Blog of Rights

Jennifer
Bellamy
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Seeing Is Believing: Bipartisan Criminal Justice Reform Is Possible

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office & Dan Zeidman, ACLU Washington Legislative Office at 6:38pm

In 2009, Terry Collins, then Director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, explained, “We are at a critical and urgent stage. If current trends continue, our research indicates the population will reach nearly 60,000 inmates by 2018. I can tell you today, just to build beds to get us to 100 percent  capacity would cost us roughly $1 billion dollars, and that does not include the operational funding. Common sense sentencing reform says we must change and understand that some people can be punished and held accountable for their actions without being placed behind prison fences.”

End Racial Profiling Act Lobby Day: Bringing Real Stories to Washington

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 4:49pm
ACLU of Michigan Client Tiburcio Briceno (right) with Rep. Luis Gutierrez outside of hearing room. Briceno spoke at the press conference following the hearing and told the story of how he was racially profiled by local law enforcement and held for deportation.

The Dream Deferred

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 4:57pm
As the nation celebrates Black History Month, we continue to work to change how the story unfolds for people who live at the margins of our society — including our children.

Too Big to Ignore: Criminal Justice Reform Can't Wait

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 9:45am

An enduring myth is that when an ostrich is afraid it will bury its head in the sand, thinking that if it cannot see, it cannot be seen. The truth is that an ostrich lowers its head when ready to fight. Ignoring a problem will not make it go away.

Criminal justice reform can't wait. The problem of mass incarceration cannot be shelved or swept under the rug. The problem is now too big to hide, and hiding from fairness, efficiency and equity undermines our most fundamental values. Real leadership responds to problems; it does not ignore them. Today, there are over 2.3 million men and women in prisons throughout the United States. We incarcerate more of our population than any country in the world, and the increased incarceration of offenders with drug offenses represents the most significant source of growth. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, our government spends nearly $69 billion on our correctional system alone.

Three Faces of Racial Profiling: The Unfinished Business of the Civil Rights Movement

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 1:48pm

Imagine that someone assumes that you are a criminal based on your race, religion or ethnicity and treats you like one. Take the case of the Latino students at Hoover High School in Los Angeles who were rounded up during lunch, detained for two hours, frisked and interrogated about gang affiliations by Glendale and Los Angeles police officers, despite no evidence of wrong doing.

From Filthy Boys Prison to New Beginnings: Hill Staffers Walk a Mile in Youthful Offenders' Shoes

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 10:47am

Recently, the juvenile justice community organized a site visit to the Oak Hill Youth Center and the New Beginnings Youth Development Center in Laurel, Maryland, for key congressional staffers and staff in the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), including Melodee Hanes, the office's acting Deputy Administrator.

The National Sheriffs' Association Endorses Legislation Calling for Broad Examination of the Nation's Criminal Justice System

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 5:45pm

The National Sheriffs' Association — one of the largest associations of law enforcement professionals in the United States, representing more than 3,000 elected sheriffs and a total membership of more than 20,000 —united with other prominent law enforcement organizations this week in calling for passage of the National Criminal Justice Commission Act, which was introduced by Sen. Jim Webb (D-Va.) and would create a blue ribbon commission to provide a comprehensive review of our nation's criminal justice system.

The New Politics of Criminal Justice Reform

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 2:01pm

On December 15, with new Republican majorities in 19 state legislatures and hundreds of newly elected lawmakers committed to spending cuts — I attended the launch of the Texas Public Policy Foundation's Right on Crime campaign. Right on Crime's Statement of Principles has been signed by a number of conservatives including Newt Gingrich, former White House drug czar William Bennett and former Attorney General Ed Meese.

Getting the Scoop on Youth PROMISE on Capitol Hill

By Jennifer Bellamy, Washington Legislative Office at 8:59pm

On Thursday, the ACLU, in conjunction with the Peace Alliance, the Student Peace Alliance, the Coalition for Juvenile Justice, GlobalGrind.com and Ben & Jerry’s, held an event on Capitol Hill to press the case for congressional passage of the Youth PROMISE Act (Youth Prison Reduction through Opportunities, Mentoring, Intervention, Support, and Education) – H.R. 1064/S. 435. This bipartisan legislation would address problems of gang involvement and youth violence through innovative and evidence-based community approaches, as opposed to the tired old routine of harsh sentences and long stints behind bars.

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