Thursday, 29 September 2011
Saving Sara
No childhood memories I'd choose to keep Stained, damaged on dirty streets
Abused and broken
Pushed to break
Paying with my life for my mistakes
Locked behind these cold repressive prison walls
Friends and allies heard my call
I thank you for your fighting spirit
For all Juveniles whose case I mimic
Children lost in a place so dark
I thank you from my damaged heart
For saving kids that have so much to be
and of cause thank you, for saving me.
Wednesday, 28 September 2011
Was the youngest person to be executed in the U.S. for the murder of two white girls innocent? .
By Daily Mail Reporter
He stood just 5ft 1in, weighing only 95 pounds and when police led George Junius Stinney to the death chamber in 1944 he was, at the age of 14, the youngest person to be executed in the U.S.
He was so small that large books had to be placed on the seat so his head could reach the electrodes.
Stinney, of Alcolu, South Carolina, was convicted of murdering two white girls after police said he confessed to the murders.
But now a lawyer is determined to prove Stinney was innocent and is calling Claredon County district attorney in South Carolina to reopen the case.
The two girls who died were eleven year-old Betty June Binnicker and 8-year-old Mary Emma Thames.
They went missing one day after they were riding their bikes while looking for flowers on the wrong side of the tracks in a small working class town of Alcolu.
At that time whites and blacks were separated by railroad tracks.
The girls were later found dead in a ditch, murdered with a railroad spike, thegrio.com reports.
Stinney joined the search crew and happened to tell a bystander that he had seen the girls earlier that day.
The police were informed of that and Stinney was arrested for the double murder.
He brought into the station for hours of tough interrogation, without either of his parents being there.
Reports claim the police offered Stinney ice cream if he confessed to them that he committed the double murder.
Stinney verbally confessed and to this day there is no written record of his confession in the archives.
There is no physical evidence linking Stinney to the murder and no record on paper of Stinney's conviction.
South Carolina attorney Steve McKenzie says he believes the case should be reopened because of the lack of evidence or archived material.
Mr McKenzie hopes attorney general Ernest 'Chip' Finney, will agree to file a motion to re-open the case by the end of this year.
He argues that Stinney was an 'easy target' and was used as a 'scapegoat' by police who wanted to quickly find and punish anyone they could tie to the murders.
Mr Mckenzie told thegrio.com: 'Stinney was a convenient target. 'But how do you exonerate somebody where there is absolutely no evidence one way or the other?
'There was only a coerced confession. The confession was never written. It was an oral confession testified to two white officers and told to an all white male jury.'
He believes, however, the complete lack of evidence will exonerate Stinney of the murders once and for all.
Manuel Valle, 61, died by lethal injection ain Florida State Prison in Raiford.
Jeneane Skeen and Lisa Pena, the two daughters of murder victim Louis Pena, hugged and cried after the brown curtain to the death chamber was closed.
Mr Pena was shot and killed by Valle in April 1978, during a traffic stop.
Miss Skeen said: 'For 33 years, people have asked us if the death penalty will give us closure. We finally got revenge on the low-life piece of human waste that murdered our father.'
Miss Skeen was 13 years old when her father was killed, gainsville.com reports.
She and Lisa Pena wore pins bearing their father’s face.
Department of Corrections spokeswoman Gretl Plessinger said Valle was 'polite and compliant' leading up to his execution.
Valle, who was pronuonced dead 20 minutes after he was given the first drug, was the first Florida prisoner executed using a new lethal mix of drugs.
Previously, officials had used sodium thiopental for executions. Now, executions are administered using pentobarbital, despite concerns that it prolongs the death process.
He stood just 5ft 1in, weighing only 95 pounds and when police led George Junius Stinney to the death chamber in 1944 he was, at the age of 14, the youngest person to be executed in the U.S.
He was so small that large books had to be placed on the seat so his head could reach the electrodes.
Stinney, of Alcolu, South Carolina, was convicted of murdering two white girls after police said he confessed to the murders.
'Easy target': George Junius Stinney died in the electric chair in South Carolina at the age of 14
The two girls who died were eleven year-old Betty June Binnicker and 8-year-old Mary Emma Thames.
THE CASE FOR STINNEY
South Carolina attorney Steve McKenzie believes George Junius Stinney was innocent because there was no physical evidence tying him to the murders.
The 14-year-old's confession was coerced, Mr McKenzie adds. There has even been a suggestion that he was told he could have ice cream if he confessed.
Mr McKenzie points out that there were no witnesses to his confession, only police officers were present.
He added that there is nothing to indicate guilt and that, in a town where whites and blacks were separated by the railroad tracks, Stinney did not stand a chance in a case involving two white girls with an all-white jury.
The 14-year-old's confession was coerced, Mr McKenzie adds. There has even been a suggestion that he was told he could have ice cream if he confessed.
Mr McKenzie points out that there were no witnesses to his confession, only police officers were present.
He added that there is nothing to indicate guilt and that, in a town where whites and blacks were separated by the railroad tracks, Stinney did not stand a chance in a case involving two white girls with an all-white jury.
At that time whites and blacks were separated by railroad tracks.
The girls were later found dead in a ditch, murdered with a railroad spike, thegrio.com reports.
Stinney joined the search crew and happened to tell a bystander that he had seen the girls earlier that day.
The police were informed of that and Stinney was arrested for the double murder.
He brought into the station for hours of tough interrogation, without either of his parents being there.
Reports claim the police offered Stinney ice cream if he confessed to them that he committed the double murder.
Stinney verbally confessed and to this day there is no written record of his confession in the archives.
There is no physical evidence linking Stinney to the murder and no record on paper of Stinney's conviction.
'There was only a coerced confession. An oral confession testified to two white officers and told to an all white male jury.'
Mr McKenzie hopes attorney general Ernest 'Chip' Finney, will agree to file a motion to re-open the case by the end of this year.
He argues that Stinney was an 'easy target' and was used as a 'scapegoat' by police who wanted to quickly find and punish anyone they could tie to the murders.
Mr Mckenzie told thegrio.com: 'Stinney was a convenient target. 'But how do you exonerate somebody where there is absolutely no evidence one way or the other?
'There was only a coerced confession. The confession was never written. It was an oral confession testified to two white officers and told to an all white male jury.'
He believes, however, the complete lack of evidence will exonerate Stinney of the murders once and for all.
Death Row inmate is executed ... 33 years after he was convicted of killing police officer
A 61-year-old man was executed on Wednesday evening - more than 33 years after being convicted of killing a police officer.Manuel Valle, 61, died by lethal injection ain Florida State Prison in Raiford.
Jeneane Skeen and Lisa Pena, the two daughters of murder victim Louis Pena, hugged and cried after the brown curtain to the death chamber was closed.
Mr Pena was shot and killed by Valle in April 1978, during a traffic stop.
Miss Skeen said: 'For 33 years, people have asked us if the death penalty will give us closure. We finally got revenge on the low-life piece of human waste that murdered our father.'
Miss Skeen was 13 years old when her father was killed, gainsville.com reports.
She and Lisa Pena wore pins bearing their father’s face.
Department of Corrections spokeswoman Gretl Plessinger said Valle was 'polite and compliant' leading up to his execution.
Valle, who was pronuonced dead 20 minutes after he was given the first drug, was the first Florida prisoner executed using a new lethal mix of drugs.
Previously, officials had used sodium thiopental for executions. Now, executions are administered using pentobarbital, despite concerns that it prolongs the death process.
children have their rights
"I won't give up until the exploitation of all children has ended and all children have their rights."
-- Craig Kielburger
freedom to those who are not free.
None who have always been free can understand the terrible fascinating power of the hope of freedom to those who are not free.
-- Pearl S. Buck
The "Faces For Sara Kruzan" Project: A Collective Petition to Governor B...
A more detailed video explaining what the "Faces For Sara Kruzan" petition is, what its purpose is, and how you can quickly participate. Sara Kruzan was a child-sex trafficking and multiple rape victim sentenced to Life without Parole at age 16 for killing her pimp (though it's strongly argued that her life was at stake if she didn't follow the order to do so by a rival pimp). Recently Governor Schwarzenegger granted Sara a lesser sentence with 25 to Life with possible parole (in approximately two years). This petition will tell you how you can help with minimum input and maximum output.
JUVENILE LIFERS: HEARING ON STATE’S MOTION TO DISMISS ACLU LAWSUIT SET FOR APRIL 21
(Ed. note: In November, 2010, the Michigan ACLU filed a lawsuit, Hill et. al. v. Granholm, on behalf of nine of Michigan’s more than 350 “juvenile lifers,” who were sentenced to life without parole before their 18th birthdays.
“The lawsuit charges that a Michigan sentencing scheme that denies the now-adult plaintiffs an opportunity for parole and a fair hearing to demonstrate their growth, maturity and rehabilitation constitutes cruel and unusual punishment and violates their constitutional rights,” said the ACLU.
The ACLU’s complete release and links to the lawsuit and the Second Chance website which supports an end to the policy of sentencing juveniles to die in prison, are at http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=2669.
A review of federal court filings shows that the defendants, now Gov. Rick Snyder, Richard McKeon, Interim Director of the Michigan Department of Corrections, and Barbara Sampson, chair of the Michigan Parole Board, filed a “motion to dismiss, or alternatively a motion for summary judgment” on Feb. 28. The motion primarily raises legal technicalities regarding time limits.
A motion hearing has been set for April 21 at 2:15 p.m. before U.S. District Judge John Corbett O’Meara, in the federal building on W. Lafayette.)
