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Category Archives: Reentry
Let There Be Light!
Prison is a place where there is an absence of light. The little bit of light that exists is generated from and emanates from the people imprisoned there. There is a strange architecture around the design of prisons, beginning with … Continue reading
The Little Giant Comes to Harlem
Yesterday I uplifted my sister, Jeanette, on International Women’s Day during this Women’s History Month. Today I uplift three women I work with. More than 15 years ago I met Dawn Ravella. She was doing amazing social justice work at … Continue reading
Posted in crime, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, race, Reentry, Religion, remorse, Shawshank Redemption, Streets of Rage, urban decay, Urban Impact
Tagged Coming Home, Emmaus House-Harlem
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Prison Walls v. Love — Review of “Memoirs of a Prison Lawyer/Prison Wife,” by Claudette Spencer-Nurse
Memoirs of a Prison Lawyer/Prison Wife, by Claudette Spencer-Nurse, is a love story. It is an improbable love story. It is a love story that has defied the odds. It is a love story for the ages. It is a … Continue reading
Posted in Amadou Diallo, Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass, crime, Family, Justice Chronicles, Life Sentences, Parole, parole board, police involved shooting, police-involved killing, race, Reentry, Relationships, remorse
Tagged Attica, Attica Correctional Facility, Beauty and the Beast, BlackLivesMatter, Claudette Spencer Nurse, Coalition for Parole Restoration (CPR), CPR, divorce, Elmira, Elmira Correctional Facility, Elmira Reformatory, Ernest Nurse, KKK, Ku Klux Klan, Legal Aid Society of New York, life sentence, love, love at first sight, Memoirs of a Prison Lawyer/Prison Wife, prison marriage, Prisoners' Rights Project, Richard Langone, Santiago v. Miles, Temple Law School
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An Open Letter to Our Friends on the Question of Language, by Eddie Ellis, President, NuLeadership on Urban Solutions
Dear Friends: The Center for NuLeadership on Urban Solutions is a human justice policy, advocacy and training center founded, directed and staffed by academics and activists who were formerly incarcerated. It is the first and only one of its kind … Continue reading
Posted in crime, Justice Chronicles, Reentry
Tagged Criminal Justice lanaguage, Eddie Ellis, NuLeadership on Urban Solutions
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Words Matter: Another Look at the Question of Language, by Eddie Ellis, President, Center for NuLeadership on Urban Solutions
We need to be constantly reminded about this language: Words matter. They shape perceptions and understanding, both of past and present events and of future possibilities and, therefore, future events. Semantic and public acceptance of terms like “formerly incarcerated” or … Continue reading
Redlining, Reentry, and the Nonprofit Game
The past twenty years I have worked in the nonprofit sector which, if it wasn’t a business entity, would provide a classic illustration of a misnomer, because many entities and people profit in this sector, some much more than others. … Continue reading
Death of a Police Officer
There’s this politically correct narrative happening right before our eyes around the killing of NYPD Officer Randolph Holder, that police lives matter more than Black lives, and other lives. Of course, this is just one more senseless killing in Gotham, … Continue reading
Posted in crime, Justice Chronicles, juveniles, Life Sentences, Mayor Bill de Blasio, Murder, NYPD, police involved shooting, police-involved killing, Reentry
Tagged Al Sharpton, BlackLivesMatter, cop killing, Criminal Justice, NYPD, Patrick Lynch, police union, Randolph Holder, thick blue line, thin blue line, Tony Brown
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Being Bernard Kerik…after Prison
This morning, on 77 WABC Talk Radio, Rita Cosby — @RitaCosby — interviewed Bernard Kerik, former, corrupt Correction and Police Commissioner of Gotham who, after a bit in the darkness of prison, has come to see the light about our … Continue reading
Posted in Commissioner Broken Windows, crime, NYPD, Parole, Reentry, remorse
Tagged 77 WABC Talk Radio, Bernard Kerik, collateral consequences of a criminal conviction, From. Jailer to Jailed: My Journey from Correction and Police Commissioner to Inmate #84888-054, JustLeadershipUSA, prison reform, Rita Cosby, second chances
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“The Justice Imperative” — The Key to Criminal Justice Reform
The Justice Imperative: How Hyper-Incarceration Has Hijacked the American Dream, is a book about the criminal justice and corrections system in Connecticut, but it is also a book about the criminal justice and corrections systems in the country, by the … Continue reading
Posted in Justice Chronicles, juveniles, Life Sentences, parole board, Reentry, Uncategorized
Tagged 1988 Presidential Election, Brian E. Moran, Cheshire CT, criminal justice language, criminal justice reform, Dr. WIlliam Petit, furlough, George Pataki, Jenna Grieshaber, Jenna's Law, Joshua Komisarjevsky, juveniles, life sentences, Malta Justice Initiative, Michael Dukakis, Nicholas Eugene Pryor, Order of Malta, Parole, Steven Hayes, The Justice Imperative: How Hyper-Incarceration Has Hijacked the American Dream, Willie Horton
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