Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Jay Z project highlights the plight of juvenile prisoners in the US

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NEW YORK: Rap superstar Jay Z is helping shine a light on prison reform by co-producing an upcoming TV documentar­y about a young man who spent three years behind bars without trial for allegedly stealing a backpack.

The rapper teamed up with Harvey Weinstein to produce the six-part TIME: The Kalief Browder Story, which airs in January on Spike TV. It uses first-person accounts, prison footage and cinematic re-creations to explore what Jay Z called a system that’s “broken”.

Browder was 16 when he was arrested on suspicion of stealing a backpack and sent to the Rikers Island facility in New York for three years. Browder was kept in solitary confinemen­t for 800 days and, according to his lawyer, beaten by inmates and guards. He was never tried and was released in 2013. He killed himself last year at age 22.

Jay Z, attending a press conference this week with Browder’s mother, the film- makers and Weinstein, said he hoped Browder’s story “inspires others and saves other lives”.

“I think it’s very clear that solitary confinemen­t for a 16-year-old is wrong,” he said. “It’s inhumane.”

In an opinion piece for The Washington Post, President Barack Obama cited Browder’s “heartbreak­ing” case to argue for a ban on the use of solitary confinemen­t for juvenile and low-level offenders.

The Spike series comes at a time when US prisons are under scrutiny. The harsh sentences in the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcemen­t Act of 1994 have been debated in the presidenti­al campaign and a documentar­y by Ava DuVernay, The 13th, delves into mass incarcerat­ion and its deep, historical roots in America.

Jay Z would not be drawn into picking a side in the presidenti­al race on the topic of prison reform, saying “it’s not a political issue. It’s a human issue. It’s a story of compassion and empathy”.

Jay Z said he came across Browder’s story in a magazine article and reached out to the young man, eventually meet- ing him. “I just wanted to give him words of encouragem­ent,” Jay Z said. He wanted to tell him, “I’m proud of him for making it through.”

The rapper, whose real name is Shawn Carter, later brought the Browder project to Weinstein, who said he wasn’t familiar with the case. “I’m going to be honest. I didn’t even know who Kalief was until Shawn showed us footage and talked to us about the project,” Weinstein said. “Now I want to make sure everybody knows.”

The series is directed by Jenner Furst, who wouldn’t explain how he obtained Browder’s video interrogat­ion by police. It will be the first to emerge from a new deal between the rapper and The Weinstein Company to produce TV shows and movies. Also on the agenda is a film about comedian Richard Pryor, directed by Lee Daniels. – ANA-AP

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