Jump to content

Criminal justice reform in the United States

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by OAbot (talk | contribs) at 04:03, 24 May 2021 (Open access bot: hdl added to citation with #oabot.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Obama pointing to barbed wire
Barack Obama visits FCI El Reno, 2015 as the first American president to visit a prison.

Criminal justice reform addresses structural issues in criminal justice systems such as racial profiling, police brutality, overcriminalization, mass incarceration, and recidivism. Reforms can take place at any point where the criminal justice system intervenes in citizens’ lives, including lawmaking, policing, sentencing and incarceration. Criminal justice reform can also address the collateral consequences of conviction, including disenfranchisement or lack of access to housing or employment, that may restrict the rights of individuals with criminal records.

There are many organizations that advocate to reform the criminal justice system such as: ACLU, Penal Reform International, Sentencing Project, Brennan Center for Justice, Cut 50 and the Innocence Project. These organizations use legal disputes, impact litigation and advocacy as well as educational events to make the public aware of problems with the criminal justice system and push state and federal governments toward reform.

Areas for reform

Sentencing

Sentencing laws within the U.S. criminal justice system are criticized for being both draconian and racially discriminatory, contributing to the growing and excessive prison population known as mass incarceration. Sentencing reform can reduce lengthy penalties for violent and nonviolent crimes, make it more difficult to incarcerate people for minor offenses, increase parole grants, improve prison programming, and even expedite the release of eligible insiders, all of which have been proven to contribute to decarceration.[1]

Discriminatory sentencing

In 2016, according to the Sentencing Project's Fact Sheet on Trends in U.S. Corrections, 2.1 million individuals were in America's prisons or jails.[2] This reflects a 500% increase since the mid-1980s, which has come to be known as mass incarceration. Those in support of criminal justice reform perceive the issue to be an increase in surveillance and the use of draconian sentencing laws, especially within communities of color. While some researches claim that racial sentencing disparities are a reflection of differences in criminal activity, crime seriousness, and recidivism between different communities, other researchers believe that racial minorities are punished more harshly than their white counterparts who commit similar crimes.[3]

Findings from a study done by Cassia C. Spohn, explained in "Thirty Years of Sentencing Reform: The Quest for a Racial Neutral Sentencing Process" indicate that an individual's race and ethnicity play a role in sentencing outcomes.[3]

Sentencing regulation

Individuals are sentenced more often and for longer with the average sentence in the U.S. being nearly twice as long as Australian and five times as long as German sentences.[4] Truth in Sentencing laws and mandatory minimums are perceived to be two forms of draconian policies that contribute to prison overcrowding.

Truth in sentencing law requires that offenders serve the majority of their sentences before being eligible for release, restricting or eliminating sentencing exceptions such as good-time, earned-time, and parole board release.[5] The majority of truth in sentencing laws require offenders to complete at least 85% of their sentence.[5] Due to the formation of the Violent Offender Incarceration and Truth-in-Sentencing Incentive Grants Program by Congress in 1994, states are given grants if they require violent offenders to serve at least 85% of their sentences.[5]

Mandatory minimums are laws that require judges to sentence an individual to a specified minimum prison sentence for the committed crime.[6] Mandatory minimums have often resulted in unnecessarily harsh sentences for low-level offenders and are believed to contribute to racial disparities in prison.[7] These laws also shift power from judges to prosecutors, who have the ability to use the threat of an extremely long sentence in order to pressure defendants into accepting a plea bargain.[6] Repealing mandatory minimums for certain low-level offenses, such as drug crimes, would return power to judges and allow a more flexible approach to sentencing that could help promote alternatives to incarceration.[1]

Drug policy

Proponents of drug policy reform point to the war on drugs, marijuana law reform, and reducing drug harm as key issues.[8] Advocates for policy change such as the Drug Policy Alliance believe that the War on Drugs was and is a policy failure that has led to wasted resources, human potential, and a violation of rights.[8] The mass incarceration of drug users is viewed as a waste of taxpayer money by drug reform advocated. The United States spends over $51 million yearly on the war on drugs.

Organizations that focus on reform such as the Sentencing Project and Campaign Zero also claim that the likelihood of imprisonment for drug related charges is racially disparate.[2][9] In her book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, Michelle Alexander originates the claim that the War on Drugs is a new form of systematic oppression and social control that resembles Jim Crow laws that enforced racial segregation.[10] The enactment of the War on Drugs in the 1980s is primarily responsible for the dramatic rise in incarceration rates in the U.S.[2] In the 1980s, 40,900 individuals were incarcerated due to drug offenses, and by 2015 there were 469,545.[2] In 2016 1,572,579 individuals were arrested for drug law violations (84% of which were due to possession).[8] Of this number, 643,249 were arrested due to marijuana violations (89% of which were due to possession).[8] Approximately half of the individuals currently incarcerated in federal prisons are there due to a drug offense. [1]Half of the individuals in federal prison are there due to a drug offense.[11] Compared to 1980, there are ten times as many people in state prisons for drug offenses.[11]

The focus of the War on Drugs is cited as being misguided for stigmatizing drug users.[8] Drug use is framed as a criminal rather than addiction and health issue. The Drug Policy Alliance points to countries that focus on the reduction of drug-related harms such as overdose, addiction, and disease as metrics for drug policy success.[8] Portugal is often cited as extremely successful for their drug policies since decriminalizing low-level drug possession in 2001 and shifting towards a health-based approach to drug use.[8][12] Since doing so Portugal has seen a decrease in violent crime, addiction, and the transmission of diseases such as HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C.[8][12]

Policing

Policing reform typically focuses on police brutality and the use of dangerous force against minority individuals. Police brutality refers to the "use of excessive physical force or verbal assault and psychological intimidation" by law enforcement against individuals.[13]

According to Mapping Police Violence, police killed 1,147 individuals in 2017.[14] This shows an increase from previous years with 963 individuals killed by fatal force in 2016 and 995 killed in 2015.[15] The distribution of these killings varies widely by state with the majority of incidences occurring in states such as California, Texas, Florida, and Arizona and the least in Rhode Island, Vermont and North Dakota. While the distribution of killings by state within the U.S. is not even, overall more individuals die due to police shootings and other acts of excessive force than in any other Western, developed nation.[14][16] Additionally, there are racial disparities within statistics of police killings.30% of the Black victims were unarmed, compared to 21% of White Victims that were.[14]

Police brutality

People in favor of criminal justice reform point to recurring examples of discriminatory violence towards individuals such as the Watts Riots of 1965, the beating of Rodney King in 1991, and the death of Amadou Diallo in the 1990s.

