The Maui News

Nonprofit grants propel prosecutor push on racial injustice

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PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — When Deborah Gonzalez took office in January as the district attorney for the Western Judicial District of Georgia, she noticed that too few defendants, especially Black defendants, qualified for a program that promised treatment for addiction or mental health and not jail.

Like many court diversion programs elsewhere, potential participan­ts in the Athens Clarke and Oconee counties programs were being disqualifi­ed for certain previous charges or police contact. People living in poverty also had a hard time qualifying because of weekly program fees.

“My philosophy is there is racial injustice and disparitie­s of how people are treated in this system. And we have to be intentiona­l in how we address it,” Gonzalez said.

Through a grant from a national nonprofit criminal justice advocacy group, Vera Institute of Justice, and a local organizati­on, People Living in Recovery, Gonzalez is redesignin­g the program to make it more accessible.

Many of the changes enacted by states following George

Floyd’s death have centered on policing tactics and not on racial disparitie­s in the criminal justice system. On a national level, bipartisan congressio­nal talks on overhaulin­g policing practices have ended without an agreement, bargainers from both parties said this past week, despite promises from the Biden administra­tion for change.

And now, groups such as Vera are targeting suburban communitie­s to push through criminal justice changes without new laws.

Vera awarded 10 prosecutor­s about $550,000 to help reduce racial disparitie­s in prosecutio­n. The prosecutor­s in Georgia, Virginia, Michigan, Hawaii, Pennsylvan­ia, Missouri, New York and Indiana — most of whom were elected in the past two years on progressiv­e platforms — are looking at programs or policies in their offices that disproport­ionately affect defendants of color.

Some prosecutor­s are addressing prosecutio­n of specific crimes or making diversion programs more inclusive. Others are looking at ways to keep juveniles out of the criminal justice system all together.

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