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The Injustice System

http://thecrazyoldman.ning.com/


Country: United States

Language: English

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Comments

KimzWimz

KimzWimz

Thank you so much for all of the support and love you show IJS & DOM :-)

Pierish G. Moze`

Pierish G. Moze`

I appreciate you favoriting my show! Keep God first and be blessed.

one of many men

one of many men

thaxs 4 listening an making our show a fav! keep up the fight

TalkingFeather Radio

TalkingFeather Radio

We respect your activism for justice and human rights. Thanks for acknowledging "Talking Feather Radio" We are All related!!! Peace.

RealTalk~RealWoman

RealTalk~RealWoman

Powerful work you're doing here! Thank-You! For supporting my 7/26/09 show. I wish you the very best with your show! jaxx :)

Lady Poet Radio(LPR)

Lady Poet Radio(LPR)

Thanks a lot for the add. I do appreciate it. God bless! -Lady P.

Our Perspective

Our Perspective

Thank u VERY much 4 making Our Perspective Radio a favorite show! Sincerely, Bro. Hank & T'Boogz!

Wake up Call Show

Wake up Call Show

Lee how far have you gotten on the castle? Please email me at nurse1cac@yahoo.com

THE PAISAN FROM PSL

THE PAISAN FROM PSL

Thank you for listening. Best Wishes, "THE PAISAN"

The Injustice System  

America we have a problem. Our justice system is unjust.

Show Notes

A few years ago I ran across a website called Surviving the System. It was about innocent prisoners and prison conditions. I decided to get involved and I started the site called The Injustice System.

I have upset some people and have had my life threatened because of my fight but it will continue.

Welcome to The Crazy Old Man Network

Thursday 7 PM Eastern
The Castle of Hope for Lost Souls
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/The-Castle-of-Hope

Friday 7 PM Eastern
Words of Wisdom from The Crazy Old White Man from the Hood
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/The-Crazy-Old-Man

Saturdays 7 PM Eastern
The Injustice System
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/theinjusticesystem

The crazy old man is also a member of the Free World Order Movement http://btr-fwom.ning.com/

The Free World Order Movement is a family of Blog Talk Radio hosts who are trying to make a difference. On Saturday December 5, 2009 they had a FWOMathon. Certain hosts of the family had there radio shows as a part of the 24 FWOMathon to raise money for Christmas gifts for needy and hospitalized children. They plan to have other events to help those in need of help.

I am proud to be a member.
  • Upcoming Episodes

    A violent education

    The Injustice System

    Date / Time:

    Category: Politics

    Call-in Number: (646) 929-2745


    Corporal punishment of Children in US Schools

    Upcoming Episodes

    - More injustice

    - More injustice

    - More injustice

  • On Demand Episodes

    Original Air Date:

    Brent Paris and David Corbin

    BP-Self defense or murder. DV-Escape is not the answer

  • Date / Time:

    Sara Kruzan - Google her for more

  • Original Air Date:

    James Diesso

    Did CA prison abuse lead to murder?

  • Original Air Date:

    Bruce Jacobs and Michael Toney

    A memorial written for Bruce by Michael and about Michael. Michael was freed from Death row only to be killed in a car accident a month later.

  • Original Air Date:

    Alabama injustice for a young lady

    A young lady in AL goest to prison for turning in the drug dealer.

  • Date / Time:

    16-Year Old Got Life Without Parole for Killing Her Abusive Pimp

    AlterNet

    16-Year Old Got Life Without Parole for Killing Her Abusive Pimp -- Should Teens Be Condemned to Die in Jail?

    By Liliana Segura, AlterNet
    Posted on October 31, 2009, Printed on November 1, 2009
    http://www.alternet.org/story/143635/

    This article is the first in a two-part series about juveniles and harsh sentencing.

    Sara Kruzan was 11 years old, a middle school student from Riverside, Calif.,

    when she met a man -- he called himself GG -- who was almost three times

    her age. GG took her under his wing; he would buy her gifts, take her and her

    friends rollerskating. "He was like a father figure," she recalls.

    Despite suffering severe bouts of depression as a child, until then, Kruzan

    was a good student, an "overachiever" in her words. But her mother was

    abusive and addicted to drugs; as for her father, she had only met him a

    couple of times. So, more and more, GG filled in.

    "GG was there -- sometimes," she said. "He would talk to me and take me out

    give me all these lavish gifts and do all these things for me …" Before long, he

    started talking to her about sex, giving her his expert advice on what men were

    really like and telling her that she didn't "need to give it up for free."

