A Muzzle Award to Plymouth County’s sheriff for keeping detainee health records secret on behalf of ICE

Plymouth County Correctional Facility. Photo via the Plymouth County Sheriff’s Office.

The Massachusetts public records law is already unacceptably weak. Now comes a new wrinkle: the Plymouth County Sheriff’s Office is refusing to release health-care records regarding the 507 detainees it is holding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), claiming that its agreement with the notoriously abusive federal agency prohibits the disclosure of such information.

Read about the 2026 New England Muzzle Awards, recognizing outrages against freedom of speech and expression from July 4, 2025, to July 4, 2026.

The ACLU of Massachusetts sued for the release of those records in February. On Tuesday, the issue came to a head, as the ACLU and the sheriff’s office squared off in Suffolk County Superior Court. Judge James Boudreau has not yet issued a ruling, but we have: Sheriff Joseph McDonald is receiving a New England Muzzle Award for failing to comply with state law.

Granted, there are some nuances. The sheriff’s agreement with ICE includes language banning the public disclosure of information about any detainees. Here’s how Kevin G. Andrade, reporting for The New Bedford Light, summarized what’s at stake:

The sheriff’s denial relied on arguments about state privacy laws and questions around federal preemption of state law.

“We have, I think, a pretty interesting issue here,” said Judge James Boudreau, who presided over the proceedings, at the hearing’s start. “The first question is whether or not the supremacy clause [of the U.S. Constitution] prohibits the production of the documents.”

Dan McFadden, managing attorney at the Massachusetts ACLU, argued that it does not.

“Plymouth has no authority to contract its way out of public records law,” McFadden told the judge in his arguments. “These are records we have good reason to believe they have because the contract with ICE says they produce them.”

As Boston Globe columnist Yvonne Abraham points out (sub. req.), “the ACLU specifically asked that all records be anonymized,” which you would think is sufficient for protecting the detainees’ privacy rights. One way of reading the ICE regulation in question, though, is that it doesn’t matter — McDonald can’t release the names “or other information relating to” detainees. Yet given the wave of terror ICE has unleashed under Donald Trump, McDonald should have assured the public by releasing records about the detainees’ well-being without identifying anyone by name.

Moreover, there are reasons to believe that all is not well in Plymouth. Abraham writes:

The Plymouth County jail might not be “Alligator Alcatraz,” but advocates have good reason to worry about detainees there. Advocates have decried McDonald’s failure to provide detainees with timely access to lawyers and interpreters. For several years, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey have been calling on ICE to improve conditions in Plymouth, citing a DHS investigation in 2022 that reported rotten food, limited access to clean water, and delays in medical attention. In interviews, detainees have described a lack of timely access to health care and medications. And it’s getting worse, said Leah Hastings, staff attorney at Prisoners’ Legal Services of Massachusetts.

The real failure by McDonald, a Republican, was to go into business with ICE in the first place; as it stands, he is the only sheriff in the state to hold detainees on behalf of ICE. In May, an investigation by The Washington Post revealed hellish conditions for ICE detainees across the country. The Post reported that on at least 780 occasions, staff members at ICE facilities “used physical force or chemical agents to control immigrant detainees during the first year of the Trump administration.”

As the Globe’s Abraham notes, McDonald has denied allegations of abuse at the jail he oversees, saying, “I am proud of the humane care and custody we provide in the Plymouth County Correctional Facility. We are … routinely audited by federal and state agencies, and routinely exceed all applicable standards.”

That may be true, but we shouldn’t have to take his word for it.

The New York Times came thisclose to having the Graham Platner rape story. So what happened?

With the meltdown of Graham Platner’s U.S. Senate candidacy still playing out, I want to take a look at how The New York Times let it slip away.

The pieces are clearly visible, so you may already know where I’m going with this. But it’s worth tying them together and asking how the Times could come so close to breaking it wide open only to be relegated to the sidelines while Politico delivered the final blow.

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Early Monday afternoon, rumors began spreading on social media that a big story was about to break. Platner, a Maine Democrat, was reportedly canceling campaign events. Then it dropped: Politico published an interview with Jenny Racicot, a 41-year-old Maine woman, who claimed that in 2021 Platner entered her home and drunkenly, violently raped her.

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A year after the public media apocalypse, Boston’s two major outlets are holding their own

GBH headquarters in Brighton, Mass. Photo (cc) 2011 by Commonist.