Theories from various fields including sociology and psychology have attempted to explain the phenomena of police brutality.[17] Sociological theories of brutality focus on the way in which interactions between police and individuals are influenced by the status of the individual.[17] This means that differences race, gender, and socioeconomic status result in disparate treatment by law enforcement.[17] Additionally, "situational factors" such as the character of the neighborhood also affect the interactions.[17] Each of these factors are cues that push officers to make judgements about how to proceed.[17] So, according to this theory minorities are overrepresented in police killings simply due to perceptions of their race.[17] Psychological theories of police brutality emphasizes that different outlooks and personalities result in differing behavior by the police.[17] This follows behavioral psychology in suggesting that differences in gender, socioeconomic status, educational and experiences affect one's responses.[17] Organizational theory suggests that police brutality is a result of the organizational structure of law enforcement. The use of excessive force is seen as a response to disrespecting their authority.[17]

In his book Punishing Race, Michael Tonry of University of Michigan, claims that White individuals and groups typically excuse police brutality due to a deep-seated prejudice towards Blacks.[18] Media representations of Black individuals and disparate sentencing contribute to the idea that Black individuals are inherently more criminal.[13] Research reveals that Black males with features considered Afrocentric such as darker skin tone, broad noses, and full lips, receive longer sentences than their lighter-skinned counterparts with Eurocentric features.[13]

Broken windows policing

Broken windows policing, or quality of life policing, is based on a criminological theory known as broken windows theory. This theory suggests that repairing broken windows in buildings and other forms of physical disorder within a city indicate whether or not there is crime.[19] When translated to policing tactics, minor offenses are targeted as a way to deter greater, more serious crime.[19] Reformers point to the ways that broken windows policing negatively impacts communities of color through criminalization and excessive force.[9] Additionally, it is typically seen as responsible for over policing and the militarization of neighborhoods.[9] Offenses such as drug possession, "suspicious" activities or mental health crises often lead to the characterization of a neighborhood as disorderly and in need of stronger policing. Opponents of broken windows policing and theory suggest that this leads to the inherent criminalization of poor, minority and homeless individuals. It creates a stigma that reinforces the underlying problems that lead to the perception of crime within the neighborhood. Additionally, those that oppose the theory suggest that these issues are improperly addressed by law enforcement and instead should be treated by social workers or healthcare professionals.

Predictive policing

Predictive policing is an analytical technique used by law enforcement in order to predict where crime is likely to occur.[20] It involves predicting both the potential time and place of crimes and individuals likely to commit them. It is used as an alternative to full reliance and trust in the "hunches" and instincts of law enforcement that are believed to come with training.[20] Proponents of predictive policing believe that it is a way to minimize bias and discriminatory practices within policing.[20]

Opponents of predictive policing point to the fact that (1) the data used to isolate patterns of criminal behavior uses a privatized algorithm that only companies have access to and (2) its potential to reinforce existing biases against poor and minority communities.[21] Because predictive policing algorithms use existing data to make predictions, it would follow that existing bias within the system is not eliminated but amplified.[21] Additionally, opponents believe that it is a way to "manufacture" crime; it reinforces the idea that crime in an area exists and just needs to be found by law enforcement.[21]

Stop and frisk

Stop-and-frisk stops refer to "a brief non-intrusive police stop of a suspect" warranted by "reasonable suspicion" that often involve a pat-down of the suspect.[22] Stop-and-frisk policies became a large part of criminal justice reform efforts following NYPD's use of the tactic. NYPD vowed to end its implementation of stop and frisk policies August 12, 2013 when ruled unconstitutional in Floyd v. City of New York.[23] Although this is the case, similar policies are used in other cities throughout the U.S.[24] Stop and frisk has saved thousands of lives according to former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, and has been responsible for taking thousands of illegal weapons off the streets of New York. According to Bloomberg Stop and Frisk has reduced the incarceration rate by 30 percent. "People also have a right to walk down the street without being killed or mugged", said Bloomberg, "And for those rights to be protected, we have to give the members of our Police Department the tools they need to do their job..."

Opponents of stop-and-frisk believe that it is unconstitutional, ineffective, and racist. Most cases in which stop and frisk is used are a result of the War on Drugs.[25] In line with this, the majority of those targeted are racial minorities, specifically African Americans.[25] A report by the Public Advocate's office indicates that of the 532,911 stops made in 2012 in New York City, 53% of individuals were Black and 31% were Hispanic.[26] Additionally, the New York Civil Liberties Union indicated that only 97,296 stops were made in 2002, or less than a fifth of those made in 2012.[26] Opponents point to the fact that stop-and-frisk is often unproductive and fails to fulfill its aim.[26] Of the 2.3 million instances of police stopping Black males based on reasonable suspicion between 2004 and 2012, only 16,000 resulted in the seizure of illicit goods.[26] In addition to this, Julian V. Roberts states in his article, "Public Opinion, Crime, and Criminal Justice" that research shows not a lot of people are aware of basic laws statistics of crimes.[27]

Re-entry

Those that believe re-entry programs need reform typically point to recidivism rates within the United States criminal justice system. While those against reform claim that recidivism rates are indicative of inherent criminality amongst certain groups, those in support of reform believe it is indicative of the ineffectiveness of re-entry and parole programs.

