We Need Fair Sentencing For Youth #stopH4184

The copy below is from Fair Sentencing for Youth and folks this needs ACTION ASAP. Many other MA groups are supporting this too–criminal defense attorneys, ACLU folks, many youth orgs., activists and those who care about justice in Massachusetts! HERE IS THE NEW BILL proposed by Rep Chris Markey that puts together other previous versions and you can download and read the .pdf file. PLEASE TAKE ACTION and also you can tweet #stopH4184 and #maleg to your reps’ and senators’ twitter accounts, etc.

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“We just learned today that the Massachusetts Joint Committee on the Judiciary is reporting a bill (called now H.4184, redrafted from other bills) out to the House for a floor vote this Wednesday.

Unfortunately, the redrafted bill contains several provisions which significantly undermine the Supreme Judicial Court’s recent decision granting individuals sentenced under Massachusetts unconstitutional former sentencing scheme a meaningful chance at parole after they had served at least 15 years in prison.

The bill sets the earliest period of parole eligibility at 20 years for those convicted of felony murder, and 25 years in other cases.  The bill also gives the Parole Board the unprecedented ability to impose a 10 year wait before an individual who is denied parole has the chance to go before the parole board again. We believe these provisions profoundly undermine the letter and spirit of the SJC’s decision, failing to recognize the unique capacity of youth to change and rehabilitate themselves, and allowing for excessively long time periods between parole hearings.

THIS TEN YEAR SETBACK APPLIES TO PERSONS SENTENCED AS ADULTS AS WELL AS THOSE SENTENCED AS JUVENILES – ALL LIFERS. Evidence-based practices tell us that parole hearings should occur with regularity and should motivate prisoners to grow and change. Parole hearings should be used to acknowledge a prisoner’s challenges, provide guidance and identify attainable goals, and measure the prisoner’s progress.  Extending the setback period for lifers to 10 years would do exactly the opposite.  

In addition THIS 10 YEAR SETBACK APPLIES TO PERSONS SENTENCED AS ADULTS AS WELL AS THOSE SENTENCED AS JUVENILES – ALL LIFERS. Evidence-based practices tell us that parole hearings should occur with regularity and should motivate prisoners to grow and change. Parole hearings should be used to acknowledge a prisoner’s challenges, provide guidance and identify attainable goals, and measure the prisoner’s progress.  Extending the setback period for lifers to 10 years would do exactly the opposite.

Please CONTACT YOUR LEGISLATORS TODAY to urge them to reject these extreme sentencing provisions for youth.  Let them know that you support these critical ingredients to fair sentencing for youth:

1.  No youth should have to wait longer than 15 years before having a first opportunity to go before the Parole Board.

2.  No person should be made to wait longer than 5 years between parole hearings.

TIME IS RUNNING SHORT, SO PLEASE CALL or EMAIL YOUR LEGISLATORS IMMEDIATELY. 

If you have a moment, please let us know how your calls go by emailing lindamalik@cfjj.org.  Thank you for supporting fair sentencing for youth!

Linda Malik
Fair Sentencing Campaign Coordinator
lindamalik@cfjj.org
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Women and Bail

Please see my new post at the Women Review of Books Blog: “Money, Justice, and Bail:”

“I met Zoe Giannousis on a wintry evening at the community college in Lowell, Massachusetts, where I facilitate my Changing Lives Through Literature (CLTL) program. Along with Zoe, there were eight women, all struggling with court issues, family conflicts, and the dark well of abuse, addiction, and crime. In CLTL they gather with a judge, two probation officers, and me for a reading group—an alternative sentencing collaboration between academia and the courts that began almost 25 years ago, and that has now spread across the state and the country, and across the Atlantic to England. For the next fourteen weeks, as a condition of probation, they dive into animated discussions of books including Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Ann Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant.

Unlike the majority of the women in CLTL, however, Zoe had served time. This was not because of an actual crime she had committed. She had been locked up in the Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI)-Framingham in the Awaiting Trial Unit, where, according to the Massachusetts Women’s Justice Network (MWJN), more than forty percent of the women being held have not been found guilty.”  MORE

Reflections on Parole

It’s been a challenging month in Massachusetts, if you care about meaningful opportunities for prisoners to change. While there was the wonderful passage (finally) of the anti-shackling bill, and the history-making juvenile lifer bids for release (which I will be writing more about at a later date), there was also the recent Legislative Judicial Committee hearing on a truly wrong-headed bill insisting that juveniles who who commit homicide should have to serve thirty-five years before parole. That bill goes against prevailing trends across the country as I wrote about in “Massachusetts Legislature: Don’t Set Back the Clock” which appeared here, on Truthout, and with a Texas-style twist, at The Rag Blog.

