Broderick Johnson, a Towsley Foundation Policymaker in Residence at the Ford School, leads a discussion on lobbying and mass incarceration. Part of the Public Policy and Institutional Discrimination Discussion Series.
Transcript:
Afternoon everyone. Good
afternoon everyone.
Welcome to the fourth
and final session
of the public policy and
institutional discrimination
discussion series for
today's topic is lobbying
and mass incarceration,
or those who may not know me.
I am Stephanie Sanders,
support schools
Diversity Officer,
and also a lecturer.
And for starters,
I'd like to just
take a few minutes to
talk about the goal
of the series and also the
format of today's event.
The goal of this
series is to one,
create opportunities
for engagement.
And this gives faculty,
staff and students, of course,
an opportunity to get
to know faculty in
their policy engagement interest
and also their research
beyond the classroom.
A second goal of this
series is to foster
dialogue on important
issues of public policy,
which is why we're here today.
Our faculty to discuss for
today is Mr. Broderick Johnson,
who we are excited
to join us today.
And he will lead
today's discussion
and he will speak
about the topic of
lobbying and mass incarceration
for the first 30 minutes
of today's session.
And the last 20 minutes of
today's discussion will be
reserved for questions
and answers.
So we hope it to be a very
engaging and interactive
session today.
And during this time,
participants are surely invited
to make use of the chat box.
We're also use the
raise hand feature
and wait to be recognized so that
you can pose questions
directly to Mr. Johnson.
And without further ado,
I'd like to take this time
to introduce Mr. Johnson,
who afford school,
tells me the policymaker in
residence at the Ford School.
Uh, Mr. Johnson has
an extensive resume,
but I'll try to capture
what important elements
of it for today's purposes.
So Mr. Johnson is
a public policy and
political strategists with
more than three decades
of leadership at
the highest levels of government
and the legal profession.
He provides strategic
leadership advice
and counsel to clients
on legislative,
regulatory, legal,
and political issues.
Mr. Johnson has the
distinction of having been
appointed to senior posts
under two US Presidents.
He served as assistant
to the president and
cabinet secretary under
President Barack Obama.
And in that role,
he was the President's
primary liaison
to members of the cabinet,
where he directed a team
that helped coordinate
policy and communication
strategies
between the West Wing
and federal agencies.
President Obama also
appointed Mr. Johnson the
chairman the White House's
My Brother's Keeper Task Force.
So this is an
interagency initiative
designed to identify and
address the disparities
that hamper the
success of boys and
young men of color and to
improve the lives of all youth.
And in the Clinton White House,
Mr. Johnson was the
Deputy Assistant to
the President for
Legislative Affairs.
Finally, Mr. Johnson
has also served on
a number of senior
positions on Capitol Hill,
beginning in the House Office
of Legislative Council,
where he drafted such
landmark legislation as
the Family and
Medical Leave Act and
the Immigration Reform
and Control Act of 1986.
So please help me. Welcome Kathy,
policymaker and resident is to
project counseling at this time.
Mr. Johnson, you can please share
your screen and unmute
your microphone.
Thank you very much.
And Stephanie, you
can see my screen.
Yes. Because he my slot.
All right. There you go.
Thank you very much.
Step made for that very
generous introduction
and for the opportunity to,
to again, be in the
presence of wolverines.
Really miss being in Ann Arbor.
It's been way too long.
I mean, we're all
being so affected,
of course by this
pandemic in so many ways,
things that we love to do,
people we love to see, but, um,
you know, things now
certainly are getting better.
And I look forward
to the opportunity
to be in Ann Arbor and on campus,
hopefully no later than
this ball release to
come to the big house and visit
the Ford School than
the law school as well.
And look, I'm
delighted that I see
some friends, friends of, of,
I won't say many years because
she might shape at this,
but Cindy banks, Citibank,
I see you're here and it's
great to see you Sunday.
And a lot of love your
way. She's a great friend.
And I also notice that there's a,
one of my former students from
the Ford School course
I taught last semester
is here as well.
So See you there.
Maybe, maybe others as well.
And it's great that they're here.
And Ben's case
because it means he
really look forward
to seeing me and
it's not great
dependent at easier,
so doesn't add to is
class participation.
You did very well nonetheless.
So again, it's, it's real
honor to be here and Eve,
by the way, of our
NC double a for
a big tent tournament
starting tomorrow.
So it's all very exciting
and I look forward to
that as a nice diversion
from what otherwise has
been a long time not being
able to have the have
sports Michigan sports B,
something that can bring
great joy or sometimes
disappointment, way.
So rare to talk about
mass incarceration
and lobbying efforts.
And let me, let me start here
with sort of an
introduction slide.
