You are currently browsing the A Voice for Juvenile Prison Reform weblog archives for the day 10. July 2009.
10. July 2009 by Rev Young.
I don’t think most of us decided one day that we were going to involve ourselves in the fight for juvenile justice reform. I believe almost all of us came into this work as a result of an incident or a person that came into our lives and awakened us to the need for reform. For me? It was my son and the criminal case that involved him. Once we were pulled into this frenzied nightmare, I realized how many cases of injustice and overly punitive measures there were.
For many of you it may be hard to understand. I know that when I first began to visit my son at the county jail, I had a very narrow view of who he was housed with and the families involved. I soon heard some incredible stories that began to chip away at my preconceived ideas of criminals, justice and prison. Once my son was sentenced to prison, I knew about injustice personally. No matter what we tried, no matter the violations of his rights, no matter the lack of evidence, no matter the injustice, they wanted to put my son away and that was that.
The sad part is, there are many stories like that and stories even worse than that. How about the young man who has suffered at the hand of his abusers for his entire life, finally stands up for himself and winds up killing his abuser. What about the kid who is trying to pay off his mothers drug debt by cooperating with her supplier and ends up being at the scene of a murder which costs him his life.
The truth is, when a kid get’s involved in criminal activity, there is usually a lifetime of tragedy behind the scene. That is what this nun found as she came to know a young woman who was sentenced to spend her entire life in prison. Read on….
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20090710/OPINION01/907100346/-1/SPORTS12
Basu: Dreamers & Doers series - Nun seeks to free youths destined to die in prison
REKHA BASU
rbasu@dmreg.com
Twenty years ago, Sister JoAnne Talarico stepped inside a women’s prison to visit someone she didn’t know, and embarked on a journey and a relationship that would become driving forces for her life’s work.
Talarico, 72, of Des Moines, is a nun with the Sisters of Humility of Mary in Davenport. Her commitment to social justice has taken her to El Salvador, seen her marching and speaking out for civil rights and advocating for homeless veterans.
But the relationship with a young female inmate named Christine Lockheart made her work personal, challenging basic assumptions about crime and punishment and giving her “the daughter I never had.”
Talarico met Lockheart when she took over visiting the Mitchellville inmate after a nun who had been doing it moved away. She had never before been in a prison or known a criminal, and assumed whatever the young woman had done warranted the life sentence she got.
Lockheart was convicted of murder four years earlier at age 17. The victim was a man for whom she had cleaned house. Talarico says Lockheart hadn’t anticipated the outcome when she accompanied her boyfriend to the victim’s house to ask for a loan. They left when he said no, but the boyfriend went back in the house and stabbed him.
Lockheart didn’t directly participate but also didn’t immediately turn her boyfriend in. Iowa law permits accomplices to be charged and punished the same as the killers. It also requires mandatory life sentences for Class A felonies committed from age 14 on.
Twenty years of weekly visits to Lockheart, now nearly 42, have convinced Talarico that’s wrong. People under 18 can’t even vote or drink or sign contracts, she notes. “They are children and should be treated as children in the criminal-justice system. They don’t always see the consequences of their actions and are highly susceptible to peer pressures.” And they can be reformed.
There are 44 people serving life sentences in Iowa who were under 18 when they committed their crimes. That’s out of 2,225 in the 42 states with such laws. Amnesty International says 59 percent were first-time offenders. Many of those laws were passed in the 1980s by lawmakers responding to gang violence and wanting to be tough on crime, says Talarico.
She has watched an uncertain young woman mature into an articulate, creative mentor to others, getting scholarships and taking courses through the University of Iowa. “I’m inspired by the fact that she stays so positive. Sometimes I think maybe she does it just for me, but I see all the beautiful things she does … I don’t know that I could be as positive.”
She adds, “My heart aches for her that one mistake just ruined her whole life.” So Talarico is determined to get the law changed.
Nearly three years ago, she attended an Amnesty International conference in Des Moines and met others who shared her concerns. They formed the Iowa Coalition to Oppose Life Without the Possibility of Parole for Youth. Talarico spent most of the last session at the Capitol lobbying for a bill (HF 43, SF 74) that would allow work or parole releases for Class A felons who committed their crimes before turning 18. They’d have to serve 15 years before the parole board could consider, among other things, their age, maturity and susceptibility to outside pressures when the crimes were committed.
The bill never made it out of committee. Talarico believes lawmakers fear being seen as soft on crime when they’re up for re-election, and 2010 is an election year.
Phyllis Stevens is the coalition’s board president. “She’s fabulous,” she said of Talarico. “She’s conversational. She brings a nice personal style to it, but she’s also knowledgeable, not just a ‘bleeding heart.’”
