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Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council

An Unusual Partnership in Criminal Justice

In a political climate where the partisan divide makes allies and alliances more predictable every day, last week's USA Today shed light on a rather unusual set of allies:  cops and individuals recently released from prison.  As USA Today reports, re-entry programs in Michigan and Rhode Island pair corrections officers with inmates before and after their release in an effort to aid them with their transition back into society, with the ultimate goal of preventing future crime.

It is surprising that such a logical approach is untraditional – and it is not surprising that it is effective. For example, in the western region of the Michigan Prisoner Re-entry Initiative program, only 11% of the program’s 713 participants have been convicted of new crimes in last four years – compared to 70% nationally. It goes without saying that job training, mentoring, counseling and support help the transition from prison to community and prevent recidivism.  

But the idea is not new to the Brennan Center.  Since 2007, we have been building a similar partnership.  After a national convening of law enforcement and criminal justice allies, we created a Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council with whom we partner on both on state and federal reform of criminal disenfranchisement laws.  Current members include police chiefs, prosecutors, heads of probation, parole and corrections departments, and presidents of leading professional law enforcement and community supervision associations. 

These law enforcement professionals recognize that restoring the right to vote after release from incarceration affirms the returning members’ value to the polity, encourages participation in civic life, and helps to rebuild the ties that motive law-abiding behavior.

The Brennan Center Law Enforcement Advisory Council has been enormously effective.  The American Probation and Parole Association (APPA), the National Black Police Association (NBPA), the Association of Paroling Authorities International (APAI) and the American Correctional Association (ACA) have all passed resolutions in favor of voting rights restoration.  Members of the law enforcement community have supported campaigns to restore the right to vote to people with prior convictions across the country, including in Kentucky, New York, Rhode Island, Washington and Virginia. In December 2009, high ranking law enforcement and criminal justice professionals wrote to members of Congress urging them to sign the Democracy Restoration Act, legislation that seeks to restore the right to vote to individuals upon release from prison. And just recently, a group of law enforcement submitted an amicus curiae brief in a case that challenges Washington’s felony disenfranchisement law, arguing that the laws impede rehabilitation and successful reintegration. 

When testifying recently before a United States House Judiciary Subcommittee, APPA Executive Director and Advisory Council member Carl Wicklund stated, “One of the core missions of parole and probation supervision is to support the successful transition from prison and jail to the community.  Civic participation is an integral part of this transition because it helps transform one’s identity from deviant to law-abiding citizen.”  Providence Police Chief Dean Esserman, another supporter of Rhode Island camping and Advisory Council member, explained, “denying the vote to people who completed their prison sentence disrupts the re-entry process and weakens the long-term prospects for sustainable rehabilitation.”  And Gil Kerlikowske, now the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, wrote when he was Chief of Police in Seattle, “voting is an important way to connect people to their communities, which in turn helps them avoid going back to crime. . . . We want those who leave prison to become productive and law-abiding citizens. Voting puts them on that path.”

In fact, the relationship between Rhode Island Department of Corrections Director A.T. Wall and Andres Idarraga, described in the USA Today article, started well before Andres asked Director Wall for a recommendation to Yale Law School.  Andres was one of the primary spokespeople for the Rhode Island Right to Vote campaign, and he is one of 15,000 Rhode Islanders with a conviction in their past who had their right to vote restored when voters approved a ballot referendum in November 2006.  Rhode Island became the first state to approve Brennan Center’s model bill that not only restores voting rights to individuals upon release from prison, but requires the Department of Corrections to notify individuals in writing about their right and provide voter registration forms.  It was through his work with the right to vote campaign that Andres caught the attention of Director Wall, who had endorsed the campaign and is currently a member of our Advisory Council.

This partnership between corrections/law enforcement individuals and people coming out of prison is exciting and promising.  It shows an increasing commitment within the criminal justice community to help address some of the systematic problems that result in some individuals’ repeated contact with the criminal justice system. Hopefully, this collaboration among unusual allies will continue to grow across the country, and the intuitive link between civic participation and successful re-entry will no longer be ignored.

Tags: Democracy, Voting After Criminal Conviction, Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council, Racial Justice

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Alan Alda Reads from “My First Vote”

 

 

At the 2009 Annual Brennan Legacy Awards, Emmy Award-winning actor Alan Alda, read from a few of the stories featured in My First Vote -- a compilation of stories from people across the country who voted for the first time in November 2008 after having lost, and then regained, their right to vote following a criminal conviction. 

More information on our work to restore voting right to people with criminal histories.

Watch below (approximately 6 minutes).

 

Tags: Democracy, Voting After Criminal Conviction, Communities of Faith Initiative, Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council, Post-Incarceration Restoration of Voting Rights, State-Based Advocacy

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In Honor of Jack Kemp

Jack Kemp Monday marked the passing of a great partner in our work to restore voting rights to people who have come out of the criminal justice system. Jack Kemp, star football player, prominent Congressman, Cabinet Secretary and leader in the Republican Party, passed away Saturday night at the age of 73.

A self-described “bleeding-heart conservative,” Secretary Kemp dedicated much of his political career to fighting racial discrimination. His concern for racial justice and his deep religious beliefs made him an outspoken proponent for reforming felony disenfranchisement laws.

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Tags: Democracy, Voting After Criminal Conviction, Communities of Faith Initiative, Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council, Post-Incarceration Restoration of Voting Rights, State-Based Advocacy, Justice, Criminal Justice, Post-Conviction Penalties

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Build Democracy, Protect Public Safety

Chief TimoneyLast week, John F. Timoney, Miami Police Chief and President of the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), placed two important issues on President-Elect Obama's to-do list: restoring voting rights to people with felony convictions and fixing the disparity in federal crack cocaine sentencing guidelines. Chief Timoney, who is a member of the Brennan Center's Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice Advisory Council, believes that the current policies undermine the criminal justice system and deepen racial divisions in the United States.

Across the country there are 5.3 million American citizens who are denied the right to vote because of a felony conviction in their past. Nearly 4 million of these people are not in prison; they live, work, pay taxes, and raise families in our communities, but remain disenfranchised for years, often for decades, and sometimes for life. States vary widely on when (and how) they restore voting rights. Maine and Vermont do not disenfranchise people with convictions; even prisoners may vote there. Other states do not let people vote while in prison, but have rules allowing people on probation or parole to vote. But there are still 35 states that keep people from exercising their rights as citizens after they have been released from prison.  

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Tags: Democracy, Voting After Criminal Conviction, Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council, Post-Incarceration Restoration of Voting Rights, State-Based Advocacy, Voting Rights & Elections

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Voter Education at Rikers Island

photoThere are approximately 14,000 inmates on Rikers Island, a vast complex of jails less than a mile away from Manhattan in New York City. Led by Commissioner Martin Horn's vision, Winette Saunders-Halyard, the Executive Director of Program Development at Rikers, set out to inform every inmate about his or her right to vote. She asked the Brennan Center for Justice and the New York Voter Assistance Commission to assist her in an unprecedented voter education and registration program during the weeks leading up to the 2008 election.

Together with the Department of Corrections staff and colleagues at the Bronx Defenders, I spoke to hundreds of inmates in the gym, their housing units, the social service waiting areas, and the medical clinics while they waited to be seen.

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Tags: Democracy, Voting After Criminal Conviction, Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice Advisory Council, Post-Incarceration Restoration of Voting Rights, State-Based Advocacy

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