What are the constitutional rights of prisoners?
Ideally, when prisoners are incarcerated, they give up nearly all rights except those related to their due process, such as Habeus Corpus. When arrested, they give up rights to the degree that the few remaining rights they have, i.e., the right to remain silent, the right to an attorney, etc., are read to them. Of course this is ideally speaking, but in reality, most of them have the right to things like cable TV, free food, and a job in the laundry that, “adjustedly,” pays better than your job.