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Article • July 15, 2020 • from CLN August, 2020
Police State: From Social Justice to Social Dominance by Michael Fortino, Ph.D by Michael Fortino, Ph.D. Just when we thought things could not get any worse, somehow they did. In the midst of a global pandemic, economic collapse, mass unemployment, and racial divide, we were exposed to a dark truth …
Article • April 15, 2020 • from CLN May, 2020
Hawaii Lawmakers Propose Transparency from Prosecutors by David Reutter by David M. Reutter Prosecutors are the “most powerful actors in the criminal justice system” proclaims Hawaii House Bill 2749. That bill would follow the lead of Florida, Colorado, and Arizona in increasing transparency into court proceedings. A Texas A&M Law …
Article • March 18, 2020 • from CLN April, 2020
U.S. District Judge Blows Open ATF Fake Stash-House Stings, Wants to Know Why They Only Target Minorities by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell “Psst ... Wanna make some easy money? I got this drug dealer who owes me big time. You help me rob him, and I’ll split it all …
Article • March 18, 2020 • from CLN April, 2020
Racial Disparity at Sentencing on the Rise by Anthony Accurso by Anthony Accurso  A new Council on Criminal Justice report shows disturbing trends in worsening sentencing disparities for black and Latinx people, even as the U.S. softens its stance on non-violent and drug crimes, The Appeal reports. The report aggregated …
Article • February 19, 2020 • from CLN March, 2020
Filed under: Racial Discrimination
White Cop Gets 10 Years for Murder; Black Kid Gets 10 Days for Oversleeping by Douglas Ankney by Douglas Ankney Former white police officer Amber Guyger murdered her black neighbor and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. In contrast, 21-year-old Deandre Somerville, a black college student from Palm Beach …
Article • February 19, 2020 • from CLN March, 2020
Study Confirms Immigrants Sentenced More Harshly in Non-Immigrant Areas by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell A recent Penn State University study confirmed that negative perceptions of immigration and immigrants have affected sentencing in geographic areas not traditionally known for being destinations for immigrants. Prior to the 1990s, Hispanics traditionally immigrated …
Article • January 21, 2020 • from CLN February, 2020
Washington Supreme Court Announces Rules for Trial Courts When Implicit Racial Bias Alleged in Jury Decision by Douglas Ankney by Douglas Ankney The Supreme Court of Washington announced procedural rules for trial courts to follow when a post-verdict motion for new trial alleges implicit racial bias of a juror or …
Letters to PE Firms re Prison Services, U.S. Congress, 2019 <!Congress of tbe tlntteb ~tates mmsbinrrton, DC 20510 September 30, 2019 Andrew Feldstein Co-Founder and Chief Investment Officer BlueMountain Capital Management, LLC 280 Park Avenue, 12111 Floor New York, NY 1001 7 Stephen Siderow Co-Founder and Co-President BlueMounlain Capital Management, …
Article • September 17, 2019 • from CLN October, 2019
Study: Brazen Cops Posting Racist, Vitriolic Comments on the Internet by Edward Lyon by Ed Lyon There is a time-worn, yet usually quite-accurate saying that states: &ldquo;Where there&rsquo;s smoke, there&rsquo;s fire.&rdquo; Thanks in great part to Philadelphia attorney Emily Baker-White&rsquo;s efforts as leader of The Plain View Project (&ldquo;PVP&rdquo;), a …
Article • September 17, 2019 • from CLN October, 2019
Black Drivers in Missouri 91 Percent More Likely to Be Stopped Than White Drivers by Bill Barton by Bill Barton A report by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt reveals that black motorists in that state are 91 percent more likely to be pulled over than whites. The 2018 report illuminating …
Article • August 8, 2019
San Francisco launches experiment to curb racial bias by San Francisco is taking a step toward making justice colorblind. The city is using artificial intelligence to strip police reports of identifying details, such as a suspect&rsquo;s name, race and hair and eye color; his or her neighborhood and district and …
Vera Institute of Justice - Gatekeepers: The Role of Police in Ending Mass Incarceration, 2019 Gatekeepers: The Role of Police in Ending Mass Incarceration S. Rebecca Neusteter, Ram Subramanian, Jennifer Trone, Mawia Khogali, and Cindy Reed August 2019 From the Director Reforming the criminal justice system has become a bipartisan …
Article • July 16, 2019 • from CLN August, 2019
Court Reporters Likely Fail to Accurately Transcribe Testimony for Speakers of ‘African American English’ by Anthony Accurso by Anthony Accurso&nbsp; A recent Vice.com article draws attention to a pioneering study that concludes court reporters exhibit low proficiency with African American English (&ldquo;AAE&rdquo;), and that the problem results in a systemic …
Publication • June 13, 2019
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights: Collateral Consequences - The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption and The Effect on Communities, 2019 U . S . C O M M I S S I O N O N C I V I L R I G H T S COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES: The Crossroads …
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights - Collateral Consequences - The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption and the Effects on Communities, 2019 U . S . C O M M I S S I O N O N C I V I L R I G H T S COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES: The …
Solitary Watch, American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, Jesuit Social Research Institute: A Report on Lockdown - A Report on the Use of Solitary Confinement in Louisiana State Prisons, With Testimony from the People Who Live It, 2019 Louisiana on Lockdown A Report on the Use of Solitary Confinement in …
Article • May 16, 2019 • from CLN June, 2019
If You’re Unlucky or Black, Your Prison Sentence Could Be 63 Percent Longer by Douglas Ankney by Douglas Ankney A new report from the U.S. Sentencing Commission reveals that the length of a defendant&rsquo;s prison sentence increasingly depends on the whims of the judge. For example, in Philadelphia, some of …
Article • February 15, 2019 • from CLN March, 2019
Study: Racial Bias Inherent in the Jury Selection Process by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss Wake Forest University criminal law professor Ronald Wright recently published a research paper, which proves&mdash;with statewide evidence&mdash;that the peremptory challenge process of jury selection in North Carolina trials is racially biased.&nbsp; Prosecutors, who are first …
Article • February 14, 2019 • from CLN March, 2019
Louisiana Supreme Court Vacates Conviction for Batson Violation by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis The Supreme Court of Louisiana affirmed a court of appeals determination that a trial court erred when it denied a Batson challenge to the State striking one of two black jurors from a criminal trial panel …
Article • January 19, 2019 • from CLN February, 2019
Race-Based Arrests Rampant in San Francisco by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss The U.S. Supreme Court made targeting by law enforcement of people based on race unconstitutional over 130 years ago, yet the practice still runs rampant in police departments nationwide, says Ezekiel Edwards, director of the ACLU Criminal Law …
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