I teach courses here at
the Ford School and at the
law school from time to
time that
examine the intersection
between effective lobbying.
That is the tools that
are used by lobbyists,
the limits that are on
lobbying, the ethics.
Those are both legal and
moral considerations.
How all that intersects with
the crisis of mass incarceration
in the United States.
As you all know,
criminal justice reform,
especially concerning how we
address specifically
mass incarceration,
has become one of
the dominant domestic
policy issues
at both the federal
and state levels.
It has, it has emerged
somewhat surprisingly,
I think, as a,
an issue or bi-partisan concern.
We've seen Democrats and
Republicans work on
these issues as well as
independence in ways
that is lacking
with respect to many other
public, public policy issues.
One of the key dividing line
has been drawn over whether
or not incremental change is
a better strategy for
addressing criminal
justice reform
and mass incarceration.
Versus a more comprehensive
approach that
would necessitate really ripping
out the system from its roots.
So this dichotomy, that
dynamic is a conflict that
continues to rage outrage at
the federal level and also
at state and local levels.
So let's begin with
this undeniable thesis.
And it has a very regrettable one
and is presented great challenges
and has caused great harm.
The United States by far,
leads the world in
incarcerating its citizens.
Mass incarceration has
destroyed many lives,
ripped apart many
families and communities,
done terrible harm to our
economy and further undermine,
undermined faith in
our justice system.
We know there are double
and triple standards.
The impact of mass incarceration
on individuals and communities
of color has been
especially pernicious.
So we look at these particular
critical questions.
When did we begin to get here to
the system of mass incarceration?
What are the origins?
I'm sure some of you, if
not all of you have read
The New Jim Crow Michelle
Alexander's incredible book
that traces I'm
mass incarceration all the
way back in her view to
the origins and slavery
and the emergence and reemergence
of racial class system.
So after racial classism,
after racial class system,
which was further fueled by
the so-called War of drugs that
began in earnest in his country
and in 1970s and accelerated
through the 80s and
90s and continued through
beginning of this century
and even continues today.
In her thesis is
that at its core,
this system has been driven
by race and racial animus.
It's been directed by
politicians who have
insisted on harsh sentences,
like three-strikes,
three-strikes laws and
XLS, excessively long sentences.
Mandatory minimums, and
even death penalties
are all very much associated
with the so-called war on drugs.
And many of these politicians
over the course of
time and through
these different
racial caste systems,
have been able to
come up with sort of
a race-neutral approach or
race-neutral messaging.
And yet, the results of this
system have hardly bend.
Race-neutral by, by anyone's,
I think by anyone's
understanding.
So we have this also irrefutable
fact that hard data,
cold data tells us the
impact of this system,
especially with regard
to people of color.
Just to highlight
a few things here.
And again, these, these
are shocking numbers.
This is data that
nevertheless is irrefutable.
So here we are.
The United States were home to
5% of the world's population,
but 25% of the world's prisoners
are incarceration is four times
higher than that of China.
In 980, there were 500000
people behind bars in America.
0.5 million people, that is 980.
Today there are 2.2 million
people and there's been some,
somewhat of a reduction
over the past year,
but the numbers are
still staggering and
well above 2 million.
It has quadrupled them since 980.
Every year we spend $80 billion
to keep people incarcerated
at the federal level.
Again, put that in perspective.
$80 billion, roughly a third of
the justice department's
budget goes
toward incarceration of people.
And in terms of
racial disparities,
African-Americans
and Latinos make up
30 percent of our population,
but 60 percent of our
incarcerated population.
About one in every 35
African American men,
one in every 88 Latino
men serving time.
Right now. Quite a disparity
relative to white men
where the number is 1214.
Although interestingly
enough, that number,
that ratio has been increasing.
A couple of other things that are
not on a slide in terms of
the numbers that go again
to the disparities.
1 million dads are in prison.
And one out of
every nine African American
kids has a father in prison.
Again, 1 million
fathers are in prison,
and one out of every nine
African American kids
have a dad in prison.
So you have to, you
know, even now,
especially you have
to say how did
so many political leaders
and other leaders,
even religious leaders in many of
the African American community
allow this to develop.
Couldn't see the handwriting
on the wall when they were
supporting laws in the seventies
and eighties and nineties.
That a tough, tough and
sentencing that took
away the ability of
prosecutors and judges to be
somewhat lenient
released to better
understand the
circumstances of people
they were indicting or that
they were sending to prison?
Was it naivete?
Was it uncaring?
Sort of heart in the cases of,
of many of these leaders.
That's certainly one side of
the argument that
some people project.
I think though it's
also important
from the standpoint of looking
at the reality of what was
happening in these communities
during these times,
especially in the seventies,
eighties, and nineties.