It is hard to imagine that another disaster-in-the-making would come down the pike so quickly. But on Wednesday, May 28, the Judiciary Committee heard H4084, “An Act relative to limiting recurring parole hearings for persons convicted of second degree murder.” While the Massachusetts Parole Board can currently make potential parolees wait five years if they receive a No vote from the Board (i.e. get a setback) this bill would insist that they wait 10 years in between hearings. In order to receive parole under any circumstance a parolee would still need to receive positive votes from 2/3 of the Parole Board members.

Research across the U.S. shows that those behind bars thrive on hope. Many work to change their attitudes through self-reflection, programming, and hard work, and even more so, when they have the hope of early release. For lifers this is particularly significant because they do so much time in prison before eligibility. A five-year setback is a long time, but it is not out of line with national standards. But hope for a meaningful chance for parole—not automatic release but opportunity— is certainly part of what motivates prisoners and what the newest parole proposal lacks.

Backed by Rep. Garrett J. Bradley (Hingham), H4084 if enacted, would be called “Leslie’s Law” in reference to the murder of Leslie Haynes who was tragically killed at age twenty. Bradley wants to stop what he feels is the “reoccurring nightmare every five years” for families and friends of loved ones who were murder victims. This is not to say that advocates who oppose this bill have no sympathy for families like the Haynes family of Hingham whose daughter and sister, Leslie, was killed. Nothing can replace such a loss or ease such pain.

But it is to say, as noted parole expert and Attorney Patricia Garin pointed out, representing the Coalition for Effective Public Safety at the hearing, that there are many ways victims can offer their opposition without actually attending hearings. Garin also pointed out that there is really not a “tradeoff” here. Victims’ advocates can read letters at hearings from people who feel it is too difficult to attend. When Representative Christopher Markey (Dartmouth), House Vice-Chair, asked Garin if it might be a good idea to give the Board discretion to go up to 10 years for a setback but not require it, she said that in 1996 when the 5 year setback was established, it became the setback most commonly used by the Parole Board. This would certainly happen with a 10 year setback. She also stated here was no support anywhere in the literature for a this kind of paroling policy.

Patty Garin and Max SternPatricia Garin and Max Stern testifying at the Judiciary Committee.

Max D. Stern, also a partner at Stern, Shapiro, Weissberg & Garin LLP, represented the Massachusetts Association Committee of Defense Lawyers as he testified against the bill. He made the excellent point that this bill would actually be a sentencing tool. It would conflate 1st and 2nd-degree murders, making them “almost equivalent” adding to the length of time behind bars. Since the intended purpose of the Parole Board is not to sentence people but to judge their behavior in prison and their growth, this could be problematic. Plus, judges currently have the ability to sentence 2nd degree murder defendants anywhere from 15-25 years before parole eligibility. In other words, they have latitude already. If someone who was sentenced to 25 years came up for parole and was denied, they then would have to wait 10 more years. Since most applicants are turned down the first time they come up for parole, the Parole Board would edge closer to being a sentencing body. Said Stern, in his opinion, “2nd degree murder pleas would become extinct.”

Committee Chair, Sen. William Brownsberger (Belmont) seemed interested to see the science from Stern and Garin. He might begin with the fact that lifers are rearrested much less than all other prisoners. As I wrote in Boston Magazine in 2013, “the best case for parole actually comes from those who have committed some of the worst crimes. According to a 2009 study by the Michigan-based Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public Spending, parolees originally convicted of homicide re-offended the least of all groups of ex-prisoners. Of 2,558 homicide parolees in that state, only 2.7 percent were returned to prison for any new crime, and only 0.5 percent were returned for another homicide. Other states have observed similar trends.”

Joel Thompson of Prisoners Legal Services (PLS), and a Harvard student from the Prison Legal Assistance Project also testified against the bill, as did Susan Tordella of Toastmasters, a volunteer group that goes behind bars.

