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Marian Wright Edelman

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See Something, Say Something

Posted: 06/29/2012 6:02 pm

On June 25th, the U.S. Supreme Court in Miller v. Alabama banned mandatory sentences of life in prison without parole for juveniles. This is a major victory for children and for America and a giant step forward for justice for children. Until this week, America was the only country in the world to routinely condemn children as young as 13 and 14 to die in prison. Now about two thousand people who were sentenced to die in prison as juveniles have hope for a new hearing and a new sentence. While we are disappointed the Court did not ban the practice outright, we must keep working toward justice for children and end the devastating Cradle to Prison Pipeline™ crisis that leads to marginalized lives, imprisonment, and premature death.

Bryan Stevenson, the brilliant founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama, argued this case and the companion case ,Jackson v. Hobbs before the Supreme Court. Earlier in June he told participants at the Children’s Defense Fund Freedom Schools® National Training session how he first became devoted to helping children in our adult justice system:

I was working on a case when a grandmother called me, and this young boy had been arrested. This boy was living in a house where his mother had repeatedly been the victim of a lot of sexual assault, a lot of physical assault and domestic violence. And one day this boy's stepfather came home, and he just punched this boy's mother in the face. She fell on the floor unconscious, and the little boy tried to revive his mom and he couldn't do it, and she was bleeding. And we think he thought his mom was dead.

Bryan Stevenson continued with his harrowing true crime story:

And the man went into the bedroom and fell asleep, and after he did that, this little boy got up. He was about five feet tall, 14 years of age, under 100 pounds, and he waited until the man went into the bedroom and fell asleep... and he went over to the man's dresser, and he pulled out this man's handgun. And while the man was sleeping, this little boy walked over to him, and he pointed the gun at his head, and tragically at point-blank range, he pulled the trigger. The man was killed instantly.

Now, this child had no prior criminal history. He had never been in trouble before. He was actually a good student, no juvenile adjudications, and probably would have been tried as a juvenile but for the fact that this man was a deputy sheriff. And because he was a deputy sheriff, the prosecutor insisted that this child be tried as an adult, and the judge certified him to stand trial as an adult and put him in the adult jail.

The grandmother called me three days later, and I went to the jail to see this little boy. I started asking him questions, and no matter what I asked him, this little boy just sat there. I tried to ask him some more questions; he just sat there. He wasn't responding to anything I said, and finally after 20 minutes, I said, "Look, you got to talk to me. I can't help you if you don't talk to me."

I got up and I walked around the table, and I got my chair close to him... I started leaning on him a little bit and leaning on him, and finally, he leaned back. And when he leaned back into me, I put my arm around him and said, "Come on, tell me what's going on." This boy started crying, and through his tears, he began talking to me not about what happened at his house with his mom or his stepdad, but he began talking to me about what had happened at the jail. He told me on the first night, he had been assaulted by several men. Then he told me on the next night, he had been sexually assaulted by several men, and then he told me on the night before I had gotten there, there were so many people who had assaulted him, he actually couldn't remember how many there had been.

I held this little boy while he cried hysterically for over an hour, and I left that jail thinking this is our system -- our system -- and so it became necessary for me to say something.

So now, Bryan Stevenson said, “I represent these young people who have many times been horribly abused. We put them in adult prisons. There are 27 states that put children in adult facilities where they are 10 times more likely to be the victims of sexual assault, 25 times more likely to commit suicide, and there is this silence.”

Once he saw the truth, he knew he could never be among those who stay silent. He also said: “Of all the problems that I'm talking about [with the treatment of juveniles in the adult justice system] -- and I'm talking about race and I'm talking about poverty and I'm talking about abuse of power and I'm talking about misconduct -- the problem that we have got to confront is hopelessness, the profound absence of hope that is represented by the death penalty, by life imprisonment without parole for children, by mass incarceration, by the way in which we are dealing with people... I'll tell you something about hope. Where there is hopelessness, there is always injustice, and you can never achieve justice without hopefulness.”

The Supreme Court’s historic decision to abolish mandatory life in prison without parole sentences for children reinforces the importance of never giving up hope as we all keep speaking out and fighting for justice for children. We still have so much work left to do to solve the crisis of children in adult prisons -- but we now have a huge victory to spur us on and give us more hope. Bryan Stevenson helped changed the nation’s course by saying something and doing something, and so must we.

 

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

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On June 25th, the U.S. Supreme Court in Miller v. Alabama banned mandatory sentences of life in prison without parole for juveniles. This is a major victory for children and for America and a giant st...
On June 25th, the U.S. Supreme Court in Miller v. Alabama banned mandatory sentences of life in prison without parole for juveniles. This is a major victory for children and for America and a giant st...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Morgan Kell
03:54 PM on 07/02/2012
Sorry to say these kids are past saving. Todays children are so pampered that they cannot understand that there are consequences in life for their actions and thats part of the problem. Maybe its time for parents to step up by putting their children in place and keep them grounded in reality. Parents should not be afraid of their children their children should fear them. Children need their parents to be parents and not their buddy\friend.
03:44 AM on 07/03/2012
Did you bother to read the article?
11:29 PM on 07/01/2012
This is like the 4th Huffpo article in the last few days that suggests society will be improved by giving shorter prison sentences to murderers if they're black. Does anyone really believe this will lead to a lower violent crime rate? Please look up the names Edmund Kemper and Richard Grissom for a more realistic taste of what happens when we set teen murderers free simply because a block of time has passed.
03:46 AM on 07/03/2012
Where in the article was color mentioned?
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Karissa36
Saving lost boys and fighting pirates.
10:43 PM on 07/01/2012
Thank you for the article. I think we should have completely separate prisons for all offenders under age 25, with substantial educational and psychological support geared toward rehabilitation. We are simply throwing the lives away of young offenders by placing them into adult prisons.
03:48 AM on 07/03/2012
I agree, but we should make sure that prisons are safe for adults too. Being raped is not and shouldn't be part of the punishment.
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acumenguy
It could be carried by an African swallow
10:21 PM on 07/01/2012
The "little boy" in this case should not have been in prison in the 1st place.

