This is What It’s like to Spend Your Life in Prison | NYT Opinion

Aug 1, 2023

Aug 1, 2023: Listening to the men in the short Opinion Video above is like encountering visitors from another planet. They are serving life sentences at Angola prison, in rural Louisiana, with little to no hope for release. Many are elderly; they have not seen the outside world, or their families, for decades. They do not face execution, but they have been sentenced to death all the same, their lives spooling out endlessly on the cellblock and in the cotton fields, then ending in a prison hospice bed. The men are among the thousands in Louisiana — and more than 50,000 nationwide — locked up for life without parole. It costs roughly $70,000 a year for each aging inmate, and this film asks whether the best way to spend billions of taxpayer dollars is on vengeance. The point is not to diminish the severity of the crimes that put these men behind bars. As many of them acknowledge, they have been rightly punished for a long time. But, ask yourself as you watch the video, how long is long enough? That’s a question more and more states are asking. In recent years, a number of states, including Maryland, South Carolina and New Mexico, have debated changing their laws to give those serving lengthy sentences a chance at freedom. Several states have already enacted so-called second-look laws, which permit reconsideration of sentences for inmates who have reached a certain age or been incarcerated for a minimum term or whose sentences no longer serve a valid legislative purpose. At the federal level, the bipartisan U.S. Sentencing Commission in January issued draft guidelines that would give judges more flexibility to consider releasing elderly inmates. None of us want to be defined solely by the person we were in our youth, or by the worst thing we ever did. The men serving life without parole feel the same way.

America’s Prison System Problems: Explained

‘Investments in people, not jails and prisons, leads to a decrease in crime’ — We’re breaking down the history and stats behind America’s prison system and the misconceptions that keep incarceration rates growing.

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On any given day, the United States incarcerates around 2 million people. But when you look at who comes under correctional control over a whole year, that number is actually closer to 10 million people—which is roughly the populations of New York City and Chicago combined.

Now let’s break that down.

Of that nearly 10 million, more than 5.5 million people end up behind bars. 600,000 of those are sent to prison, and about 4.9 million of those are put in jail. Then there’s the folks on probation or parole, which comes out to roughly 4 million people.

So how did we get here?

Miami Climate Gentrification | Razing Liberty Square | Full Documentary | Independent Lens



Jan 29, 2024 #ClimateChange #Documentary #IndieLensPBS

Official website: https://to.pbs.org/IL_2024 | #IndieLensPBS In the heart of Liberty City, Miami, lies an enduring symbol of historical segregation—the city’s longstanding public housing projects. Today, as sea levels continue to rise, the once-elevated areas of this neighborhood have taken on a new identity: prime real estate. Affluent property owners are making a move inland to the higher ground, transforming the community into a speculative market. This shift underscores the stark contrast from its past, as the historically Black neighborhood, once overlooked by developers and policymakers, is now at the center of attention.

Opioids, Inc. (full documentary) | FRONTLINE

From Frontline (Jun 18, 2020): “Opioids, Inc.” tells the inside story of how Insys profited from Subsys, a fast-acting fentanyl-based spray that’s been linked to hundreds of deaths. Tactics included targeting high-prescribing doctors and nurse practitioners known as “whales,” misleading insurers, and holding contests for the sales team: the higher the prescription doses they got doctors to write, the larger the cash prize — despite the dangers to patients. But as the documentary traces in unprecedented detail, the scheme fell apart: With federal prosecutors using anti-racketeering laws designed to fight organized crime, Insys became the first pharmaceutical company to have its CEO sentenced to prison time in federal court in connection with the opioid crisis.

The Collapse Of FTX: Insiders Tell All | CNBC Documentary

From CNBC “In this documentary, CNBC’s Kate Rooney speaks to the people most impacted by the fall of Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire. The in-depth documentary includes a candid interview with former President of FTX US who reveals what it was like to work directly for Bankman-Fried and what red flags concerned him most about the company. FTX investor, Anthony Scaramucci, tells all about his front-row seat to the collapse and what it was like to visit SBF while his empire was crumbling around him.”

Gaslit Nation // Jennifer Taub: White-collar Crime Impacts Us All

Big Dirty Money: The Jennifer Taub Interview

Dec 22, 2020

From Gaslit Nation: “@jentaub: “White-collar crime impacts all of us in ways that don’t always seem visible.” Listen to more of this @gaslitnation episode here: 

https://www.patreon.com/posts/big-dirty-money-45342242

Decolonising Criminology Resource List

From the Scottish Centre for Crime & Justice Research: “On this website, you will find a compilation of resources that aim to help understand what decolonisation is, how to include it in the academic curriculum, and its link with the development of criminology.”

Teaching Resources

Decolonising Methodologies

Decolonising Criminology

Diverse Criminological Perspectives

Deep End of the Pool: Act 1

If You Cannot Afford an Attorney, Some Random Dude Will Be Appointed to You

From This American Life: “A lawyer with almost no experience in criminal law is assigned to a criminal case with a sentence of 20 years to life. This happened because, in Louisiana, like in a few states, public defenders’ offices are so short-staffed that courts are ordering private attorneys to take pro bono clients. Reporter David Zax tells the story. (29 minutes)”

https://www.thisamericanlife.org/595/deep-end-of-the-pool/act-one-1