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Moms behind bars: Are separated families punished, too?

Dressed in her Sunday best – pink ruffled sleeves and a rainbow tulle tutu – Crystal Martinez’s 4-year-old daughter proudly presents her with a multicolored bouquet of carefully crafted tissue paper flowers. With her 5-year-old son nestled on her lap, laughing in delight, Ms. Martinez holds out her arms and pulls the girl into a hug so tight that her glasses are knocked askew.

“I want you! I don’t want the flowers,” Ms. Martinez says, smiling and holding her children close.

Ms. Martinez’s five children, including three aged 13, 10, and 6, last month traveled for three hours from Chicago to visit her in Logan Correctional, Illinois’ largest state prison for women and transgender people, on the Reunification Ride. The donation-dependent initiative buses prisoners’ family members 180 miles from the city to Logan every month so they can spend time with their mothers and grandmothers.

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