Article below is by Dante. D. Cottingham #259241, Voice of Juvenile Defendants
As most of you already know, I’ve been in Prison for nearly 16 years now. I was incarcerated when I was a teenager and next month, February 20th, I’ll be 33 yrs old. I literally was forced to grow from a child to an adult in prison, a process that was long, cold and difficult, but yet a process that taught me a couple very important things.
Some of the most powerful things that I read in the sentences that detail my history is the fact that a child has absolutely NO place in an adult prison, I see that a child has absolutely NO place within an adult court room, I see the fact Judges and Lawyers, Parents and Politicians were/are smart enough to do better for the most vulnerable sector of our society. Smart enough to adjudicate its children in a more responsible way that is directly connected to the spirit of rehabilitation that values a child’s potential, and that respects cutting edge science. World history is saturated with stories where societies’ sophistication was far more advanced than societies’ Laws and Policies, that is, until a group of people, like Dr. Martin Luther King and the SNCC, adopted an issue and proactively pursued progressive transformations.
Well today, in our era, that issue is a Juvenile Justice Issue. It’s time for the responsible adults of our era to prevent our children being waived into the adult system and being discarded into adult prisons. There are thousands upon thousands of adolescents in adult court rooms and prisons all across the U.S. but it can be stopped with your help, by adopting this issue we can take children from the grips of adult prisons, and place them on the path that leads to their maximal development.
I implore you to go to the Volunteer page and see how you can help.
Thank you for your time and attention and I look forward to working with you.
Dante. D. Cottingham #259241
[In one of my most significant dreams, I shed my human Characteristics, I take the form of a light, a bright mobile soaring light, that is, I take the form of my soul...unadulterated.
I am hovering in what must be a part of space, for the darkness is absolute, and I am instinctively and patiently waiting, for what? I am unsure. Then instantly lights resembling my own start to appear, thousands and thousands at first but by the time they stop coming there is no question that hundreds of millions of lights are before me, hundreds of millions of souls are before me as if we are in an infinite stadium in the sky, enclosed by four walls of darkness, it looks as if I am on a podium in front of millions of stars.
……We are in grave danger of Losing the hearts and minds and souls of our sons and daughters, to the maleficent appendages of our societies. There exists in countries world-wide, from the poorest to the richest, governmental policies and societal influences that are not conducive to our children’s’ maximal development.
Their eagerness to hear me speak to them is unmistakable! It becomes beautifully apparent that I am about to articulate my soul’s essence to the souls of the world’s adult population. So through the utilisation of thought I speak to them, I speak to them about our most precious possessions, our world’s most significant and vital resource, I speak to them about the only vehicle that can be used to navigate the course which leads to world peace, I speak to them about our children, I say to them……..]
For example……currently in the United States there are two systems for processing Individuals who commit crimes: The Criminal Justice system for adults and the Juvenile Justice System for children. Not long ago these systems differed significantly in virtually all respects, including their principles, procedures and dispositions. While punishment for adults was premised on retribution and deterrence, children were generally subject to diversion or short term legal restraint which in theory emphasised rehabilitation.
However between the 1960′s and present day, the Juvenile system’s philosophy and structure has come to closely imitate the Adult system. Legislatures have narrowed Juvenile Court Jurisdiction, nudged what is left of that Jurisdiction towards a punishment orientation that often downplays treatment and Indeed imposes adult criminal procedures and determinate sentences. Children are being transferred to adult systems far too early and far too often, something that must be reserved for the truly unnameable to treatment, which is a very narrow category for people.
For children are less responsible for their actions because of cognitive and volitional developmental deficiencies and thus should receive special treatment. I mean, the moral and decision making capacities of children between seven and eighteen are inferior, and this inferiority should, must be recognised through treatment in a separate system. Children as a class are not psychologically developed in legally relevant ways, and since it is worldly and humanly possible to reconstruct these governmental policies that advocate discarding its children into garbage receptacle called adult prisons, we must dutifully make that our goal.
[The light that is my soul glides from before them, I glide amongst them for I desire to see how it feels to be so close to so many souls, but more importantly I want all these souls' to feel the intensity of my light, my energy. When I am intimately amongst them I acknowledge that there are no skin colours, no religions, no cultures, no social classes to separate us. There's a deep natural feeling of unification within the energy that connects every soul in attendance. I continue........]
……….. Since it is humanly, worldly possible to eradicate the feeling of hunger from within the belly of every starving child, to render the famine obsolete, we must dutifully make this our goal, Since it is humanly, worldly possible to eradicate the Juvenile delinquency problem all over the world by focusing on the problem, making it a high priority and relentlessly pursuing the answers, we must dutifully make this our goal.
Since it is humanly, worldly possible to utilise pro-action in each and every one of our communities in the form of being mentors, sports coaches and referees, fighting against the detrimental laws and policies, donating to reputable and effective organisations, we must dutifully make that our goal.
[I soar through the millions of souls until I am hovering directly in the middle of them all, their attention following me intently, then i say with earnest conviction......]
Our every goal is possible to achieve only if we recognise, accept and embrace our natural occupations as Ambassadors, as Diplomatic Officers with the highest rank appointed and accredited as representatives of every child on the face of our earth, Advocating the proliferation of world-wide systems being implemented in Countries everywhere that are designed to ensure our kids reach their maximal development, for that is the only way that future generations have a chance to experience world peace.
I was a Juvenile defendant, as a teenager I received a Life sentence, and to date, I have been Incarcerated fourteen years and five months. However hindsight informs me that under the proper circumstances, with the proper system my mind could have been fundamentally led away from providing the United States with the Opportunity to exploit my cognitive and volitional developmental tendencies, my childlike disposition. So I am intimately positive, despite the debate,that virtually all children will respond most effectively to rehabilitative efforts as opposed to retributive.
I thank you for your time and attention…..
Dant’e Cottingham.
Dant’e Cottingham.
Posted Friday, March 4th 2011 at 9:27AM by: Darcy Delaproser
Sentencing Shift Gives New Leverage to Prosecutors
Jason Henry for The New York Times
By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/26/us/tough-sentences-help-prosecutors-push-for-plea-bargains.html?_r=1&smid=fb-share&pagewanted=all
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — After decades of new laws to toughen sentencing for criminals, prosecutors have gained greater leverage to extract guilty pleas from defendants and reduce the number of cases that go to trial, often by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties. Some experts say the process has become coercive in many state and federal jurisdictions, forcing defendants to weigh their options based on the relative risks of facing a judge and jury rather than simple matters of guilt or innocence. In effect, prosecutors are giving defendants more reasons to avoid having their day in court.
“We now have an incredible concentration of power in the hands of prosecutors,” said Richard E. Myers II, a former assistant United States attorney who is now an associate professor of law at the University of North Carolina. He said that so much influence now resides with prosecutors that “in the wrong hands, the criminal justice system can be held hostage.”
One crucial, if unheralded, effect of this shift is now coming into sharper view, according to academics who study the issue. Growing prosecutorial power is a significant reason that the percentage of felony cases that go to trial has dropped sharply in many places.
Plea bargains have been common for more than a century, but lately they have begun to put the trial system out of business in some courtrooms. By one count, fewer than one in 40 felony cases now make it to trial, according to data from nine states that have published such records since the 1970s, when the ratio was about one in 12. The decline has been even steeper in federal district courts.
Cases like Florida v. Shane Guthrie help explain why. After Mr. Guthrie, 24, was arrested here last year, accused of beating his girlfriend and threatening her with a knife, the prosecutor offered him a deal for two years in prison plus probation.
Mr. Guthrie rejected that, and a later offer of five years, because he believed that he was not guilty, his lawyer said. But the prosecutor’s response was severe: he filed a more serious charge that would mean life imprisonment if Mr. Guthrie is convicted later this year.
Because of a state law that increased punishments for people who had recently been in prison, like Mr. Guthrie, the sentence would be mandatory. So what he could have resolved for a two-year term could keep him locked up for 50 years or more.
The decrease in trials has also been a consequence of underfinanced public defense lawyers who can try only a handful of their cases, as well as, prosecutors say, the rise of drug courts and other alternative resolutions.
The overloaded court system has also seen comparatively little expansion in many places, making a huge increase in plea bargains a cheap and easy way to handle a near-tripling in felony cases over the past generation.
But many researchers say the most important force in driving down the trial rate has been state and federal legislative overhauls that imposed mandatory sentences and other harsher and more certain penalties for many felonies, especially those involving guns, drugs, violent crimes and repeat offenders.
Stiffer punishments were also put in place for specific crimes, like peddling drugs near a school or wearing a mask in certain circumstances. And legislators added reams of new felony statutes, vastly expanding the range of actions considered illegal.
These tougher penalties, by many accounts, have contributed to the nation’s steep drop in crime the past two decades. They have also swelled the prison population to levels that lawmakers in some states say they can no longer afford, and a few have rolled back some laws.
The ‘Trial Penalty’
In the courtroom and during plea negotiations, the impact of these stricter laws is exerted through what academics call the “trial penalty.” The phrase refers to the fact that the sentences for people who go to trial have grown harsher relative to sentences for those who agree to a plea.
In some jurisdictions, this gap has widened so much it has become coercive and is used to punish defendants for exercising their right to trial, some legal experts say.
“Legislators want to make it easy for prosecutors to get the conviction without having to go to trial,” said Rachel Barkow, a professor of law at New York University who studies how prosecutors use their power. “And prosecutors who are starved for resources want to use that leverage. And so now everyone acts with the assumption that the case should end with a plea.”
“When you have that attitude,” she said, “you penalize people who have the nerve to go to trial.”
Prosecutors say they are giving defendants options and are merely charging them based on what is allowed under the law for those who turn down pleas.