Massachusetts is just beginning to come back from low paroling rates which hinder public safety, increase over-crowding, and are exorbitantly expensive for taxpayers. Not to mention that correction officers do not want to work in overcrowded prisons with people who feel despair. According to a White Paper on Parole written by Garin and attorneys at PLS in 2013: “The U.S. Department of Justice’s National Institute of Corrections (NIC) and the Pew Center on the States recognize that success increases and, accordingly, recidivism rates decrease” when Parole Boards motivate prisoners and parolees to change.

Massachusetts need not make another backwards criminal justice move—away from what is proven good policy, the national trend, and certainly, the right thing to do.

Prison Playwrights

It’s Memorial Day weekend and many of us are still in shock from the horrible killings that happened in Santa Barbara. And so, while I turn over the intersection of gun violence, mental illness and misogyny,  I turn away too, for comfort, to the places I find hope.

Playwright.Prison

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Manuel Boras, photo credit, Life of The Law

So many men and women behind bars are trying to better themselves through education, and these stories are often on page 8 or 23, tucked in a corner of the paper, or at the end of a series of online clicks. But they are hopeful stories about humanity, inspiring us that many people choose change, transforming attitudes and hearts.

“It’s a bitter irony to admit that through imprisonment the world was opened up to me,” said Manuel Boras, who entered the Bard Prison Initiative behind bars and found playwriting enabled him to express himself with words. Now, outside, he recently completed a fellowship through the New York Public Theater’s Emerging Playwrights program and he is working on a play, Starting Over: Coming Home, about the difficulties prisoners and families face upon reentry.

Playwriting seems a natural for people who are trapped but see so much happening around them. They hear dialog that is often unbelievable to those of us on the outside. They see despair, fights, small acts of kindness. They live with a set of values different from that in so-called “civil society” that doesn’t promote expression. But writing does. And programs that offer playwriting to prisoners are more plentiful than you might think. As part of its recognition of prisoner writing behind bars, Pen America gives an award every year to an aspiring playwright. In 2013, it was Derek Trumbo, whose short play Conviction is reproduced online here. Trumbo’s play was performed in New York on March 24th, 2014, by Voices Inside/Out as one of five short prisoner-authored plays at the Engelman Recital Hall of Baruch Performing Arts Center in Manhattan.

Writing plays helps to exercise the mind, said a young prisoner in an article in The Oregonian. Denton, a twenty-four-year old confined to MacLaren Youth Facility in Woodburn, Oregon, struggled with drug addiction—heroin and meth—and was locked away for assault. Behind bars, he found writing.  “I think a lot of different things,” he said, and writing is “the only way I can get my visions out.”

In the 1970’s when I lived in California after college, I saw a play written by a playwright in prison that had a huge impact on my life. The play was The Cage by Rick Cluchey. Cluchey got into theatre in 1957, when he was serving a life sentence at San Quentin Prison for armed robbery. He heard about the famed production of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot put on for the prisoners at San Quentin, but at the time was considered a “security threat,” so did not attend. Only later did he put on his own production of the play behind bars, after he founded the San Quentin Drama Workshop, and his production also touched the prisoners with the notion that Godot never arrives.

Cluchey wrote The Cage in 1965, a year before his life sentence was commuted by then-Governor Pat Brown. It was a drama about the realities of prison life, and once outside, Cluchey found the San Francisco Actors Workshop in 1967 and produced the play, complete with former prisoners from his work behind bars; they toured dozens of campuses across the country in the ’60s and ’70s. That’s how I saw it. It was perhaps the most powerful experience I have ever had in theatre, watching men tell what prison was really like, listening to Cluchey’s words, like Beckett’s, that deal with the human condition. And seeing that cage replicated on stage, a space where no one could exit from.

Per an article in the LATimes, Cluchey’s tours with The Cage led him to Europe, “where in 1976–after years of correspondence and much persistence–he became Beckett’s assistant director for a Berlin staging of Waiting for Godot.” Imagine! A playwright now, a former prisoner sentenced to life and a man working with his hero.

Below is a clip of a production of The Cage re-staged in 1987 at a theatre in L.A. It is not the production I saw with former prisoners who truly captured the devastating cage in their performance like no one else could. But still Cluchey’s words pack a punch and show that he made meaning out of the madness he experienced and was able to turn his life around through art.