There are some new details today on how Boston’s two news-focused public media stations, GBH and WBUR, are faring a year after Donald Trump and the Republican Congress zeroed out all public funding.

Recently I wrote that GBH chief executive Susan Goldberg had sent a memo to her staff touting new levels of fundraising success, including more than 50,000 new donors and members as well as 3% raises for everyone. Now The Boston Globe’s Aidan Ryan expands on that (sub. req.), reporting, among other things, that GBH has begun a new statewide radio show in collaboration with New England Public Media of Massachusetts, with which it recently merged, and with its Cape Cod operation, CAI. (NEPM had technically been part of GBH since 2019.)

The weekly program, “In Common,” debuted on July 4 and will be broadcast on Saturdays at 2 p.m. It’s also available as a podcast, which is a good thing given that time slot.

As Mike Deehan first reported in Axios, GBH will also receive $500,000 in state money during the next fiscal year, which is a first for public media in Massachusetts. The money comes from the millionaires’ tax, which is restricted to education and transportation. Ryan reports that the money will be spent on children’s television programs.

Fundraising and revenue from events are up at WBUR as well, Ryan writes, noting that WBUR and GBH are fundamentally two different types of entities — although both are committed to digital, GBH has a massive television operation in addition to a local radio station, whereas ’BUR is primarily a radio station. It’s in radio that the two operations compete on local news coverage.

Last August I wrote for CommonWealth Beacon on plans Goldberg and WBUR chief executive Margaret Low were making to negotiate the post-federal-funding era. At a webinar sponsored by the New England chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, they said they planned to emphasize trust and community.

That approach seems to be working so far, with the public responding to the harm done by Trump and his legislative lemmings. The question is whether public media outlets across the country can hang on until January 2029, when the political tides may shift in the White House and in one or both branches of Congress.

Frederick Douglass’ landmark Fourth of July speech reminds us of the promise of America

Frederick Douglass. Photo via the Milwaukee Independent.

An excerpt from Frederick Douglass’ 1852 speech “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” It is also well worth reading in full. At a time when racism is on the rise and voting rights are under assault, Douglass speaks to the true meaning of America’s promise. 

Fellow-citizens, pardon me, allow me to ask, why am I called upon to speak here to-day? What have I, or those I represent, to do with your national independence? Are the great principles of political freedom and of natural justice, embodied in that Declaration of Independence, extended to us? and am I, therefore, called upon to bring our humble offering to the national altar, and to confess the benefits and express devout gratitude for the blessings resulting from your independence to us?

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The Boston Globe celebrates 1776 with a 250th commemorative edition

This is what the top of The Boston Globe’s homepage looks like today. When I checked out the e-paper, I saw that the first two pages are given over to 1776. If you’re a home delivery subscriber, I’d be curious to know exactly what it looks like in print. Is it the front page, or is it tucked inside somewhere?

More: My wife picked up a print edition at Wegmans. Nicely done!

Why did the Celtics dump Jaylen Brown for pretty much nothing?

Jaylen Brown in Jakarta, Indonesia. 2018 public domain photo by State Dept. / Budi Sudarmo.

I usually reserve my semi-informed sports musings for Facebook. But that Celtics trade, with Jaylen Brown going to the 76ers for a few draft picks and a 36-year-old guy who’s hurt all the time, is just mind-boggling. How did we get from “We’ll trade Brown reluctantly if it gives us a chance to win a championship” to “We must dump Brown at any cost”?

The best-case scenario is that Brad Stevens is clearing the decks for a blockbuster move. The worst-case scenario? New owner Bill Chisholm comes from the world of private equity, and the one thing these guys know how to do is strip their businesses of assets before selling them off and moving on.

Sports journalist Howard Bryant put it this way on Threads: “Are the Celtics entering the John Y. Brown era of ownership?”

Stevens has proved to be bold and creative in recent years, so he deserves some time to show us what’s next. But if that’s all there is, the Celtics just gave away their second-best player, who also happens to be an interesting person and a leader in the Black community, for — nothing.

On second thought. Less than two weeks ago, the Celtics were willing to trade Brown for Giannis Antetokounmpo. It didn’t work out because of other players and draft picks, but you can’t say it would have been a contract dump. So I guess we should be willing to wait and see what Stevens might have up his sleeve.

The 2026 New England Muzzle Awards: Spotlighting the enemies of free speech and expression

Photo (cc) 2022 by Dan Kennedy.