While legal experts say the effect is clear in persuading more defendants to forgo trials, the trial penalty is hard to quantify without examining individual cases and negotiations between prosecutors and defense lawyers.
That is because threats of harsher charges against defendants who reject plea deals often are the most influential factor in the outcome of a case, but this interplay is never reflected in official data.
“How many times is a mandatory sentence used as a chip in order to coerce a plea? They don’t keep records,” said Senior Judge John L. Kane Jr. of United States District Court in Denver, who believes that prosecutors have grown more powerful than judges. But it is very common, he added. “That’s what the public doesn’t see, and where the statistics become meaningless.”
But one result is obvious, he said: “We hardly have trials anymore.”
In 1977, the year Judge Kane was appointed to the bench, the ratio of guilty pleas to criminal trial verdicts in federal district courts was a little more than four to one; by last year, it was almost 32 to one.
Here in Florida, which has greatly toughened sentencing since the 1990s, felony defendants who opt for trial now routinely face the prospect of higher charges that mean prison terms 2, 5, or even 20 times as long as if they had pleaded guilty. In many cases, the process is reversed, and stiffer charges are dismissed in return for a plea.
Before new sentencing laws, the gap was narrower, and trials less risky, veteran lawyers here say. The first thing Denis deVlaming, a prominent Florida criminal defense lawyer, does with a new client is pull out a calculator to tally all the additional punishments the prosecutor can add to figure the likely sentence if the client is convicted at trial.
“They think I’m ready to charge them a fee, but I’m not,” he said. “I tell them in Florida, it’s justice by mathematics.”
No matter how strongly defendants believe they are innocent, he said, they could be taking dangerous risks by, for example, turning down a one-year plea bargain when the prosecutor threatens additional charges that carry a mandatory sentence 10 times as long.
A Power Shift
The transfer of power to prosecutors from judges has been so profound that an important trial ritual has become in some measure a lie, Mr. deVlaming said — the instructions judges read stating that the jury determines guilt or innocence, and the judge a proper sentence. The latter part is no longer true when mandatory minimums and, in many cases, sentencing guidelines apply, but jurors often do not know that.
Legal scholars like Paul Cassell, a conservative former federal judge and prosecutor who is now a law professor at the University of Utah, describe the power shift as a zero-sum game.
“Judges have lost discretion, and that discretion has accumulated in the hands of prosecutors, who now have the ultimate ability to shape the outcome,” Mr. Cassell said. “With mandatory minimums and other sentencing enhancements out there, prosecutors can often dictate the sentence that will be imposed.”
Without question, plea bargains benefit many defendants who have committed crimes and receive lighter sentences than they might after trial. It also limits cases that require considerable time and expense in court.
But many defendants who opt for trial effectively face more prison time for rejecting a plea than for committing the alleged crime.
In Mr. Guthrie’s case, he was initially charged with aggravated battery on a pregnant woman and false imprisonment. But after he rejected the plea bargains, the prosecutor, more than a year later, filed the more serious charge of first-degree felony kidnapping, based on the girlfriend’s accusation that he pulled her by the arm inside her home and, once outside, grabbed her hair and pulled her on her feet the distance of several parking spaces.
Nobody is suggesting that Mr. Guthrie, previously incarcerated for 18 months on gun, assault and drug charges, is a sympathetic figure. According to a police report, he punched and kicked his girlfriend, left her with a bruised and bloody nose and a face that “appeared to be swollen,” and threatened to cut her stomach with a knife.
The assistant state attorney handling the case, Frank Slavichak, did not return calls. The chief investigator for the office, Spencer Mann, said Mr. Guthrie’s choices dictated the course of the case.
But his lawyer, Craig DeThomasis, hired after the plea rejections, said he was “plainly being punished for exercising his right to trial.” According to Mr. Guthrie’s mother, Claudia Guthrie, the prosecutor told her son at a hearing this spring that if he did not plead guilty and take a five-year sentence, higher charges would be filed that mean “you’re going to get life.” Mr. Mann did not dispute that some sort of warning of new charges was presented.
Mr. DeThomasis said that there was no evidence the girlfriend was pregnant, and that she started the altercation by hitting him in the forehead with a pipe, landing him in the jail infirmary for a week. He pointed out that she was arrested in 2009 for attacking Mr. Guthrie after telling the police he had struck her, leading police to say in a report that she had “changed her story several times and could not explain her actions.” He also said she had a history of involuntary hospitalizations, which she declined to address in a 110-page sworn deposition in February.
Mr. Mann declined to comment on the girlfriend’s background but said none of it affected the credibility of the case.
Judges in many cases can set aside verdicts that they believe are unsupported by the evidence, but they generally have no power in mandatory-minimum cases to reduce punishments below levels established through legislation.
While the Guthrie case may be a particularly stark example of how much power one prosecutor can have over a defendant’s fate, many places have given district attorneys similar influence.
“There have been so many laws passed in the various states that just about always there is some enhancement available to the prosecutor that can be used as leverage in negotiations,” said Scott Burns, executive director of the National District Attorneys Association.
Mr. Burns, a former Utah prosecutor, did not dispute that sentencing-law changes had made trial riskier for defendants and helped drive down the percentage of cases taken to a verdict. He also acknowledged that the plea-bargain process “clearly is coercive” when defendants face harsher or more numerous charges for rejecting deals.
But he said plea bargains were also “extremely lenient in many instances because prosecutors are taking several criminal acts off the table.” He emphasized that lawmakers time and again have given prosecutors more leverage and said it was “grossly unrealistic” to criticize district attorneys for enforcing laws that they are duty-bound to uphold — even those that are ill-advised.
“There are a lot of criminal laws that are passed that we all kind of roll our eyes at,” he said. “Sometimes they are just repetitive; sometimes they are knee-jerk responses to some high-profile case, and therefore politically motivated.”
Though national statistics are not readily available, the trend toward lower trial rates is evident in a number of places.
The National Center for State Courts in Williamsburg, Va., found that the percentage of felonies taken to trial in nine states with available data fell to 2.3 percent in 2009, from 8 percent in 1976.
The number of jury trials rose slightly, while nonjury trials, where a judge decides guilt or innocence, fell sharply — all while caseloads nearly tripled. The states account for more than a third of the American population, and most have mandatory minimums or sentencing guidelines or have passed toughened sentencing laws.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics, after studying partial data on state-court felony prosecutions nationwide, found that from 1986 to 2006 the ratio of pleas to trials nearly doubled.
The shift has been clearer in federal district courts. After tougher sentencing laws were enacted in the 1980s, the percentage of criminal cases taken to trial fell to less than 3 percent last year, from almost 15 percent, according to data from the State University at Albany’s Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics. The explosion of immigration prosecutions, where trials are rare, skews the numbers, but the trend is evident even when those cases are not included.
Nearly nine of every 10 cases ended in pleas last year, the federal data show, while one in 12 were dismissed (the percentage of dismissed cases was substantially higher a generation ago).
The number of acquittals dropped even further. Last year, there was only one acquittal for every 212 guilty pleas or trial convictions in federal district courts. Thirty years ago, the ratio was one for every 22.
More Plea Bargaining
Experts like Ronald Wright, a former federal prosecutor and now a professor of law at Wake Forest University, say they fear that the steep decline in acquittals stems partly from more defendants, who might have winnable cases, deciding not to risk trials and reluctantly accepting plea bargains instead.
Some federal prosecutors worried that their power would be weakened by a 2005 Supreme Court ruling that made sentencing guidelines advisory only. But academics say the ruling had much less effect than what some predicted as many judges still largely follow the guidelines, and the ruling did not affect other laws that have given prosecutors more power.
While sentencing changes allowed legislators in this state to take credit for being tough on crime, they have also worked against their goal of trimming prison costs, leaving prosecutors caught in the middle.
“There is a big disconnect,” said Bill Cervone, the state attorney in Gainesville and the chief prosecutor in six counties that make up Florida’s Eighth Judicial Circuit. “There is subtle and not so subtle pressure” to reduce the numbers sent to prison.
Mr. Cervone, who was head of the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association, added, “Our position is, ‘Please don’t pass any new crime laws while you are also cutting our budgets.’ ” His budget has been cut 20 percent in four years.
The fiscal strains extend to judges, who face pressure to keep dockets moving. Some do not appreciate defendants who refuse pleas and then lose a time-consuming trial, he and other lawyers say.
“There are some judges who will punish you for going to trial,” Mr. Cervone said. “Legally, you cannot impose a longer sentence on someone because they exercised their right to trial,” he said, speaking of judges. “Factually, there are ways to do it.”
In some cases, he added, he wished judges had more discretion, instead of having to automatically impose an inflexible punishment.
So, too, do many judges faced with cases where legislatively mandated penalties do not square with their idea of justice.
Like the one in Polk County, Fla. that began when Orville Wollard said he fired his registered handgun into his living room wall to scare his daughter’s boyfriend out of the house after he repeatedly threatened his family.
In Mr. Wollard’s view, he was protecting his family and did not try to hurt the boyfriend, who was not hit, though the judge said the bullet missed him by inches. But after Mr. Wollard turned down a plea offer of five years of felony probation, prosecutors won a conviction two years ago for aggravated assault with a firearm. Because the gun was fired, a mandatory-minimum law required a 20-year term.
At his sentencing, Mr. Wollard said he felt as if he were in “some banana republic” and described the boyfriend as a violent drug dealer. But prosecutors said the judge had “no discretion” because of the state law.
Reluctantly, the judge agreed. “If it weren’t for the mandatory minimum aspect of this, I would use my discretion and impose some separate sentence,” he told Mr. Wollard, adding that he was “duty bound” to impose 20 years.
