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Group Sues Over Prison Faith-Based Program

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From Times Wire Reports

An advocacy group filed suit Wednesday against Iowa and its top prison officials over a rehabilitation program for inmates that is centered in fundamentalist Christianity.

The Washington, D.C.-based Americans United for Separation of Church and State claims that state funding for the faith-based program is unconstitutional.

The InnerChange Freedom Initiative, offered at Iowa’s Newton Correctional Facility since 1999, aims to reduce recidivism among inmates.

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The program, operated by Prison Fellowship Ministries, also is run in prisons in Texas, Kansas and Minnesota.

The ministry, based in Reston, Va., was founded by Chuck Colson, a former aide to President Nixon and a Watergate defendant.

The lawsuit says the program is funded almost entirely with government money but is in essence a religious program.

But Mark Earley, president of Prison Fellowship Ministries, said InnerChange uses state money solely for nonsectarian expenses while private funds are used for religious programming.

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