Different types of disenfranchisement exist that affect the formerly incarcerated after their release. Advocates of criminal justice reform in the United States often also push for the reform of restrictions on federal aid and societal participation.[28] Federal restrictions that exist include bans on the use of welfare programs and federal financial aid for education.[28] Restrictions on societal participation include felons not being allowed to hold public office, teach or work in child care, or vote. Voting restrictions are known as felony disenfranchisement.[28] This refers to the regulations that prevent those with a felony conviction from voting in local, state, and federal elections on the basis of their conviction. 6.1 million individuals were unable to vote due to felony disenfranchisement in 2016.[2]

Former prisoners are incarcerated multiple times, increasing recidivism rates, because they are unable to follow strict rules and regulations.[29] Advocates of parole reform perceive these regulations as not being focus on community well being but instead on controlling parolees.[29] A report for Columbia University's Justice lab showed that in the four years since January 1, 2018, New York City's jail population declined by 21%.[29] However, during this time period, the population of individuals incarcerated due to parole violations increased by 15%.[29]

The challenge of finding employment opportunities is another barrier for reintegration. Many employers deny applicants due to criminal records. Other reasons for difficulty finding employment is lack of available support such as personal networks and resources from correction systems.[30] The chance of successful reintegration can come from the community surrounding the newly released individual. Those who return to disadvantaged neighborhoods have a higher chance of recidivism than those who return to communities with rich and affluent resources.[31] Lack of stable housing and resources to combat mental health and drug and alcohol abuse create obstacles for formerly incarcerated to successfully reintegrate.[32]

Former prisoners are incarcerated multiple times, increasing recidivism rates, because of many factors that often do not include real crime. Most often they are re-incarcerated because of strict parole rules and regulations.[33] Advocates of parole reform perceive these regulations as not being focus on community well being but instead on controlling parolees.[33] A report for Columbia University's Justice lab showed that in the four years since January 1, 2018, New York City's jail population declined by 21%.[33] However, during this time period, the population of individuals incarcerated due to parole violations increased by 15%.[33]

There are many forms of successful re-entry. Government intervention such as implementing "wrap-around" services are proven to help income and boost employment.[34] Comprehensive social services that offer independent housing and jobs alongside counseling and rehabilitation help formerly incarcerated reintegrate.[35] Restorative justice approaches can also be effective in reducing recidivism: Programs that engage repeat offenders in community justice, such as group affiliations and mentorship, help divert participants from the prison system.[36]

The Second Chance Act was passed with bipartisan support in an effort to reduce recidivism rates and improve outcomes for individuals following their released from juvenile facilities, jails and prisons.[37] Second Chance Grant Programs include those that focus on substance use and mental disorders, mentoring and transitional services for adults, improvement for the outcomes for youth in the juvenile justice system, and technology career training.[37]

The "Ban the Box" Act is a program that has been implemented in 23 states that offers fair chance hiring for the formerly incarcerated by eliminating the requirement of addressing criminal history on employment applications.[38] This act strives to end criminal record discrimination and has improved employment opportunities for formerly incarcerated with employers such as Target, Starbucks, and Home Depot.[38] "Ban the Box" also influences racial discrimination as employers began to guess who has criminal records, and individuals mostly targeted by these assumptions are Hispanics and Blacks.[39]

Juvenile justice reform

The push for reform within juvenile justice highlights the notion that Black and Latino individuals, especially males, are criminalized prior to adulthood.[40] The juvenile justice system is viewed in the same light as the criminal justice system as a form of social control that incapacitates Black and Latino youth.[40] Criminalization is also thought to occur in other social institutions such as school businesses, the streets and community centers.[40] The juvenile justice system itself is also often criticized by reformers for perpetuating the notion that non-criminal individuals are criminal.[40] The majority of individuals that enter the system have committed non-violent offenses, but still experience the effects of indirect punishment, direct punishment, and criminalization of their violent counterparts.[40] Overall, this criminalization is thought to be harmful due to its impact on the perception and Black and Latino youth have of themselves and their capability to be successful within society.[40]

Many also believe that the juvenile justice system is a part of the school-to-prison pipeline which funnels individuals from public school to the criminal and juvenile justice systems.[41] Harsher disciplinary rules, which stem from educational inequalities, prevent individuals from re-entering schools following an offense, making it more likely for them to experience social pressures such as law income and unemployment that reform groups perceive to lead to criminal activity.[42] Additionally, in-school arrests contribute to the pipeline.[42] Advocates of reform point to the fact that 70% of students arrested at school are Black, further contributing to the criminalization and mass incarceration of Black individuals.[42]

"There is a growing body of evidence that identifies child maltreatment as a predictor of lifetime anti-social and criminal behavior" (Basto-Pereira, Miranda, Ribeiro, & Maia. (2016). Whatever the reason for the criminal behavior, there must be countermeasures that are developed to keep people that are more than likely to commit a crime from committing them. After school programs, community involvement in youth, diversionary programs must be in place to keep youth that have a higher risk of committing a crime from continuing their crime involvement. If you do not start something at the beginning, you will never address the cause of the issue.[43]

Arguments on criminal justice reform

Arguments exist for and against criminal justice reform in the United States. While it is more common for those on the left to support reform, some conservative groups and individuals also believe that the system must be reformed.

Support for reform

Conservative support for reform

There is a push from conservative groups such as Right on Crime to reclaim ground in the debate for criminal justice reform. Although support for reform is typically associated with liberal ideology, conservative criminological views emphasize the role of individual responsibility in crime. This parts from the liberal viewpoint that societal pressures contribute to crime in society.

