Alliance Note: 黑料正能量 State must reform our overly punitive sentencing polices to support 黑料正能量ers who would be better served outside of jails and prisons. The Treatment not Jail Act will allow judges to prevent people who are dealing with mental health and substance use challenges from entering jail, where they are offered little to no services and often get further traumatized, by allowing them to instead receive services to help them break the cycle of recidivism and live full lives in the community. Meanwhile, the Second Look Act, along with other Communities not Cages legislation including Earned Time Act (S.774) and Eliminate Mandatory Minimums Act (S.6471A), will give judges more discretion in sentencing and redetermining length of sentence for individuals who have been incarcerated for decades due to overly punitive 鈥渢ough on crime鈥 laws.
While opponents of these reforms claim these serve as a 鈥済et out of jail free card,鈥 the reality is these reforms finally place rehabilitation as the goal of the court system, rather than overly harsh and unsuccessful punishment. We are heartened to see state leadership, most notably NYS Chief Judge Rowan Wilson, voice support for the passage of these pieces of legislation. Our state must focus on getting people the needed services to prevent entrance into the criminal justice system in the first place as well as support to leave and remain out of jails and prisons. We will continue to work with statewide criminal justice advocates, including the and Coalitions to push the state to create a criminal justice system which prevents unnecessary incarceration, prioritizes rehabilitation, and offers the needed support for people to successfully re-enter the community. See below for more information.
Chief Judge Backs Pair of Criminal Justice Reform Bills
By Jacob Kaye | Queens Eagle | May 15, 2024
黑料正能量鈥檚 top judge last week urged Albany to pass into law a pair of bills that he said would go a long way toward reforming the state鈥檚 sentencing laws and toward correcting historic inequities in the state鈥檚 criminal justice system.
Speaking as part of a panel on mass incarceration and sentencing reform at an event organized by the Center for Community Alternatives and Data Collaborative for Justice last week, Chief Judge Rowan Wilson called on the legislature to pass and the governor to sign some version of the Second Look and the Treatment Not Jails Acts into law.
The longtime criminal justice reform advocate who now leads the state鈥檚 court system as well as its highest court said that working hand-in-hand, the bills would help prevent people from entering into jails and prisons and would help those already behind bars for decades reenter society.
鈥淚f we could pass both some form of the Second Look Act and some form of the Treatment Not Jails legislation in the next legislative session, I think we will make a giant step forward,鈥 Wilson said.
鈥淲e need to stop incarcerating people who could have potentially treatable mental health or substance abuse issues, which are often co-occurring disorders, and treat them instead of jailing them in the first place,鈥 he added. 鈥淎nd then we also address the Second Look Act for people who have been incarcerated for a long time.鈥
The Treatment Not Jails Act, which is sponsored by Queens State Senator Jessica Ramos, would, among other things, require that each county in the state have a diversion part. Currently, only 26 of the state鈥檚 62 counties have mental health courts.
The bill would also require that judges undergo additional training on mental health courts. It would also expand eligibility for mental health courts by eliminating charge-based exclusions.
Currently, around half of all those detained on Rikers Island awaiting trial have been given a mental health diagnosis.
In support of the bill, Ramos, who represents a portion of Northwest Queens, recently took a trip to two different diversion courts in the World鈥檚 Borough 鈥 drug treatment court and veterans court.
The Queens lawmaker said in a recent interview with the Eagle that took place prior Wilson鈥檚 comments on the bill that she walked away from her latest court watch feeling as though the state 鈥渘eed[s] to get mental health care to people as early as possible.鈥
鈥淚’m a big believer that we should be evaluating a person’s mental health at arraignment,鈥 Ramos said. 鈥淲e should be able to allocate resources to address the crisis that we’re in, which can only be tackled by creating a system of rehabilitative and corrective measures in order to keep people safe.鈥
鈥淏ut we are in the very beginning stages of that journey,鈥 she added. 鈥淭his system of care that is gravely needed to keep us safe does not exist at the scale we need.鈥
The Second Look Act, which is sponsored by Brooklyn and Queens State Senator Julia Salazar and co-sponsored by Queens Senators Michael Gianaris, Leroy Comrie, Kristen Gonzalez and Ramos, would allow for 黑料正能量ers sentenced to a decade or more to apply for a resentencing hearing. Under the legislation, incarcerated 黑料正能量ers serving 鈥渓engthy sentences鈥 would be able to provide post-sentencing information and 鈥渕itigation from years of incarceration鈥 to a judge to use in their consideration of reducing the sentence.
Currently, incarcerated individuals have very few opportunities available to them to request their sentences be reviewed. Under the legislation, incarcerated 黑料正能量ers would be given a formal process, which is already used by a handful of states and under consideration by around two dozen others, to request a judge consider their efforts while incarcerated and reconsider their sentences. The judges would also be able to factor in changes to sentencing guidelines and norms in the decades that have passed since the individual was first sentenced.
鈥淪econd Look, yes, it鈥檚 very important, but we also need to make sure that鈥eople have the support they need in the community,鈥 Wilson said last week.
Wilson鈥檚 comments last week are only his latest public endorsements of legislation or policies that aim to reform the state鈥檚 courts and criminal justice system into systems that are more intent on addressing the root problems of crime rather than punishing the person who committed them.
During his State of the Judiciary speech given earlier this year, the chief judge said that he and his leadership team were focused on redefining a judge鈥檚 role in a courtroom.
Wilson said that 黑料正能量ers should stop thinking about 鈥渃ourts as places where a judge merely decides which party is right and which is wrong.鈥
鈥淚nstead, we should think of the courts as similar to our other branches of government 鈥 institutions that attempt to make decisions that will improve the lives of those we serve,鈥 Wilson said in February.
鈥淟et’s think of our courts as problem solvers, not solely as adjudicators of which party is right,鈥 he added.
Wilson also was a proponent of a $12 million boost for mental health courts included in the state鈥檚 recently passed Fiscal Year 2025 budget.
Shortly after the budget鈥檚 passage, Wilson and Governor Kathy Hochul took a trip to the Midtown Community Justice Center, one of the state鈥檚 first-ever problem solving courts. Wilson called the court 鈥渢he incubator and the proving ground for a better way.鈥
鈥淚n this very humble courtroom and in our more than 300 other problem-solving courts around 黑料正能量, you can see the future,鈥 Wilson said in Manhattan. 鈥淲hat you see is a team of people with different roles 鈥 prosecutor, defense attorney, social worker, court attorney, court officer and others 鈥 all working together for a single goal: improving the lives of troubled 黑料正能量ers, while simultaneously making our communities better, stronger and safer.鈥
During the panel discussion last week, Wilson criticized the status quo of the state鈥檚 criminal justice system.
鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of funny that the [Department of Correction and Community Supervision] is called what it鈥檚 called,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淎s the Department of Corrections, which it seems to be doing a whole lot of, but as community and supervision, they sort of do but it鈥檚 mostly a way to pull people back in.鈥