More than one reason why old-timers should be released!
Denials are arriving by the boatload in the Michigan prison system. Many inmates
who deserve a second chance are not being considered for clemency by Governor
Snyder. And that’s a shame.
Darnell Epps, student at Cornell University who served 17 years for a
violent crime, wrote a great op-ed piece in the New York Times, titled: The
Prison ‘Old-Timers’ Who Gave Me Life. “Aging inmates,” he said, “some serving life
sentences, helped me turn my life around.” His next sentence is important: “They could do even more good on the
outside.”
We’re tough
on crime in Michigan! We like to “throw away the key.” Right now more than 8%
of Michigan prisoners are 60 and older…some 75 of them over the age of 80!
Our friend
Doug, age 54, who has served 33 years, has had the door slam shut on every
opportunity for reentry into society, and that saddens us. A teacher, mentor,
and a person who has done so much good behind bars, he deserves a new crack at
freedom. Besides that, he could do
even more good on the outside!
In a rare
rant this week, he said,
“When this place opened I
worked around Ed Rozek. His comment about the MDOC erring by keeping people too
long is something I'm only really appreciating now, 23 years later. He said
most guys steadily improve, but rather than release at the peak, the State
keeps people not only when they plateau out, but start sliding back downhill,
having given up on all the rhetoric about second chances. With decades served
and no end in sight, Ed's observation has finally sunk in. Now don't fret that
I'm on some downward spiral of despair, but at the same time I'm not going to
pretend this disillusionment with a system I've wanted to believe in despite
the growing evidence to the contrary doesn't hurt. A large part of my joining
the Marines was because I really believed in America being the best country of
all time, that a person really could be whatever they want, and, yes, second
chances even for screw-ups were available. Far too idealistic for my age and
circumstance, I admit, but up to now it's gotten me through this sentence. Now,
my idealism is gone, replaced with resignation. I still don't want to ever use
the word "unfair!" given what I did to get myself here, but, well,
damn, in a fair, objective review I can't help but think I'd finally get to go
home before any more of my family passes away from old age.”
Says Darnell
Epps: We must seriously consider whether society would benefit by letting
reformed offenders re-enter their community, and whether it’s economical and
humane to punish solely for the sake of retribution. When I hear of all the gun
violence on Chicago’s South Side, for instance, I can’t help wondering what
would happen if Illinois’s many reformed old-timers, who hail from those
neighborhoods, were granted parole with a mission of working to reduce the
violence. It’s not unreasonable to think they’d have a better chance of reaching the younger generation
than the local police or federal law enforcement.
One shameful
certainty: It won’t be happening in Michigan!
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