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The Michigan Messenger going forward

By Staff Report | 11.16.11

I am writing today to announce the closure of the Michigan Messenger. After four years of operation in Michigan, the board of the American Independent News Network, has decided to shift publication of its news into a single site, The American Independent at Americanindependent.com. This is part of a shift in strategy, towards new forms [...]

Colorado-based abstinence program provided false and misleading information to Michigan students

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By Todd A. Heywood | 11.16.11

An abstinence-only presentation provided to numerous school districts in Calhoun and Eaton Counties in October of this year provided false and misleading information to students about HIV, experts allege.

Class action lawsuit filed against MERS over unpaid taxes

foreclosure
By Todd A. Heywood | 11.15.11

Two county registers of deeds filed a class action lawsuit Monday on behalf of Michigan’s 83 counties alleging that the Mortgage Electronic Registration Services owes millions of dollars in property title transfer taxes.

Schuette fights important mercury regulations

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By Eartha Jane Melzer | 11.14.11

Despite evidence of the impact of mercury on children and public health, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette last month joined with 24 other state attorneys general in filing a lawsuit to scuttle new EPA regulations that would reduce mercury emissions from power plants.

Juveniles sentenced to life without parole cost the state millions

By Eartha Jane Melzer | 02.24.09 | 7:16 am

(Photo: Steven Fernandez via Flickr.com)

Michigan’s prison system holds 346 inmates who are serving life without parole for crimes they committed as children. As the state struggles with a $1.5 billion deficit and a prison system that eats up 20 percent of the budget, a bill to end the controversial practice of sending minors to prison for life may gain momentum in the state Legislature.

The United States is the only nation that allows life without parole for juvenile offenders and, according to a report by Human Rights Watch, Michigan ranks third among states for number of people serving such sentences.

Shelli Weisberg, legislative director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, an advocate for banning mandatory life sentences for children, explained that Michigan’s large number of juvenile lifers is a result of legislation enacted in the 1980s during a period of fear about a wave of juvenile crime.

“People were worried about ‘super predators,’” she said. “States around the country started really cracking down, with laws that were intended to get the worst of the worst — kids so far gone that there is nothing that can help them.”

But the fear was a scare tactic, Weisberg said. “In fact the juvenile crime wave was temporary and has gone down.”

In a third of the cases in which Michigan juveniles are sentenced to life without parole, she said, the crime is their first offense.

But tough-on-crime laws beginning in 1988 mandated life without parole sentences for certain crimes, and allowed children as young as 14 to be tried as adult without a special hearing.

Legislation introduced this month by state Sen. Liz Brater (D-Ann Arbor), which has been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee, would ban life without parole for juveniles. It would also allow those already serving mandatory life sentences for crimes committed as juveniles to apply for parole after a portion of their sentence is served.

“It is inhumane and it is inappropriate to take children before their brains are fully developed and subject them to same sentence that adults would get,” Brater said. “Many of them were sentenced along with an adult defender who got a lesser sentence and many of these youth were victims of abuse or neglect in their homes or are people with mental illness or disability.”

In addition to the ethical problems, she said, incarcerating young people for their full lives represents a significant expenditure for taxpayers and this money could probably do more to prevent crime if spent earlier in life on services like pre-school.

It costs at least $30,000 per year to keep an inmate in the state prison system, according to the Department of Corrections. With 346 mostly still-young lifers serving time for juvenile crime, the current law that prohibits rehabilitation and release will cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars over the next several decades.

Brater, who has introduced this same legislation in the last two legislative session, said that she feels it has developed some momentum. Last year the House held a hearing on the legislation and then passed it with strong bipartisan support.

Gary Walker is president of the Michigan Prosecutors Association, a group that has historically opposed bills to end mandatory life sentences for juveniles.

The legislation proposed by Brater could represent a “monumental change in terms” for the Michigan criminal justice system, Walker said, because the general age of criminal responsibility is 17 in Michigan and a large number of criminal offences are committed by people between 17 and 18 years old.

In Michigan, as in 13 other states, people who are 17 years old are considered adults by the criminal justice system, Walker said. Prosecutors have the option of charging younger offenders as juveniles, Walker said, and generally charge them as adults only in cases involving “horrific” crimes.

The legislation to end juvenile life without parole would in effect change the age of criminal responsibility to 18, Walker said.

“There is no real magic to the age of responsibility,” he said. Some people as young as 16 are fully aware of the meaning of their actions and decades ago the age of majority was 21.

“If we were to be starting out now, 18 may well be an appropriate choice.”

Walker said that Michigan prosecutors are open to working the legislation’s supporters.

“We are always willing to discuss legislation and we try to shape it in a way that is appropriate to Michigan citizens,” he said. “I want to see the kids in caps and gowns, not in jump suits.”

While Brater’s legislation has been referred to the Judiciary Committee, it remains unclear whether the bill will be considered further.

Comments

  • Velia_Koppenhoefer

    To learn about how devastating juvenile life without parole sentences can be to juveniles in this state I urge you to visit the following links to learn about the case of Efrén Paredes, Jr. who is currently serving life without parole for a crime he was accused of committing at age 15. Efrén has maintained his innocence since the day of his arrest and is supported widely by people across the globe.

