PROGRESSIVE PROSECUTORS

PROSECUTORIAL DISCRETION
https://emilybazelon.com/books/#charged
https://www.appealpolitics.org/the-politics-of-prosecutors/
https://www.wnycstudios.org/story/repairing-justice-prosecutor
https://theintercept.com/2018/03/20/larry-krasner-philadelphia-da/
https://www.philly.com/judicial-accountability-elections-court-criminal-justice-reform
https://www.philly.com/da-larry-krasner-philly-probation-criminal-justice-reform-parole
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/05/mass-incarceration-sentencing-reform.html
If Prisons Don’t Work, What Will?
by Emily Bazelon  /  April 5, 2019

“The United States spends far too much money locking up far too many people for far too long. A few years ago, a politician had to be brave to say anything like that out loud. Now it’s a mainstream and bipartisan view. In a 2018 survey conducted for the American Civil Liberties Union, 59 percent of respondents said they would be more likely to support than oppose a candidate who supports reducing the prison population. Achieving that goal is now an accomplishment that politicians showcase. In December, Congress by wide margins passed the First Step Act to reduce some drug sentences and improve conditions in federal prisons. President Trump, despite painting a frightening picture of crime-ridden “American carnage” at his inauguration, invited the first drug offender released as a result to the State of the Union address.

https://twitter.com/emilybazelon/status/1115772112285970432

It’s all pretty head-spinning after decades of elected officials competing to lock more people up and spotlight the scariest crimes. Now, with public opinion shifting far and fast and politicians hurrying to catch up, you could even argue that criminal justice reform has become the new marriage equality in terms of the turnaround in public attitudes. That presents a major opportunity for Democratic presidential candidates. But for all the energy behind reform, no presidential candidate has articulated a big, comprehensive vision for transformational change. There’s a consensus that the system is broken, but no agreement on how to fix it.

The presidential candidate seeking to distinguish herself might start by looking at a new wave of reform-minded district attorneys who are challenging conventional law-and-order approaches in red states and blue ones. For the candidates, thematically, a starting point should be that wealth should not determine a person’s fate in court, and profit should not drive the system. Bail bonds, privatized probation and corporate-run prisons are parasitic features of the justice system. Ending cash bail should be at the top of every candidate’s criminal justice agenda. So should getting rid of fines and fees that help fund local governments but trap people in cycles of debt. Ferguson, Mo., became a symbol of the criminalization of poverty for routinely sending black defendants to jail for failing to pay minor traffic fines.

But last November, a new district attorney, Wesley Bell, was elected. On his first day in office, he announced one of the most progressive bail policies in the country — pretrial release, without bail, for misdemeanors and some felonies, unless the prosecutor thinks there is a direct threat to public safety. Mr. Bell also said his office would no longer seek to revoke probation for unpaid fines and fees. “As an overriding principle, I do not believe in prosecuting poverty,” he told a weekly newspaper, The St. Louis American. The old Ferguson lives on elsewhere. In Texas, 524,000 people were jailed in 2018 for unpaid traffic tickets. Even short stays for nonviolent offenses can wreak havoc with people’s jobs and child care. Sparing them needless punishment matters for their lives.

To end mass incarceration, however, exempting nonviolent offenses from jail time isn’t enough. People convicted of violent crimes make up more than half of the country’s state prison population. But the image of prisons overflowing with murderers and rapists is wrong. In many states, “violent felonies” include offenses like breaking into an empty house or snatching a purse or iPhone on the street. Reducing sentences for these offenses — and changing what counts as a violent felony to begin with — can lower this share of the prison population. And that fits in with a second theme for candidates: People deserve a second chance, because many grow and change. They robbed to feed an addiction and then got sober. They assaulted someone because they were mentally ill and then got treatment and stabilized. They mature as they age beyond their teens and early 20s. That’s why it makes sense to reconsider how long a person should stay in prison after doing some time.

https://twitter.com/emilybazelon/status/1116683676077756416

At last, a few prosecutors are doing this and are moving to correct the heavy sentences handed down in the past. The elected prosecutor in Seattle, Dan Satterberg, has won 21 commutations or resentencings for people serving life or decades. Three of the people released — brothers — are back in prison for new crimes, including one for a killing, but the other 18 are “taking full advantage of their freedom,” Mr. Satterberg put it. “Our obligation to do justice continues to go backward as well as forward,” he said. “Yes, we’ll have failures, but one way to manage that is more re-entry support for people.” Parole offers another opening for second chances. In Texas, says Scott Henson, an activist who blogs at the site Grits for Breakfast, “our parole rates have gone from 15 percent to the high 30s in the last decade,” He said the increase is “having more impact than any bill we’ve passed even through the legislature.” He thinks the reason for the rise is a humdrum logistical one: The state unofficially uses parole as a way to reduce prison overcrowding.