Massachusetts Legislature: Don’t Set Back the Clock

This past Wednesday, May 14, while many in Massachusetts were preparing for hockey playoffs, or celebrating graduations from college, or merely enjoying the first breaths of spring, tragedy was front and center at the Massachusetts State House.

CPCS and Brown PeaceBarbara Kaban (left), Committee for Public Council Services (CPCS) and Tina Chery, Founder of the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute in Boston.

There, advocates, victims, elected representatives and officials came to testify about what to do with our juveniles who commit homicide—and although this is relatively rare, only twenty over the past thirty years said forensic child psychologist Richard Barnum in his written testimony—it is so awful to lose a loved one to murder that the outcry was understandable. Families who had experienced such losses spoke eloquently: “I dread Mother’s Day, a reminder of the day my mother was killed,” and “There is no parole from my loss.”

But Massachusetts is in for some difficult years of litigation if it follows the path of Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr who filed a bill setting a minimum of thirty-five years before any juvenile convicted of first-degree murder would be eligible for parole. This was in response to legislation passed this year in Massachusetts that ended the practice of life without parole for juveniles. The bill, S2008, would also set almost impossible standards for our Parole Board to consider such a youth rehabilitated—a potential minefield since the current Parole Board’s release rate has taken a nose dive, some would say, in response to public pressure. In Tarr’s bill, the Board gets no direction to consider factors such as what a prisoner has achieved behind bars, one of the most important principles in determining if someone is ready to be released on parole. The bill is overly harsh.

So why would this bill get us into trouble? Let’s go with legal issues first. In 2012 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that across the country, juvenile life without parole could no longer be a mandatory sentence for youth convicted of first-degree murder, and declared that science had shown us that juveniles were different from adults. Such knowledge needed to be considered at sentencing. In 2013, Massachusetts went further, and as Barbara Kaban, Director of Juvenile Appeals at CPCS, said in her testimony, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) “determined that any death-in-prison sentence for a juvenile is disproportionate punishment in violation of the Massachusetts constitutional prohibition against cruel or unusual punishment.” Such juveniles need to have a meaningful chance at rehabilitation.

Tarr’s bill, gaining momentum after a grisly murder in Essex last year, aims to consider families, he said in his testimony before the Judiciary Committee. But if we do not put a stop to the idea of thirty-five years before parole, Massachusetts could face what Connecticut is facing. A former Justice of Connecticut’s top court, David M. Borden, wrote in an op-ed that his state had on the books a bill that would put it in compliance with the U.S. Supreme Court decisions. The House had passed it in full. He warned that without its passage in the Senate, they’d have “years of expensive and unpredictable litigation” and uncertainty for victims. The Senate let it die without a vote. Many of those in Massachusetts who submitted written testimony against Tarr’s bill cited that endless litigation over legal issues was a definite possibility because S2008 and another bill equally probematic, H.1426, do not seem to honor the spirit of the U.S. Supreme Court decision.

That list of written testimony against these bills was long, and included heavy-hitters such as attorney Bryan Stevenson, who represented the young people in the now-famous 2012 U.S. Supreme Court case I mention above, Miller v. Alabama. It included testimony from a number of youth-centered organizations that have experience with kids and have seen them grow and change; it included a former prisoner who had transformed his life, medical specialists, a former head of the Parole Board, judges, lawyers and youth advocates, as well as CPCS.

Most impressive was Tina Chery. Chery’s son, Louis D. Brown was murdered in 1994, and since that time, she has dedicated her life to helping address community violence.

Chery.Tina_

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tina Chery’s son, Louis D. Brown.

Chery said that there are always two families to consider, the family of the one who was killed and the one whose child wielded the weapon. She said that families preparing to send a loved one to prison find themselves in a similar situation to the families of victims, but rarely receive the help they need to prevent future crimes. “Juveniles must be given meaningful opportunity to change,” she concluded, “and thirty-five years is not a meaningful opportunity.”