As a nun who believes in redemption, Talarico offers a compelling dimension to the debate, says Stevens. You wouldn’t know it to see her, since she doesn’t wear a habit. One legislator discovered it after his rather forceful outburst at a committee meeting, then apologized, red-faced, Stevens said. But Talarico wasn’t bothered.
Asked whether her faith drives her to this cause, Talarico says, “It’s a justice issue. In a way, I’m acting on my own but in accordance with our laws and beliefs and our mission to the world.”
She answered the call to service at a time when people were drawn into lifetime commitments, she says. “I said ‘forever’ at one time, but I don’t know that we live in a society where people want to do things forever.”
So, ironically, someone who pledged a lifetime commitment to a calling has found her cause in helping undo a lifetime commitment imposed on someone else.
For Lockheart, the only way out of prison now would be a grant of clemency by the governor. She applied, unsuccessfully, in 2003.
But she’s not giving up, and neither will Talarico, who hopes that as the coalition grows broader - especially with neurologists, psychologists and experts in the youthful brain - more lawmakers will listen.
“You just have to keep repeating over and over that we’re dealing with children,” says the former teacher. “Children sometimes do horrible things, but we cannot dispose of them.”
Call it idealism, call it spiritual, call it the instinctive, compassionate response of an older person to a younger one in trouble. Or call it the Lord’s work. Whatever you call it, Talarico’s message is both profound and profoundly simple: Our youth are our future. We cannot afford to give up on them.
Additional Facts
Get involved
- Contact your legislator to support reviving the bill introduced last session to eliminate Iowa’s mandatory life sentences for youth. Or contact the bill’s sponsors, Beth Wessel-Kroeschell, D-Ames, in the House, and Pam Jochum, D-Dubuque, in the Senate.
- Join the Iowa Coalition to Oppose Life Without the Possibility of Parole for Youth. Sign up online through its Web site: http://www.ia4juvenilejustice.org/
- Link here to view a video about a state of Missouri program to keep youthful offenders out of prison.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rNo1KDZnuo&feature=channel_page
Posted in Prison Reform Advocates, Juvenile Reform Advocates, From Families of Juvenile Offenders | Print | No Comments »
10. July 2009 by Rev Young.
As we address this issue of sentencing reform, mandatory minimums, prison over crowding and the misuse of power by District Attorneys through Direct File Statutes, I have found something of interest. For the most part, lawmakers are unwilling to be the first one on their block to propose and stand behind criminal justice reforms. They do not want to be the first to “test the waters” and see what kind of back lash would come as a result of these proposed changes.
Fortunately there are the exceptions. I applaud those lawmakers who see the error of our current legislation and want it changed. The truth of the matter is, it is about justice. The truth of the matter is, these are cruel and unusual punishments. The truth of the matter is we are not being fair or just, when it comes to juvenile justice issues. It is a question of morals, basic human rights, constitutionality and the future of our nation. Morally? Because we, as citizens of this country, are responsible for the children and insuring that they are protected, cared for and directed so that they become the next workers, business owners and leaders. Human Rights? Since when did we believe it was okay for any other country in the world to over look the needs of it’s children and to punish it’s children severly without having to answer to us for their actions? We are not above those same requirements. Constitutional? Cruel and unusual punishment.
There is hope. There are states all across the nation who are working to change the juvenile justice system and, at the same time, looking at ways to prevent criminal behavior in juveniles. Below are articles from two such states.
Ventura County
State Sen. Leland Yee, D-San Francisco, is haunted by the case of a Riverside girl who was 16 when she killed the man who sexually abused her and lured her into prostitution. She was sentenced to life without parole and, today, at age 31, Sara Kruzan has been rehabilitated.
However, “She is locked up in jail, and she is going to die there,” Sen. Yee told The Associated Press last month.
Because of this case and hundreds of others, Sen. Yee has introduced legislation that would allow courts to review life-without-the-possibility-of-parole sentences given to minors. If the inmate met three of at least eight criteria, a court would grant a new sentencing hearing — but not necessarily change the sentence — to consider making a prisoner eligible for parole after he or she has served at least 25 years locked up.
The Star supports this bill, which takes into account that minors are different from adults, a fact recognized by the existence of a juvenile-justice system in the U.S., with sentencing guidelines and rules that differ significantly from those in the adult system.
Sen. Yee, who has a doctorate in child psychology, told the Oakland Tribune: “Adolescent impulse control, planning and critical thinking skills are still not yet fully developed. Children have an extraordinary capacity for rehabilitation.”