Conservative responses to crime emphasize holding prisoners accountable.[44] They also strongly believe in the concept of victim reconciliation, or restorative justice.[44] Restorative justice focuses on mediation between a victim and offender in order to satisfy both parties.[45] Furthermore, they believe that victim engagement benefits victims and offenders because a large part of rehabilitation is the recognition of the impact of their criminal acts.[44][45]

The conservative case for criminal justice reform is based on a moral belief in the need to help offenders turn their lives around, but also necessary for public safety.[44] The conservative belief is that high incarceration rates reflect an expansion of government power.[44] Fiscal discipline reflects a large portion of conservative support for reform.[44] Those that have been advanced in support of criminal justice reform include that the prison population of the United States costs about $80 billion per year to maintain.[46] The push for reform emphasizes that it is inefficient to continue to spend such a large portion of state and national taxpayer dollars on incarcerating such a large number of individuals.[44] Additionally, conservatives believe that the government should have greater accountability in reducing rates.[44]

Their proposed reforms have been criticized by some who claim the reforms are driven primarily by cost benefit analysis and recidivism, not a concern for justice and human rights, including sociologist Marie Gottschalk, who stated "cost-benefit analysis is one of the principal tools of the neoliberal politics on which the carceral state is founded."[47]

Liberal support for reform

Liberal reformers believe that since the civil rights era, a form of color-blind racism has developed, reflecting a shift from de jure to de facto racism.[28] Within this, racial minorities, most often African Americans of a low socioeconomic status, "are subject to unequal protection of the laws, excessive surveillance, extreme segregation, and neo-slave labor via incarceration, all in the name of crime control."[28] Beyond tangible punishments there are "invisible punishments" such as felony disenfrachisment, restrictions on holding public office, occupational bans on professions such as law enforcement, teaching and child care, bans on welfare and federal assistance, and federal financial aid for education.[28] Because mass incarceration and "invisible punishments" that also impact communities of color are thought of and referred to as the New Jim Crow, or another form of racialized social control, prison abolitionists draw parallels between prison abolition and the abolition of slaves.[28][48][10]

The prison abolition movement, typically believed to be on the far left, view prisons as a form of Neo-slavery that is unjust and racist.[28][48] The movement dates back to Emma Goldman's 1911 abolitionist essay, The Priest and the Devil to open Prisons: A Social Crime and Failure.[49] There exists the belief that prisons are obsolete, financially motivated, and better replaced by more humane institutions that directly focus on the rehabilitation of individuals.[48] The abolition movement believes that prisons should not be reformed but replaced as they are not productive social institutions and instead only serve to incapacitate individuals.[49][48] Proponents of abolition may support divestment from the prison system through state and federal budget plans that funnel money away from punitive institutions and invest in community-based alternatives to incarceration.

Opposition to reform

Opposition to criminal justice reform typically is expressed by conservatives who do not perceive errors in the criminal justice system. Those that believe this also typically reject the claim from reform activists that the criminal justice system acts in a way that is racially disparate, and do not acknowledge the War on Drugs as "the new Jim Crow." Instead, "blue racism," or discrimination against law enforcement is seen as existing.[50] Policing is viewed as a colorblind process that has no consideration for the race of offenders.[50] Right wing media outlets frequently fight the notion of racially disparate policing that groups such as Black Lives Matter and Campaign Zero with the idea that police officers are reacting to compromising situations in a normal and rational way.[51] Crime is cited as the rationale for any police reaction, and "violent criminal attacks are (cited as) the best predictor of whom police might shoot in America" according to those opposed to reform.[51]

Reform organizations

Several non-profits, organizations, and initiatives also focus on criminal justice reform including the ACLU, Campaign Zero, Right on Crime, The Innocence Project, The Sentencing Project, and the Marshall Project. The goals of these organizations is to spread awareness about perceived injustices within the criminal justice system and to promote action against it through social and policy change.[9][11][44]

In 2015 a number of reformers, including the ACLU, the Center for American Progress, Families Against Mandatory Minimums, Koch family foundations, the Coalition for Public Safety, and the MacArthur Foundation, announced a bipartisan resolution to reform the criminal justice system in the United States. Their efforts were lauded by President Obama who noted these reforms will improve rehabilitation and workforce opportunities for those who have served their sentences.[52][53][54][55]

Reform organizations led by people with conviction histories and their family members have sprung up across the United States in recent decades. The Formerly Incarcerated, Convicted People & Families Movement (FICPFM), a national network of organizations led by and for people impacted by the justice system and dedicated to ending mass incarceration, was formed in 2011. Its member organizations share the belief that people with first-hand experience of the justice system are uniquely positioned to advocate for alternatives to incarceration and for the restoration of rights to people with criminal records. The role of formerly-incarcerated leaders in promoting transformational criminal justice reform has often gone unrecognized in academic and policy arenas, but FICPFM has contributed to a national movement that's gaining institutional recognition and traction at local, state and national levels.[56][57]

Reform in the States

A common theme of reform bills in the states aim for reform on sentencing laws, civil asset forfeiture laws, bail reform, "ban the box" policies, and juvenile justice reform.

Reformed the policy of allowing people with a felony drug conviction apply for assistance programs such as food and cash assistance. Alabama reformed this policy to expand the criteria as a case-by-case premise.[58]

In 2016, Alaska chose not to participate in the law that doesn't allow people with a felony drug conviction to apply for programs to assist in their living and family situations. Include in their new policy under Senate Bill 91, someone with a felony drug conviction must follow the court's rehabilitation treatments and remain on good behavior under the assigned parole requirements.[58]

In April 2017, Arizona amended the civil assets forfeiture law allowing agencies of the government to take property from criminal enterprises whether there was a conviction or not.[59]

Most recently Arkansas passed Act 423 of 2017 to allow offenders who break probation or parole to be housed in a different, more rehabilitative facility for a shorter amount of time instead of overcrowding the prison system. This law also keeps offenders who commit crimes from being intoxicated by drugs or because of their mental health out of prison and jails. Their focus is on reducing the prison population. They agree, bipartisan, to do this by reducing prison sentences and adding reentry programs while keeping it cost-effective.[60]

The recent governor of California proposed to reduce the population of prisons with three new eligibility requirements approved by the public. Proposition 57 included on policy for judge's approval on juvenile offenders being tried as an adult, changing the eligibility requirements for an adult with violent convictions allowing them to be granted parole, and advising the prison system to be more lenient on the "good behavior" rules for those incarcerated to be released early.[58]

Senate Bill 181 was created in 2016 and allows juveniles that were previously sentenced to life without the option of parole to file for a resentencing hearing, in hopes of reducing the prison population.[58]