For First Amendment and civil liberties fans, it’s the most wonderful time of the year.  It’s time for the New England Muzzle Awards, that Fourth of July tradition in which I highlight outrages against the First Amendment that took place in the six-state region during the previous 12 months.

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It’s something I started doing in 1998 for The Boston Phoenix and then later moved to GBH News after the Phoenix folded in 2013. (Here’s the complete archive.) After leaving GBH, I skipped 2023, but since then have been writing up individual Muzzles throughout the year rather than waiting for an annual roundup. So welcome to the 27th annual edition.

This year I thought I would try something different. Rather than simply listing the Muzzles I’ve awarded since July 2025 (although I’m still doing that), I asked Claude AI for some additional candidates. I did not ask Claude to write them for me, and I’m relying on citations from reliable news sources. I simply used Claude as a more sophisticated way of searching than what DuckDuckGo or Google offers these days. So I’ll start with a few that I’m presenting here for the first time.

Kudos, as always, to my friends Harvey Silverglate, who conceived of this annual feature all these years ago, and Peter Kadzis, who edited all 25 editions that appeared in the Phoenix and at GBH News. They were inspired by the Jefferson Muzzles, which no longer are awarded. Here in New England, though, their spirit lives on.

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For the second time in a week, federal agents threaten critics of the Trump regime in upstate NY

Federal agents looking for David Streever at his home in Rochester, N.Y. Photo via Syracuse.com.

Here we go again. Last week Michelle Breidenbach of Syracuse.com reported that a poll worker in Syracuse, New York, had been handed a threatening letter by two federal agents.

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The letter, which claimed she had endangered ICE personnel, was almost certainly the result of her having written an Instagram post calling on Jonathan Ross, the ICE agent who shot and killed Minneapolis protester Renee Good, to be indicted. Ross had already been publicly identified in the press. (The Syracuse incident was the subject of my newsletter last week for paid supporters, which I’m now offering for free.)

Now we learn that two federal agents showed up at a home in Rochester, New York, last Tuesday to deliver a warning about an email that David Streever had sent to Todd Lyons last February. At that time Lyons was the interim director of ICE; he’s since left that post. Breidenbach reports that Streever was on vacation in Finland with his 7-year-old daughter, so the letter was left with his wife, Hilary Brandt Streever, an Episcopal priest.

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Why the Prairieland case is more about disproportionate justice than it is the First Amendment

Prairieland Detention Facility. Photo via the Texas Immigration Law Council.

Draconian sentences handed down against protesters at an ICE facility in the Dallas-Fort Worth area are being characterized as an abridgment of their First Amendment rights. The reason: Among the bill of particulars used against them in court were anarchist zines in their possession that they tried to hide from authorities.

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But though the case raises serious questions about the proportionality of their sentences, it’s also a lot more complicated than that given that a police officer who responded to the scene was shot in the neck by one of the protesters. Benjamin Song, who was convicted of attempted murder, was sentenced to 100 years in prison. The officer recovered.

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Emily Sweeney tells us how she uses social video to help The Boston Globe reach new audiences

This video about a break-in at a mansion in Beverly, Mass., helped launch Emily Sweeney to stardom.

On the latest “What Works” podcast, Ellen Clegg and I talk with Emily Sweeney of The Boston Globe. As the Globe’s first social video journalist, Emily has broken through the clutter on TikTok, YouTube and Instagram with her Dorchester accent and her collection of track suits. Not to mention her skills as a reporter.

There’s a Northeastern connection as well: Sweeney played on NU’s championship-winning Division 1 women’s ice hockey team.

I’ve got a Quick Take about NJ Spotlight News, a website and a newscast that covers politics and public policy in New Jersey. It’s also featured in our book, “What Works in Community News.” Spotlight was in danger of being seriously downsized after Donald Trump and the Republican Congress zeroed out funding for public media. The state of New Jersey, facing a budget crisis, cut its public media subsidy as well. Now, though, it looks like there’s good news to report.

Ellen’s Quick Take is on a comprehensive investigation into a Trump donor named Tim Barnard. Barnard Construction has received billions in taxpayer dollars to build the border wall in the Southwest. The story was reported by the nonprofit High Country News in Colorado and republished by another nonprofit news site, AZ Luminaria in Arizona. It’s a strong example of how a national story can be localized and, in doing so, pack a real punch.

You can listen to our conversation here, or you can subscribe through your favorite podcast app.

Finally, a programming note: The podcast will be on mute for the summer, returning in late August or September. So behave yourselves.