Here are a few odds and ends that caught Grits' attention this week but didn't make it into independent blog posts:
Houston cop pleads guilty to on-duty rape after traffic accident
Ugliest police misconduct story I've read in a while. The cop received a ten-year sentence and will then spend 20 years on the sex-offender registry. His attorney "was hopeful his client will be paroled in two to three years. [former Ofc. Adan] Carranza could also be freed after six months if the judge agrees to 'shock probation,' which is sometimes used to scare first offenders straight without making them serve their entire sentence." That's certainly less than you or I'd have gotten, one imagines, had a civilian committed a rape caught on videotape.
More on whether anti-bullying programs are counterproductive
Grits had earlier cited initial news reports about research claiming anti-bullying programs may increase instead of decrease student victimization. Here's a link to the actual study.
Never too late?
Texas' longest-serving inmate - paroled after 64 years at age 85 - wants the courts to revisit his case, claiming the jury was "rigged.
Waco judges seek to stem costly jail overcrowding, clean up DA's mess
In Waco, District Attorney Abel Reyna has created a massive pileup in the county jail by insisting on such long sentences in routine cases that many defendants choose simply to take their cases to trial. The result: county jail cost overruns are causing property tax hikes with no end in sight. Now, local judges may address the issue by shifting civil judges to preside over trials in the criminal courts, reported the Waco Tribune Herald (Sept. 25). The county has also eliminated Friday "announcement dockets" which "were implemented so a defense attorney and a prosecutor could meet and plan the course of a case, whether setting a trial date or offering a plea deal." Going forward:
Ted Cruz 'favors very, very harsh penalties for stealing calculators'
Newsweek had a piece titled "Eight Things You Don't Know About Ted Cruz" which included this criminal-justice related tidbit about Texas' junior senator:
Barry Scheck of the national Innocence Project and Texas exoneree Michael Morton had a column in the Houston Chronicle yesterday arguing for the governor to posthumously pardon Todd Willingham based on new evidence of alleged prosecutorial misconduct as well as the debunked arson testimony in his case. Though I personally believe Willingham did not intentionally kill his children, at this point I think they'd have a better shot convincing Rick Perry to endorse Wendy Davis than to pardon a man he's publicly derided as a "monster." In the meantime, nobody ever seems to want to talk about the scores of other worthy, still-living pardon applicants who're routinely rejected - even after favorable recommendations from the Board of Pardons and Paroles - and almost never garner media attention.
Journalist seeks first-hand jail experience
A San Antonio Express News reporter spent the night in the Bexar county jail to give readers an idea of the experience. My favorite line: "Ventilation doesn’t seem to be a major concern here, and holding cells can smell like caged animals reeking of desperation, anger and vomit." Texas Monthly's Dan Solomon questions whether her experience was typical, her depiction accurate, or her recommendations useful. Answer in each case: Sort of.
Drug war a failure, says paper, but only lame solutions offered
The McAllen Monitor editorial board opined that the US drug war is an abject failure. The article concludes:
"The 'invisible' crisis of correctional health care"
Good piece on the topic from The Crime Report. While care inside is often sub-par, one expert also lamented that, “There are significant health-related barriers to people returning home from prison ... Often there is no discharge planning and short or no amounts of necessary medications upon release.”
Anthony Graves gives back
Kudos to Texas exoneree Anthony Graves for establishing a legal scholarship in the name of the attorney who sprung him. See Texas Monthly's report. And the people cheered:
Houston cop pleads guilty to on-duty rape after traffic accident
Ugliest police misconduct story I've read in a while. The cop received a ten-year sentence and will then spend 20 years on the sex-offender registry. His attorney "was hopeful his client will be paroled in two to three years. [former Ofc. Adan] Carranza could also be freed after six months if the judge agrees to 'shock probation,' which is sometimes used to scare first offenders straight without making them serve their entire sentence." That's certainly less than you or I'd have gotten, one imagines, had a civilian committed a rape caught on videotape.
More on whether anti-bullying programs are counterproductive
Grits had earlier cited initial news reports about research claiming anti-bullying programs may increase instead of decrease student victimization. Here's a link to the actual study.
Never too late?
Texas' longest-serving inmate - paroled after 64 years at age 85 - wants the courts to revisit his case, claiming the jury was "rigged.
Waco judges seek to stem costly jail overcrowding, clean up DA's mess
In Waco, District Attorney Abel Reyna has created a massive pileup in the county jail by insisting on such long sentences in routine cases that many defendants choose simply to take their cases to trial. The result: county jail cost overruns are causing property tax hikes with no end in sight. Now, local judges may address the issue by shifting civil judges to preside over trials in the criminal courts, reported the Waco Tribune Herald (Sept. 25). The county has also eliminated Friday "announcement dockets" which "were implemented so a defense attorney and a prosecutor could meet and plan the course of a case, whether setting a trial date or offering a plea deal." Going forward:
The lawyers now will meet throughout the week and turn in a form to the presiding judge indicating the offers that were made, Reyna said. ...Though the paper had Reyna announcing it, surely only judges could remove defense counsel from the appointment list. Reyna should thank his lucky stars the judges are trying to cover his rear since it's DA's office policies causing all of this. Frankly, I doubt it will be enough.
