introduced by U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) that would require federal prisons to upgrade faulty security camera systems has been signed into law, a recent report from FOX 5 Atlanta said.
The new law went into effect just before the start of the new year, meaning the Federal Bureau of Prisons is now legally required to ensure that all facilities have the coverage necessary to protect the safety of their detainees and staff.
"I’ve led multiple investigations of crime and corruption in Federal prisons, and broken prison camera systems are enabling corruption, misconduct, and abuse," Ossoff told FOX 5 Atlanta.
The senator first introduced the Prison Camera Reform Act in 2021 while also calling attention to his hope that a new system would generate transparency and accountability and improve safety for everyone involved in the federal prison system, the FOX 5 report said.
Ossoff recently went public with his findings from an 8-month bipartisan investigation into the sexual abuse of women in federal prisons, which he said showed the Federal Bureau of Prisons failed to prevent, detect and stop recurring abuse by its own employees.
At that time, sexual abuse survivors testified they had been assaulted by employees in areas where they knew there was no camera coverage; the FOX 5 report said.