When because of the explosion of
crack cocaine and
so-called angel dust,
we saw we saw violet
fueled drug activity,
drug trades in many of
these communities of color and
for many of these leaders,
and they were so
deeply concerned about
the impact of drugs and
violence in their own communities
that they were willing to,
to propose and also to
support some pretty
harsh sentencing.
Though that has led to, again,
mass incarceration that's
disproportionately
affected communities of
color and men of
color and African American
men even more specifically,
the system of mass incarceration.
Let's talk a little bit about
who has benefited
from the system.
Sadly. But there's no question
that there had been
beneficiaries of it.
Politicians. There are
many politicians who,
because of being able to
exploit the conditions
in many communities,
especially in many
urban communities,
have been able to ride
political success based on
their cause for law and order.
And they'd been able
then to exploit
fears about race and class
for their own benefit.
For many law
enforcement entities.
As a result of the tools
available for mass,
fought for incarcerating people,
that they've been
able to benefit from.
The power and resources for
purposes of personnel
and equipment.
As a result of this system.
Communities where
prisoners are located,
jobs and economic stability
of come to many of
those communities
had been maintained
in many of those communities.
And also, another way
to look at this though,
is that there are
many communities.
There are many communities
and urban parts of
this country that have
become more safe,
certainly as a result of
this massive locking
up of people.
Now there's bad, of course,
a tremendous price
to pay with, say,
the absence of many men of
color in those communities
as a result of this,
there's no question there are
communities in this
country that are,
that have been set there
now safer than they were.
Before we saw many of these
policies put into place.
The private prison industry
has certainly seen over
the last several decades.
It's been a bit of a
roller coaster though,
depending on who's in office.
But increases in contracts for
federal and state
procurement agreements.
And those have certainly in where
those contracts have certainly
been been put in place.
We've seen benefits
for their executives,
their employees, and
their investors.
But again, it really
can depend largely on
which party is as an
office don't Obama years.
It was certainly
tougher for private,
the private prison industry
because we essentially put a,
a barn place with
regard to the use
of private prisons
in many instances,
something that was lifted during
the Trump years and will be
different under the abide the
administration and
other industries.
I would just point
out here, the phone,
phone companies are among,
some phone companies are
among those that have
benefited from the
system in as much
as they've been able to get
away with charging really
high rates for phone
communications
between incarcerated
and their families.
Families that certainly
in many situations
could by no means be able to
afford being able to
communicate that way.
And there have been efforts
at the FCC to address this,
but again, it has been a
bit of a partisan issue.
So this is not to say
that in some of these
instance, for example,
the communities where people
have jobs as a result of
prisons being in their
communities that there's
something evil or nefarious here.
It's just to say that there
are those communities and
those groups that have
benefited as a result
of the system of mass incarceration
and the locking up of
so many people want
to go to those
that had been harmed most
by mass incarceration.
Some of this is quite obvious
when you look at the
statistics in terms of
the increases incarceration rates
for adults and juveniles.
Certainly what's
happened with respect
to men of color and
women of color.
And the families of
those incarcerated.
The impact of mass
incarceration on children
is clear and shameful,
an undeniable.
The lasting effects on
those children can't
be understated.
As well as the economic impact of
our system of mass incarceration.
Locking up of the
breadwinners, men and women,
who would otherwise be
in a position to support
their families
certainly better than
they otherwise are able
to do without question
when there just during
their incarceration,
but even afterwards.
One way to think about mass
incarceration, by the way,
is it also leads to sort of,
I'd call it lasting
incarceration.
The impact of someone being being
incarcerated can of course
impact them for
their entire lives.
Whether it had to do with jobs,
economic opportunities, the, the,
the stature to last,
the lack of stature, um,
all the stigmas that
are associated as well.
Also clearly communities,
especially urban communities
where the loss of many
people, whether it be the,
the sons and their
husbands, and the alcohols,
and the grandfathers
and grandmothers
and many other people who are
important in those communities.
And perhaps because of
drug related issues ended
up not because they
were dealing drugs,
but perhaps because
they had drug problems,
ended up no longer being
in those communities.
And it's ADA, of course,
a horrible impact as well
for judges and prosecutors.
Certainly by losing
their discretion
and their ability to be able to
discern whether or
not someone should
face this kind of punishment for
what they did versus
that kind of punishment.
Rehabilitation rather
than punishment at all.
It's pretty tremendous burden
on judges and prosecutors.
And they have overstaffed
prison administrators and
prison staff as well.
For employers who struggled
to try to find it,
particularly if they're
based in urban areas,
trying to find employees
to help them run their
business 6 successfully.