If defense attorneys fail to turn in the forms more than three times, they are taken off of the court-appointed attorney list, Reyna said.
Ted Cruz 'favors very, very harsh penalties for stealing calculators'
Newsweek had a piece titled "Eight Things You Don't Know About Ted Cruz" which included this criminal-justice related tidbit about Texas' junior senator:
Cruz doesn't talk much about the case of Michael Haley, erroneously sentenced to 14 years in prison for stealing a calculator from Walmart when the maximum sentence was two years. Acknowledging the longer sentence was an error, Cruz nevertheless argued before the Supreme Court that Haley should serve the full 14 years, a position that prompted Justice John Paul Stevens to wonder whether the "state has forgotten its overriding 'obligation to serve the cause of justice.' " The court sent the case back to the lower court, which freed Haley.Pardon my skepticism: Column pushes Willingham clemency application
Barry Scheck of the national Innocence Project and Texas exoneree Michael Morton had a column in the Houston Chronicle yesterday arguing for the governor to posthumously pardon Todd Willingham based on new evidence of alleged prosecutorial misconduct as well as the debunked arson testimony in his case. Though I personally believe Willingham did not intentionally kill his children, at this point I think they'd have a better shot convincing Rick Perry to endorse Wendy Davis than to pardon a man he's publicly derided as a "monster." In the meantime, nobody ever seems to want to talk about the scores of other worthy, still-living pardon applicants who're routinely rejected - even after favorable recommendations from the Board of Pardons and Paroles - and almost never garner media attention.
Journalist seeks first-hand jail experience
A San Antonio Express News reporter spent the night in the Bexar county jail to give readers an idea of the experience. My favorite line: "Ventilation doesn’t seem to be a major concern here, and holding cells can smell like caged animals reeking of desperation, anger and vomit." Texas Monthly's Dan Solomon questions whether her experience was typical, her depiction accurate, or her recommendations useful. Answer in each case: Sort of.
Drug war a failure, says paper, but only lame solutions offered
The McAllen Monitor editorial board opined that the US drug war is an abject failure. The article concludes:
A team of U.S. and Canadian researchers, using government data, found that from 1990 to 2007, the average price of marijuana, cocaine and heroin decreased by at least 80 percent, when adjusted for inflation.
Basic economics tells us lower prices mean the supply has gone up or the demand has gone down.
And it isn’t the latter. One former Mexican intelligence official said that the number of marijuana users in the United States has increased from 14.5 million in 2007 to nearly 19 million last year.Kind of a wimpy prescription after such a bold prognosis. More treatment resources would be a good thing but it won't mean much without addressing overcriminalization of drug possession.
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration seizures increased by 465 percent for marijuana from 1990 to 2010 and by 29 percent for heroin, according to a recent report by BMJ Open, an online publication of the British Medical Journal. It also found that drugs have gotten stronger during later years.
Many global leaders say it’s time to accept defeat and stop the interdiction efforts that have cost us billions in lost dollars and millions of lives lost. Some want decriminalization of drugs.
We’re not advocating for that, but a shift in funds toward more treatment would be a humane strategy that might help reduce demand and incarceration rates.
The evidence shows U.S. officials are losing the current drug war.
"The 'invisible' crisis of correctional health care"
Good piece on the topic from The Crime Report. While care inside is often sub-par, one expert also lamented that, “There are significant health-related barriers to people returning home from prison ... Often there is no discharge planning and short or no amounts of necessary medications upon release.”
Anthony Graves gives back
Kudos to Texas exoneree Anthony Graves for establishing a legal scholarship in the name of the attorney who sprung him. See Texas Monthly's report. And the people cheered:
Houston cop pleads guilty to on-duty rape after traffic accident
Ugliest police misconduct story I've read in a while. The cop received a ten-year sentence and will then spend 20 years on the sex-offender registry. His attorney "was hopeful his client will be paroled in two to three years. [former Ofc. Adan] Carranza could also be freed after six months if the judge agrees to 'shock probation,' which is sometimes used to scare first offenders straight without making them serve their entire sentence." That's certainly less than you or I'd have gotten, one imagines, had a civilian committed a rape caught on videotape.
More on whether anti-bullying programs are counterproductive
Grits had earlier cited initial news reports about research claiming anti-bullying programs may increase instead of decrease student victimization. Here's a link to the actual study.
