BREAKING: Donald Trump Announces Plan 2 Remove Clinton Era Criminal Justice Laws That Hurt Black Men

LurkMoar

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This bill is actually looking amazing :ohhh:


Although it does not go far enough :patrice: still for a first step this is fantastic:jbhmm:
 

Professor Emeritus

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This is a letter on the act from back in May by a Civil Rights group, discussing its numerous flaws, including how it is specifically likely to help White people more than Black people. Most of the stuff in the bill is simple shyt that the DOJ could already be doing if it wanted without passing any bill, and some of the stuff could actually make racial disparities worse.

Dear Representative,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and the 108 undersigned organizations, we write to urge you to vote NO on The FIRST STEP Act (H.R.5682). While well intentioned, this bill takes a misguided approach to reforming our federal justice system. Without question, we appreciate the inclusion of some promising provisions to address some of the problems in the federal prison system, however, the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) already has broad authority to make the majority of these changes through administrative action. In sum, this bill falls short on its promise to “meaningfully” tackle the problems in the federal justice system – racial disparities, draconian mandatory minimum sentences, persistent overcrowding, lack of rehabilitation, and the exorbitant costs of incarceration. Decisions we make now through this bill could have deep implications for our ability to impact the abiding and deepening harms that lead to mass incarceration.

As such, we continue to have several, grave concerns with The FIRST STEP Act, including:

  • The Dangerous “Risk Assessment System”: The Act purports to offer people in prison the chance to “earn time credits” towards early release to pre-release custody– but by building and placing a “risk and needs assessment” algorithm in the hands of the Attorney General – one not required to be designed or tailored for the individuals it is meant to judge – we risk embedding deep racial and class bias into decisions that heavily impact the lives and futures of federal prisoners and their families.
Researchers have shown that risk assessment tools applied in sentencing decisions in Florida – meant to predict recidivism – were twice as likely to be wrong when evaluating Black people as White people. One of the first independent studies analyzing the use of risk assessment in pretrial showed that decisionmakers using risk assessment tools – in this case, Kentucky judges – ignored their results over time, while also overseeing an increase in failures-to-appear at court and an increase in pretrial arrests. A further recent analysis showed that risk assessment tools are as accurate as a prediction made by a random human selected over the Internet.

We cannot introduce algorithmic risk assessment into the assignment of housing and release decisions or rehabilitative opportunities without sufficient transparency, independent testing for decarceral and anti-racist results prior to implementation, and regular effective oversight for not just what the tool purports to predict, but how decisionmakers in our prison system use it. The Act uses “risk assessments” in an untested manner. It fails to ensure transparency, independent testing, or analysis of the proposed risk assessment system or its results prior to its adoption or implementation. And again, it doesn’t require the tool to be designed or tailored for the individuals it is meant to judge.

Without these things, and in the hands of the nation’s most prominent proponent of a punishing, rather than a rehabilitative criminal justice system, “risk assessments” will further embed racism into the meting out of resources that could change prisoners’ lives – like access to treatment, work, and most importantly, the ability to earn time off of a sentence.

  • The Overbroad List of Exclusions: The majority of people in prison will eventually be released. Categorically excluding entire groups of people from receiving early-release credits will undermine efforts to reduce prison overcrowding and improve public safety since such exclusions weaken the incentive to participate in recidivism-reduction programming. Furthermore, many of these exclusions, such as those based on immigration-related offenses, could have a disproportionate impact on people of color.

  • The Overbroad Discretion Provided to Attorney General Sessions: The bill gives broad authority to the Attorney General and would rely upon implementation by this administration. Despite assurances to the contrary, this administration has failed to take any active steps to improve the justice system, has dismantled existing protections, and has shown outright hostility to people of color and other historically marginalized communities. Furthermore, Attorney General Jeff Sessions is a well-known, longtime opponent of sentencing and prison reform. It would be unwise and harmful to vest so much discretion in an Attorney General so hostile to meaningful justice reform.

  • The Misplaced Incentive System: Effectively reducing recidivism requires targeting those most likely to reoffend with rehabilitative programming. Yet, under this bill, only “minimum” and “low-risk” prisoners would be able to redeem their earned time credits,and they would earn more credits than prisoners categorized as “medium” or “high-risk.” Given that time credits would also be subject to denial by the BOP warden and they are not real time off of a sentence but rather a flawed mechanism to transition into a decreasing number of halfway houses or to home confinement that is rarely used by BOP, the bill is unlikely to provide the incentives that would meaningfully reduce recidivism.

  • Allows for the privatization of certain public functions and allows private entities to profit from incarceration. The bill retains a provision that in order to expand programming and productive activities, the Attorney General shall develop policies for wardens of each BOP facility to enter into partnerships with private entities and industry-sponsored organizations.

  • The Absence of Appropriations for Implementation: The resources needed to expand programming authorized under the bill have not been – and may never be – appropriated. In fact, Congress could decide today, absent this legislation, that prison programming should be funded and increase the BOP’s budget by $50 million a year for the next five years. Instead, the FY19 BOP budget calls for a reduction. Furthermore, the recidivism reduction programming that currently exists in the federal prison system is grossly underfunded and not enough to serve those currently incarcerated. Therefore, without any guarantees that the necessary funding will be appropriated, this bill is an empty promise.

