I, too, have a dream!
I have a
dream today.
I have a
dream that one day the concept of restorative
justice will take hold in every community, that offenders will be concerned
about victims of crime, that victims will learn more about reasons for crime,
and that supporting the rights of victims will
not be mutually exclusive of ensuring humane treatment for prisoners.
I have a
dream that one day the legal defense of
indigent prisoners will not go to the lowest bidder, but will be sought out
by the best legal minds so that every
arrested person may get constitutionally guaranteed excellent
representation in the courtroom.
I have a
dream that one day the concept of “innocent
until proven guilty” will become a reality instead of a meaningless cliché,
that investigating officers will avoid the curse of “tunnel vision” and seek
all facts before making arrests, and that states’ attorneys will pursue
conviction of proven criminals but also admit
mistakes and wrongdoing and release those persons where accusations are
unfounded. I look forward to that day
when arrests are equally made with no
regard to race, religion and gender.
I have a
dream that a better system of choosing
prosecutors can be established, in which prosecutors do not campaign for
re-election on a platform of conviction totals, but instead seek public support
based on their pursuit of justice. I
look forward to that day when prosecutorial
misconduct will not only be readily exposed, but pursued and punished with
an equal vigor.
I have a
dream today.
I have a
dream that those robed justices on the bench may not only find fairness and equality in sentencing from county to county,
state to state, but that their fine legal minds can creatively develop
alternatives to incarceration, especially
in cases of non-violent crimes…alternatives
that not only benefit the public and reduce the costs of prison systems, but
also seek to positively impact lives of the accused. May that day come when rehabilitation supersedes retribution.
I have a
dream that parole boards will no
longer insist that prisoners show remorse before giving them consideration, but
recognize that the system has its flaws, that there really are people behind
bars who have been wrongly convicted,
and that it is criminal to insist that these people lie in order to achieve
freedom.
I have a
dream that prison wardens and prison
staff members will no longer become jaded by those who commit heinous
crimes, but instead will recognize that all men and women have been created in
the image of God. Even though many
prisoners seem rebellious, insensitive and uncaring, I have a dream that leaders of prison
systems will make efforts to give their occupants more education, more
vocational training, more counseling, adequate medical care, and that prison
staffers will receive improved professional training to better care for the
large population of mentally challenged inmates.
My dream
goes beyond those behind bars, those who put them there, and those who keep
them there.
I have a
dream that one day the general public
will not only hear but accept our message that all prisoners, regardless of
guilt or innocence, regardless of the nature of the crime, deserve humane
treatment.
That will be
the day when HUMANITY FOR PRISONERS
is no longer an agency with services limited to the State of Michigan, but has active
chapters in every state!
That will be
the day when we no longer have to worry about how to pay the electric bill, but
will have dollars to improve and expand our essential ministry.
And that
will be the day when we’ll have hundreds of volunteers gladly holding open doors
for re-entering citizens as they exclaim, “Free at last…free at last. Thank God Almighty, I’m free at last!”
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