We should also focus on redefining the terms of the public safety debate. Ending mass incarceration, and ensuring fairness throughout the criminal justice system, aren’t in tension with public safety. It is integral to it. People tend to uphold the law when they believe it’s reasonable and applied evenly. When people have that faith, they are more likely to help the police solve crimes. With only about 60 percent of murder cases resulting in arrest or other resolutions — that percentage is even lower for other crimes — disillusionment may be our biggest safety threat. After Baltimore’s district attorney, Marilyn Mosby, announced in January that her office would stop prosecuting marijuana possession, a group of mothers whose children were killed in the city mounted a mobile billboard. “Stop Pot Arrests,” it read. “Solve Murders Instead.

In a comprehensive new blueprint for reform, the Justice Collaborative, a nonprofit group, makes an underappreciated and crucial point: “Law enforcement is not the only, or even the most important, answer to addressing cycles of violence.” Adam Foss, president of Prosecutor Impact, which conducts training for prosecutors, said politicians can be explicit about this approach: “If you’re serious about tackling violence, you talk about how to prevent it. You talk about how trauma drives violence among groups the public can get behind, like young people, women and veterans. You adopt language used by the doctors and surgeons working on the front lines of this scourge of violence who have been saying for years that it is a public health issue. “You talk about stable housing and equal access to education and health care,” he continued. “You center it around the survivor community begging for alternative solutions. And you tie it back to public safety so you’re changing the terms of the debate.”

Finally, incarceration should be the last resort, not the default. In Brooklyn, District Attorney Eric Gonzalez has said this idea is central to his tenure. His counterpart in Boston, Rachael Rollins, last month instructed prosecutors to ask for jail only “when any other recommendation would compromise” safety. When no option other than jail or prison will do, it’s important to remember that the vast majority of people who go in also get out. Making sure they have the tools to lead productive lives when they emerge — like job training and access to decent housing — is a public good.

Presidents don’t actually control the key levers of the American punishment machine. About 80 percent of the people who are locked up today are in state and local jails and prisons. But presidents, and presidential campaigns, can raise the profile of an issue and set a tone. The way they talk about repairing our broken criminal justice system speaks loudly to broader issues about racial and wealth inequality. Presidents can also shape the behavior of states and cities with funding and other incentives, like redirecting money for treatment and prevention programs. Though some prosecutors and state legislatures are now embarking on serious reforms, there’s still so much further to go. Bipartisan support is increasing but still has to build. The candidate for president who makes that happen can reap political benefits — and more important, make America so much better.”

RESTORATIVE JUSTICE
http://bds.org/#policy
https://www.latimes.com/la-na-marijuana-justice
https://www.latimes.com/la-me-ln-la-county-marijuana-convictions
https://sfbayview.com/san-francisco-clears-all-88000-drivers-license-holds
http://theappealpodcast.libsyn.com/episode-35-the-risks-of-risk-assessment
https://www.themarshallproject.org/new-york-overhauls-pretrial-evidence-rules
https://www.law360.com/the-rise-of-the-progressive-prosecutor
The Rise of the Progressive Prosecutor
by Sam Reisman  /  April 7, 2019

“In November 2017, Wesley Bell made his decision to run for prosecuting attorney in his native St. Louis County against a nearly three-decade incumbent. The contrast with his opponent was stark. Bob McCullough had come under fire in 2014, when he oversaw the grand jury probe into the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, which resulted in no charges. Bell had been elected to Ferguson’s City Council in the wake of the protests sparked, in part, by the shooting. Among Bell’s campaign promises, as he ran for chief prosecutor, was a pledge to appoint a special independent prosecutor in cases of shootings by police. In an August primary, he walked away with 57% of the vote. He skated to victory in the November general election, unopposed. “Change tends to scare people,” Bell told Law360 recently. “And when you have an example of maybe an office or individual that’s been doing the same thing for 10 or 20 years, and they’ve gotten good at it, coming in and doing something different often knocks people off balance, if you will. I think that’s been the biggest obstacle: explaining the ‘why’ in addition to the ‘what,'” he added.

