State News / Public Policy

Taxpayers footed the bill for prison tablets, but some inmates are using them as "personal sex machines."

ES
Elena Sterling
Official Publisher

Join the conversation

React with your take and see what people think below.

When you give a digital window to a person with nothing but time, you hope they use it to grow. For some on California’s death row, that window has reportedly become a way to indulge in the very things that are strictly banned behind bars.

WHAT HAPPENED

California handed out over 90,000 free tablets to inmates, including those on death row, to encourage education and family ties. The program cost the state roughly $189 million. Officials promised the devices were "tightly controlled" and would help reduce crime.

However, an investigation found that some serial killers and rapists have been using the tablets to watch 30-second porn clips. They also use video calls to have people on the outside "put porn on the TV" so they can watch it from their cells.

Even more alarming, reports show at least one child predator used his tablet to groom a minor from inside prison walls. Inmates bragged to investigators that they could easily "get around" the security rules the state put in place.

What the evidence shows

  • 90,000 tablets distributed across the state prison system.
  • $189 million spent on the contract for the new devices.
  • 30-second clips of pornographic videos being delivered to cells.
  • 5 cents is the cost for an inmate to send a text message.
  • 16 cents per minute is the charge for a video call.

THE BIGGER QUESTION

If a tablet is meant to "rehabilitate," what happens when it actually lets a criminal continue their harmful behavior from a cell? This story makes us ask if the rush to provide "digital equity" ignored the basic need for safety. We should be asking why the people in charge of these multimillion-dollar contracts didn't see these gaps before the devices were in the hands of serial killers.

THE OTHER SIDE

The California Department of Corrections says these tablets are vital tools that provide access to the Bible, legal resources, and schoolwork. They argue that the vast majority of inmates use them for good and that they have recently tightened rules to ban explicit images. While these changes are a start, the evidence from inmates suggests that the technology is still several steps ahead of the prison guards.

WHAT HAPPENS NOW

California is currently in the middle of switching all 90,000 tablets to a new vendor, a process expected to finish by the end of May 2026. The state hopes this new system will have better locks, but for now, the damage to public trust is done. Lawmakers are facing pressure to prove that taxpayer money isn't funding a digital playground for the state's most dangerous people.

WHAT WE STILL DON'T KNOW

How many inmates have been caught and punished for using the tablets for porn?

  • Did the tech companies know their security could be bypassed so easily?
  • Will the new tablets actually have the power to stop live video streaming of explicit content?

SOURCE NOTE

Information came from a City Journal investigation, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, and public contract records. All charges are allegations — any named inmates are presumed innocent of new charges until proven guilty.

Transparency notes

Published: May 14, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.

Spot an error or missing context? Email hi@kindjoe.com and we will review and correct if needed.

Sources

External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.

What's your take on this story?

Vote before the outcome is known and compare your call with the crowd.

Politics

Should California restrict inmate access to digital tablets?

California’s multimillion-dollar program to help prisoners learn and connect with family is under fire for failing to block explicit content.

Posted 1d ago

Open
0 total votesChoose one option

Replies

Loading comments…