Then finally, taxpayers,
the incredible amounts of
money the taxpayers see put into
a system to lock people up
rather than them being in
a position of seeing
their friends
and their neighbors in
their community members,
being able to contribute
to the local economy.
But also I'm national economy.
With respect to the issue
of who drove mass incarceration.
I just want to make this point.
I mentioned the Michelle
Alexander book.
There's another book
that I've actually embed
is aware of this that I've
used in my classes as well,
because it gives a
different perspective
in terms of sort of the,
the Michelle
Alexander approach or
analysis with regard to who
drove mass incarceration.
Professor James
Foreman has written
a book that's been out for
several years called
locking up our own.
It's a book that looks
at what happened in
Washington DC through
the 60s, 70s, 80s, and
Nineties and really into
the turn of the century.
With respect to the policies,
the police practices,
the approach of,
of politicians in a
city that over time,
certainly throughout
those decades,
became a city with,
with more black leadership,
with dominant black leadership.
And yet we saw incredible rise
in incarceration rates
during those times.
And the title of his
book is so suggestive
of this notion when
answering this question of
who drove mass incarceration.
Because he points to
the fact again that many
African-American leaders in DC,
we're for policies that have
led to mass incarceration,
particularly of African-American
men in Washington DC.
And so again, going back
to what I said before,
what what drove that?
Was it I gave it a was
it was it just kind of
for political expedience.
Having been in DC through
these periods and knowing
some of the people who were
involved in and these policies.
And there's prosecutions.
Thinking about the
conditions that were
that we faced in DC at the time
that led to search
and violence in DC,
we became close to the murder
capital of the country.
A lot of that driven By the,
the impact of crack cocaine
and other drugs in
the nation's capital.
And then of course, the inflex,
the tragic influx of guns
in the nation's capital.
All of that contributed to
this notion of, of black folks,
black leaders, driving
mass incarceration
and locking up a
URL, so to speak,
I would certainly
recommend came formance,
but as well for that analysis,
because it does frame that
how one should think about
what it will take to turn
around the system of
mass incarceration.
Who do we need to appeal to?
And what do we need
to lead with in terms
of kind of the thesis
or the theory of what
do you have to think about in
terms of which
leadership you need to
turn around on
these issues or who
you need to be helping
to lead these efforts.
If you start with
sort of a notion
that this is also
based in racism,
which in many fundamental
ways, of course it is.
Does it make it tougher to
be able to appeal though,
to certain groups,
especially on the right,
are especially in the
Republican Party,
are especially perhaps among
conservative Democrats in
order to make a difference.
And then just thinking about
the general public and how
the general public
sees things as well.
So that affects again,
how you lobby on
these issues and thinking
about how you appeal to
different people get involved
in it is a moral argument,
is a legalistic argument,
is an argument that's
based kind of event on
the notion of black folks making
sure we are better
taken care of our own,
of our own children and families.
As we address these issues.
All this data, all the data's,
what I point to earlier is
of course very important.
And data fuels debates
and discussions,
but is also so important
to get it from
the standpoint of
how you effectively
lobbying on these issues,
to think about how you can
project individual
stories that will move
public policymakers and
move the general public in
terms of how they think
about the necessity to.
Thanks. This is sort
of what we referred
to in Washington.
Oftentimes when
we're talking about
a public policy campaign is
who are the real people here,
so to speak, that
you can bring into
the debate that you
can talk about.
Again, that can convince
the public and
convince policymakers,
convince politicians
that they should
care about addressing an issue,
especially an issue as
difficult as this one can be.
And that's very, very
tricky because, you know,
it's very hard to
bring a degree of
sympathy to people who are,
who have been incarcerated for,
for crimes that many
people would say,
you know, kinda, kinda get it.
But you really didn't
need to do you.
And you should pay
a price for the,
for the crimes that you commit.
So I want to talk about
a specific example here of
something that I've
struggled with.
This young man and his
photograph spent five years
in federal prison for
Douglass distribution.
Back in the mid to late nineties,
he got a mandatory
minimum sentence.
He had no prior record
before he was arrested.
He had lived in
a homeless shelter throughout
high school and the District
of Columbia with his mom,
his mom and had drug
related problems.
And that's how they ended up
in in a homeless shelter.
He was a student at
Howard University.
When he was arrested.
He was a junior at
Howard University when
he when he was arrested.
I don't personally.
This photograph
that you see here,
which is quite compelling to
seal their president behind,
has nothing to do
with a photograph.
That's kinda the way
I guess it must have
been taken for purposes
of this unless I handed him
a memo office because
there's a personal element,
strong personal element
to the story for me.
This young man was
a mentee of mine.
