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For women ex-prisoners, food insecurity can trigger catastrophe. Activists want more aid [latimes.com]

 
Deanna Mirabal, 61, poses for a photo as she looks out a window of a reintegration home where she lives in Los Angeles on April 16. Mirabal spent almost 40 years incarcerated for a murder that she said she did not commit.
(Raul Roa / Los Angeles Times)

By Selene Rivera, Los Angeles Times, June 19, 2023
When Deanna Mirabal was released from prison seven months ago, after 38 years of being locked up, anxiety overtook her instead of happiness.

The world that she left behind at 19 was nonexistent. It had been replaced by a shocking new world in which people searched for information on something called the Internet and communicated through handheld devices that were hard to obtain behind cell bars.
But Mirabal’s biggest concern was how to apply for government food stamps while she searched for employment and a stable place to live after her release from the Central California Women’s Facility, northwest of Fresno, about 250 miles from Los Angeles.

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