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Makes you want to cry for our children!!
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
California: Repeal Law Jailing Children for Life
Senate Should End "Life Without Parole" for Juvenile Offenders
(Sacramento, January 14, 2008) "California's State Senate should pass
a law this month to end the sentencing of children to prison for
life with no possibility of parole, Human Rights Watch said today
in a report on a practice outlawed in most of the world.
In the 100-page report, "When I Die, They'll Send Me Home: Youth Sentenced
to Life without Parole in California," Human Rights Watch found
that in many cases where juveniles were prosecuted with an adult,
the youth received heavier sentences than their adult codefendants.
There are 227 inmates in California sentenced as juveniles to life in prison without parole.
"Sentencing children to life without parole means they will
die in prison, without the possibility of a second chance
at life," said Elizabeth Calvin, children's rights
advocate at Human Rights Watch and author of the report. "The
public can be kept safe without locking children up forever
for crimes committed when they were too young to vote, drink, or even drive."
For the report, Human Rights Watch interviewed 27 people sentenced
to life without parole for crimes committed at ages 14
to 17. The report draws on records from the California
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and analyzes
findings from a Human Rights Watch survey of more than
half of all youth serving the sentence.
Despite popular belief to the contrary, Human Rights Watch found
that life without parole is not reserved for children
who commit the worst crimes or who show signs of being
irredeemable criminals. Forty-five percent of California
youth sentenced to life without parole for involvement
in a murder did not actually kill the victim. Many were convicted
of felony murder, or for aiding and abetting the murder, because
they acted as lookouts or were participating in another felony when the murder took place.
In nearly 70 percent of cases reported to Human Rights Watch in which the
youth was not acting alone at least one codefendant was an adult. Survey
responses reveal that in 56 percent of those cases, the adult received a lower sentence than the juvenile.
Many survey respondents wrote heartfelt messages of remorse and apology to the families of their victims.
Nationally, a 2005 Human Rights Watch study estimated that 59 percent of
youth offenders serving life without parole in the United States were
first-time offenders, without even a juvenile court matter on their records.
Other states are considering reforms or have efforts underway to eliminate
the sentence, including Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, and Washington.
International law prohibits the sentence for child offenders, and
it is banned in nearly every other country in the world.
Human Rights Watch believes only seven people outside
the United States are serving life without parole for crimes committed as children.
"The immaturity that leads children to commit crimes in the
first place leaves them ill-prepared to navigate the criminal
justice system, so they're more likely than adults to
receive the heaviest sentence," Calvin said. "Some
of those I interviewed didn't understand the plea bargain system,
for instance, so they"d reject
a 15-year sentence as being too long and then end up with life."
One interviewee, Dave U., who was 16 years old at the time of his crime,
said he had several adult codefendants, one of whom was more than 10 years older than he:
"I thought these older dudes would be my friends, but in the
end, they said that I did it all."
Almost all of those interviewed said they did not fully understand the
proceedings, their role in the process, and the consequences at stake.
Jeff S., 16 at the time of his crime, told Human Rights Watch:
"I didn"t even know I got LWOP [life without parole] until
I talked to my lawyer after the hearing."
California has the worst record in the nation for racial disparity
in the imposition of life without parole for juveniles.
African-American youth are serving the sentence at a rate
that is 18 times higher than the rate for white youth,
and the rate for Hispanic youth is five times higher in California than for white youth.
Despite there being no evidence that these youth are incapable of rehabilitation,
many youth serving life without parole reported that their
sentence precludes participation in rehabilitative programs in prison.
The Juvenile Life Without Parole Reform Act (SB 999) is scheduled
for a vote in the State Senate before January 31, 2008.
If passed in the State Senate and House, the bill, written
by Senator Leland Yee (D- San Francisco/San Mateo), would
end the sentencing of juveniles to life without parole
in California. Youth convicted of murder could still be
sentenced to life in prison, but would have the opportunity for
parole consideration after serving 25 years or more. The bill is supported
by a diverse and sizable number of organizations, coalitions, and religious groups.
"Even children convicted of crimes that cause terrible suffering
can turn their lives around," said Calvin. "California's
child offenders should be punished for their crimes, but
they also deserve a chance to rehabilitate themselves.
And California's political leaders should help them by passing SB999."
Selected Testimonies
"When they offered [my codefendant and me] 30 years, a flat
30
years, not 30 to life, we were 17 [years old.] We didn't understand. Thirty
years, I was 17 and in 30 years I'd be 47. That seemed like forever
to me. We were in juvie hall. We said no."
--Robert D.
"The judge let me hug my mom and I cried and I couldn't stop...
I got
life without and I didn"t kill anybody."
--Ray J., 17 at the time of his crime, described the moment when
he heard the sentence.
"As a kid, you don"t realize how fragile life is or how
fragile it becomes."
--Billy G., 17 at the time of his crime.
"My thoughts about what I had done to them, I've been thinking
about the crime, my case, and the victims a lot... I didn"t
realize my situation until I was about 24 or 25 years
old. I started thinking about my whole life, what my whole
family went through, their pain and suffering. I started
waking up. I started regretting, Just me really accepting what I had done to them."
--Roland T., 33, described the process of beginning to understand what he had done, and his feelings of remorse.
"[I was] scared to death. I was all of 5"6', 130 pounds
and they sent me to PBSP [Pelican Bay State Prison]. I
tried to kill myself because I couldn't stand what the
voices in my head was saying, "You"re gonna get raped. You won't ever see your family again."
--David C., 29, described being sent at age 18 to one of California's highest-security prisons. David was 16 at the time of his crime.
From:
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/01/14/usdom17726.htm
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