    Efrén is now age 35 and soon to turn 36 in April. He has spent more time in prison than he did a free boy in society. At the time of his arrest he was an honor student with no prior criminal history. The Berkeley City Council in California condemned Efrén's sentence as a human rights violation on February 10, 2009. More about this and so many more things regarding juvenile life without parole sentences is available in the links below.

    http://www.4Efren.com
    http://4Efren.blogspot.com
    http://twitter.com/Free_Efren
    http://Free-Efren.blogspot.com
    http://Abolish-JLWOP.blogspot.com

  • lbedell

    I know everyone of these juvenile offenders claim they are innocent…but they were convicted of murder. YES juveniles are capable of murder and they fully understand that it is wrong. Why would we want to release murderers back into the public? I think the cost of someones life is worth every penny to keep them behind bars.

    • dcbrown

      I disagree with your statement. These juvenile offenders accepts responsibility for their crimes. However, at the age of 17, and sentences to LWOP, now facing his 41st birthday in July, I truly feel that it's time to bring these un-just sentences of minors/juvenile to some closure. There are grown men who have committed far more dreadful crimes,and even they are given a chance for parole. We're just asking for the same thing, I believe 23 plus years as a juvenile is punishable enough. Let's not let them die behing bars.

  • http://www.4Efren.com Velia_Koppenhoefer

    Contrary to popular belief most prisoners do not proclaim innocence. Ninety percent of prisoners are incarcerated as the result of guilty pleas. To learn more about the complex issues regarding juveniles sentenced to life without parole people are encouraged to visit http://Abolish-JLWOP.blogspot.com.

    A cursory review of the research regarding juvenile justice, youth incarceration, and adolescent brain development will reveal that the public still has much to learn. Citizens will also learn that in a recent Wayne State University School of Social Work study 95% of MIchigan residents oppose the imposition of life without parole sentences for youth. That study is available on the blog as well.

    Justice will not be served by incarcerating youth for the entire lives. The lives of youth are not dispensable. What is dispensable, however, is the “lock em up and throw away the key” philosophy that is ruining the lives of young people and our nation.

    http://www.4Efren.com
    http://4Efren.blogspot.com
    http://twitter.com/Free_Efren
    http://Free-Efren.blogspot.com

  • http://www.4Efren.com Velia_Koppenhoefer

    Contrary to popular belief most prisoners do not proclaim innocence. Ninety percent of prisoners are incarcerated as the result of guilty pleas. To learn more about the complex issues regarding juveniles sentenced to life without parole people are encouraged to visit the Abolish Life Without Parole Sentences for Children in the USA blog.

    A cursory review of the research regarding juvenile justice, youth incarceration, and adolescent brain development will reveal that the public still has much to learn. Citizens will also learn that in a recent Wayne State University School of Social Work study 95% of MIchigan residents oppose the imposition of life without parole sentences for youth. That study is available on the blog as well.

    Justice will not be served by incarcerating youth for their entire lives. The lives of youth are not dispensable. What is dispensable, however, is the “lock em up and throw away the key” philosophy that is ruining the lives of young people and our nation.

  • lbedell

    How do you know they “acept responsibility”? What is worse than murder? If they are capable of murder when they are seventeen what is going to stop them as an adult? They need to stay where society has deemed most appropriate and that is behind bars where they can not murder another innocent person.

  • dcbrown

    I disagree with your statement. These juvenile offenders accepts responsibility for their crimes. However, at the age of 17, and sentences to LWOP, now facing his 41st birthday in July, I truly feel that it's time to bring these un-just sentences of minors/juvenile to some closure. There are grown men who have committed far more dreadful crimes,and even they are given a chance for parole. We're just asking for the same thing, I believe 23 plus years as a juvenile is punishable enough. Let's not let them die behing bars.

  • lbedell

    How do you know they “acept responsibility”? What is worse than murder? If they are capable of murder when they are seventeen what is going to stop them as an adult? They need to stay where society has deemed most appropriate and that is behind bars where they can not murder another innocent person.

  • dcbrown

    I disagree with your statement. These juvenile offenders accepts responsibility for their crimes. However, at the age of 17, and sentences to LWOP, now facing his 41st birthday in July, I truly feel that it's time to bring these un-just sentences of minors/juvenile to some closure. There are grown men who have committed far more dreadful crimes,and even they are given a chance for parole. We're just asking for the same thing, I believe 23 plus years as a juvenile is punishable enough. Let's not let them die behing bars.

  • lbedell

    How do you know they “acept responsibility”? What is worse than murder? If they are capable of murder when they are seventeen what is going to stop them as an adult? They need to stay where society has deemed most appropriate and that is behind bars where they can not murder another innocent person.

  • Anonymous

    Children and adolescents often act on impulse. Many are abused and have no one. Some went along for the ride and had know idea to the outcome. there is a time in a child’s life when peers are their greatest influence and many do not have stable environments at home in society today. Those that act out because there is no apparent reason to the public there is to someone that has studied the case and this information usually comes out after the offenders is all ready sentence. These are children without even proper defense sometimes so until all the cards are on the table one can not voice their opinion.

  • Anonymous

    I agree with the poster above. It is proven that most youth are impulsive, good home or community environments or not. Some kids in the best upbringing can make the worst choices and vice versa. It is an individual response to a situation and what stressors may be involved. Peer pressure is huge to a teenager. Toss in rebellious teenager, some trauma, abuse, homelessness, substance abuse, runaway, the need to fit in, being impulsive, hormones, and lack of a support system-in the blink of an eye, you have a disaster waiting to happen. Then they are in the system. The system that says, hey you young scared punk kid, just plead guilty to this crime and avoid a trial so you dont waste anyone’s time and we will give you this parolable sentence and if you are good, you will be out in about ten years. They get tossed into an adult prison and left for the wolves for years..it’s a crying shame.