For the other little "pants-on-the-ground-i-luv-thu-lifestyle" hoodlums who kill some one while earning their "street-cred"...... lock them up and keep them there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mustbelove
Rumi wannabe
06:12 PM on 07/01/2012
Has the country banned it or only Alabama? I had no idea there was such a law. I think we are forgetting kids have a lot of maturing to do. The brain is not fully devoloped until the early 20s. Kids think they are invincible; they do not really grasp the seriousness of crimes like murder because the brain is not ready to understand that yet.
iflew
Pro Publiae Bonae
04:13 PM on 07/01/2012
Wrongfully convicted people and people with unneeded long sentences add to the cost of keeping them in people warehouses. The conservative thing to do would be to get them out of their free room and board, and expunge records of non repeat offenders after five or so years so they can get employed at their ability levels, so they too can be contributing tax payers.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:38 PM on 07/01/2012
That 'free room and board' is paying into the bank accounts of those who want to call themselves "Conservatives." The prisoners would happily agree to become functional, but then what would many in the repub. party use for vacation funds?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Morgan Kell
04:04 PM on 07/02/2012
How about this they can all live with you. yeah this happy to become functional type you reference usually kill some one within a year of being out or in some cases less then a week.
iflew
Pro Publiae Bonae
02:57 PM on 07/03/2012
I agree. Their net is larger and has smaller openings than any safety net they would try to destroy, at least my guess.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PatrickforO
America needs a Labor Party
04:10 PM on 07/01/2012
Sending the 14 year old kid in the story to prison as an adult does not serve justice in any way.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
see-ellen2001
10:22 AM on 07/01/2012
The difference between some juveniles who are condemned to life and those who are not is All American Money. Which equals All American Justice for those ONLY who can afford the high priced lawyers. The All American Impoverished get legal aid. Justice is blind but has big pockets.
02:49 AM on 07/01/2012
Child aren't born as murderers they are urned into them, I bet you @ some point there was hope for Eric Smith... For those who used him as an example, today that hope is lost. At some point we must so ourselves, should procreating be held to the same standards as driving or getting an education, I.e. getting a parenting license. We need to draw the line somewhere it drift he's me when people are so willing and egar to take the life of a child.
researcher
researcher
02:03 AM on 07/01/2012
Corporate america can make a ton of money from young men being put in jail for life without ever getting out.

America needs to take a long hard look at why their prisons are overflowing. there is something really wrong in america with massive crime and drug use. more and more punishment and longer prison terms is not working.

There are many significant variables that are causing this crisis. having an economic system that is a survival of the fittest where winners take all is one significant variable. it promotes poverty generation after generation.

There are more variables but americans refuse to look for systemic reasons and only focus on the individual. this will be their downfall. a nation of individuals trying to live as a society. wont work never has worked.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JackBlair69
True and Fabulous
11:53 PM on 06/30/2012
No, it's a "victory" for children who happen to be murderers.
03:52 AM on 07/03/2012
Do you really think the kid in story should be even in jail? specially in an adult and violent one?
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Riven
Honi soit qui mal y pense.
11:07 PM on 06/30/2012
This decision got lost in all the furor over the constitutionality of the PPACA, but in its own way, it is just as earth shaking and important. Kudos to the Roberts Court, which might have been expected to side with law-and-order conservatism in a 5-4 vote, for doing the right thing by juvenile offenders. Many of them deserve a second chance, and now they'll get it.
10:10 PM on 06/30/2012
Let's work on those Texas convictions.....
iflew
Pro Publiae Bonae
04:28 PM on 07/01/2012
F&F. Texas has a past to live up to. It was a country wrested from someone else already there and the stronger invader used things like lynch laws, and being unreasonable when bias was in support of unreasonableness. When bias opposed unreasonableness, then at those times reason prevailed. Today's conditions could be reasonably expected to be extensions from the past. Maybe today's Texans are as reasonable as those of the past. In a land where a few unreasonables are in charge there are always likely to be many reasonable as well. It's not reasonable to paint everyone with the same brush even when there is one preferred color. But it's not mine to reason why.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sofarfrome
a.k.a. Roland Deschain
09:17 PM on 06/30/2012
All I can say is..See Eric Smith Savona NY...if you can convice the Robie family he deserves a chance I will consent. I know the Smith family and I know Eric. He should not get out, ever.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jorge Escondido
07:42 PM on 06/30/2012
Because these children are MURDERERS!