In August 2017, the governor passed a reform bill for the criminal justice system of Connecticut. This bill included a bail reform to get ride of cash bail for misdemeanor level and non-violent offenses. It also included a requirement of a criminal conviction before seizing the asset(s) someone put up for bail. The governor also created "Second Chance Society" to reduced the consequences of drug possession and offenders who committed non-violent offenses to apply for parole or get their conviction pardoned.[61]

Delaware amended the "three-strikes" law by allowing more convictions before the offender was sentenced under the law. Under Senate Bill 163 Delaware lowered the sentencing requirement for the "three-strikes" law and is allowing offenders already convicted to be resentenced. In 2016, Delaware also reformed their policy that made people with convicted felonies to pay their fines off before they could vote. SB 242 allows convicted felons to vote without paying off their fines.[58]

Florida reformed one of their sentencing policies in 2016. Aggravated assault is no longer a crime that sentences a 10 to 20 or 20 to Life mandatory minimum statue, under SB 228.[58]

Georgia, like Alabama amended their policy for food assistance programs for a case-by-case premise under Senate Bill 367.[58]

The summer of 2012 the governor enacted two bills to reform the justice system for both juveniles and adults. House Bill 2515 and Senate Bill 2776, which was agreed upon by both parties, were signed to reduce the number of prisoners by reducing recidivism rates and use rehabilitation more than prisons.[62]

In 2005, Idaho created a group of members from the branches of government to contemplate the issues in the criminal justice system and find the most cost effective and safe practices to keep the public safe and reform the system. They have created guidelines to reduce recidivism rates in their state. Idaho, most recently, has revised a policy for posting cash bail bonds for low-level driving offenses.

Illinois adopted House Bill 1437, in 2016, requiring the Criminal Justice Information Authority to evaluate the reporting practices. It also regulates the requirements for reporting practices such as arrest without charges, most involving racial demographics.[58]

There has been framework to amend sentencing policies that coincide with the offense rather than the standard for everyone. It includes the use of rehabilitation for drug offenders to keep them out prison and tightening the ropes of offenders on probation.[63]

In 2016 Iowa reduced the mandatory minimum sentencing for second degree robbery offenses from seven years to five or six years. The House File 2064 also allows offenders who committed non-violent drug offenses to be released early after serving half their mandatory minimum sentence.[58]

In April 2016, Kansas passed Senate Bill 367 to save money on offenders who are considered "low-risk" by serving their time helping the community while they live at home. Instead, the bill intends that the money is spent rehabilitating the "high-risk" offenders to keep them from entering the criminal justice system again after they are released. SB 367 is also aimed at fixing the juvenile justice system by categorizing them as "low-risk" offenders and keeping them out of the prison systems to lower incarceration rates.[64]

Kentucky passed House Bill 40 to allow offenders to file to have their low-level conviction removed from their record. This also allows people with their felony records removed to vote.[58]

Louisiana allowed House Bill 266, a "ban the box" policy that holds up the question "have you ever been convicted of a felony" on employment applications to give a fair chance to those that have. In 2016, they also passed Senate Bill 324, changing the age for juveniles to be considered criminally responsible to 18.[58]

This reform is aimed at fixing police misconduct and the policies that impact the public of an indigent nature. In April, the governor enacted a bill that reformed the bail system, waiving fines and fee in certain cases, called LD 1639.[65]

With House Bill 1312, Maryland reversed the mandatory minimum sentence for drug crimes that weren't violent. It also allowed offenders that are incarcerated and can apply for aged and medical parole earlier and allowing the prison system to award more credits to offenders for finishing programs that are educational. Maryland also allowed HB 980, without the governor's permission, to allow offenders in felony parole to vote.[58]

In Massachusetts, a person will no longer get their license suspended if they are convicted of a drug offense also getting rid of the fee to get one's license back, under Senate Bill 2021.[58]

The governor signed to enact multiple bills in March 2017. One includes Senate Bill 8, a bill that will reform the recidivism rates by applying supervision practices for offenders on probation or parole to agencies that get state funding. SB 22 is another bill that reforms the rehabilitative services to those in the age range of 18 and 22. Lastly, SB 9 reforms the reentry program to make it an easier transition back to functioning society.[66]

Minnesota has become more lenient on the sale and possession laws by reducing the imprisonment time for first-degree and second-degree sales and possession charges for drugs including heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamines. With Senate File 3481, Minnesota has increased the amount for a first-degree sale and possession charge from 10 grams to 17. For offenses with violent factors such as firearms, the imprisonment term has increased.[58]

House Bill 812 was signed by the governor to regulate civil forfeiture reporting made easier for departments in the state.[67]

Missouri also amended their law defining the voting requirements for offenders in the state. The governor also held up the "ban the box" policy.[58]

In October 2017, Montana signed into law House Bill 133. This bill reforms the system by reforming sentencing for a wide range of first-time misdemeanors or by eliminating incarceration time. It also got rid of mandatory minimum sentences for felony drug offenses but revised the mandatory minimum statutes for felony sex crimes.[68]

Nebraska passed three bills reforming the criminal justice system. Legislative Bill 172 which was directed towards sentencing of midlevel felon charges by reducing or getting id of the mandatory minimum sentences. LB 173 was directed towards the "three-strikes" law by reducing the requirements to only violent crimes. Lastly, LB 483 which would reenact a rule from the 1980s. This is the "one-third" rule that forces judges to apply minimum sentences that are a third of the maximum sentence.[69]

Nevada has reformed the policy for voting by allowing convicted felons to vote in Assembly Bill 181. They have reformed the amount of time to file for a petition to seal conviction records in Senate Bill 125 and allowing offenders who are incarcerated to speak with their families to find a job for when they reenter society in Senate Bill 420.[70]

Most recently in New Hampshire, they have decriminalized a small amount of marijuana with House Bill 640. Senate Bill 200 reduces the likeliness that you will have served jail time for not being able to afford a fine and its fees.[71]

