With the 2024 legislative session upon us, we’re gearing up to advocate for much-needed criminal legal reform.
Here are some of our top goals this session:
Elimination of Juvenile Fines and Fees
Currently, youth in Kansas can be charged thousands of dollars in unjust fines and fees that burden Kansas families and trap youth for years to come. This hurts Kansas families trying to make ends meet. Eliminating fines and fees means paving the way for our youth to succeed without the chains of financial burden holding them back.
Decriminalization of Medical Marijuana
No one should face criminal penalties for accessing the medicine they need. We’re advocating to legalize medical marijuana and ensure equity in the regulated medical industry. This is more than an act of compassion; it's one step towards addressing the disproportionate impact of past policies on marginalized communities.
Ending Cash Bail
We’re also working at the local level to reform our broken cash bail system. The cash bail system in Kansas creates a divide between those who can afford their freedom and those who cannot. Kansans support a legal system that upholds the presumption of innocence and does not equate freedom with financial means. Reforming this system is about reinforcing the fundamental American principle that everyone deserves justice, regardless of their economic status.
Kansans support these reforms, and we’re fighting for them this session. If you’d like you help, RSVP for our Legislative Advocacy Training and our Medical Marijuana Day of Action.
We have big goals this legislative session—with your help, we can advance civil liberties in Kansas.
Date
Friday, January 5, 2024 - 2:30pm
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As we look back at 2023, we’re celebrating the local organizing work to advance voting rights at the county level through our Civil Liberties Beehive. Here are some of the highlights:
In Johnson County, Beehive Leaders were active in contacting Election Commissioner Fred Sherman and county commissioners, advocating for a vote from jail program and expanded language access. Commissioner Sherman met with leaders and was supportive of both policies.
The Sedgwick County Beehive wanted to increase access to voting by mailing advanced ballot applications to every voter after long lines and major delays in the 2022 election. They worked with Election Commissioner Laura Rainwater, and while we haven’t yet won advanced ballot applications, we did win expanded access--securing 30 additional voting locations for 2024.
In Wyandotte County, Beehive leaders worked to expand language access for voting materials. When Election Commissioner Michael Abbott declined to meet on the issue, they organized to get over 100 community members to email the commissioner. In November, Commissioner Abbott had a meeting with community leaders, where they learned the election office has started providing Spanish information on their website and hired bilingual poll workers. This win, and the other steps we’ve made to make voting easier across the state show us that organizing works.
Thank you to all the beehive leaders who made these wins possible. And if you want to get involved in making change in your community, join us for our next New Beehive Leader Orientation on January 9 at 6PM on Zoom.
Date
Tuesday, December 19, 2023 - 3:45pm
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In 2019, Wyandotte County’s DA, Mark Dupree, asked the Vera Institute of Justice to help the DA’s office address racial inequities in the county’s criminal legal system with a focus on prosecution reform. Vera reports that Dupree was committed to transparency and racial equity “even if the data shows that my office has contributed to the issue.”
Vera used a variety of techniques to evaluate data generated by Wyandotte’s criminal legal system and to document the perspectives of community members who have had contact with the system.
Vera’s reporting highlights clear racial and economic disparities for people entering and passing through Wyandotte’s criminal legal system. Based on their findings, Vera made five recommendations to DA Dupree’s office.
1. Decline cases based on non-public safety stops.
These pretextual stops occur when a person is pulled over for a minor infraction (such as a broken taillight) while law enforcement seeks evidence of a more serious crime. Research on traffic stops in the US consistently demonstrates that Black and Latinx drivers are more likely to be stopped and searched despite not being more likely to carry contraband. Such racial profiling creates a clear bias in who enters the criminal justice system. The DA does not directly control policing; nonetheless, they can combat racial profiling by refusing to prosecute cases that result from these biased practices.
2. Lower and limit the use of bail.
A person who is unable to pay bail faces extended time in jail and risks losing their jobs and homes. Moreover, pretrial detention can hamper their ability to work freely with a lawyer to prepare their defense. These pressures can influence defendants to plead guilty to prevent even worse outcomes. Vera found that over 70% of Wyandotte respondents who took a plea deal did so to avoid more jail time.
Vera also found that existing bail practices disproportionately affected low-income neighborhoods. In Wyandotte, these neighborhoods are disproportionately made up of Black and Latinx families. The bail amounts faced by these neighborhoods are excessive considering annual incomes for these households are under $34,818: 59% of bonds were higher than $11,000 and 21% were higher than $34,818.
A person’s freedom should not be determined by their ability to pay. Pretrial detention should be reserved only for defendants who pose a risk to public safety or a flight risk. The DA can directly influence bail practices by requesting that bail be lowered or eliminated for low-level charges and non-violent crimes. Moreover, the DA can request judges to consider a defendant’s ability to pay when setting bail.
3. Exercise restraint in charging.
Participants in Vera’s research suggested that the legal system could better serve their communities if prosecutors had more restraint in charging. Specifically, they felt prosecutors should consider the type of crime, the age of the person charged, and the potential harms of charging a case -- especially when the defendant belongs to a marginalized group.
Prosecutors have absolute discretion over charging. Vera recommends Mark Dupree’s office adopt clear standards for charging that ensure fairness and equity while promoting safe, healthy, and strong communities.
4. Expand diversion programs.
One way prosecutors can exercise restraint is by expanding diversion programs. Diversion programs attempt to minimize people’s contact with the criminal legal system by targeting the underlying problems that lead to criminalized behavior in the first place. These offer an alternative to incarceration by addressing the root causes of community instability such as food and housing insecurity, joblessness, lack of educational resources, and unmet mental health needs.
The Wyandotte DA could expand diversion by using it as the standard response to certain offenses (e.g., in non-violent drug cases) and by developing stronger partnerships with responsive community-based services to address unmet needs. Vera specifically recommends Wyandotte’s DA office develop a juvenile diversion program as a juvenile’s involvement in the criminal legal system has been demonstrated to increase the likelihood of offending and arrest.
5. Increase transparency.
Finally, Vera found that many community members said they became involved in the criminal justice system because they did not know their rights or how the legal system works. Moreover, community members expressed a lack of trust in the system and its protection of people’s rights.
Vera recommends the DA’s office make better efforts to communicate its programs and policies to the community and, specifically, to hire a community liaison officer to manage ongoing communication between the DA’s office and the community. Finally, Vera recommends the DA’s office promote transparency and accountability by publishing office data on a public dashboard.
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Prosecutors should be responsive and accountable to the communities they serve. A criminal justice system that punishes poverty, mental illness and substance use does not serve Wyandotte County. A system that disproportionately imprisons Black and Latinx people is unjust.
You can join the work with the ACLU of Kansas to reimagine a criminal legal system that respects the rights of all; where freedom doesn’t depend on wealth, fewer people are incarcerated, and taxes are wisely invested in evidence-based solutions.
You can read Vera's report here.
Date
Monday, November 27, 2023 - 5:30pm
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