“We now have an incredible concentration of power in the hands of prosecutors,” said Richard E. Myers II, a former assistant United States attorney who is now an associate professor of law at the University of North Carolina. He said that so much influence now resides with prosecutors that “in the wrong hands, the criminal justice system can be held hostage.”
One crucial, if unheralded, effect of this shift is now coming into sharper view, according to academics who study the issue. Growing prosecutorial power is a significant reason that the percentage of felony cases that go to trial has dropped sharply in many places.
Plea bargains have been common for more than a century, but lately they have begun to put the trial system out of business in some courtrooms. By one count, fewer than one in 40 felony cases now make it to trial, according to data from nine states that have published such records since the 1970s, when the ratio was about one in 12. The decline has been even steeper in federal district courts.
Cases like Florida v. Shane Guthrie help explain why. After Mr. Guthrie, 24, was arrested here last year, accused of beating his girlfriend and threatening her with a knife, the prosecutor offered him a deal for two years in prison plus probation.
Mr. Guthrie rejected that, and a later offer of five years, because he believed that he was not guilty, his lawyer said. But the prosecutor’s response was severe: he filed a more serious charge that would mean life imprisonment if Mr. Guthrie is convicted later this year.
Because of a state law that increased punishments for people who had recently been in prison, like Mr. Guthrie, the sentence would be mandatory. So what he could have resolved for a two-year term could keep him locked up for 50 years or more.
The decrease in trials has also been a consequence of underfinanced public defense lawyers who can try only a handful of their cases, as well as, prosecutors say, the rise of drug courts and other alternative resolutions.
The overloaded court system has also seen comparatively little expansion in many places, making a huge increase in plea bargains a cheap and easy way to handle a near-tripling in felony cases over the past generation.
But many researchers say the most important force in driving down the trial rate has been state and federal legislative overhauls that imposed mandatory sentences and other harsher and more certain penalties for many felonies, especially those involving guns, drugs, violent crimes and repeat offenders.
Stiffer punishments were also put in place for specific crimes, like peddling drugs near a school or wearing a mask in certain circumstances. And legislators added reams of new felony statutes, vastly expanding the range of actions considered illegal.
These tougher penalties, by many accounts, have contributed to the nation’s steep drop in crime the past two decades. They have also swelled the prison population to levels that lawmakers in some states say they can no longer afford, and a few have rolled back some laws.
The ‘Trial Penalty’
In the courtroom and during plea negotiations, the impact of these stricter laws is exerted through what academics call the “trial penalty.” The phrase refers to the fact that the sentences for people who go to trial have grown harsher relative to sentences for those who agree to a plea.
In some jurisdictions, this gap has widened so much it has become coercive and is used to punish defendants for exercising their right to trial, some legal experts say.
“Legislators want to make it easy for prosecutors to get the conviction without having to go to trial,” said Rachel Barkow, a professor of law at New York University who studies how prosecutors use their power. “And prosecutors who are starved for resources want to use that leverage. And so now everyone acts with the assumption that the case should end with a plea.”
“When you have that attitude,” she said, “you penalize people who have the nerve to go to trial.”
Prosecutors say they are giving defendants options and are merely charging them based on what is allowed under the law for those who turn down pleas.
While legal experts say the effect is clear in persuading more defendants to forgo trials, the trial penalty is hard to quantify without examining individual cases and negotiations between prosecutors and defense lawyers.
That is because threats of harsher charges against defendants who reject plea deals often are the most influential factor in the outcome of a case, but this interplay is never reflected in official data.
“How many times is a mandatory sentence used as a chip in order to coerce a plea? They don’t keep records,” said Senior Judge John L. Kane Jr. of United States District Court in Denver, who believes that prosecutors have grown more powerful than judges. But it is very common, he added. “That’s what the public doesn’t see, and where the statistics become meaningless.”
But one result is obvious, he said: “We hardly have trials anymore.”
In 1977, the year Judge Kane was appointed to the bench, the ratio of guilty pleas to criminal trial verdicts in federal district courts was a little more than four to one; by last year, it was almost 32 to one.
Here in Florida, which has greatly toughened sentencing since the 1990s, felony defendants who opt for trial now routinely face the prospect of higher charges that mean prison terms 2, 5, or even 20 times as long as if they had pleaded guilty. In many cases, the process is reversed, and stiffer charges are dismissed in return for a plea.
Before new sentencing laws, the gap was narrower, and trials less risky, veteran lawyers here say. The first thing Denis deVlaming, a prominent Florida criminal defense lawyer, does with a new client is pull out a calculator to tally all the additional punishments the prosecutor can add to figure the likely sentence if the client is convicted at trial.
“They think I’m ready to charge them a fee, but I’m not,” he said. “I tell them in Florida, it’s justice by mathematics.”
No matter how strongly defendants believe they are innocent, he said, they could be taking dangerous risks by, for example, turning down a one-year plea bargain when the prosecutor threatens additional charges that carry a mandatory sentence 10 times as long.
A Power Shift
The transfer of power to prosecutors from judges has been so profound that an important trial ritual has become in some measure a lie, Mr. deVlaming said — the instructions judges read stating that the jury determines guilt or innocence, and the judge a proper sentence. The latter part is no longer true when mandatory minimums and, in many cases, sentencing guidelines apply, but jurors often do not know that.
Legal scholars like Paul Cassell, a conservative former federal judge and prosecutor who is now a law professor at the University of Utah, describe the power shift as a zero-sum game.
“Judges have lost discretion, and that discretion has accumulated in the hands of prosecutors, who now have the ultimate ability to shape the outcome,” Mr. Cassell said. “With mandatory minimums and other sentencing enhancements out there, prosecutors can often dictate the sentence that will be imposed.”
Without question, plea bargains benefit many defendants who have committed crimes and receive lighter sentences than they might after trial. It also limits cases that require considerable time and expense in court.
But many defendants who opt for trial effectively face more prison time for rejecting a plea than for committing the alleged crime.
In Mr. Guthrie’s case, he was initially charged with aggravated battery on a pregnant woman and false imprisonment. But after he rejected the plea bargains, the prosecutor, more than a year later, filed the more serious charge of first-degree felony kidnapping, based on the girlfriend’s accusation that he pulled her by the arm inside her home and, once outside, grabbed her hair and pulled her on her feet the distance of several parking spaces.
Nobody is suggesting that Mr. Guthrie, previously incarcerated for 18 months on gun, assault and drug charges, is a sympathetic figure. According to a police report, he punched and kicked his girlfriend, left her with a bruised and bloody nose and a face that “appeared to be swollen,” and threatened to cut her stomach with a knife.
The assistant state attorney handling the case, Frank Slavichak, did not return calls. The chief investigator for the office, Spencer Mann, said Mr. Guthrie’s choices dictated the course of the case.
But his lawyer, Craig DeThomasis, hired after the plea rejections, said he was “plainly being punished for exercising his right to trial.” According to Mr. Guthrie’s mother, Claudia Guthrie, the prosecutor told her son at a hearing this spring that if he did not plead guilty and take a five-year sentence, higher charges would be filed that mean “you’re going to get life.” Mr. Mann did not dispute that some sort of warning of new charges was presented.
Mr. DeThomasis said that there was no evidence the girlfriend was pregnant, and that she started the altercation by hitting him in the forehead with a pipe, landing him in the jail infirmary for a week. He pointed out that she was arrested in 2009 for attacking Mr. Guthrie after telling the police he had struck her, leading police to say in a report that she had “changed her story several times and could not explain her actions.” He also said she had a history of involuntary hospitalizations, which she declined to address in a 110-page sworn deposition in February.
Mr. Mann declined to comment on the girlfriend’s background but said none of it affected the credibility of the case.
Judges in many cases can set aside verdicts that they believe are unsupported by the evidence, but they generally have no power in mandatory-minimum cases to reduce punishments below levels established through legislation.
While the Guthrie case may be a particularly stark example of how much power one prosecutor can have over a defendant’s fate, many places have given district attorneys similar influence.
“There have been so many laws passed in the various states that just about always there is some enhancement available to the prosecutor that can be used as leverage in negotiations,” said Scott Burns, executive director of the National District Attorneys Association.
Mr. Burns, a former Utah prosecutor, did not dispute that sentencing-law changes had made trial riskier for defendants and helped drive down the percentage of cases taken to a verdict. He also acknowledged that the plea-bargain process “clearly is coercive” when defendants face harsher or more numerous charges for rejecting deals.
But he said plea bargains were also “extremely lenient in many instances because prosecutors are taking several criminal acts off the table.” He emphasized that lawmakers time and again have given prosecutors more leverage and said it was “grossly unrealistic” to criticize district attorneys for enforcing laws that they are duty-bound to uphold — even those that are ill-advised.
“There are a lot of criminal laws that are passed that we all kind of roll our eyes at,” he said. “Sometimes they are just repetitive; sometimes they are knee-jerk responses to some high-profile case, and therefore politically motivated.”
Though national statistics are not readily available, the trend toward lower trial rates is evident in a number of places.
The National Center for State Courts in Williamsburg, Va., found that the percentage of felonies taken to trial in nine states with available data fell to 2.3 percent in 2009, from 8 percent in 1976.
The number of jury trials rose slightly, while nonjury trials, where a judge decides guilt or innocence, fell sharply — all while caseloads nearly tripled. The states account for more than a third of the American population, and most have mandatory minimums or sentencing guidelines or have passed toughened sentencing laws.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics, after studying partial data on state-court felony prosecutions nationwide, found that from 1986 to 2006 the ratio of pleas to trials nearly doubled.