New Jersey passed a bill reforming the treatment of offenders while they are incarcerated by only allowing offenders to be housed in solitary confinement for less than 15 consecutive days at a time. S51 also prohibits solitary confinement for those with disabilities, mental illnesses, and the LGBTQ community. If an offender is housed in solitary confinement, S51 requires they are seen by a medical professional every day for their stay.[72]

The reform for New Mexico has focused mostly on making the sentencing tougher, but there has been a campaign that advocates for reform called New Mexico Safe.[73]

New York passed a 2017 Criminal Justice Reform Act only approving, so far, reforming the bail determination system, raising the age of juvenile offenders, and providing a speedy trial for all.[74]

Most recent controversy about North Carolina is the passing of House Bill 142 that prevents the protection of the members in the LGBTQ community. Senate Bill 145 puts a limit on the role of the highway department patrol enforcing federal immigration laws.[75]

North Dakota has passed two bills reforming the criminal justice system in different ways. One bill, House Bill 1221, reforms the confidential informant use by the police restricting juveniles to be an informant, making sure the informant has spoken with a lawyer and both parties are aware of the safety risks. The other bill, House Bill 1195, reforms the juvenile sentencing for murder. Instead of being sentenced as an adult, if they are tried as an adult, they are sentenced as a juvenile so they won't receive the sentence of life without the option of parole.[76]

Most recently, Ohio has passed Senate Bill 97 to increase the amount of time someone who has committed a crime with a weapon spends in prison by 50%. It also restricts offenders with a violent background and violent criminal history to buy or use a firearm. They have also passed a variation of the "ban the box" policy by requiring employers of the public to not consider the criminal background as the first thing to rule them out.[77]

Oklahoma has amended classifications for drug possession charges and property offenses to reflect as misdemeanors under State Question 780. They also approved State Question 781 to use the money funding offenders in the previous state question towards rehabilitation instead. In 2016, Oklahoma also held up the "ban the box" policy.[58]

Most recent efforts from Oregon is a complain, They Report to you, to make the criminal justice system clearer to the average person, focus on the reason an offender commits a crime but also with a prevention and rehabilitative approach.[78]

Reform in Pennsylvania has enacted a Senate Bill 100, Criminal Justice Reform Act that changes laws such as sending offenders who violate parole conditions to a community correction center instead of prison and to sentencing offenders of misdemeanor level offenses to prison.[79]

Rhode Island has passed a human trafficking reform this past year (2017) and a Juvenile Reinvestment package.[80]

The age for criminal responsibility was increased with Senate Bill 916 to age 17.[58]

South Dakota has eliminated the life without the option of parole for juveniles completely for people under 18 years old when they committed the crime with Senate Bill 140.[58]

In recent years, many groups have been created to battle the task of reforming the criminal justice system. They all aim to impact the bail system, and juvenile justice. In 2017 a juvenile justice reform bill was passed that makes judges let juveniles know when they can and cannot expunge their record and lowered the age of allowing them to do that to 17.[81]

Texas, just like Alabama, Missouri, and Georgia has reformed the voting eligibility requirements for offenders based on their cases.[58] In Texas in 2007 they were seeking to build more prisons at a cost of 2 billion dollars. The legislature enacted criminal justice reforms and by 2010 they closed 4 prisons and are planning on closing more and the crime rate dropped. <Grover, N. (2017). Conservatives For Criminal Justice Reform. The Wall Street Journal, pp a17. >

A person that has paid his or her debt to society should get "ALL" American Rights back. Depending on if he or she has led a good life after said debt has been paid in full and should not be held against him or her after 20 years of no other felony convictions.

With House Bill 405, Utah also eliminated the life without parole for juveniles under 18 for capital offenses.[58]

In 2016, Vermont granted House Bill 95 and got rid of the discretion for the state to charge juveniles as adults for certain and less serious offenses.[58]

The governor pushed executive orders that allowed about 70,000 people who have completed their sentence, parole included to vote in 2016.[58]

Washington has reformed their sentencing structure also while restructuring their discretionary powers for those involved in the criminal justice system. In September 2017, the voting rights of people with felony convictions were reenacted allowing them to vote once their sentence is completed. Another reform Washington is working towards is bail reform.[82]

Senate Bill 393 was passed in April 2015 to reform the juvenile justice system by keeping the juveniles at home instead of incarcerated.[83]

Wisconsin has also recently adopted a form the "ban the box" policy to require the employers of state jobs to hold off on asking about any criminal convictions until the end of the application process in the Wisconsin Act 150.[84] The state has also pursued more options for those who committed low-level nonviolent crimes out of prisons and jails and more resources in the community in Assembly 657.[84] They have also tightened the penalty process for repeat offenders of driving while intoxicated in AB 536 and Senate Bill 455.

One bill in 2017 aimed at fixing the criminal justice system wasn't passed in the Senate. It was aimed at reforming sentences and reforming the parole and probation violations and the conditions and resentencing.

[85]

Global criminal justice reform efforts

As an example, in 2016, it was reported that Britain was considering reforming its own criminal justice system in similar ways that Texas had done so in recent years.[86]

There is an organization called the United Nations Office of Drug and Crime. They advocate for criminal justice reform globally as well.[87] They advocate for reform in the police departments, prosecutorial reform, court reform, prison reform, and mostly for restorative justice. UNODC helps countries develop plans such as legislature to pass to reform their entire criminal justice system. They also work closely with other groups mostly fixating on the global drug problem.