Never too late?
Texas' longest-serving inmate - paroled after 64 years at age 85 - wants the courts to revisit his case, claiming the jury was "rigged.
Waco judges seek to stem costly jail overcrowding, clean up DA's mess
In Waco, District Attorney Abel Reyna has created a massive pileup in the county jail by insisting on such long sentences in routine cases that many defendants choose simply to take their cases to trial. The result: county jail cost overruns are causing property tax hikes with no end in sight. Now, local judges may address the issue by shifting civil judges to preside over trials in the criminal courts, reported the Waco Tribune Herald (Sept. 25). The county has also eliminated Friday "announcement dockets" which "were implemented so a defense attorney and a prosecutor could meet and plan the course of a case, whether setting a trial date or offering a plea deal." Going forward:
The lawyers now will meet throughout the week and turn in a form to the presiding judge indicating the offers that were made, Reyna said. ...Though the paper had Reyna announcing it, surely only judges could remove defense counsel from the appointment list. Reyna should thank his lucky stars the judges are trying to cover his rear since it's DA's office policies causing all of this. Frankly, I doubt it will be enough.
If defense attorneys fail to turn in the forms more than three times, they are taken off of the court-appointed attorney list, Reyna said.
Ted Cruz 'favors very, very harsh penalties for stealing calculators'
Newsweek had a piece titled "Eight Things You Don't Know About Ted Cruz" which included this criminal-justice related tidbit about Texas' junior senator:
Cruz doesn't talk much about the case of Michael Haley, erroneously sentenced to 14 years in prison for stealing a calculator from Walmart when the maximum sentence was two years. Acknowledging the longer sentence was an error, Cruz nevertheless argued before the Supreme Court that Haley should serve the full 14 years, a position that prompted Justice John Paul Stevens to wonder whether the "state has forgotten its overriding 'obligation to serve the cause of justice.' " The court sent the case back to the lower court, which freed Haley.Pardon my skepticism: Column pushes Willingham clemency application
Barry Scheck of the national Innocence Project and Texas exoneree Michael Morton had a column in the Houston Chronicle yesterday arguing for the governor to posthumously pardon Todd Willingham based on new evidence of alleged prosecutorial misconduct as well as the debunked arson testimony in his case. Though I personally believe Willingham did not intentionally kill his children, at this point I think they'd have a better shot convincing Rick Perry to endorse Wendy Davis than to pardon a man he's publicly derided as a "monster." In the meantime, nobody ever seems to want to talk about the scores of other worthy, still-living pardon applicants who're routinely rejected - even after favorable recommendations from the Board of Pardons and Paroles - and almost never garner media attention.
Journalist seeks first-hand jail experience
A San Antonio Express News reporter spent the night in the Bexar county jail to give readers an idea of the experience. My favorite line: "Ventilation doesn’t seem to be a major concern here, and holding cells can smell like caged animals reeking of desperation, anger and vomit." Texas Monthly's Dan Solomon questions whether her experience was typical, her depiction accurate, or her recommendations useful. Answer in each case: Sort of.
Drug war a failure, says paper, but only lame solutions offered
The McAllen Monitor editorial board opined that the US drug war is an abject failure. The article concludes:
A team of U.S. and Canadian researchers, using government data, found that from 1990 to 2007, the average price of marijuana, cocaine and heroin decreased by at least 80 percent, when adjusted for inflation.
Basic economics tells us lower prices mean the supply has gone up or the demand has gone down.
And it isn’t the latter. One former Mexican intelligence official said that the number of marijuana users in the United States has increased from 14.5 million in 2007 to nearly 19 million last year.Kind of a wimpy prescription after such a bold prognosis. More treatment resources would be a good thing but it won't mean much without addressing overcriminalization of drug possession.
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration seizures increased by 465 percent for marijuana from 1990 to 2010 and by 29 percent for heroin, according to a recent report by BMJ Open, an online publication of the British Medical Journal. It also found that drugs have gotten stronger during later years.
Many global leaders say it’s time to accept defeat and stop the interdiction efforts that have cost us billions in lost dollars and millions of lives lost. Some want decriminalization of drugs.
We’re not advocating for that, but a shift in funds toward more treatment would be a humane strategy that might help reduce demand and incarceration rates.
The evidence shows U.S. officials are losing the current drug war.
"The 'invisible' crisis of correctional health care"
Good piece on the topic from The Crime Report. While care inside is often sub-par, one expert also lamented that, “There are significant health-related barriers to people returning home from prison ... Often there is no discharge planning and short or no amounts of necessary medications upon release.”
Anthony Graves gives back
Kudos to Texas exoneree Anthony Graves for establishing a legal scholarship in the name of the attorney who sprung him. See Texas Monthly's report. And the people cheered:
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