I met him when he was
in the shelter and
I was a leader of a program
that that reached out to,
to young people who
lived in homeless shelters
to try to help them
with their with their
educational and social needs.
He was the oldest of
the kids who were
living in a shelter.
These this was a big family
shelter in Washington DC.
So I was a mentor to him and
he became very
close to my family.
So close to my family.
The reason he's
wearing a tuxedo and
the photograph is that this is
actually at our
wedding in 990 three,
he was one of the,
one of the ashes at our wedding.
He was very close to us.
If you read the description
of what happened to him.
Again, he had never been
involved in any
drug-related crime.
In fact, I remember him
saying on a number of
occasions because of
the impact of drugs on on
his family life and
when his mother
that he thought drug dealers
should get the death penalty.
And so what was shocking then,
and I had no idea
that he would ever do
anything that would involve
either drug use or distribution.
So with shocking, when I got
the news that he had been
arrested and that he
was facing a mandatory
minimum sentence.
He was walking through an
airport in Cincinnati and
He was profiled and
some officers followed
him and they suspected him
of having drugs in his knapsack.
And to make a long story short,
he was arrested after he
landed back in Washington
DC and they've
gone through to his package
back in Cincinnati.
And the DA arrested on,
um, he's been on prison
for number of years now,
but he was not able to finish
getting his degree that he
was so close to
obtaining and his life
has been affected considerably.
Now, if you're trying to DOE
project a story of someone
for for issues around
mass incarceration and the
impact of mass incarceration.
The story, you know,
you want to be able to tell.
But one of the challenges
is whether or not
this story, for example,
having this young
man be a witness at
a hearing or taking him
around on Capitol Hill
to meetings with,
with members of Congress
who talk about the need
for for sentencing reform,
for prison reform, for
criminal justice reform.
Is this going to be the
story that is going to
draw the kind of
empathy you need.
Or instead is it going to be
sort of the story of say,
a white woman who committed
a similar offense,
who was caught carrying
opioids illegally.
Those are some of
the calculations at
you that you have to make if
you're trying to lobby
on these issues.
But you would hope that
a story is compelling,
is this young man story would be
able to move public
opinion as well.
And that's one of the
real challenges that we,
that we face when
we're trying to work
on issues as difficult as
as as the issue of
criminal justice reform
and mass incarceration.
I want to end with
something that happened
that door 2017 and 2018.
That was, was a good story.
Some people would
say that it wasn't
enough that Congress
and the White House,
the Trump administration,
work together in order
to be able to get the
first step Act passed.
But there was a debate and
a successful debate
to 2017 in 2018,
US House of Representatives
and the US Senate
passed the first step
Act and that became law.
And it's had an impact
on thousands of
people who are incarcerated
and their families.
Again, some people
would say it didn't go
nearly enough that there
are lots of issues
that have to do with
what happens after
someone has been
released from prison.
And also issues that
have to do with
preventing people from being in
those circumstances
in the first place.
Well, we saw this incredible
army, so to speak,
of advocacy groups,
both business groups,
including even that,
even Koch Industries,
I got very involved
in the push for,
for criminal justice reform.
No surprise present or
prisoners rights groups
got very involved.
Even many law enforcement
organizations got involved.
Civil and human rights groups
got involved in
religious organizations,
of course, making more,
more a moral argument are
religiously based moral argument.
And he saw many coalitions of
these organizations
getting together
to work on these issues.
And they were successful
and being able to
move the needle considerably
and getting something done.
That again, took a lot of effort,
but has had a real impact.
And it shows that
there are ways to
build center-right,
center-left coalitions,
business groups working with
civil and human rights
organizations from
time to time on these issues
in a very surprising way.
There's a lot left to
be done after this.
And so one of the big
questions is, what comes next?
The Biden administration
has made clear it wants to
continue to further
criminal justice reform.
Along. There are members of
both parties who continue.
Certainly talk about
the need for it.
We will see though,
when you look at
the stack of major initiatives,
whether it's the passage
of the COVID relief bill
that will be signed
into law tomorrow.
And you look at infrastructure,
which is a major next initiative
out of this administration,
as well as issues around
climate change and the like,
where it's criminal
justice reform
rank among the priorities.
At what point can we see
really further change,
further momentum
for more changes on
criminal justice reform
at the federal level.
So last thing I would say here
is perhaps we shouldn't look at
the federal level anyway in terms
of where the major
changes need to be made,
there have been a lot of reform,
successful reform efforts
done at the state level,
and those will continue.
Some are driven by state budgets.
For example, at least in
the minds of some who
were pushing for changes
at the state level
because of the impact
of mass incarceration
on their budgets.