References

  1. ^ a b "Decarceration Strategies: How 5 States Achieved Substantial Prison Population Reductions". The Sentencing Project. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  2. ^ a b c d e Trends in U.S. Corrections. The Sentencing Project, 2017, Trends in U.S. Corrections, sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Trends-in-US-Corrections.pdf.
  3. ^ a b Spohn, Cassia. "Thirty years of sentencing reform: The quest for a racially neutral sentencing process." Criminal justice 3 (2000): 427–501
  4. ^ "How Truth in Sentencing Keeps Prisons Full – GenFKD". [FKD]. 2015-12-17. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  5. ^ a b c Inc., US Legal. "Truth in Sentencing Law and Legal Definition | USLegal, Inc". definitions.uslegal.com. Retrieved 2018-03-10. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ a b "Mandatory Minimums and Sentencing Reform". Criminal Justice Policy Foundation. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  7. ^ "Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System". The Sentencing Project. Retrieved 2021-05-14.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "Drug Policy Alliance". Drug Policy Alliance. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  9. ^ a b c d "Campaign Zero". Campaign Zero. Retrieved 2018-02-23.
  10. ^ a b Alexander, Michelle. The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. New Press, 2016.
  11. ^ a b c "Drug Policy | The Sentencing Project". The Sentencing Project. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  12. ^ a b Ferreira, Susana (2017-12-05). "Portugal's radical drugs policy is working. Why hasn't the world copied it?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  13. ^ a b c Chaney, Cassandra, and Ray V. Robertson. "Racism and Police Brutality in America." Journal of African American Studies, vol. 17, no. 4, 2013, pp. 480–505. JSTOR, JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/43525523.
  14. ^ a b c "Police killed 1,147 people in the U.S. in 2017". Mapping Police Violence. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
  15. ^ "2015 Washington Post database of police shootings". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
  16. ^ Lartey, Jamiles (2015-06-09). "By the numbers: US police kill more in days than other countries do in years". The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The 'Causes' of Police Brutality: Theory and Evidence on Police Use of Force ." Criminal Justice Theory: Explaining the Nature and Behavior of Criminal Justice, by Edward R. Maguire and David E. Duffee, Taylor and Francis Ltd, 2015.
  18. ^ Tonry, Michael H. Punishing Race: a Continuing American Dilemma. Oxford University Press, 2012.
  19. ^ a b Maskaly, Jon; Boggess, Lyndsay N. (2014). The Encyclopedia of Theoretical Criminology. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. doi:10.1002/9781118517390.wbetc127. ISBN 9781118517390.
  20. ^ a b c Brayne, Srah, et al. "Predictive Policing."Data&Civil Rights: A New Era of Policing and Justice, 27 Oct. 2015.
  21. ^ a b c Dixon, Andi. "Why big-data analysis of police activity is inherently biased". The Conversation. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  22. ^ Busby, John C (2009-09-17). "Stop and frisk". LII / Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  23. ^ Vaughan, Bernard (August 12, 2013). "NYPD's 'stop-and-frisk' practice is unconstitutional, judge rules". Reuters. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  24. ^ "This is what stop and frisk is, and why it's unconstitutional". Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  25. ^ a b Laser, Rachel Karen. "Unreasonable Suspicion: Relying on Refusals to Support Terry Stops." The University of Chicago Law Review, vol. 62, no. 3, 1995, pp. 1161–1185. JSTOR, JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/1600058.
  26. ^ a b c d Matthews, Dylan (2013-08-13). "Here's what you need to know about stop and frisk — and why the courts shut it down". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  27. ^ Roberts, Julian V. (1992). "Public Opinion, Crime, and Criminal Justice". Crime and Justice. 16: 99–180. ISSN 0192-3234.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h Brewer, Rose M., and Nancy A. Heitzeg. "The racialization of crime and punishment: Criminal justice, color-blind racism, and the political economy of the prison industrial complex." American Behavioral Scientist 51.5 (2008): 625–644.
  29. ^ a b c d Bellafante, Ginia (2018-02-02). "Criminal Justice Reform Empties Cells, Parole Fills Them Up Again". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  30. ^ Shivy, Victoria A.; Wu, J. Juana; Moon, Anya E.; Mann, Shay C.; Holland, Jo G.; Eacho, Christine (October 2007). "Ex-offenders reentering the workforce". Journal of Counseling Psychology. 54 (4): 466–473. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.54.4.466. ISSN 1939-2168.
  31. ^ KUBRIN, CHARIS E.; STEWART, ERIC A. (February 2006). "Predicting Who Reoffends: The Neglected Role of Neighborhood Context in Recidivism Studies". Criminology. 44 (1): 165–197. doi:10.1111/j.1745-9125.2006.00046.x. ISSN 0011-1384.
  32. ^ Cnaan, Ram A.; Draine, Jeffrey; Frazier, Beverly; Sinha, Jill W. (2008-05-28). "Ex-Prisoners' Re-Entry: An Emerging Frontier and a Social Work Challenge". Journal of Policy Practice. 7 (2–3): 178–198. doi:10.1080/15588740801938035. ISSN 1558-8742.
  33. ^ a b c d Bellafante, Ginia (2018-02-02). "Criminal Justice Reform Empties Cells, Parole Fills Them Up Again". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  34. ^ Cook, Philip J.; Kang, Songman; Braga, Anthony A.; Ludwig, Jens; O'Brien, Mallory E. (2014-12-20). "An Experimental Evaluation of a Comprehensive Employment-Oriented Prisoner Re-entry Program". Journal of Quantitative Criminology. 31 (3): 355–382. doi:10.1007/s10940-014-9242-5. ISSN 0748-4518.
  35. ^ Visher, Christy A.; Travis, Jeremy (2011-08-19). "Life on the Outside". The Prison Journal. 91 (3_suppl): 102S–119S. doi:10.1177/0032885511415228. ISSN 0032-8855.
  36. ^ Doleac, Jennifer L. (2018-06-16). "Strategies to Productively Reincorporate the Formerly-Incarcerated into Communities: A Review of the Literature". Rochester, NY. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3198112. hdl:10419/185106. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  37. ^ a b "Second Chance Act Grant Program | CSG Justice Center". csgjusticecenter.org. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  38. ^ a b Henry, Jessica; Jacobs, James (2007). "Ban the Box to Promote Ex-Offender Employment". doi:10.2139/ssrn.3119658. ISSN 1556-5068. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  39. ^ Doleac, Jennifer; Hansen, Benjamin (July 2016). "Does "Ban the Box" Help or Hurt Low-Skilled Workers? Statistical Discrimination and Employment Outcomes When Criminal Histories are Hidden". Cambridge, MA. doi:10.3386/w22469. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  40. ^ a b c d e f Victor M. Rios (2006) The Hyper-Criminalization of Black and Latino Male Youth in the Era of Mass Incarceration, Souls, 8:2, 40–54