To that end, the bill seems based on the idea that juveniles cannot change. Joshua Rovner, State Advocacy Associate at the Washington DC-based Sentencing Project, in a telephone interview, said “A good bill gives an opportunity for individualizing cases and gives a Parole Board the opportunity to show rehabilitation. Opportunity for parole is not release.” He also pointed to Tarr and other members of the Legislature’s demand for thirty-five years before parole eligibility as “mis-characterizing” the requirements in the Supreme Court decision. While the Supreme Court called for individualized sentencing, Tarr’s bill rejects that, said Rovner, almost as if individualized sentencing somehow meant brevity.

Massachusetts should not have a knee-jerk reaction to this incredibly important subject (See Cinelli.) All too often we have made law based on our emotional reactions to tragedy. We should not make law based on emotion rather than on science. While the D.A. of Essex County and the president of the Massachusetts District Attorneys Association, Jonathan Blodgett, was one of the first to testify, he came armed with fury from the recent tragic killing in his county. While the horror his community felt at teacher Colleen Ritzer’s murder was justified, some of his claims were not. He said that brain science is an “evolving science…a very slippery slope.” But certainly, this sounded like the dispute over climate change, and scientists who have spent their lives studying the brain would sharply disagree with Blodgett. For years we have known that juveniles are not adults developmentally, emotionally, and psychologically. Researchers such as clinical scientist, Antoinette Kavanaugh, say adolescent development based on neuroscience shows that kids are different from adults. She insists that techniques like Functional Magnetic Resonance Imagining that are used in brain research are not “new” or “evolving.” The evidence is there and not going away.

So how do we get out of this mess? We might take our lead from other states that are using this as an opportunity to think more deeply about juvenile justice and not react precipitously. Rovner pointed out that twenty-eight states including Massachusetts were affected by the Miller ruling; eight states plus DC had previously banned juvenile life without parole (JLWP), and interestingly this includes Montana, Texas, and Kansas—i.e. not a blue/red divison; fourteen states had allowed JLWP.  But not all used it, including New York, Maine, and Rhode Island. Rovner said it is also not uncommon for states to seek retroactivity so that those already serving first-degree sentences can come up for parole hearings—Massachusetts has 63 such cases.  Texas, Illinois, Nebraska, Iowa, and Mississippi all have sought relief for prisoners already sentenced, i.e. retroactivity.

West Virginia has a law that we might turn to for guidance. When a sentence is issued to a juvenile convicted of life, the Court must consider what are called the “Kagan factors,” based on what Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan said during the famed Miller v Alabama hearing: “(1) Age at the time of the offense; (2) Impetuosity; (3) Family and community environment; (4) Ability to appreciate the risks and consequences of the conduct; (5) Intellectual capacity; (6) The outcomes of a comprehensive mental health evaluation…; (7) Peer or familial pressure; (8) Level of participation in the offense; (9) Ability to participate meaningfully in his or her defense; (10) Capacity for rehabilitation; (11) School records and special education evaluations; (12) Trauma history; (13) Faith and community involvement; (14) Involvement in the child welfare system; and (15) Any other mitigating factor or circumstances.”

And in West Virginia, prisoners sentenced as youth are allowed meaningful chance at rehabilitation and parole eligibility after fifteen years.

The Statehouse News reported that Gov. Deval Patrick had filed his own bill with a twenty-year minimum before parole consideration. This is better than thirty-five years but it still seems to play into the idea that children are similar to adults. Bob Gittens, a former prosecutor, Department of Youth Services commissioner, and Parole Board chair under Gov. Michael Dukakis, testified at the hearing that he fears for an “institutionalization” of children who go into adult prisons, making it more difficult for them to change, and he believes that our parole policy should not be “a one size fits all.” He is concerned about juveniles serving twenty or twenty-five years. “Sooner than later” was his advice.

Gail Garinger, the child advocate for the Commonwealth and a former juvenile judge left the Judiciary Committee with four factors to consider as they deliberated on how to proceed:
*Respect gravity of the offense;
*Public safety: her experience has convinced her that most juveniles can mature into good citizens;
*Regarding the capacity of young people to grow, mature and change, she said, “We cannot give a broad brush stroke to murder and cannot enact a law that only responds to the most horrific acts;”
*Costs associated with incarceration.

Striking the right balance is difficult but Garinger said she thinks fifteen years is the right balance to start seeking parole. She also urged that first degree murder jurisdiction for juveniles be returned to the juvenile court.

And certainly, that’s another important story.