Army veteran and infamous whistleblower Chelsea Manning was found guilty for possessing unapproved reading material by the Fort Leavenworth prison board Tuesday, but she was spared indefinite solitary confinement. Instead, her library and recreation privileges are being taken away for 21 days.

Manning is currently serving a 35-year sentence for leaking sensitive military and government documents to WikiLeaks while she was deployed. When word of her possible solitary confinement got out, supporters gathered a petition with more than 100,000 signatures and delivered it to Congress. Manning’s legal counsel believe this public support is what stopped the prison board from throwing her into solitary confinement.

“It was no doubt this support that kept [Chelsea] out of solitary confinement,” said Chase Strangio, Manning’s attorney.

The full list of Manning’s illicit reading material was posted to Twitter.  It included the Caitlyn Jenner issue of Vanity Fair and the Cosmopolitan issue that featured an interview with Manning.

Other charges brought against Manning included possessing expired toothpaste and disorderly conduct.