In a September primary, Rachael Rollins, another prosecutor running on a platform of criminal justice reform, handily won a primary race to be the head county prosecutor for Boston, with a 16-point lead. Along with Larry Krasner, the reform-minded former public defender who became Philadelphia’s district attorney in January 2018, Bell and Rollins represent part of a new wave of progressive prosecutors taking office and getting their names on ballots across the country. They ran on a host of proposals that vary in their particulars, but emphasize ending or limiting cash bail, prosecuting fewer low level nonviolent offenses, increasing police accountability and introducing more transparency about prosecutorial decisions. In most cases, it is too early to measure the impact of their policies, but the prosecutors are already making waves in the criminal justice system and forcing a re-evaluation of the question: What makes an effective prosecutor?

Until relatively recently, district attorneys did not lose elections to candidates like Krasner, Bell and Rollins. In fact, they rarely lost elections at all. According to a 2014 study, incumbent prosecutors ran unopposed in 80% of their races for re-election. Even when they were opposed, they still won 70% of the time.  For activists who have zeroed in on these prosecutor elections as an avenue for criminal justice reform, the rise of the progressive prosecutor represents new voter awareness about the roles prosecutors play in assessing what charges to bring, whether to incarcerate, negotiating plea deals and recommending sentencing.  “Prosecutors are the most powerful, unaccountable, and least transparent actors in the criminal justice system,” said Udi Ofer, director of the ACLU‘s Campaign for Smart Justice, whose goal is to cut the U.S. incarceration rate in half. “If we’re ever going to end mass incarceration in America, we must overhaul prosecutorial practices.”

Criminal justice reform experts point to the activism of Smart Justice, as well as a host of other organizations, for driving voter education and turnout. Many also identified the unprosecuted police killings of black men and boys — such as Brown in Ferguson, Eric Garner in New York and Laquan McDonald in Chicago — as catalytic moments in a nationwide awakening of voters to the power prosecutors hold. Taylor Pendergrass, who oversees the electoral efforts of the Smart Justice campaign, said that reform-minded prosecutor candidates are having more success getting their message out in “places where we’ve seen communities have suffered for a very long time from the tough-on-crime approaches that have decimated their neighborhoods without making safety.”

For the first time in recent memory, candidates for prosecutor are eschewing familiar “law and order” rhetoric and emphasizing a vision of “public safety” that can’t simply be measured in arrests and convictions. “For as long as I can remember, people who thought about criminal justice and wrote about criminal justice reform worked on the assumption that the politics of criminal justice pushed for ever increasing harshness and severity, that electoral politics in this area was a one-way ratchet,” said David Sklansky, a Stanford criminal law professor who wrote a 2017 paper called “The Progressive Prosecutor’s Handbook.” “You never loosened up,” he said. “You only toughened up.”

For all the emphasis placed on the power prosecutors hold, they face bureaucratic inertia and potential opposition from line prosecutors, police officers and other government officials. For example, Rollins was hit with a Massachusetts state bar complaint from an Indianapolis-based pro-police advocacy organization in December, about a week before she took office. The group accused her of violating rules of professional ethics by campaigning on a promise to roll back prosecution of some nonviolent crimes, such as trespassing and petty larceny. On a more fundamental level, reform-minded prosecutors may have to reckon with whether they can deliver on their campaign promises to bring about transformative change given the limitations of their positions. “A lot of what’s happening today, in my opinion, about criminal justice system is being driven by slogans and cliches,” said Jonathan Blodgett, president of the National District Attorneys Association.

Blodgett, who is in his fifth term as district attorney of Essex County, Massachusetts, just north of Boston, says the narrative of the “progressive” prosecutor has gotten undue emphasis, and that many of the prongs of the candidates’ campaign platforms have already been in force for years. “I chuckle when I hear people who call themselves reformers say they’re not going to prosecute low-level drug offenses,” Blodgett said. “Who has been? No one does that. We give people diversion, we give people drug court. No one is going after someone who has a bag of weed.” He said he is more troubled by the way he sees the conversations advanced by the reformist guard sidelining legislators, by candidates publicly promising not to prosecute certain low-level offenses by default, and marginalizing victims. “I don’t hear progressives talk about how they are going to help victims of crime,” he said.