And businesses in many states
have gotten very involved
to around the issues of,
of people with that are available
to supply their workforce.
And the overwhelming number
of people incarcerated in this,
in this society are
incarcerated in
state and local
institutions as well.
So even if the,
the priorities that otherwise
exist sort of get an a way of
federal changes in
the short-term.
Anyway, we can look
to more changes as
the state level and a lot of
resources put into that as well.
So I'll end with
that and I'm glad to
entertain any questions
that you all have.
But that's, that's why I like
33 minute course on
criminal justice reform and
there's a much longer
one that I teach.
Thank you, Stephanie. Glad
to take any questions.
Thank you so much, Mr. Johnson
for sharing your
thoughts on lobbying and
mass incarceration
and for linking
mass incarceration to the
historical context of slavery,
race-neutral laws and
policies that you mentioned,
as well as providing us
with reasonable versus on
Michelle Alexander's
in John James
performance analysis
of incarceration.
So at this time,
I'd like to for the
remainder of the session,
I'd like to open it up for you.
And as a reminder, participants
are invited to make
use of the chat box or
the raise hand feature.
Recognize so that you can post
questions directly
to Mr. Johnson.
I think there's a
question. Hand raise area.
It looks like Ben Levine's
hand is raised in oh, yes.
Thanks, Ethan, am I going
to come off mute? Speak?
Yes.
Great.
Hello, Professor Johnson.
Pay them in YouTube.
I'd love to just learn
a little bit more
here about like efforts
or strategies and the legal side
to about conditions within
conditions inside prisons.
So there's me kinda mention
movements, coalitions,
efforts to limit
mass incarceration
or the return of
incarcerated people.
But what about what's
happening inside of
jails and prisons?
Is that also being addressed?
Well, yeah, it certainly has
been addressed and some of
the legislation Ben,
at the federal level,
but especially at
the state level,
there have been a number
of number of efforts
to address conditions
inside of prisons.
That can be very tough though,
to make reforms era
because sort of the jet,
there's kind of a general view
that you have to breakthrough,
which is that people who are
incarcerated didn't feel
that the conditions
under which they are incarcerated
are comfortable in
a sense and that,
that, that that's a
short sighted view.
I mean, conditions in prisons
should be such that they
help lead peak people toward
rehabilitation and
successful rehabilitation,
which would involve say,
workforce training, for example.
So some, certainly many
jurisdictions I would say
that are forward-looking
address those kinds of reforms.
But again, they're
somewhat atypical.
And many other places as well,
you just don't hear
a lot of people sort
of talking about
those situations.
All right? Sure.
They suggest that there's
a question in the
chat box and I'll
read from so this
question is for Julie,
so what would your top
priority for changing
federal policy to reduce
incarceration levels?
What would be your top priority?
And can you discuss any
promising policies that could be
persuaded to reduce recidivism
beyond workforce training?
Yeah, I think those two are,
are associated questions.
Because a major reason
that we have the system
of mass incarceration
is because of the pernicious
nature of of the way we,
we fail to give people
opportunities and what they
need when they get released.
Sort of this notion I mentioned
of lasting incarceration, right?
That you, that you
get out of prison.
And in many jurisdictions,
UK, you if you are in for felony,
which certainly the
case with most people,
can't vote, or you can't
get public housing.
And until very recently,
you couldn't get access
to a Pell Grant.
Perhaps get a GED,
but you couldn't get a Pell Grant
to allow you to pursue
higher education.
And then issues, of course,
around employment
that have led to
many jurisdictions efforts to ban
the box or among many employers
to ban the box as well.
So I think that solid,
I guess I would answer
that question that it's
really important to
look at the back-end,
like what happens to people after
they are released from these,
from institutions important
to have training,
workforce training and
other opportunities
for people when they're in,
but for people to
have support systems
and to take away
the barriers that
not just stigmatize
them when they get
released for the long haul,
but also they get in
the way of them again,
being able to take care of
themselves economically,
be able to house themselves
and their families
in, in healthy environments.
Healthy from both a physical
and emotional standpoint.
And then also to be
rehabilitated to the point
where they can vote and
have an impact on what's
happening in public policy
in their communities.
So I think a lot of
that really is, again,
that back-end set of issues be
to prevent as much as we can
people being incarcerated
in the first place.
But let's stop this,
this cycle over recidivism in
this country which feeds
this, these numbers.
So terribly. 70. Can I
go throw out a question
to this group here?
This is, Ben knows this.
I'll treat this like this
is in the classroom.
Absolutely.
Are people hopeful about
the possibility of
criminal justice reform
being further along?
For example, in your state,
imagine that most of
you even on the Zoom call
or in state of Michigan,
the people who are
politicians talking about it.
