Seek Justice

Informações:

Sinopsis

A weekly deep dive into Criminal Justice with Erik Rasmussen and Dennis Schrantz

Episodios

  • Ep. 4 - Racial Disparity

    15/04/2019

    Links New Zealand bans suspect’s manifesto (The Detroit News) The New Jim Crowe, by Michelle Alexander (Wikipedia) Jack Maple – creator of CompStat methodology that reduced crime in NYC but ultimately lead to arrest quotas (Wikipedia) North Carolina Jury Sunshine Project findings (Wake Forest University) Women and men serve on felony trial juries at about the same rate. Prosecutors remove twice as many potential black jurors at trial as white jurors (20 percent of available black jurors compared with 10 percent of available white jurors). Judges remove 14 percent of available black jurors compared with 10 percent of available white jurors. Defense attorneys remove white jurors more often: they exclude 22 percent of the available white jurors versus 10 percent of the available black jurors. The differences in removal rates are different for urban and rural districts, with racial disparities larger on average in urban districts. The differences in removal rates are different from some urban districts

  • Ep. 3 - Plea Bargaining

    08/04/2019

    Links Invisibilia, S05E02 - Post, Shoot (NPR) Plea Bargaining in the United States (Wikipedia) But in this era of mass incarceration — when our nation’s prison population has quintupled in a few decades partly as a result of the war on drugs and the “get tough” movement — these rights are, for the overwhelming majority of people hauled into courtrooms across America, theoretical. More than 90 percent of criminal cases are never tried before a jury. Most people charged with crimes forfeit their constitutional rights and plead guilty. – Michelle Alexander, Go to Trial: Crash the Justice System (NYTimes) Parens Patriae (Wikipedia) Van Jones & CT Governor Ned Lamont Lead Criminal Justice Reform Conversation at Quinnipiac (YouTube) Serial Podcast Van Jones

  • Ep. 2 - Community Engagement

    02/04/2019

    Links Michigan Governor – Gretchen Whitmer Northpoint Institute of Public Management, now Equivalent Florida Amendment 4, Voting Rights Restoration for Felons Initiative (2018) - ✅ Approved (Ballotpedia) The report [by The Sentencing Project] estimated that, as of 2016, around 6.1 million people, or about 2.5 percent of the U.S. voting age population, were disenfranchised due to a felony conviction. Florida was estimated to have 1,686,318 persons—10.43 percent of the voting age population—disenfranchised due to felonies. The majority of the disenfranchised persons, around 88.23 percent, were estimated to have completed their sentences. Florida had the highest rate of felons disenfranchised in the U.S. in 2016, according to the report. The estimated average rate of felon disenfranchisement across the 50 states was 2.28 percent in 2016. – The Sentencing Project Nation Outside, in Michigan The Center for Community Transitions, in North Carolina Justice Reinvestment Initiative Ron Taylor, Prisons Division of

  • Ep. 1 - What is Criminal Justice?

    28/03/2019

    Links 40% of murders in the US went unsolved in 2017 (NY Post) Clearance Rate (Wikipedia) – Measure of percentage of “solved” crimes Bernie Sanders raises $5.9M in 24 hours after announcing 2020 campaign National Criminal Justice Reform Project (ncja.org) The Sentencing Project (Wikipedia) JEHT Foundation The Unmet Promise of Alternatives to Incarceration, by James Austin and Barry Krisberg (not actually Kay Harris) Kay Harris Obituary (philly.com) Stategies, Values, and the Emerging Generation of Alternatives to Incarceration (PDF), by Kay Harris Reducing Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice System: A Manual for Practitioners and Policymakers, by Dennis Schrantz and Jerry McElroy (The Sentencing Project) Voice of the Experienced (vote-nola.org)

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