  • The Undetermined Human and Fiscal Impact: It is unclear what the fiscal impact of this bill will be, given that the Congressional Budget Office has not released a score for the bill. Moreover, it is unclear what the human impact of this bill will be, given that neither the BOP nor the U.S. Sentencing Commission has produced updated estimates on the number of people projected to be impacted by the legislation. Proponents argue that at least 4,000 people will be impacted by the good time fix alone; however, relying on that number is misleading because it is based upon data that is over a decade old. No hearings have been held and there is no CBO score available in order to explore these questions further.
  • The Omission of Sentencing Reform: Sentencing reform and prison reform are both important, but one will not work without the other. Meaningful reform requires both. Furthermore, advancing prison reform as a stand-alone will undermine longstanding, bipartisan efforts in the Senate to advance a comprehensive justice reform package that includes sentencing reform.
Last week, we were joined by over 70 civil rights organizations in opposing this well-intentioned, but misguided legislation at the House Judiciary Committee markup. Many of our concerns were also shared by the American Federation of Government Employees representing 33,000 federal correctional workers in the Bureau of Prisons, as well as Representatives Lewis, Jackson Lee, and Senators Durbin, Booker, and Harris in a recent Dear Colleague letter. While we appreciate the inclination to support legislation that endeavors to reform our prison system, we believe that this particular bill would do more harm than good and would have unintended consequences that ripple into the future.

Finally, if presented with one choice, “to take what we can get now,” then we must ensure that “what we get” will not perpetuate the existing harms of mass incarceration or give false hope to the men and women languishing in prison and the communities we represent. Our communities are being demonized and criminalized so we must stand firm to resist the lure of a compromise that is ultimately a false promise that may never be realized and isn’t in their best interests.

For the foregoing reasons, we urge you to vote “No” on the FIRST STEP Act and The Leadership Conference will include your position on the bill in our voting scorecard for the 115th Congress. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Sakira Cook, Senior Counsel at The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, at (202) 263-2894 or cook@civilrights.org.

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

334 East 92nd Street Tenant Association

A. Philip Randolph Institute

African American Ministers In Action

....
 
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thekyuke

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San fran is like 1% black
:mjlol:

If I'm wrong correct me pls,I'm a Kenyan but this is what I do know: as far back as '09,my younger sis in LA told me the inner city schools were running out of basic supplies including chalk! Research shows even San Fran with a mere 1% black pop is equally bad: The result: San Francisco, a progressive enclave and beacon for technological innovation, has the worst black student achievement of any county in California.

Why is San Francisco the state's worst county for black student achievement? | CALmatters

If I've been misinformed or have misread anything tell me cause AFAIK both have been Dem for the longest.
 

FreddyCalhoun

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:patrice::patrice::patrice::patrice:




box-trap-carrot-rope-drawing-vector-id482468161
 

Megadeus

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So how do you explain 2008 - 2015!?! :what:

No seriously, explain those fluctuating numbers based on what you just said

I said every FEW YEARS. What does it matter if they fluctuate a couple mill between a given year if the totals per term end up increasing anyway? :heh:What is the matter w/yall? I dont know if you remember but there was an economic crisis in 2008 that MAY have disrupted annual goals, and it still didnt matter. Bottom line, every president donates more to HBCUs in total than the last. The totals under every president almost always increases in the end. Obama HELD THE RECORD and had "donated more than any president before him" in the end, as per your own article that YOU POSTED for this very reason.

The trend will continue under every president. This is a very basic financial analysis. But keep believing this was all massa Trump's plan and he is our one and only savior though:mjlol:
 
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If I'm wrong correct me pls,I'm a Kenyan but this is what I do know: as far back as '09,my younger sis in LA told me the inner city schools were running out of basic supplies including chalk! Research shows even San Fran with a mere 1% black pop is equally bad: The result: San Francisco, a progressive enclave and beacon for technological innovation, has the worst black student achievement of any county in California.

Why is San Francisco the state's worst county for black student achievement? | CALmatters

If I've been misinformed or have misread anything tell me cause AFAIK both have been Dem for the longest.
The voting style won't change the tax base and that's how funds get distributed.
De Facto segregation.
 

Easy-E

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^^^ this is you talking about Mitch McConnell like he was pro-Obama and trying to write history.




perfect.


I'm not moving goal posts. I said specifically that the original intention of bills were heavily changed wihen they were passed.

YOu posted ACA - that's pretty much sums up my argument. From the start of what ACA was until the final bill was passed several key items were removed or softened due to republicans refusing to pass it. And to my piont, Mitch Mcconnell didn't even vote yes for the ACA and has voted against ACA and for repealing it for several years.



Sen. Mitch McConnell votes on Obamacare


here's the actual vote registry

S 3590: Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)


You're absolutely wrong, and I would go one by one through your list but the fact that you listed ACA as some sort of Mitch McConnell accomplishment shows that you're trolling. Everyone who dapped you @Easy-E @LiveFromLondon @HarlemHottie

need to be put on the "agent" list and watched very carefully.
:mjlol: ppl used that same website to post "Obama's African American Accomplishments"

But, nnnooowww, it's a bullshyt link. :laff:

That's why I dapped it. I had to tear it up twice for the half truths.
 
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Booker T Garvey

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I said every FEW YEARS. What does it matter if

:russ: No, you said ANNUAL INCREASE do you know what the word “annual” means dummy?!

an·nu·al
/ˈany(o͞o)əl/
adjective
  1. occurring once every year
It’s like debating with the dudes from the slow classes on here sometimes
 

Losttribe

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Are ya'all insane? The Democrats long ago wrote up far STRONGER versions of this bill. The Republicans have refused to sign off on it, so this year the best they got was this vastly weakened version of the bill.

You're literally blaming the Democrats for not doing what they already been trying to do and praising the Republicans for doing a weak-ass version of the same thing they've been blocking for years.

:mindblown:
People on both sides have wrote similar bills.

And the most recent BS justice laws were Clinton and Dem inventions.... The Dems have madd opportunity with controlled congresses, presidents, etc to change it.

So Trump probably cares less about black people, but the fact that hes Pushing for this and not just going w the flow on it - is a good thing.
 
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