There are things happening at
the legislative level,
the state of Michigan.
Brad Cindy, hey,
Cindy Gaia or hey,
I think I think it's
sort of a mixed bag.
As far as feeling hopeful.
I think we've got, especially
at the local level,
certain things happening like our
local like Eli saw that who
is getting rid of cash bail.
And we're starting
to see some things.
I think the night,
I think at the national
level happens,
the administration as
you were talking about
before, you know, I mean,
it's certainly we've
got better chances now,
although there was some success
last during the last
administration,
which I'm really glad you
touched on that piece to it.
Especially talking about
the lobbying effort
and maybe even address more.
If you could address even more
on not only the state level,
because so many of our issues by
state sort of advocacy policies.
I mean, you look at
the right to life,
folks who have been
going state-by-state.
And now we're seeing it
in voter suppression.
And I'm sure for
criminal justice,
that this also is starting at
the local and state level.
Angela.
Moving up to the federal,
as well as not always,
we'll lighten what
the perfectionist,
but realizing that you
need to take the steps
to get there, right?
Yeah, yeah, It's interesting
when you think about
lobbying tactics,
Cindy, around something
like this, right?
Because I mean, one of the,
I think the important
successful tactics
in any kind of a campaign
where you've got people who
are working on and
successfully made reforms
happened on whatever the issue
at the state level or who
are committed to change
on the state level is to
have them sort of
intercede, to lobby.
At the federal level. You know,
if you're going to
move a lawmaker,
federal law maker,
from a state of
Michigan on an issue
like mass incarceration.
It certainly does help if
that lawmaker and
his or her staff is
being approached as being
lobbied by people from the
local level who can say,
as a result of these measures
that we put in place,
it does state bubble.
We've seen these kinds of
reductions in prison populations,
in jail populations in
arrests in our jurisdiction.
That that is that had a big
role to play, certainly.
And what happened
in 2017 and 2018.
And moving lawmakers from
pretty conservative states and
districts to a point
where they would
also support criminal
justice reform.
Event tremendous reforms made
in the state of
Texas, for example.
And Texas has been moving or
toward perhaps being
a purple state,
sort of, but still pretty
conservative state.
And yet we saw it. We
certainly saw texas lawmakers,
federal Texas lawmaker
supporting criminal
justice reform.
Same with Georgia as well,
where congressmen Collins,
former congressman
Collins worked with
Congressman Jeffreys
from New York
on the first step act
as major champions.
A lot of that I'm sure
was driven by what was
happening in Georgia,
had impressed him.
Thank you.
Sure.
It's going to so
windy Hawkins has
her hand up and she has a
question for you, Mr. Johnson.
Yeah.
Hi.
I was actually going
to answer sorry.
That's my dog barking.
Answer a question about
hope and the State
of Virginia and around
criminal justice reform.
Sure.
So I think what I struggle with
a lot as someone who's
interested in criminal
justice reform.
An abolition really
is that like ending
cash bail is really great
for people moving forward.
But what I want to know is,
how do we go back and help
the people that are still
being harmed and incarcerated?
And so something that find
myself to be a hopeful person,
but something that's hard
for me in the state
of Michigan is
the truth in sentencing laws and
how people are forced to
serve just indeterminant
Lee long sentences.
And I wonder if you know any sort
of legislative actions or
if you find hope and like
letting people out after 25
or 30 years because there's
so much hope in
reducing jail populations
or an ending cash bail.
But then there's all these people
that had been
suffering for so long
that are often left out of
like legislation and
moves towards justice.
Sure. Show yes, there are
many efforts or your states.
On, on the addressing
these indeterminate sentences are
these sentences that are so
excessive that people just
will languish in jail
for 30, 40 years.
And Ben will recall
this incredible film that
actually showed last semester.
And I would encourage all of
you. It's available on it.
I think it's still
available on Amazon Prime.
But it's a film called simply
time. That's the title of them.
And it's a documentary.
And it chronicles
the 20 year effort
by by family husband and wife.
Husband incarcerated
45-year sentence for
an armed robbery that that the
two of them committed when
they were in their early 20s.
She served three years in prison.
She was pregnant when
she went into prison.
They but he's he had
a 45-year sentence
and it looked like
he was going to serve
all of that sentence.
But she got very involved
in efforts to get
clemency for him.
And I won't I guess
I shouldn't say how
the documentary ends.
Because when I
watched a documentary
actually for the first time,
I expected a very
different ending.
Honestly, I didn't
know how it would end.
I thought that really
because they re six
children by the way,
I could say that 26 sons
while he was in
prison all this time.
And several of those sons
have now gone onto
professional careers.
One's a dentists and
other one's a lawyer.