Even some academics who study criminal justice reform wonder whether the emphasis on putting progressive advocates in prosecutor’s offices is misguided. Jeffrey Bellin, a law professor at William & Mary, has argued that the local prosecutor’s power to unilaterally change the system has been overstated and the activism that promulgates that message represents a “blinkered approach.” Prosecutors seem “very powerful” when they’re acting in line with what other local politicians, judges and police chiefs want, Bellin said. “It’s a little less clear what happens when prosecutors take bold policy stands that these other actors disagree with,” he said.

In February, Krasner’s office released a report revealing that a year after instituting changes to its cash bail policy, there was no increase in recidivism, crime or failures to appear, as critics have warned would happen. The report represented some of the first hard evidence to gauge the impact a progressive prosecutor can have, even in areas where they exert influence but have no direct control, such as setting bail, which is determined by a judge. Krasner’s office identified 25 nonviolent, non-sex-related charges, making up 61% of all cases, where the bail was set so low it was effectively only a punishment for those too poor to pay it. The office instituted a policy of not recommending bail for those charges, with the result that nearly 1,750 defendants were released without cash bail in 2018. “We hoped this policy would allow people to return to their lives, their families, their jobs, and their communities,” Krasner said in a statement. “We hoped it would reduce our county jail population. We believed, based upon our research into other jurisdictions, that it would not cause a crime spike or result in defendants skipping court.”

An outside study of the Philadelphia data found that the policy precipitated an immediate 23% increase in the proportion of eligible defendants who were released on their own recognizance, and the proportion of defendants who spent at least one night in jail went down 22%. It is still early days for other metrics on whether newly elected progressive prosecutors are making a difference. A spokesperson for Krasner said the office is planning to release more reports demonstrating the effects of his policies. Bell, who promised to enact a “data-driven, restorative model of justice” in his campaign, said that his office will hire a data analyst with the intention of gathering information tracking its progress. Kim Foxx, who was elected state’s attorney for Chicago’s Cook County in 2016, has made case-level data publicly available going back to the beginning of the decade with the intention of making hers the most transparent prosecutor’s office in the U.S.

https://twitter.com/emilybazelon/status/1115007435444502530

Even if advocates are able to gauge the success of individual reformists in office, it will be difficult to see how those policies translate to nationwide reform. Many of the reforms discussed in the context of city prosecutors’ offices — such as diverting defendants to specialty courts and addiction treatment centers — only apply to areas with the population density to support such facilities, said Pamela Metzger, director of the Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center at Southern Methodist University’s Dedman School of Law. Moreover, challenges endemic to more rural areas, like limited numbers of public defenders or infrequent court dates, are well outside the purview of even the most reform-minded prosecutor. “The question is how effective are we at translating this conversation that we’re having in our cities into rural America or exurban America,” Metzger said. For now, other candidates for prosecutor are stepping forward under the reform banner.

Chesa Boudin, a public defender running for San Francisco district attorney in the first wide open race the city has seen for that office in a century, said the progressive wave is reflective of a national, bipartisan agreement that the criminal justice system is broken and in dire need of change. “We see that manifesting … in the election of people who five, 10, 15 years ago, would have been extraordinary as candidates for district attorney, and frankly who themselves would not have wanted to run for that role,” Boudin said. He counts himself among that group and has sought counsel from some of those same once-unthinkable candidates — now elected district attorneys — since he kicked off his campaign. “Inevitably with any policy innovation or significant social change project, there are growing pains and there are mistakes that are made,” Boudin said. “I’m lucky to have a few other folks who have made those mistakes and learned the lessons that I can benefit from.”

PREVIOUSLY

SENTENCING REFORM
https://spectrevision.net/2018/03/21/sentencing-reform/
INCARCERATED ‘VOLUNTEER’ FIREFIGHTERS
https://spectrevision.net/2018/11/15/the-case-for-letting-malibu-burn/
INVOLUNTARY HUMAN RESOURCES
https://spectrevision.net/2016/09/22/cornered-markets/