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The Maryland Restorative Justice Initiative (MRJI) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Maryland released a new report, "Still Blocking the Exit," which tells the stories of many individuals given parole-eligible life sentences who have been denied release despite being recommended for it.

The report was presented at a press conference in Annapolis, where advocates were joined by legislators sponsoring a bill to depoliticize the parole process for lifers. Also on hand were individuals released under the decision in Unger v. State of Maryland, which held that flawed jury instructions given by judges prior to 1980 denied defendants the right to a fair trial. Many of the individuals recently released – who often had parole-eligible life sentences – were sentenced as juveniles and are now successfully reintegrating into their communities.

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Tuesday, January 20, 2015 - 10:15am

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Still Blocking the Exit

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Image from the cover of the Still Blocking the Exit report by ACLU of Maryland. There are square images of Black people's faces with color overlays of blue, orange, green, and purple.

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Here are some of the people who are placed in immigration detention in Maryland and whose lengthy and unnecessary detention our taxpayer dollars are funding:

  • A family man who has lived in the United States for three decades, has lawful permanent resident and U.S. citizen family members, and a wife and daughter with significant medical needs, and whose only conviction was a theft offense for which he served no time in jail.

  • An elderly lawful permanent resident woman who some years ago was convicted of a theft offense but who otherwise has no criminal history and has lived peacefully in the United States for decades.
  • A man who has lived in the United States for two decades, who has five U.S. citizen children and only a single non-violent drug possession conviction for which he served less than six months in jail.
  • A man who has lived in the United States for decades, who has a U.S. citizen wife and relatives, and whose only conviction was a single drug possession conviction from 20 years ago for which he served less than six months in jail.
  • A lawful permanent resident mother of two small U.S. citizen children with two shoplifting charges involving diapers and food.

In addition to being costly and wasteful, the detention of each of these individuals raises serious due process concerns. Each had substantial challenges to their removability, many were eligible for relief, and at least three were detained for a prolonged period of time. Their stories will be described in detail in this report.

In the criminal justice system, the presumption is that everyone is eligible for release on bond and given an opportunity to argue their equities at a hearing before a neutral arbiter. In the immigration system, that presumption is reversed for most detainees. Immigrants are routinely and automatically subjected to detention pending their removal cases without ever having an opportunity to present their case for release to an immigration judge. They remain detained for the entire duration of their immigration proceedings, even when they have strong immigration cases and are ultimately able to win and remain permanently in the United States.

In 1996, Congress enacted a provision, 8 U.S.C. § 1226(c), requiring the mandatory, no bond detention of immigrants facing deportation based on certain criminal convictions. It did so because of an assumption that people with criminal records posed a heightened risk of flight or danger. But recent government data shows that this is untrue: individuals detained under § 1226(c) pose no greater flight or public safety risk than the general population of immigration arrestees.

Combining qualitative interviews and quantitative analysis of a three-month data sample of immigration custody determinations in Maryland, this report describes and illustrates the needless overuse of “mandatory” (no-bond) detention for persons who pose little flight or public safety risk. Our analysis produced the following basic endings:

Of 485 individuals entering Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody in Maryland during a three-month period in 2013, 96 individuals were held without bond under the mandatory detention statute, 8 U.S.C. § 1226(c), which requires the detention of noncitizens placed in removal proceedings due to their criminal records.

As a group, mandatory detainees did not pose a higher flight or safety risk than the general population of ICE arrestees, by the assessment of ICE’s own risk classification tool. In fact, those detained under § 1226(c) were collectively the lowest ight risk category among all ICE arrestees.

About 41 percent of people classified as mandatory detainees had convictions that either clearly did not subject them to mandatory detention under § 1226(c), or raised a substantial question as to whether they did so. Nonetheless, all were automatically placed in mandatory detention without regard to substantial legal doubts regarding their classification.

Of those classified as mandatory detainees, at least half may have been eligible for some form of relief from deportation and therefore likely to be legally entitled to reside in the United States.

Several federal courts have recognized that § 1226(c) does not require mandatory detention where someone raises a good faith or substantial challenge to their removal, nor does it authorize mandatory detention beyond a reasonable period of time. Nonetheless, in many cases, the government imposes mandatory detention in an improperly broad manner to persons with minor convictions and strong equities, even where there are substantial doubts about whether they committed a crime that triggers the mandatory detention statute; even where they are likely to ultimately prevail in their immigration cases; and even when they are detained for unreasonably prolonged periods.

The report recommends that the government limit its application of § 1226(c) to its proper scope and provide bond hearings in cases where a person raises a substantial challenge to removal or where detention has become prolonged. Instead of presuming that a person is subject to mandatory detention, the presumption should be reversed. Detention without a bond hearing should be reserved only where the person has no substantial challenge to removal and should not be applied beyond a brief period of time. 

Date

Thursday, August 4, 2016 - 9:45am

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detained without process

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The recent tragic death of Freddie Gray while in the custody of Baltimore police officers has raised serious questions about the circumstances of his death and the practices of Baltimore officers in dealing with members of the public. This tragedy has created an opportunity for reform.

If we want to understand the long history of police misconduct by Baltimore police officers, and begin to end that misconduct, a good place to start is the police union contract and the Maryland Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights.

In Baltimore, and in other cities and counties across the country, police union contracts contain provisions that impede the effective investigation of reported misconduct and shield officers who are in fact guilty of misconduct from meaningful discipline.

The role of police union contracts in impeding police accountability has been largely ignored in all of the protests and discussions that have consumed the nation since the tragic events in Ferguson, Missouri, in August 2014.

Police officers are, of course, entitled to the full measure of due process with respect to disciplinary matters. They should not be subject to arbitrary and unreasonable investigations or discipline. But they are not entitled to unreasonable protections against investigations of alleged misconduct. 

 

Date

Tuesday, May 26, 2015 - 5:45pm

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Balt City Police Union Contract Walker

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