It's really quite a story.
But the most important thing
when you to go to your question
is that that they have gotten
involved in efforts to address
these indeterminate
an excessively
long sentences in the state of
Louisiana to at least get
clemency consideration
for many people.
But that's an example of what,
what has been happening.
And there's certainly
been legislative
efforts and there's an adult.
So the first step
back, people got
released from prisons who weren't
going to get released anytime
before their sentences were over.
So you're right though,
to pinpoint that there are
so many people who spend
so much time up to the end of
their sentences and
their lives are
over once they end up in prison.
Because so reduce the
population by, but again,
without the support on
the other side of when
people get released,
they'll end up, they'll end
up in many cases anyway.
Back in prison again.
Where in many cases homeless.
Just languishing in our society.
And that's obviously
deeply tragic.
I think I see a
hand raised there.
I I'm not John. No.
No. Yeah. Sure. What?
Marcia.
Marcia.
Hi. You asked about
hope and I work out at
the women's prison here in
Michigan with pregnant
women in prison.
And we chest, the state
just decided not to
shackle women to their
labor and delivery bad.
Year ago.
That's a long way from hope to
have just that they don't have.
They can have a support
person but only one.
A lot of things that make it
difficult and then
they have to be
returned to prison
within 24 hours.
And not with their baby
after they give birth.
After they give birth.
So they have 24 hours.
Or if the mother has had some
sort of birthing problem,
like if she had a C-section,
she gets to stay an extra day.
And so it poses
enormous hardships.
Well, first of all,
on the mother who
therefore it can nurse
her baby or see that child
until God knows when.
But sometimes the
families lives, you know,
they might live in the UP and
the state doesn't notify
them that the woman has gone
into labor so somebody can
begin to make the drive
down so that child There's
either in the hospital,
it goes to foster care until
somebody can pick it up.
I mean, it's just it's a
very dysfunctional,
unhelpful situation.
And the reason I bring it up is
largely that the organizations
who do this kind
of work find that
if they challenge the
system in any way,
they can be descend by two.
The prison, Massachusetts
did that fairly recently.
Did watch stopped. Stopped.
Oh, grandma, heavy.
So what is it?
They're doulas who go in.
So women who are trained to
be a support person in birth.
And this is just because nobody
else was allowed to go
in with these women.
Well, and so I
guess something happened
in Massachusetts where
the organization challenged
the prison system
in such a way that they said,
That's okay, we don't
need to hear them.
And I think that's a that's
a maybe a hesitation
that a lot of
well intentioned nonprofits
working with prisoners
have there's ensure roles
as I'm sure you know,
when you do an end
to her president.
Yeah. No question. You know,
this issue about chuckling
pregnant women who
are incarcerated
was was part of the of
the step back at the
federal level anyway,
and prohibiting that
practice anymore,
at least at the federal level.
So as barbaric anyway,
you know, it's, it's great
when you see progress.
But let's not delude ourselves
that we've got barbaric,
things that we have
that just shouldn't be,
have to be subject to a
change in the law is dead.
Morality should keep us
from every joint in
the first place,
but progress is progress in it.
I think that just goes back to
sort of I'm sorry. Go ahead.
No.
I was just nodding my
head in agreement.
And this is something a bit
and embed can attest to this.
This is as i'd,
I'd start off with saying that
there's the there's
this bright line.
It seems between whether we
need to take a wholesale
approach or whether continuing
to make an incremental change is
good and or enough because,
you know, better, as good
as my old boss used to say.
And yet is that always the case?
If you've got
something that is so
fundamentally kind of
rotten at the core.
Suppose to Michelle
Alexander's approach,
this making incremental changes,
perhaps it makes some people
feel a little better
in some people
on the margins do better
and some lives are changed.
These aren't all just
about statistics.
And yet does it
keep us from being
able to do something
more significant
because of all the
political capital that is
exercised in trying to
make incremental change.
You'll get an a
first step back done
was not a small thing.
And yet could we
have gotten larger?
And among the people
who argued for
much bolder approach
was Eric Holder.
And if you read
James Norman's book,
Eric is pretty is pretty critical
of what Eric Holder did when
he was US Attorney in DC.
Thank you.
Of course.
Thank everyone. We are over time.
Thanks for for attending
today's session for
posing questions
to Mr. Johnson on
the importance of lobbying
and mass incarceration.
So we can see that there
is a lot of tensions
between the beneficiaries and who
benefits from a
system like that in
the far reaching consequences
of a family's in their lives.
So this concludes our E dance.
Thank you so much
for joining us and
state in 20 twenty one,
twenty two, twenty two,
public policy and institutional
discrimination discussion series.
Go blue.
Blue.