    Unbeknownst to her, GG was grooming Kruzan to be a prostitute. When she

    was 13, he raped her. "He uses his manhood to hurt," Kruzan recalls, "Like,

    break you in. I guess."

    Kruzan worked for GG as a prostitute for three years. The hours were 6 p.m.

    until 5:30 or 6 in the morning. She and "the other girls" would come back and

    hand over their earnings to him. "He was, like, married to all of us I guess,"

    she says. " … Everything was his."

    After years of prostitution and sexual abuse, when she was 16, Kruzan

    snapped: She killed GG, was arrested and convicted of first-degree murder.

    Despite attempts by her lawyer to have her sentenced as a juvenile, the judge

    described her crime as "well thought-out" and sentenced her to life without

    parole.

    "My judge told me that I lacked moral scruples," she recalls, a term she did

    not know the meaning of.

    But the meaning of her sentence was all too clear. Life without parole, she

    says, "means I'm gonna die here."

    'These Children Were Literally Lost In Adult Prison'

    A few years ago, Sara Kruzan's story grabbed the attention of California State

    Sen. Leland Yee, D-San Francisco, who introduced legislation to abolish the

    of life without the possibility of parole for youth offenders. The bill was no

    get-out-of-jail pass; under his legislation, a juvenile who committed a felony

    before the age of 18 would serve a minimum of 25 years before being eligible

    to go before a parole board (also not a get-out-of-jail pass).

    Yee is also a child psychologist. When it comes to judging the actions of

    teenagers versus those of adults, he argues, "the neuroscience is clear;

    brain maturation continues well through adolescence, and thus impulse

    control, planning and critical-thinking skills are still not yet fully developed."

    Condemning teenagers to die in jail, then, means curtailing the lives of

    potentially productive members of society. "Children have a greater

    capacity for rehabilitation than adults," Yee said. Anyway, didn't California's

    prison system rename itself the California Department of Corrections and

    Rehabilitation?

    In politics, however, punitive almost always wins out -- particularly in

    California, where "three strikes" laws have led to a prison crisis unparalleled

    anywhere else in the country. Yee's bill met intense political resistance and

    eventually died.

    This past February, he introduced a new, watered-down bill that, instead of

    eliminating life without parole for juveniles would provide a review of a youth

    offender's sentence after 10 years.

    In 2005, Human Rights Watch published an unprecedented study, "The Rest

    of Their Lives: Life without Parole for Child Offenders in the United States,"

    which found "at least 2,225 people incarcerated in the United States who have

    been sentenced to spend the rest of their lives in prison for crimes they

    committed as children." Today, the number is even higher: 2,574.

    It's only recently that the plight of juveniles serving life in adult prisons came

    across the national radar. Alison Parker, deputy director of the U.S. Program

    of Human Rights Watch told AlterNet, "these children were literally lost in

    adult prison. Nobody paid attention to the fact that they were under 18 at the

    time of their offense."

    But this could soon change. Next month, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear

    arguments in a pair of cases -- Sullivan v. Florida and Graham v. Florida --

    that will decide whether life sentences for juveniles violate the Constitution's

    ban on cruel-and-unusual punishment.

    These cases follow the Court's landmark ruling in Roper v. Simmons four

    years ago, which struck down the death penalty for juvenile defendants on

    Eighth Amendment grounds. Echoing the opinion of Yee, Justice Anthony

    Kennedy wrote for the majority that juveniles have an "underdeveloped sense

    of responsibility" that leads to "impetuous and ill-considered actions and

    decisions," as well as being "more susceptible to negative influences and

    peer pressure."

    Civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson, the lead attorney in Sulliivan, argues

    that sentencing children to life without parole makes no more sense than

    sentencing them to death. In court filings for Sullivan, he writes, "The

    essential feature of a death sentence or a life-without-parole sentence is

    that it imposes a terminal, unchangeable, once-and-for-all judgment upon

    the whole life of a human being and declares that human being forever unfit

    to be a part of civil society."

    Stevenson is the executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama,

    a nonprofit that provides legal representation to indigent defendants and

    prisoners, including juveniles. According to EJI, out of the prisoners serving

    juvenile life without parole, more than half are first-time offenders. At least 74

    involve defendants who were 14 years old or younger when they committed

    their crime.