The shift has been clearer in federal district courts. After tougher sentencing laws were enacted in the 1980s, the percentage of criminal cases taken to trial fell to less than 3 percent last year, from almost 15 percent, according to data from the State University at Albany’s Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics. The explosion of immigration prosecutions, where trials are rare, skews the numbers, but the trend is evident even when those cases are not included.
Nearly nine of every 10 cases ended in pleas last year, the federal data show, while one in 12 were dismissed (the percentage of dismissed cases was substantially higher a generation ago).
The number of acquittals dropped even further. Last year, there was only one acquittal for every 212 guilty pleas or trial convictions in federal district courts. Thirty years ago, the ratio was one for every 22.
More Plea Bargaining
Experts like Ronald Wright, a former federal prosecutor and now a professor of law at Wake Forest University, say they fear that the steep decline in acquittals stems partly from more defendants, who might have winnable cases, deciding not to risk trials and reluctantly accepting plea bargains instead.
Some federal prosecutors worried that their power would be weakened by a 2005 Supreme Court ruling that made sentencing guidelines advisory only. But academics say the ruling had much less effect than what some predicted as many judges still largely follow the guidelines, and the ruling did not affect other laws that have given prosecutors more power.
While sentencing changes allowed legislators in this state to take credit for being tough on crime, they have also worked against their goal of trimming prison costs, leaving prosecutors caught in the middle.
“There is a big disconnect,” said Bill Cervone, the state attorney in Gainesville and the chief prosecutor in six counties that make up Florida’s Eighth Judicial Circuit. “There is subtle and not so subtle pressure” to reduce the numbers sent to prison.
Mr. Cervone, who was head of the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association, added, “Our position is, ‘Please don’t pass any new crime laws while you are also cutting our budgets.’ ” His budget has been cut 20 percent in four years.
The fiscal strains extend to judges, who face pressure to keep dockets moving. Some do not appreciate defendants who refuse pleas and then lose a time-consuming trial, he and other lawyers say.
“There are some judges who will punish you for going to trial,” Mr. Cervone said. “Legally, you cannot impose a longer sentence on someone because they exercised their right to trial,” he said, speaking of judges. “Factually, there are ways to do it.”
In some cases, he added, he wished judges had more discretion, instead of having to automatically impose an inflexible punishment.
So, too, do many judges faced with cases where legislatively mandated penalties do not square with their idea of justice.
Like the one in Polk County, Fla. that began when Orville Wollard said he fired his registered handgun into his living room wall to scare his daughter’s boyfriend out of the house after he repeatedly threatened his family.
In Mr. Wollard’s view, he was protecting his family and did not try to hurt the boyfriend, who was not hit, though the judge said the bullet missed him by inches. But after Mr. Wollard turned down a plea offer of five years of felony probation, prosecutors won a conviction two years ago for aggravated assault with a firearm. Because the gun was fired, a mandatory-minimum law required a 20-year term.
At his sentencing, Mr. Wollard said he felt as if he were in “some banana republic” and described the boyfriend as a violent drug dealer. But prosecutors said the judge had “no discretion” because of the state law.
Reluctantly, the judge agreed. “If it weren’t for the mandatory minimum aspect of this, I would use my discretion and impose some separate sentence,” he told Mr. Wollard, adding that he was “duty bound” to impose 20 years.
A version of this article appeared in print on September 26, 2011, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Sentencing Shift Gives New Clout to Prosecutors.
WILL JUSTICE EVER BE DONE?
- WILL JUSTICE EVER BE DONE?! WILL THE TRUTH EVER COME OUT?! OR WILL THE PROSECUTORS CONTINUE TO COVER-UP?! http://www.twitter.com/JUSTICEDAVONTAE http://freedavontaesanford-irishgreeneyes.blogspot.com/?spr.
Keaire Brown
She was only 13-years-old when she shot and killed Scott Sappinton Jr. during an attempted car jacking. Two and half years later, a judge sentenced Keaire Brown to life in prison.
Just two days before Scott Sappington Jr.'s 17th birthday, Keaire Brown shot him in the head at point blank range. Tried as an adult, a Wyandotte County jury convicted the now 16-year-old of first degree murder. On Thursday, a judge sentenced her to life with a hard 20, which means Brown has to serve 20 years before she is even eligible for parole.
"Well I think justice has spoken, I'll never be completely healed from this so I just hope she never, ever gets the opportunity to do this again," said Scott Sappington Sr., the victim's father. "Scotty will never have a second chance so in my mind she doesn't deserve a second chance."
Brown's lawyer asked for a new trial, arguing among other things that Brown didn't understand the law well enough as a teenager.
"She's still a kid. She doesn't even understand what's even going happening or the language, she completed 7th grade," said Cheryl Brown, Keaire's mother.
The judge rejected that, ruling Brown was clearly competent and received a fair trail.
Showing no remorse and claiming her innocence, Keaire Brown turned to spectators in court and said, "I am not an animal or a murderer, I love people, I'm a kid too, God has my back."
At that moment most of the Sappington family left the court room. For now Scott Sappington Sr. said he will take it day by day in prayer. Kearie Brown's family says they plan to appeal the case.
Sentence - 999 yrs. 999 mo. 99 days
Ark. parole board rejects clemency request for Cox .
he Arkansas Parole Board rejected a clemency request Monday by a man serving a life sentence for a killing he committed at 16 in Cross County.
The parole board voted 5-0 to reject the application by Richard Cox, 29. Cox was convicted in the 1996 death of Holly Strickland and received a life without parole sentence. Also convicted - in a separate trial - was Kingrale Collins, who was sentenced to death.
On May 18, 1996, Collins shot Strickland when she answered the door of a house where she was staying in Wynne, according to court documents. Cox admitted to carrying and hiding the shotgun as he ran away from the crime scene, but said he did not fire the weapon.
In his clemency application, Cox asked for leniency because he was "with the wrong person at the wrong time."
"I've seen the world for somewhat of what it is; a cold-hearted and at the same time loving place," Cox wrote. "Basically, I believed that I have paid my debt to society as a whole as well as rehabilitated myself."
Prosecutor Fletcher Long opposed the clemency request, saying that Cox helped kill Strickland "purely for the thrill of it."
In April 2006, a federal appeals court rejected a lawsuit by Cox, who is black, claiming he did not receive a fair trial from an all-white jury. Cox also argued the trial court erred in not requiring an explanation for the prosecution's dismissal of Dorothy Caddell, a black woman who stated she could not impose the death penalty on a 16-year-old.
In its dismissal, the appeals court noted that white jurors were also removed from the jury pool for expressing reluctance about imposing the death penalty.
Cox is serving his sentence at the state's Varner Unit
he Arkansas Parole Board rejected a clemency request Monday by a man serving a life sentence for a killing he committed at 16 in Cross County.
The parole board voted 5-0 to reject the application by Richard Cox, 29. Cox was convicted in the 1996 death of Holly Strickland and received a life without parole sentence. Also convicted - in a separate trial - was Kingrale Collins, who was sentenced to death.
On May 18, 1996, Collins shot Strickland when she answered the door of a house where she was staying in Wynne, according to court documents. Cox admitted to carrying and hiding the shotgun as he ran away from the crime scene, but said he did not fire the weapon.
In his clemency application, Cox asked for leniency because he was "with the wrong person at the wrong time."
"I've seen the world for somewhat of what it is; a cold-hearted and at the same time loving place," Cox wrote. "Basically, I believed that I have paid my debt to society as a whole as well as rehabilitated myself."
Prosecutor Fletcher Long opposed the clemency request, saying that Cox helped kill Strickland "purely for the thrill of it."
In April 2006, a federal appeals court rejected a lawsuit by Cox, who is black, claiming he did not receive a fair trial from an all-white jury. Cox also argued the trial court erred in not requiring an explanation for the prosecution's dismissal of Dorothy Caddell, a black woman who stated she could not impose the death penalty on a 16-year-old.
In its dismissal, the appeals court noted that white jurors were also removed from the jury pool for expressing reluctance about imposing the death penalty.
Cox is serving his sentence at the state's Varner Unit
Tuesday, 27 September 2011
COME ON GUYS WE NEED MORE NAMES ON DAVONTE SANDFORD PETITION
" TOGETHER WE STAND TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE "
http://www.change.org/petitions/wrongful-conviction-of-youth-free-davontae-sanford?share_id=kJkdbbocbt&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=twitter via @change
Blade Reed or James Prindle
James Prindle
Okay, to contribute to Blade, anyone can do so through Ally Bank. Make check/money order out to Blade Reed-UGMA. On the back of the check put for deposit only and 2121278267. For those who wish to contribute to Blade Reed or James Prindle through Paypal, please do so at wandervogel.com and put for Blade Reed or James Prindle in the memo section.
Blade Reed with Steve Sydebotham
Friday, 23 September 2011
LETTER TO GOVERNOR BROWN
DEAR SARA SUPPORTERS! WE URGE AND ENCOURAGE YOU TO SEND THIS LETTER TO GOVERNOR BROWN IMMEDIATELY! SAMPLE LETTER WRITTEN / PREPARED BY ELIZABETH O'HARA AND MARK SEVIER. INSTRUCTIONS:
1. COPY THE CONTENT BELOW
2. MAKE ANY CHANGES THAT YOU WOULD LIKE AND / OR INCLUDE AN INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH WITH A PERSONAL STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF SARA'S IMMEDIATE RELEASE.
3. PRINT THE DOCUMENT AND SEND TO THE ADDRESS BELOW. YOU MAY ACCESS A PRINTER AT YOUR LOCAL LIBRARY OR HAND WRITE A SIMILAR LETTER TO THE GOVERNOR.
