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This wikilog article is a draft, it was not published yet.

by: Sduclos • November 20, 2012 • no comments

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==='''Release Your Elders'''===
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===Trying to Increase Revenues, State Courts Contract Probation Supervision to For-Profit Corporations===
  
The ACLU just released a [http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/elderlyprisonreport_20120613_0.pdf new report] that found that states would save an average of more than $66,000 per year for each low-risk inmate over 50 released early, even when post-release costs are accounted for. The report also details how prisoners over 50 are likely to cost more than younger inmates and are less likely to re-offend after release. Read the summary on [http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/13/12207601-aclu-states-could-save-billions-by-releasing-some-elderly-prisoners?lite MSNBC].
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The New York Times reports in [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/03/us/probation-fees-multiply-as-companies-profit.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp this sobering article] that many localities, mostly in the southeast, have contracted with private companies for probation supervision. Unlike the private collection firms that collect traffic fines and fees in Oregon, these companies have the authority to jail those who are not paying their fines and fees--and to impose fees to cover the costs of incarceration.
  
==='''Pennsylvania PDs Sue the County'''===
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==='''A Snitch's Story'''===
  
Luzerne County Pennsylvania is a classically underfunded, understaffed, and overworked public defender's office. After a series of complaints and concerns from his PDs that they might let something slip or violate someone's right to effective assistance of counsel, Chief Public Defender Al Flora, Jr. decided to stop it. First, his office began refusing new case assignments to catch up. Three months later, he filed a class-action suit seeking an injunction and asking for more resources for his office. Read more in [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/30/pennsylvania-public-defenders_n_1556192.html?ref=topbar#s=1105050 HuffPo].
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The NYT Magazine came out with a [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/01/magazine/alex-white-professional-snitch.html?pagewanted=10&_r=2&hp fascinating article] last week about all the dirty under-your-fingernails confidential-informant dirty-cop scandal you could ever imagine. The story details the experience of one confidential informant, Alex White, who Atlanta police officers attempted to use to cover up a false warrant and shooting of a 92-year old woman.
  
'''Stop and Frisks' Disproportional Impact on LGBTQ Community'''
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==='''Criminal Non-Disclosure of HIV - Does It Undermine Testing?'''===
  
As protests against NY stop and frisk policies grow, new voices are joining the fold to show how the practice disproportionally impacts marginalized groups. A [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/15/stop-and-frisk-gay-blacks-latinos-transgender-nypd_n_1599470.html?utm_hp_ref=black-voices new article] in the Huffington Post details the discrimination and abuse faced by LGBTQ Blacks and Latinos. Unlike other targeted groups, transgender and gender-nonconforming people are profiled as sex workers, sexually harassed, and suspected of giving fake identification when their IDs do not conform to their gender.
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32 states have some sort of HIV-specific criminal transmission statute. 45 states have laws against HIV-positive people not disclosing their status during sex, acts of prostitution, needle exchanges, or when making organ, blood, or semen donations, or have prosecuted people for these behaviors under general felony laws. (Oregon uses general felony laws). A recent [http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2012/06/criminal-transmission-hiv-law Mother Jones article] describes the pushback against these laws as they discourage people from getting tested and further stigmatize HIV status.
  
==='''Rodney King - Famous Drug Addict, WHAT?!'''===
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======
  
The reports on Mr. King's death are eye-opening about how the media (and presumably the public, the jury pool) view people living with addiction. These were within the first few sentences reported on Mr. King's death by NYT and LA Times:
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==='''Your Cell Phone Data - Shared With Everyone But You'''===
  
"He was a drunk, unemployed construction worker on parole when he careened into the city's consciousness in a white Hyundai early one Sunday morning in 1991" - [http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0618-rodney-king-20120618,0,4523043.story LA Times]
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Cell phone companies hold onto your location information for years and routinely provide it to police. But NOT to you. [http://www.propublica.org/article/cellphone-companies-will-share-your-location-data-just-not-with-you ProPublica] recently gave it a shot- several staffers attempted to obtain their own cellphone location data from their carriers. Verizon, Spring, AT&amp;T, and T-Mobile all responded that they could not provide the information to individuals, only to the police with a warrant. Reasonable expectation of privacy, anyone?
 
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{{wl-publish: 2012-07-02 11:19:42 -0700 | sduclos }}
"Mr. King, whose life was a roller coaster of drug and alcohol abuse, multiple arrests and unwanted celebrity, pleaded for calm during the 1992 riots." - [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/18/us/rodney-king-whose-beating-led-to-la-riots-dead-at-47.html?pagewanted=all NYT]
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Surprisingly, [http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/17/us/obit-rodney-king/index.html%20 CNN ]was the first article I saw that did not preface Mr. King's story by harping on addiction issues and criminal history. They addressed the issue later in the piece. Is having a criminal history really that inconsistent with having valuable civil rights?
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{{wl-publish: 2012-06-18 09:25:27 -0700 | sduclos }}
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Revision as of 17:31, December 21, 2012

Contents

Trying to Increase Revenues, State Courts Contract Probation Supervision to For-Profit Corporations

The New York Times reports in this sobering article that many localities, mostly in the southeast, have contracted with private companies for probation supervision. Unlike the private collection firms that collect traffic fines and fees in Oregon, these companies have the authority to jail those who are not paying their fines and fees--and to impose fees to cover the costs of incarceration.

A Snitch's Story

The NYT Magazine came out with a fascinating article last week about all the dirty under-your-fingernails confidential-informant dirty-cop scandal you could ever imagine. The story details the experience of one confidential informant, Alex White, who Atlanta police officers attempted to use to cover up a false warrant and shooting of a 92-year old woman.

Criminal Non-Disclosure of HIV - Does It Undermine Testing?

32 states have some sort of HIV-specific criminal transmission statute. 45 states have laws against HIV-positive people not disclosing their status during sex, acts of prostitution, needle exchanges, or when making organ, blood, or semen donations, or have prosecuted people for these behaviors under general felony laws. (Oregon uses general felony laws). A recent Mother Jones article describes the pushback against these laws as they discourage people from getting tested and further stigmatize HIV status.

==

Your Cell Phone Data - Shared With Everyone But You

Cell phone companies hold onto your location information for years and routinely provide it to police. But NOT to you. ProPublica recently gave it a shot- several staffers attempted to obtain their own cellphone location data from their carriers. Verizon, Spring, AT&T, and T-Mobile all responded that they could not provide the information to individuals, only to the police with a warrant. Reasonable expectation of privacy, anyone?