    "Almost all of these kids currently lack legal representation, and in most of

    these cases the propriety and constitutionality of their extreme sentences

    has never been reviewed."

    'Beyond Help'

    Among these 74 is Joe Sullivan, the defendant in Sullivan v. Florida. Sullivan,

    who is reportedly mentally disabled, was 13 years old in 1989 when he was

    accused of raping an elderly woman after a burglary carried out by an older

    group of teenagers. The older teenagers confessed to the burglary but pinned

    the rape on Sullivan, a charge he denied.

    The older boys did time in juvenile prison and were then freed. Sullivan

    became the youngest prisoner to be sentenced to die in prison for a crime

    other than murder. "I am going to try to send him away for as long as I can,"

    his trial judge said. "He is beyond help."

    At 14, Sullivan was sent to an adult prison, where he was repeatedly sexually

    assaulted. Sullivan now is 33 years old. Stricken with multiple sclerosis, he is

    confined to a wheelchair.

    Sullivan's case is emblematic of a number of problems when it comes to

    juveniles sentenced as adults, not the least of which is the phenomenon of

    youths either being coerced or getting caught up in criminal situations

    orchestrated by older teenagers or adults.

    Among juvenile offenders, many have participated in violent crimes as a

    result of their relationship with a grown-up. Incredibly, this can mean getting

    a harsher sentence than the adult in question.

    "There is this tendency to point the finger towards the younger co-defendant,

    sometimes because of the perception that the younger person will get a

    lesser sentence," says Alison Parker. "There's still this perception out there

    that kids will be treated differently, but the reality is that kids are treated like

    adults."

    Another major factor is race. During Sullivan's trial, "the prosecutor and

    witnesses made repeated, unnecessary reference to the fact that Joe is

    African American and the victim (was) white," according to EJI. "One

    witness repeatedly said the perpetrator of the assault was a 'colored

    boy' or 'a dark colored boy.' "

    It is not news that the American criminal justice system disproportionately

    targets people of color. But when it comes to juvenile offenders, Alison

    Parker calls the disparities "absolutely shocking." On a national level,

    "African American youth are serving the sentence at a rate of about 10

    times that of white youth," Parker told AlterNet. "In some states, the rate

    is even higher."

    In both cases before the Supreme Court, the defendants were sentenced

    to life for crimes that fell short of murder, a phenomenon that is especially

    prevalent In Florida, where the number of prisoners who will die in jail for

    non-homicide crimes hovers at 77.

    Terrance Jamar Graham, the defendant in Graham v. Florida, was 17

    years old and on probation for a crime he committed when he was 16,

    when he took part in an armed burglary. His co-defendants got minor

    sentences. He was slapped with life without parole.

    "Mr. Graham, as I look back on your case, yours is really candidly a sad

    situation," the judge told him. "The only thing that I can rationalize is that

    you decided that this is how you were going to lead your life and there is

    nothing that we can do for you."

    This is classic "three strikes" logic, which, along with the conspiracy and

    felony murder statutes have led teens to be sentenced to life for crimes in

    which they played only a minor role.

    Take Christine Lockhart, the first female juvenile to be sentenced to life

    without parole in Iowa. She was 17 years old and sitting in a car when her

    boyfriend killed someone during an armed robbery. Today, she has been

    in prison for more than half her life.

    Lockhart, along with Sara Kruzan are a relative minority, two out of some

    175 women serving life without parole for crimes they committed as

    teenagers. But their stories reveal how young people can get caught up in

    dangerous, harmful, and ultimately deadly, situations often simply by

    being with the wrong people at the wrong time.

    "Sara's story is compelling," says Parker. "But it is really one that is shared

    across the country. There are many, many people with similar circumstances

    who are serving life sentences without any possibility of parole."

    Kruzan, in fact, is one of the lucky ones. She now has attorneys who are

    working on appealing her sentence, pro bono. Most other prisoners serving

    life without parole for crimes committed as juveniles have no post-conviction

    representation at all.

    Today, Kruzan is 32 years old and described as a "model inmate," despite

    any real lack of incentive. ("Who wants to excel in prison?" she says.) Asked

    what she would say if she had a chance to appear before a a parole board,

    she says that she believes she can now be of some value to society, perhaps

    even a "positive example."

    Also, she says, "I've learned what moral scruples are."

    Liliana Segura is an AlterNet staff writer and editor of Rights & Liberties and

    World Special Coverage. http://twitter.com/LilianaSegura

    © 2009 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
    View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/143635/

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