Governor Jerry Brown
... c/o State Capitol, Suite 1173
Sacramento, CA 95814
Dear Governor Brown:
I am writing to urge you to grant clemency to Sara Kruzan, a woman who is serving a 25-year-to-life term in a California penitentiary for shooting and killing, when she was 16 years old, a man who had sexually abused her and who had previously been her pimp, making him a very serious child sex offender. While I am not condoning vigilantism, Sara’s sentence of life without parole, imposed when she was a juvenile, is too extreme considering her youth and the extraordinary circumstances surrounding her crime, and fails to reward the remarkable personal growth and transformation that she has demonstrated during her 16 years in prison.
This is your opportunity to correct the woefully inadequate action of your predecessor, Governor Schwarzenegger, who commuted Sara’s sentence from life without parole to twenty-five years to life. At this point she has spent more than half her life in prison and has served more time than most murderers. You can now restore justice by commuting Sara’s sentence to time served. She, the State of California, and all women everywhere will benefit.
Sara was just two months past her 16th birthday when she shot and killed a well-known pimp who raped her and sexually abused her since she was 11 and forced her into prostitution since she was 13. Now 32 years old, Sara has spent more than half her life in prison. She has been a model inmate, and has earned her college education, and received a 2009 Honor Dorm "Woman of the Year" award from corrections officers.
Prior to her incarceration, Sara grew up in Riverside, California where she excelled in school, making the honor roll and running track. But starting at a young age, Sara was a victim of regular abuse: she was molested by several men, gang-raped by neighbors, physically and emotionally abused by her mother, and then abused and manipulated by her pimp. Two nationally known experts have determined that Sara was suffering from the effects of intimate partner battering when she committed the crime.
Despite being only 16 and having no criminal record, Sara was tried as an adult and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. At the time of her sentencing, the California Youth Authority found Sara amenable to treatment. Had the court followed this recommendation, Sara would have been released at age 25. Even while her youth, abuse, and trauma help to mitigate her offense, Sara expresses remorse for her crime. In a 2007 Human Rights Watch interview, she reflects:
“I definitely know that I deserve punishment. You don’t just take someone’s life and think it’s okay…I am very sorry to take his life like that…If I had a parole hearing, I would want to tell the people that, first of all, I have learned what moral scruples are. Second, that every day is a challenge, but I realize that…I have a lot of good to offer. Now the person who I am today, at 29, I believe that I could set a positive example….”
The terrible crimes committed by youth can take and ruin lives. Yet we believe that the sentencing choices in California should reflect the circumstances of the offender as well as the nature of the crime, and leave open the possibility that a person redeem herself. This is especially true of youth. As the United States Supreme Court re-affirmed earlier this year, youth are different from adults, and thus a life without parole sentence is “an especially harsh sentence for juveniles.”
Sara is not the same person that she was at age 16. Considering her background of trauma and abuse, her young age at the time of the offense, and her rehabilitation over the last 16 years, I ask that you commute her sentence to time served.
Yours sincerely,
Name
address
city, state, zip
telephone
email
1. COPY THE CONTENT BELOW
2. MAKE ANY CHANGES THAT YOU WOULD LIKE AND / OR INCLUDE AN INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH WITH A PERSONAL STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF SARA'S IMMEDIATE RELEASE.
3. PRINT THE DOCUMENT AND SEND TO THE ADDRESS BELOW. YOU MAY ACCESS A PRINTER AT YOUR LOCAL LIBRARY OR HAND WRITE A SIMILAR LETTER TO THE GOVERNOR.
Governor Jerry Brown
... c/o State Capitol, Suite 1173
Sacramento, CA 95814
Dear Governor Brown:
I am writing to urge you to grant clemency to Sara Kruzan, a woman who is serving a 25-year-to-life term in a California penitentiary for shooting and killing, when she was 16 years old, a man who had sexually abused her and who had previously been her pimp, making him a very serious child sex offender. While I am not condoning vigilantism, Sara’s sentence of life without parole, imposed when she was a juvenile, is too extreme considering her youth and the extraordinary circumstances surrounding her crime, and fails to reward the remarkable personal growth and transformation that she has demonstrated during her 16 years in prison.
This is your opportunity to correct the woefully inadequate action of your predecessor, Governor Schwarzenegger, who commuted Sara’s sentence from life without parole to twenty-five years to life. At this point she has spent more than half her life in prison and has served more time than most murderers. You can now restore justice by commuting Sara’s sentence to time served. She, the State of California, and all women everywhere will benefit.
Sara was just two months past her 16th birthday when she shot and killed a well-known pimp who raped her and sexually abused her since she was 11 and forced her into prostitution since she was 13. Now 32 years old, Sara has spent more than half her life in prison. She has been a model inmate, and has earned her college education, and received a 2009 Honor Dorm "Woman of the Year" award from corrections officers.
Prior to her incarceration, Sara grew up in Riverside, California where she excelled in school, making the honor roll and running track. But starting at a young age, Sara was a victim of regular abuse: she was molested by several men, gang-raped by neighbors, physically and emotionally abused by her mother, and then abused and manipulated by her pimp. Two nationally known experts have determined that Sara was suffering from the effects of intimate partner battering when she committed the crime.
Despite being only 16 and having no criminal record, Sara was tried as an adult and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. At the time of her sentencing, the California Youth Authority found Sara amenable to treatment. Had the court followed this recommendation, Sara would have been released at age 25. Even while her youth, abuse, and trauma help to mitigate her offense, Sara expresses remorse for her crime. In a 2007 Human Rights Watch interview, she reflects:
“I definitely know that I deserve punishment. You don’t just take someone’s life and think it’s okay…I am very sorry to take his life like that…If I had a parole hearing, I would want to tell the people that, first of all, I have learned what moral scruples are. Second, that every day is a challenge, but I realize that…I have a lot of good to offer. Now the person who I am today, at 29, I believe that I could set a positive example….”
The terrible crimes committed by youth can take and ruin lives. Yet we believe that the sentencing choices in California should reflect the circumstances of the offender as well as the nature of the crime, and leave open the possibility that a person redeem herself. This is especially true of youth. As the United States Supreme Court re-affirmed earlier this year, youth are different from adults, and thus a life without parole sentence is “an especially harsh sentence for juveniles.”
Sara is not the same person that she was at age 16. Considering her background of trauma and abuse, her young age at the time of the offense, and her rehabilitation over the last 16 years, I ask that you commute her sentence to time served.
Yours sincerely,
Name
address
city, state, zip
telephone
One Child at a Time
ighting Juvenile Injustice one child at a time. -
Welcome To My World http://irishgreeneyes-welcometomyworld.blogspot.com/
Elish Delaproser http://ning.it/pOfkCk Delaproser's Page - Black Talk Radio
http://all4webs.com/w/d/guardianangel21/home.htm
Juvenile Incarceration
all4webs.com
Welcome To My World http://irishgreeneyes-welcometomyworld.blogspot.com/?spref=tw
Blogger: Sign in
www.google.com
Elish Delaproser http://ning.it/pOfkCk Delaproser's Page - Black Talk Radio Network™ blacktalkradionetwork.com Delaproser's Page on Black Talk Radio Network™
http://blacktalkradionetwork.com/profile/DavontaeSanford?xg_source=activity
Davontae Sanford's Page - Black Talk Radio Network™
blacktalkradionetwork.com
Davontae Sanford's Page on Black Talk Radio Network™
http://all4webs.com/w/d/guardianangel21/home.htm
Juvenile Incarceration
all4webs.com
http://support2ndchance.blogspot.com/2011/05/for-teens-impulsive-unthinkable-...
Wednesday, 21 September 2011
FREE SARA KRUZAN
www.freesarakruzan.org
http://www.twitter.com/freesarakruzan
www.facebook.com/facesforsarakruzan
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/free-sa ra-kruzan/
Alone we can do little, together we can do much. -Helen Rice Keller
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
Support Needed For James Prindle'
We are trying to raise a large sum of money for James Prindle's defense. For those of you who are interested, please contact Dan at info@wandervogel.com or direct contributions to paypal at info@wandervogel.com Thanks for supporting James!
Cyntoia Brown
The United States is one of the only countries in the world that allows children under 18 to be sentenced to life without parole. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International report that more than 2,000 inmates are currently serving life without parole in the United States for crimes committed when they were juveniles; in the rest of the world, there are only 12 juveniles serving the same
Cyntoia Brown
That any girl can be facing life in prison for a crime she committed at age 16 is mind-boggling enough. But as the circumstances of Nashvillian Cyntoia Brown's case become clear, her sentence seems even more incomprehensible. There's no denying the violence of the crime: Brown shot a john she claims she thought was reaching for a gun.
As Dan Birman's documentary shows, however, it's difficult to understand why Brown was tried as an adult and how the murder could have been premeditated. Nashville's juvenile justice system allowed the filmmaker generous access to Brown, and the footage is compelling and heartbreaking. Particularly devastating are the early interviews, which show that Brown was clearly still a child — not to mention a victim of physical and sexual abuse for as long as she could remember.
It's good you like it but better sign it!!!
It's good you like it but better sign it!!!
Wrongful Conviction of Youth - Free Davontae Sanford http://www.change.org/petition
WE ASK FOR JUSTICE FOR Free Davontae Sanford
'Positive reinforcement encourages and perpetuates behavior. Attention is power. Whatever we give our attention to increases.'