A report, “Cruel and Unusual Punishment: Sentencing 13- and 14-Year-Old Children to Die in Prison,” by The Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit law organization in Montgomery, Ala., states: “Kids too young to drive a car or go to a scary movie by themselves” are “subjected to the harshest possible prison sentence despite widespread acknowledgment by experts, parents, teachers, doctors and courts that children tend to be incapable of making mature choices, that they are vulnerable to negative influences and peer pressure, and that they are powerless to protect themselves from dysfunctional and dangerous home environments. The majority of these children were condemned to die in prison by mandatory sentencing laws that preclude the sentencer from considering the child’s age, maturity, or capacity for change.”
Human Rights Watch, an international watchdog group for human rights, supports Sen. Yee’s Senate Bill 399, noting there are 2,380 people in the U.S. serving life sentences for crimes they committed as minors, and just 12 in the rest of the world.
In California, there are 250 inmates given life-without-parole sentences for crimes they committed before they turned 18.
Such sentences violate international law and the Convention of the Rights of the Child, which has been ratified by every country in the world, except Somalia and the United States.
Colorado outlawed life-without-the-possibility-of-parole sentences for minors in 2006.
SB399 in California does not mandate a sentence be changed for the inmate sentenced as a minor to life without parole. It only grants a new sentencing hearing after the inmate has served at least 10 years behind bars and only if the inmate meets at least three of eight criteria. In addition, any new sentence would make the prisoner eligible for parole only after he or she has been imprisoned for at least 25 years.
SB399 passed out of the state Senate last week and is headed to an Assembly Public Safety Committee on Tuesday.
The Star urges the Assembly committee members to approve this bill.
June 29, 2009
One-size-fits-all justice doesn’t work for Mich.
Juveniles in Michigan can be given the state’s maximum prison sentence, which is life without the possibility of parole. Jeff Gerritt, an editorial writer for the Detroit Free Press, thinks that is a barbaric practice. See why in this opinion piece, which originally appeared in its entirety in the Free Press.
Michigan has outlawed second chances for some juveniles, garnering international shame for imposing the maximum adult penalty — life without parole — for children as young as 14.
The time is right to end this unreasonable and inhuman law that, in effect, declares young people beyond redemption. … As Michigan Department of Corrections Director Patricia Caruso has said, we must recognize the difference between those we fear and those we are simply mad at.
Arguments made by some Michigan prosecutors that they use the juvenile lifer law judiciously and with discretion — even if true — are off point. Many prosecutors, hunting for votes, have not exercised restraint or judgment. The only way to keep some of them from unnecessarily throwing away the keys on a juvenile offender is to change the law. …
There are serious moral and constitutional problems with sentencing juveniles to mandatory life sentences. That’s why Congress convened a hearing recently on legislation to eliminate life-without-parole sentences for juveniles, and the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to take up two Florida cases challenging such sentences.
Michigan, too, is re-examining juvenile lifer laws that impose one-size-fits-all justice. Bills in the state House and Senate would eliminate mandatory life sentences for juveniles and restore parole eligibility to those serving such sentences. …
The state House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Rep. Mark Meadows, D-East Lansing, has already tacked on some debilitating amendments to the bills, including lowering the applicable age to 16 and under and increasing the minimum time served from 10 years to 15 years. Excluding 17-year-olds, even though they are minors, would erase the possibility of parole for 129 of Michigan’s 346 juvenile lifers.
The committee might also, for the first time, require that prosecutors, judges and victims’ families approve a parole hearing. If that happens, we might as well stick with what we have. Would any Michigan prosecutor running for re-election ever OK a hearing for anyone convicted of a homicide?
On the Senate side, state Sen. Wayne Kuipers, R-Holland, who heads the Judiciary Committee, would not commit even to given the juvenile lifer bills a hearing. … When corrections and criminal justice reform are dominating the public debate, no state legislator should prevent a hearing on an issue that the nation’s highest court and governing body are taking on.
These bills would not … unleash violent criminals. In fact, they would not, by themselves, release one juvenile lifer. They would only give them a chance at parole after serving 10 years or 15 years, and some have already served decades.
Michigan’s Parole Board is one of America’s toughest. Few juvenile offenders would get released after their first hearing. Still, offering some hope of freedom would provide a powerful incentive for prisoners to act right and change. Without hope, people become dangerous, or spiritually dead.
Science has proved what all parents already know: Juvenile brains are more impulsive and unstable than those of adults. They don’t have the same rights as adults, nor should they suffer the same penalties. …
People, especially young people, can change and contribute to society. But hundreds of juvenile offenders in Michigan prisons won’t get that chance unless legislators and Gov. Jennifer Granholm lift the state’s barbaric ban on second chances.
Posted in Legal News, Prison Reform Advocates, Juvenile Reform Advocates | Print | No Comments »