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Friday, September 19, 2014

A White Lawyer's Take on The New Jim Crow, By Brian Moran, Esq. - Guest Blogger

Progressive Prison Project

Innocent Spouse & Children Project

Greenwich, Connecticut


A White Lawyer's Take on The New Jim Crow

By Brian Moran, Esq. - Guest Blogger




Brian Moran is the lead writer of the new, important book, "The Justice Imperative: How Hyper-Incarceration Has Hijacked The American Dream." It exposes in great detail the truth about the Connecticut criminal justice and prison process, and how we are all paying for it.  It also gives specific recommendations as to how we, and our legislators, can make effective changes immediately. We urge all of our friends, colleagues and readers to order and read this book. Please order individual copies through Amazon and group copies through the book website, thejusticeimperative.org. Thank you. - Jeff 
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Last year, after reading Michelle Alexander’s book “The New Jim Crow – Mass Incarceration In the Age of Colorblindness”, I came away thinking this will go down as one of the most important books of the 21st Century.  In the year since then, nothing has transpired to change my mind.  If anything, the discussion in this country on race has amped up.

It is difficult to put race aside when discussing major urban issues, especially mass incarceration.  However, if you take race out of the equation for a moment and look at our prison system strictly from a policy or economic standpoint, an inexorable conclusion is reached:  mass incarceration is simply bad policy.  It is a terrible deal for taxpayers.  The corrections system is enormously expensive and largely ineffective.  As a consequence, the taxpayer does not get bang for his or her hard-earned tax dollars.  In Connecticut, we pay over $1 billion annually on corrections.  It costs $51,000 annually per bed to house an inmate in our state prisons, the third highest rate in the country.  Yet, Connecticut has a recidivism  rate well above the national average, with close to two-thirds of released inmates returning to prison within two to three years.  This revolving door, directly and indirectly, places further strains on our state’s budget.
 

If a CEO at a Fortune 500 Company produced the operating results of our corrections system, he or she would face a shareholder revolt.  So why has there been no taxpayer revolt or outcry?  I would suggest it is a product of a lack of attention and the wide acceptance of the mantra that tough on crime policies necessarily serve the public’s desire for safety.
 

Unlike a lot of the problems we face, our prison system is one that is solvable.  One needs only to look at the proven success of reforms enacted in both red and blue states.  By (1) right-sizing our prison population, (2) using prisons primarily for hard-core, violent criminals and (3) re-investing the cost savings from such right-sizing on drug and mental health treatments and post-release support, we can realize a trifecta of benefits: reduced costs; lower recidivism; and improved crime rates.  Taxpayers should rally behind right-sizing and proven prison reforms.
 

Such reform also comes with the prospect of a fourth societal benefit--improving the fate of inmates, their families and their local communities.  Upon finishing Michelle Alexander’s book and learning about the dire collateral consequences of a felony conviction (e.g., loss of public assistance and housing), I was left thinking that a released felon would be better off leaving the United States and starting over elsewhere.  That is a sad and sobering thought.  We, as a society, must and can do better.  Rehabilitation is not out of reach.  Prison reform, if done properly, can yield not only the trifecta of benefits, but also better the lives of inmates and their families.  If we fail to act decisively, we risk subjecting yet another generation of urban youth to the revolving door of our current prison system, a door that the taxpayer pays to keep spinning.



Brian E. Moran is a partner in the law firm of Robinson + Cole LLP. He is a civil litigator specializing in antitrust, intellectual property, licensing and other commercial disputes. He has co-written two business books, The Executive’s Antitrust Guide To Pricing: Understanding Implications of Typical Marketing, Distribution and Pricing Practices (2013), published by Thomson Reuters, and E-Counsel: The Executive’s Legal Guide to Electronic Commerce (2000).

He is the founder of The Success Foundation, a non-profit that has run summer study programs on college campuses for low-income ninth graders with college potential. In 2006, the Foundation’s Students Undertaking College Career Enhancing Study SkillsTM Program received a Gold CQIA Innovation Prize from The Connecticut Quality Improvement Award Partnership, Inc. CQIA is Connecticut’s Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award Partner.
Mr. Moran received a B.A. with distinction from the University of Virginia and a J.D. degree from the University of Richmond School of Law.
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Here's a six-minute video that will start you off on your journey of learning about the real story in the criminal justice system. Produced by Malta Justice Initiative/the Prodigal Project. - Jeff


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Rev. Jeff Grant, JD, M Div, Minister/Director
jgrant@prisonist.org
jg3074@columbia.edu
(o) +1203.769.1096
(m) +1203.339.5887

Lynn Springer, Advocate, Innocent Spouses & Children
lspringer@prisonist.org
(m) +1203.536.5508

George Bresnan, Advocate, Ex-Pats
gbresnan@prisonist.org

Michael Karaffa, Advocate, Disabilities
mkaraffa@prisonist.org

Please feel free to contact us if we can be of service to you, a friend or family member - we will promptly send you an information package by mail, email via Dropbox. 


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Comments From Social Media: 

Betsy Hansbrough Boy, do I agree with the fact that this was the most important book I have read in sometime.

Anna Melissa Jackson We won't revolt against mass incarceration on a national level until this is affecting more than the black and brown communities. 

1 comment:

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KuZYUF9HvU
    Criminalization of Asperger Syndrome and Mental Illness

    ReplyDelete