ONE CHILD AT A TIME
In life make it your goal to pursue every dream and make them happen, to learn all you can along the way, to love yourself and the life you have, to fight and work hard for the things that are worth it, to never give up, to never back down, to never surrender, and to be the very best you can be and put your all into your life by giving it everything you’ve got!- Jenna Kandyce Linch
Free Davontae Sanford http://freedavontaesanford-irishgreeneyes.blogspot.com/?spref=tw
Cyntoia Brown http://cyntoiabrown-irishgreeneyes.blogspot.com/?spref=tw
ELUTHERIA - Support 2nd chance Law for Juveniles http://support2ndchance.blogspot.com/?spref=tw
http://all4webs.com/w/d/guardianangel21/home.htm
Monday, 19 September 2011
Free Sara Kruzan
There are approximately 225 juveniles in California serving a life without parole sentence. California has the worst racial disparity rate in the nation for sentencing juveniles to life without parole. Black youth are given this sentence at 22 times the rate of white youth.
A number of California cases have recently been highlighted in the media due to the background of the juveniles who received the sentences, and the circumstances surrounding their crimes. One such case involves Sara Kruzan, now 31. She was raised in Riverside by her abusive, drug-addicted mother. Sara met her father only three times in her life because he was in prison.
Since the age of 9, Sara suffered from severe depression for which she was hospitalized several times. At the age of 11, she met a 31-year-old man named G.G. who molested her and began grooming her to become a prostitute. At age 13, she began working as a child prostitute for G.G. and was repeatedly molested by him. At age 16, Sara was convicted of killing him. She was sentenced to prison for the rest of her life despite her background and a finding by the California Youth Authority that she was amendable to treatment offered in the juvenile system.
“Life without parole means absolutely no opportunity for release,” said Senator Yee. (of California) “It also means minors are often left without access to programs and rehabilitative services while in prison. This sentence was created for the worst of criminals that have no possibility of reform and it is not a humane way to handle children. While the crimes they committed caused undeniable suffering, these youth offenders are not the worst of the worst.”
“As a society we’ve learned a lot since the time we started using life without parole for children,” said Elizabeth Calvin, a children’s rights advocate with Human Rights Watch. “We now know that this sentence provides no deterrent effect. While children who commit serious crimes should be held accountable, public safety can be protected without subjecting youth to the harshest prison sentence possible.”
*Written by Michelle Quann
"When I Die They'll Send Me Home." - Official Human Rights Watch Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
Sara's Official Website
http://www.freesarakruzan.org
Free Sara Kruzan
Sunday, 18 September 2011
I know why the Caged Bird Sings
Davontae's new address:
Davontae Sanford-684070
Ionia Correctional Facility
1576 W. Blue Water Highway
Ionia, MI 48846 -
Recycled Futures by Steve Sydebotham
This is part of a letter I received from a friend of Bennie Reed (Blade Reed's older brother). This young man is so dead on with what he says. I thought it right to post this, and if you are so inclined you may write him.
Recycled Futures
by
Landis J. Reynolds
It has frequently been said that children are the key to our future. In them rest our hopes, our dreams and all our aspirations for progression. Children are the culmination of our evolution as a society; the wonderful outcome of all our hardships and subsequent triumphs. Our efforts to educate and mold them into productive citizens are essentially investments in our own future. The sad reality is that not every child is born into an environment that will mold them into being the Nelson Mandelas and Hillary Clintons of their times. Even though I believe, and I'm sure you share my sentiments, that every child has the ability to achieve success....even greatness. In some capacity, many of these lost and misguided children eventually find themselves caught in the web of our nation's juvenile justice system. But instead of recognizing these children's promise, it is further squandered by meaningless incarceration in adult facilities.
...Many have joined in on the "going green" movement in an effort to lessen the negative impact on our environment. Every day, with a little initiative, creativity and a touch of passion, we save refuse otherwise doomed to a landfill, and give it a second life. Salvaged milk jugs become bird feeders, nourishing wildlife. Rescued wood is refurbished and used to provide shelter for the needy through such programs as Habitat for Humanity. Gases that would otherwise be harmful. such as methane, are harnessed and used to power our homes safely and efficiently. With minimal effort we take undesirable, inanimate objects, give them new purpose, a second chance, and reap the rewards. We recycle trash, mere objects with no dreams or fears, things with no heartbeat, simple items with no soul. Yet each day a broken system strips a child of a second chance.
I'm sure we're all familiar with the disciplinary tactic "time-out," in which Children are set in a corner for a short period after misbehavior to reflect on their misdeeds. In many cases this is an effective tactic with children. Often times, incarceration is thought to be synonymous with a "time-out," a time in which people who have committed crimes are removed from society, given time to reflect and learn better habits. In some cases with juveniles, incarceration may be necessary...but juveniles are meant for juvenile facilities conducive to rehabilitation, and even then incarceration should be used sparingly. Some hard nosed proponents of juveniles being charged, sentenced and incarcerated as adults say, "If you commit an adult crime, you should do adult time."
What constitutes an adult crime? Isn't a crime a crime, whether or not it is committed by a child or an adult? The only discernable difference is the offender, and in this difference lies the heart of the issue. It is a scientific fact that an adolescent is incapable of reasoning and thinking as an adult. For this very reason, minors cannot enter into a legal contract, vote, buy or consume alcohol, view an R-rated movie alone in a theater, etc,---they cannot make adult decisions, or fully comprehend their actions and the inherent consequences of their actions like adults. So how can the system rationalize charging minors as adults, sentencing them to adult time and incarcerating them in adult facilities if it is psychologically impossible for them to think at the same capacity as adults? It absolutely does not stand to reason. Not only is it illogical, but it serves no ultimate purpose. It is the antithesis of justice. For some reason in our society, the word "justice" has become interchangeable with "punishment." And though punishment is a tool in the arsenal of justice, it is not justice. The Webster's Dictionary defines the word justice as "moral rightness, equity and fairness." Is it morally right to rob a child of a second chance because of the bad hand that life dealt them? There is nothing equitable or fair about turning a blind eye to a child in need. Would true justice not demand that the juvenile system make the best choice for society and child?
Most believe that the Department of Corrections is a favorable environment to a person making a positive change in their life, hence the name "Department of Corrections." Nothing could be further from the truth, especially for an adolescent. Due to an adolescent's natural innocence and impressionability, there are basically two likely outcomes to incarcerating a juvenile in an adult facility. One, they become a victim, which is a re-occurring theme in many troubled adolescents lives already. Two, they are corrupted even further and become infinitely more troubled. The reasoning behind this is simple. Prison is best described as a "predator-prey" society. Those deemed vulnerable physically or mentally are preyed upon. This makes adolescents, who many times are not yet mature physically or mentally, particularly susceptible to being victims of manipulation, physical assault, and in some instances, sexual assault. On the other hand, some do not become prey, but instead themselves turn into predators.
We often describe children and adolescents as "sponges" because of their innate ability to absorb information and learn from their surroundings. Queen Elizabeth II once said, "I learned the way a monkey learns...by watching my parents." Though humorous, it is quite true. We adopt all our morals, values, beliefs and many of our habits from the people and environment in which we are reared, whether those values be good or whether they be bad. This intrinsic impressionability truly makes adolescents products of their environment. Instead of serving as a place to rehabilitate and correct negative behaviors, adult facilities can serve as a "criminal college" of sorts for juveniles. The fact they are at an age in which they are still forming their own personal morals and values makes them substantially susceptible to negative influence in an environment that, at it's very core, is negative. Many individuals incarcerated as juveniles experience a mentally arrested development in which their mental reasoning and maturity remains at the level that it was at the point of incarceration. This arrested development coupled with the adaptation of antisocial behavior is the perfect recipe to create serious career criminals. What was once simply a broken, misguided adolescent is transformed into a depraved and, often times, violent adult, with a warped sense of right and wrong. Once an individual reaches this point, rehabilitation, though not entirely impossible, is grossly unlikely.
What many don't take into consideration is that the vast majority of juvenile offenders who are incarcerated , even with substantial sentences , will be released back into society. Clearly, you can see how incarcerating juveniles in adult facilities is contradictory to the justice system's model of "correction and rehabilitation." It is even more antithetical to Article I, Section 18, of the Indiana Constitution which states, "The penal code shall be based on the principles of reformation and not vindicitve justice." Simply put, incarcerating juveniles as adults in adult facilities creates a breeding ground for criminal degenerates who will inevitably be released back into society.
Indiana and many other states across the nation have, in effect , given up on troubled youth. Troubled juveniles have become collateral damage of the "get tough on crime" mentality that has become prevalent in America's broken justice system. Members of the justice community have yet to acknowledge that the juvenile justice system is ground zero in America's war onj crime. Today's juvenile delinquents are tomorrow's adult offenders. The key to stopping criminal behavior is dealing with it at it's genesis.
First, we must stop waiving juveniles to adult court so liberally. It serves no constructive purpose, but rather victimizes and criminally indoctrinates juvenile offenders at the taxpayers expense. Secondly, we must reform our juvenile justice system and facilities. The majority of men currently incarcerated with me said their criminal behavior began as juveniles. Many were incarcerated and felt that incarceration was merely a stepping stone to their incarceration as adults. It served not to discourage criminal behavior but actually, in many cases, was a catalyst to further criminal behavior. Troubled behavior is a manifestation of underlying issues in adolescents. There is always smoke before there is fire. It is up to mus as a society to recognize this. If your driving and see your engine light on, you don't drive straight to the junkyard to have the car destroyed. You take the car to the mechanic, identify the problem and fix it. The same should be true of juveniles. The very innocence3 and impressionability that make incarcerating juveniles as adults so fundamentally wrong make them excellent candidates for rehabilitation. By tackling the problem at the juvenile level, we can drastically reduce the amount of juveniles who become adult offenders. This, in turn, would both significantly reduce the criminal population and the costs of incarceration.
