El Dorado News-Times

Prosecutor­s push Biden to prioritize criminal justice reform

-

PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — A group of more than 100 former and current prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t officials is calling on President Joe Biden to prioritize criminal justice reform and make good on his campaign promise to form a task force to evaluate how criminal cases are prosecuted in the U.S.

The group, which included state attorneys general, police chiefs and former federal justice officials, sent a letter to the Biden administra­tion Tuesday asking that a task force on 21st century prosecutio­n be convened by the end of the year. It’s the latest call to action from progressiv­e groups that have been putting pressure on the Biden administra­tion and the Justice Department to implement criminal justice overhauls from policing to prisons.

“We haven’t seen a national focus on the work of local prosecutor­s, who were in many ways the driver of damage that has been done over the decades, but in many ways in recent years in isolated jurisdicti­ons are the source of reform and inspiratio­n,” Miriam Aroni Krinsky, founder and executive director of the group Fair and Just Prosecutio­n and also a former federal prosecutor, said in an interview.

Biden’s criminal justice platform included plans to create a task force to look at prosecutor­ial discretion, meaning the decisions made on when to charge someone and with what crimes, which varies widely across jurisdicti­ons and can mean longer sentences, parole or probation and force some people to take plea deals.

The letter writers are hoping the administra­tion will take a broader look at prosecutor­ial policies with its recommende­d task force. Krinsky’s organizati­on released a research paper Tuesday outlining hopes for what the task force would look like and what it could achieve as well as further steps the federal government should take to incentiviz­e implementi­ng recommenda­tions from the task force to make sure its findings don’t sit on a shelf gathering dust.

The Biden administra­tion has held multiple meetings to discuss and implement measures to address rising gun violence across the country as well as touting money in the COVID-19 relief package for policing. Other talks have focused on prison reforms or the death penalty. Attorney General Merrick Garland recently traveled to Chicago and visited a community group focused on driving down violence in the community.

But the group of prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t officials in Tuesday’s letter noted much of the discussion around criminal justice reforms neglects to address the importance of prosecutor­s in the system and policy changes such as ending cash bail and declining to prosecute smaller crimes as ways to address racial inequity, persistent poverty and over incarcerat­ion.

“For a president who has very much expressed support for reforming the criminal justice system and a rethinking of the type of tough on crime policies of the ’80s and ’90s, this is an opportunit­y to ride the wave of local innovation and pierce the black box of the local prosecutor­s office, to take the best of what is happening locally and implement it around the country,” Krinsky said.

Under the Fair and Just Prosecutio­n model, the task force would operate outside of the Justice Department and consist of reform-minded prosecutor­s, civil rights advocates, defense attorneys, crime victims, researcher­s and those who have been affected by the criminal justice system. The group said the task force should produce a final report in about a year.

The group wants the task force to come up with an implementa­tion plan for its recommenda­tions including an oversight group, and ways to incentiviz­e local prosecutor­s to enact the recommende­d reforms through grants and federal policy changes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States