  41. ^ "School-to-Prison Pipeline". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  42. ^ a b c "Fact Sheet: How Bad Is the School-to-Prison Pipeline? | Tavis Smiley Reports | PBS". Tavis Smiley | PBS. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  43. ^ Basto-Pereira, Miranda, Ribeiro, and Maia. "Growing up with Adversity: From Juvenile Justice Involvement to Criminal Persistence and Psychosocial Problems in Young Adulthood." Child Abuse & Neglect 62 (2016): 63-75.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Conservative Case for Reform". Right on Crime. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  45. ^ a b Braithwaite, John. "Restorative Justice: Assessing Optimistic and Pessimistic Accounts." Crime and Justice, vol. 25, 1999, pp. 1–127. JSTOR, JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/1147608.
  46. ^ Heuvel, Katrina Vanden (18 November 2014). "The moral and political case for reforming the criminal justice system". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  47. ^ Gottschalk, Marie (June 8, 2015). "The Folly of Neoliberal Prison Reform". Boston Review.
  48. ^ a b c d Davis, Angela Y., et al. "Are Prisons Obsolete?" By Angela Y. Davis, https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/108428.Are_Prisons_Obsolete_.
  49. ^ a b Yadin, Daniel (2017-10-22). "More Than Reform: Prison Abolition". thepolitic.org. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  50. ^ a b O'Reilly, Andrew (2017-08-21). "Blue Racism? New York police association says cops are victims of racism". Fox News. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  51. ^ a b Selby, Nick (17 July 2017). "Police Aren't Targeting and Killing Black Men". National Review. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  52. ^ Mak, Tim (Jan 13, 2015). "Koch Bros to Bankroll Prison Reform". The Daily Beast.
  53. ^ Horwitz, Sari (Aug 15, 2015). "Unlikely Allies". The Washington Post.
  54. ^ Gass Henry (Oct 20, 2015). "Congress's big, bipartisan success that might be just beginning". The Christian Science Monitor.
  55. ^ Nelson, Colleen Mccain; Fields, Gary (Jul 16, 2015). "Obama, Koch Brothers in Unlikely Alliance to Overhaul Criminal Justice". The Wall Street Journal.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  56. ^ Sturm, Susan P.; Tae, Haran (2017-05-01). "Leading with Conviction: The Transformative Role of Formerly Incarcerated Leaders in Reducing Mass Incarceration". Rochester, NY. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  57. ^ Fine, Michelle (November 2013). "Echoes of Bedford: a 20-year social psychology memoir on participatory action research hatched behind bars". The American Psychologist. 68 (8): 687–698. doi:10.1037/a0034359. ISSN 1935-990X. PMID 24320653.
  58. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Porter, Nicole (January 2017). "State Advances in Criminal Justice Reform, 2016" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  59. ^ "Arizona Governor Doug Ducey Signs Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Bill". Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  60. ^ "Prison Reform". Arkansas Citizens First Congress. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  61. ^ "Governor Malloy signs criminal justice reform bills at Faith Congregational Church". Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  62. ^ "What's Happening to Hawaii's Push for Criminal Justice Reform?". Honolulu Civil Beat. 2015-08-17. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  63. ^ "Indiana | CSG Justice Center". csgjusticecenter.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  64. ^ "Should we spend $89,000 to separate a child from his parents?". Right on Crime. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  65. ^ "Bill To Start Fixing Maine's Fine and Bail Policies Becomes Law". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  66. ^ "Michigan Passes Criminal Justice Reform Package". Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  67. ^ "Criminal Justice Reform :: ACLU of Mississippi". www.aclu-ms.org. Archived from the original on 2017-01-30. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  68. ^ "Criminal Justice System Adjusting To "Sweeping" Changes from Legislative Reform | CSG Justice Center". csgjusticecenter.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  69. ^ Bureau, Paul Hammel / World-Herald. "3 bills to reform prison sentencing procedures debated at State Capitol". Omaha.com. Retrieved 2017-12-07. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  70. ^ "ACLU Nevada" (PDF).
  71. ^ "2017 NH State Legislative Review". ACLU of New Hampshire. 2017-01-11. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  72. ^ "Solitary Confinement Reform Bill Passes in Historic NJ Senate Vote". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  73. ^ "Criminal Law Reform". ACLU of New Mexico. 2016-08-05. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  74. ^ "The 2017 Criminal Justice Reform Act". Welcome to the State of New York. 2017-01-06. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  75. ^ "ACLU North Carolina". 2017-03-08.
  76. ^ "2017 Legislative Recap Part Two: Criminal Justice and Privacy and Technology". ACLU of North Dakota. 2017-06-30. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  77. ^ "Criminal Justice | ACLU of Ohio". www.acluohio.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  78. ^ "ACLU of Oregon Launches Major Criminal Justice Reform Campaign". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  79. ^ "Criminal Justice Reform :: ACLU of Pennsylvania". www.aclupa.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  80. ^ "riaclu.org – 2017 Legislative Session". www.riaclu.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  81. ^ "Tennessee Coalition for Sensible Justice Wins Major Reforms". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  82. ^ "Washington Joins Nationwide Campaign for Pretrial Reform". ACLU of Washington. 2017-06-22. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  83. ^ "West Virginia Takes Great Strides in Juvenile Justice Reform | Right on Crime". rightoncrime.com. 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  84. ^ a b "A Summary of Recent Legislative Action on Criminal Justice". Wisconsin Budget Project. 2016-03-24. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  85. ^ "State of Wyoming, House Bill 0094" (PDF). 2017. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  86. ^ Gass, Henry (20 May 2016). "America's newest export: criminal justice reform". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  87. ^ safa.zaben. "criminaljusticereform1". www.unodc.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.