It was Albert Einstein who said "We can't solve problems using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." It's blantantly obvious that our system is essentially broken, and it's clear as it becomes progressively worse that the problems won't solve itself. We as a society must approach this issue with the same bravery and ingenuity that made the civil rights movement a success...with the same persistence and conviction that afforded us the victory in the battle for women's suffrage. It's that type of forward thinking and unity that will allow us to overcome this and other obstacles as a nation. In the words of Henry Miller:
Life goes on whether we act as cowards or heroes...everything we shut our eyes to, run away from, everything we deny, denigrate or despise serves to defeat us in the end. What seems nasty, painful, evil can become a source of beauty, joy, and strength, if faced with an open mind.
If you saw a child who was lost, would you allow him or her to wander, dejected and alone? If you saw a child hurt, could you turn your back on their suffering? Yes, as Henry Miller said, life will move on whether we act as cowards or heroes. But we hold the key to correcting an injustice and saving troubled adolescents from a life of loneliness, hardship and suffering. We can recycle their futures
I am currently conducting research for a proposal that I believe will be instrumental in correcting this disparity. My reason for writing this essay is to bring awareness to this issue. By doing so, I hope to prevent countless adolescents from being doomed to a life of crime and subsequent incarceration. I welcome anyone who would like to assist or contribute in any way. You may contact me at the following address:
Landis J. Reynolds
157028 PF-18
WVCF-P.O.Box 1111
Carlisle, In. 47838
Recycled Futures
by
Landis J. Reynolds
It has frequently been said that children are the key to our future. In them rest our hopes, our dreams and all our aspirations for progression. Children are the culmination of our evolution as a society; the wonderful outcome of all our hardships and subsequent triumphs. Our efforts to educate and mold them into productive citizens are essentially investments in our own future. The sad reality is that not every child is born into an environment that will mold them into being the Nelson Mandelas and Hillary Clintons of their times. Even though I believe, and I'm sure you share my sentiments, that every child has the ability to achieve success....even greatness. In some capacity, many of these lost and misguided children eventually find themselves caught in the web of our nation's juvenile justice system. But instead of recognizing these children's promise, it is further squandered by meaningless incarceration in adult facilities.
...Many have joined in on the "going green" movement in an effort to lessen the negative impact on our environment. Every day, with a little initiative, creativity and a touch of passion, we save refuse otherwise doomed to a landfill, and give it a second life. Salvaged milk jugs become bird feeders, nourishing wildlife. Rescued wood is refurbished and used to provide shelter for the needy through such programs as Habitat for Humanity. Gases that would otherwise be harmful. such as methane, are harnessed and used to power our homes safely and efficiently. With minimal effort we take undesirable, inanimate objects, give them new purpose, a second chance, and reap the rewards. We recycle trash, mere objects with no dreams or fears, things with no heartbeat, simple items with no soul. Yet each day a broken system strips a child of a second chance.
I'm sure we're all familiar with the disciplinary tactic "time-out," in which Children are set in a corner for a short period after misbehavior to reflect on their misdeeds. In many cases this is an effective tactic with children. Often times, incarceration is thought to be synonymous with a "time-out," a time in which people who have committed crimes are removed from society, given time to reflect and learn better habits. In some cases with juveniles, incarceration may be necessary...but juveniles are meant for juvenile facilities conducive to rehabilitation, and even then incarceration should be used sparingly. Some hard nosed proponents of juveniles being charged, sentenced and incarcerated as adults say, "If you commit an adult crime, you should do adult time."
What constitutes an adult crime? Isn't a crime a crime, whether or not it is committed by a child or an adult? The only discernable difference is the offender, and in this difference lies the heart of the issue. It is a scientific fact that an adolescent is incapable of reasoning and thinking as an adult. For this very reason, minors cannot enter into a legal contract, vote, buy or consume alcohol, view an R-rated movie alone in a theater, etc,---they cannot make adult decisions, or fully comprehend their actions and the inherent consequences of their actions like adults. So how can the system rationalize charging minors as adults, sentencing them to adult time and incarcerating them in adult facilities if it is psychologically impossible for them to think at the same capacity as adults? It absolutely does not stand to reason. Not only is it illogical, but it serves no ultimate purpose. It is the antithesis of justice. For some reason in our society, the word "justice" has become interchangeable with "punishment." And though punishment is a tool in the arsenal of justice, it is not justice. The Webster's Dictionary defines the word justice as "moral rightness, equity and fairness." Is it morally right to rob a child of a second chance because of the bad hand that life dealt them? There is nothing equitable or fair about turning a blind eye to a child in need. Would true justice not demand that the juvenile system make the best choice for society and child?
Most believe that the Department of Corrections is a favorable environment to a person making a positive change in their life, hence the name "Department of Corrections." Nothing could be further from the truth, especially for an adolescent. Due to an adolescent's natural innocence and impressionability, there are basically two likely outcomes to incarcerating a juvenile in an adult facility. One, they become a victim, which is a re-occurring theme in many troubled adolescents lives already. Two, they are corrupted even further and become infinitely more troubled. The reasoning behind this is simple. Prison is best described as a "predator-prey" society. Those deemed vulnerable physically or mentally are preyed upon. This makes adolescents, who many times are not yet mature physically or mentally, particularly susceptible to being victims of manipulation, physical assault, and in some instances, sexual assault. On the other hand, some do not become prey, but instead themselves turn into predators.
We often describe children and adolescents as "sponges" because of their innate ability to absorb information and learn from their surroundings. Queen Elizabeth II once said, "I learned the way a monkey learns...by watching my parents." Though humorous, it is quite true. We adopt all our morals, values, beliefs and many of our habits from the people and environment in which we are reared, whether those values be good or whether they be bad. This intrinsic impressionability truly makes adolescents products of their environment. Instead of serving as a place to rehabilitate and correct negative behaviors, adult facilities can serve as a "criminal college" of sorts for juveniles. The fact they are at an age in which they are still forming their own personal morals and values makes them substantially susceptible to negative influence in an environment that, at it's very core, is negative. Many individuals incarcerated as juveniles experience a mentally arrested development in which their mental reasoning and maturity remains at the level that it was at the point of incarceration. This arrested development coupled with the adaptation of antisocial behavior is the perfect recipe to create serious career criminals. What was once simply a broken, misguided adolescent is transformed into a depraved and, often times, violent adult, with a warped sense of right and wrong. Once an individual reaches this point, rehabilitation, though not entirely impossible, is grossly unlikely.
What many don't take into consideration is that the vast majority of juvenile offenders who are incarcerated , even with substantial sentences , will be released back into society. Clearly, you can see how incarcerating juveniles in adult facilities is contradictory to the justice system's model of "correction and rehabilitation." It is even more antithetical to Article I, Section 18, of the Indiana Constitution which states, "The penal code shall be based on the principles of reformation and not vindicitve justice." Simply put, incarcerating juveniles as adults in adult facilities creates a breeding ground for criminal degenerates who will inevitably be released back into society.
Indiana and many other states across the nation have, in effect , given up on troubled youth. Troubled juveniles have become collateral damage of the "get tough on crime" mentality that has become prevalent in America's broken justice system. Members of the justice community have yet to acknowledge that the juvenile justice system is ground zero in America's war onj crime. Today's juvenile delinquents are tomorrow's adult offenders. The key to stopping criminal behavior is dealing with it at it's genesis.
First, we must stop waiving juveniles to adult court so liberally. It serves no constructive purpose, but rather victimizes and criminally indoctrinates juvenile offenders at the taxpayers expense. Secondly, we must reform our juvenile justice system and facilities. The majority of men currently incarcerated with me said their criminal behavior began as juveniles. Many were incarcerated and felt that incarceration was merely a stepping stone to their incarceration as adults. It served not to discourage criminal behavior but actually, in many cases, was a catalyst to further criminal behavior. Troubled behavior is a manifestation of underlying issues in adolescents. There is always smoke before there is fire. It is up to mus as a society to recognize this. If your driving and see your engine light on, you don't drive straight to the junkyard to have the car destroyed. You take the car to the mechanic, identify the problem and fix it. The same should be true of juveniles. The very innocence3 and impressionability that make incarcerating juveniles as adults so fundamentally wrong make them excellent candidates for rehabilitation. By tackling the problem at the juvenile level, we can drastically reduce the amount of juveniles who become adult offenders. This, in turn, would both significantly reduce the criminal population and the costs of incarceration.
It was Albert Einstein who said "We can't solve problems using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." It's blantantly obvious that our system is essentially broken, and it's clear as it becomes progressively worse that the problems won't solve itself. We as a society must approach this issue with the same bravery and ingenuity that made the civil rights movement a success...with the same persistence and conviction that afforded us the victory in the battle for women's suffrage. It's that type of forward thinking and unity that will allow us to overcome this and other obstacles as a nation. In the words of Henry Miller:
Life goes on whether we act as cowards or heroes...everything we shut our eyes to, run away from, everything we deny, denigrate or despise serves to defeat us in the end. What seems nasty, painful, evil can become a source of beauty, joy, and strength, if faced with an open mind.
If you saw a child who was lost, would you allow him or her to wander, dejected and alone? If you saw a child hurt, could you turn your back on their suffering? Yes, as Henry Miller said, life will move on whether we act as cowards or heroes. But we hold the key to correcting an injustice and saving troubled adolescents from a life of loneliness, hardship and suffering. We can recycle their futures
I am currently conducting research for a proposal that I believe will be instrumental in correcting this disparity. My reason for writing this essay is to bring awareness to this issue. By doing so, I hope to prevent countless adolescents from being doomed to a life of crime and subsequent incarceration. I welcome anyone who would like to assist or contribute in any way. You may contact me at the following address:
Landis J. Reynolds
157028 PF-18
WVCF-P.O.Box 1111
Carlisle, In. 47838
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)