Standing with the powerless and the voiceless: HFP at Public Hearings!
We chose to stand by two guys today. Perhaps some
would call them losers.
Why, you might ask. Why speak up for someone who
committed a terrible crime against humanity 30, 40 or 50 years ago? Human life
seemed to mean very little to that person back then. Why suggest freedom for
that kind of criminal?
I’m referring
to Public Hearings, sessions conducted by the Michigan Parole Board to
determine if serious offenders should be paroled. I first became aware of the
Public Hearing in 2004, when the Board tried to determine whether to release my
friend Maurice Carter. Since that time, our office has made it a priority to
speak up, when possible, for our friends.
There’s something
you gotta know about Public Hearings. They’re not fun.
-The prisoner is nervous and, more often than not,
unprepared.
-The Parole Board members are concerned about
freeing a dangerous person.
-The Assistant Attorney General, who claims to
represent all the people of the State of Michigan, tends to lean all of his
support toward victims of the crime, and refuses to recommend parole for anyone who has committed a violent crime.
Regardless of any extenuating circumstances.
-Friends and/or family members of the victim(s)
sometimes show to support that position.
-Judges and Prosecutors, also, often oppose the
release.
Does anyone
speak up on behalf of the inmate? Sometimes…perhaps a family member or a
friend. Some claim to be too nervous. Some are embarrassed by the nature of the
crime. Some have nothing to do with the inmate anymore and stay home. In some cases, no one shows.
Today we
spoke up on behalf of two inmates. One guy, 64, has served 40 years. Rehabilitation
has worked, and we’re convinced he’s going to make it. The other is 68, has served
33 years, and won’t live much longer. He’s terminally ill, and in our
communications with him, he just doesn’t want to die in prison.
Two losers?
We didn’t think so. It meant a day away for Matt, while calls and messages stacked
up in the office (We’re getting over a hundred a week).
Matt will be
the first to tell you: It’s where we belonged.
Perhaps Father
Greg Boyle says it best:
We stand there with those whose dignity has been denied. We
locate ourselves with the poor and the powerless and the voiceless. At the
edges, we join the easily despised and the readily left out. We stand with the
demonized so that the demonizing will stop. We situate ourselves right next to
the disposable so that the day will come when we stop throwing people away.”
Yep, that’s
HFP!
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