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Category Archives: remorse
I’m Driving as Fast as I Can
Bell Gayle Chevigny is another woman I met through my work with PEN America Center’s Prison Writing Program (PWP). She is also the editor of Doing Time: 25 Years of Prison Writing, an anthology of some of the best writing … Continue reading
Posted in crime, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, Life Sentences, Murder, Parole, Poetry, Politics, race, raising black boys, Reentry, Relationships, remorse
Tagged American Studies Association, Bell Gale Chevigny, Doing Time, PEN, Prison Writing Program, Vassar College
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Poets Are Revolutionaries: Drop Poetry, Not Bombs!
Poets, at heart, are revolutionaries. In addition to being incurable romantics, they are idealists. Even in their poetry, they seek the ideal. They are always in search of the ideal. I also met Susan Rosenberg through my work with PEN … Continue reading
Posted in Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, Poetry, Reentry, remorse, Revolution, Urban Impact
Tagged An American Radical, Assata Shakur, Brink's Robbery, John Brown, May 19th Communist Organization, PEN America, President Bill Clinton, Prison Writing Program, Susan Rosenberg
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Fiat justitia ruat caelum
Today I get to uplift an advocate and an author, Claudette Nurse. I have not met a person more passionate about justice than Claudette. (She causes “good trouble.”) She is an attorney. She worked for the Legal Aid Society, in … 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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“Race factors in reporting of criminal justice”
In the above referenced editorial, Len Levitt’s “NYPD Confidential” column, he notes a few criminal legal cases where race may or may not have been a factor, and how readers responded. Ironically, by the responses, you could safely bet your … Continue reading
Posted in Murder, race, remorse, Uncategorized
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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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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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