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Episoden
12.11.2019
1 Minute
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Securing Justice: Reforming Our Criminal Legal System
Summary Page
2000 Winning Essay by Peter Buttigieg – Bernie Sanders (JFK
Library)
Pete Buttigieg has been criticized for his handling of
policing. He hopes his criminal justice plan will change that.
(Vox)
Buttigieg Raised $19.1 Million in Third Quarter, Campaign
Says (Yahoo News)
Mehr
17.10.2019
1 Minute
Links
Kamala’s Plan to Transform the Criminal Justice System and
Re-envision Public Safety in America
[Joe Biden] was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1972 at the age of
29, becoming the fifth youngest senator in history. – Britannica
How Kamala Harris’ death penalty decisions broke hearts on
both sides (CNN)
Kamala Harris Touts Her Opposition to the Death Penalty. Her
Track Record’s More Complicated (Mother Jones)
Kamala Harris’s criminal justice reform plan, explained (Vox)
Kamala Harris, Progressive Prosecutor? (On The Media, NPR)
Kamala Harris Was Not a ‘Progressive Prosecutor’ (New York
Times)
Mehr
02.10.2019
1 Minute
Links
The Biden Plan for Strengthening America’s Commitment to
Justice
SAFE Justice Act (Bobby Scott)
The Reverse Incarceration Act (The Brennan Center)
Decriminalization Versus Legalization of Marijuana (Thought
Co.)
Mehr
24.09.2019
1 Minute
Links
Rethinking Public Safety to Reduce Mass Incarceration and
Strengthen Communities (Team Warren)
The United States makes up 5% of the world’s population, but
nearly 20% of the world’s prison population. We have the highest
rate of incarceration in the world, with over 2 million people in
prison and jail.
Our system is the result of the dozens of choices we’ve made —
choices that together stack the deck against the poor and the
disadvantaged. Simply put, we have criminalized too many things.
We send too many people to jail. We keep them there for too long.
We do little to rehabilitate them. We spend billions, propping up
an entire industry that profits from mass incarceration. And we
do all of this despite little evidence that our harshly punitive
system makes our communities safer — and knowing that a majority
of people currently in prison will eventually return to our
communities and our neighborhoods.
The federal government oversees just 12% of the incarcerated
population (PDF) (Bureau of Justice Statistics)
Mehr
17.09.2019
1 Minute
Links
Rethinking Public Safety to Reduce Mass Incarceration and
Strengthen Communities (Team Warren)
The United States makes up 5% of the world’s population, but
nearly 20% of the world’s prison population. We have the highest
rate of incarceration in the world, with over 2 million people in
prison and jail.
Our system is the result of the dozens of choices we’ve made —
choices that together stack the deck against the poor and the
disadvantaged. Simply put, we have criminalized too many things.
We send too many people to jail. We keep them there for too long.
We do little to rehabilitate them. We spend billions, propping up
an entire industry that profits from mass incarceration. And we
do all of this despite little evidence that our harshly punitive
system makes our communities safer — and knowing that a majority
of people currently in prison will eventually return to our
communities and our neighborhoods.
Debtors’ Prisons, Then and Now: FAQ (The Marshall Project)
Dispelling Myths About Poverty (Equal Justice Under Law)
Preventing a mother from visiting her sons in prison because she
cannot afford to pay parking tickets is wealth-based
discrimination. Forcing someone to leave town because their
mobile home is not worth enough is wealth-based discrimination.
Keeping someone in jail prior to trial simply because they cannot
afford bail — while those who can afford bail go free — is
wealth-based discrimination. In all of these examples (and many
more), people are penalized just for a lack of financial means.
A Fair and Welcoming Immigration System (Team Warren)
Some brain wiring continues to develop well into our 20s
(Science Daily)
Minimum Age for Delinquency Adjudication—Multi-Jurisdiction
Survey (National Juvenile Defender Center)
While every state (and territory) sets a maximum age of juvenile
court jurisdiction (in most states it is 18), in about two thirds
of the states (and territories), there is no statute that
specifies a minimum age under which a child cannot be adjudicated
delinquent.
In those states without a statutory minimum, there is nothing
legally preventing the state from prosecuting even the youngest
of children. This runs contrary to all of the scientific research
and emerging case law that recognizes children are inherently
less culpable than adults and that the younger a person, the less
competent he or she may be.
Mehr
Über diesen Podcast
A weekly deep dive into Criminal Justice with Erik Rasmussen and
Dennis Schrantz
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