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USA -  Trump-Harris
USA - Trump-Harris
USA - Trump and Harris records on criminal justice policy

August 16, 2024:

August 16, 2024 - USA. Both former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris have extensive records when it comes to criminal justice policy – records that are sometimes completely opposed to one another, and at other times are aligned.
As Trump – who has a criminal record of his own, having been convicted on 34 felony counts – prepares to face off in the general election against Harris, who is a former prosecutor, district attorney and attorney general, their past actions on criminal justice have come into the spotlight.
Here’s a look at some of the candidates’ policy records on crime, the death penalty, policing, and prison reform:
Recidivism - In 2005, as the district attorney for San Francisco, Harris launched “Back on Track,” a reentry initiative aimed at reducing recidivism among young, low-level, first-time felony drug-trafficking defendants.
Candidates between the ages of 18 and 30 who first complete 6 weeks of community service and then plead guilty to their charges are eligible to participate in the program, during which their sentencing is deferred until they complete a 12 to 18-month supervised “individualized personal responsibility plan” that includes “concrete achievements in employment, education, parenting, and child support,” among other mandates. The program reported that fewer than 10% of the program graduates reoffended after being released, compared to a 53% recidivism rate for California drug offenders within two years of release from incarceration.
The Biden-Harris administration also implemented a new Small Business Administration rule that removed loan eligibility restrictions based on a person’s criminal record.
“Making this available, reducing and eliminating that restriction is going to mean a lot in terms of 2nd chances and the opportunity for people to excel,” Harris said of the program earlier this year.
In 2018, Trump signed a bipartisan bill into law similarly aimed at supporting recidivism reduction programs – a bill Harris voted for as a senator.
The First Step Act (FSA) called for the development of risk and needs assessment programs to reduce recidivism, and required the Bureau of Prisons to help incarcerated people access federal and state benefits, obtain identification, and more. Under the act, incarcerated people could earn time credit for participating in recidivism reduction programming and other activities, which could be applied toward early release.
According to the Council on Criminal Justice, recidivism is estimated to be 37% lower among FSA releases when compared to “similarly situated pre-FSA releases.”
Death penalty - Trump has consistently been pro-death penalty. Federal executions began under the Trump administration in 2020 for the 1st time in roughly 17 years, according to the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC).
In 2020, the federal government completed 13 federal executions in the final months of the Trump presidency, according to the DPIC.
In 1989, prior to his time in office, Trump called for the return of the death penalty in a series of ads amid the case of 5 Black and brown boys then known as the “Central Park 5” who were convicted of assaulting and raping a woman in New York City.
Trump took out full-page ads in local newspapers within 2 weeks after the April 19, 1989 attack, calling to “Bring back the death penalty. Bring back our police!” However, the ads never explicitly mentioned the 5 boys, who were incarcerated for years before they were exonerated after another man confessed to the crime.
Harris has been consistent in her stance against the death penalty: “My entire career I have been opposed – personally opposed – to the death penalty,” Harris said in an August 2019 debate. “And that has never changed.”
However, some have criticized Harris for decisions regarding several death penalty-related cases.
For example, Harris declined to take up the case of convicted murderer Kevin Cooper, who was sentenced to death for a quadruple homicide in California in 1983 and is currently awaiting execution. His team had asked the state for additional DNA testing that they maintained could have exonerated him.
Harris has since changed her views on Cooper’s request, later telling The New York Times “I feel awful about this.”
Additionally, U.S. District Court Judge Cormac J. Carney overturned the death sentence of Ernest Dewayne Jones in 2014, ruling that the nearly 20 years he spent waiting for execution on death row was a form of cruel and unusual punishment, and so the death penalty was unconstitutional.
As the state’s attorney general, Harris appealed the ruling, arguing that the court’s decision “is not supported by the law, and it undermines important protections that our courts provide to defendants.” Carney’s ruling was overturned on appeal the following year.
Prison policy - Under the Trump administration, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions in 2017 rescinded an Obama-era initiative to phase out private prisons. Sessions then began distributing contracts for new privately-run detention centers.
In January 2021, the Biden-Harris administration ordered the Department of Justice not to renew contracts for privately-operated criminal detention centers. In December 2022, the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) ended all contracts with privately owned prisons and transferred federal inmates who had been incarcerated in them to BOP-operated prisons.
Pardons and commutations - The Trump administration commuted the sentences of more than 90 individuals and granted pardons to more than 140 people, according to the DOJ. The Biden-Harris administration has so far commuted the sentences of more than 120 individuals and granted pardons to 25 people, according to the DOJ.
The plan ahead - Though the Harris campaign hasn’t yet released the vice president’s official 2024 platform, she previously has supported legalizing marijuana at the federal level, ending solitary confinement, embracing cash bail reform, ending federal mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders, and furthering rehabilitative services for the incarcerated. She has also supported the Justice in Policing Act, which would limit “unnecessary” use of force and no-knock warrants, limit qualified immunity for police officers, and increase accountability for law enforcement misconduct.
The Trump administration’s plan, according to his official campaign website, states that he plans to increase funding to hire and retrain police officers, strengthen qualified immunity and other “protections” for police officers, increase penalties for assaults on law enforcement, and “surge federal prosecutors and the National Guard into high-crime communities.”

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/harris-trumps-records-criminal-justice-compare/story?id=112840980

(Source: abcnews, 16/08/2024)

IRAN - Mohammadreza Abbaszade executed in Zanjan on August 31
USA - Florida. Loran Cole, 57, White, was executed on August 29
IRAN - Sirwan Abubakri executed in Mahabad on August 29
IRAN - Meisam Hosseinkhani executed in Khorramabad on August 28
IRAN - 4 men executed in Isfahan on August 28
IRAN - 68 Organisations Declare Support for “No Death Penalty Tuesdays”
USA - Florida. Judge Nicholas Thompson sentences Wade Wilson to death
IRAN - Amirreza Ajam Akrami executed in public in Shahroud on August 26
IRAN - Fahim … executed in Isfahan on August 24
IRAN - 4 men executed in Tabriz on August 26
IRAN - Barkatali Sanjarani executed in Zahedan on August 26
IRAN - Abbas Rashidi executed in Qazvin on August 24
IRAN - Vahid Abbasi executed in Nahavand on August 22
IRAN - Mohammad Khaled Jahangiri executed in Tabriz on August 22
USA - Exonerated members of Central Park 5 warn about Trump at Democratic convention
USA - Florida. Duval County Jury recommends death sentence Pinkney ‘Chip’ Carter
IRAN - Mohammad Daghestani executed in Urmia on August 21
USA - Tennessee. Sean Finnegan gets death penalty for murder of Jennifer Gail Paxto
IRAN - The Continuation of the "No to Execution Tuesdays" Campaign in 18 Prisons Across the Country
IRAN - Mehdi Piri and Mazaher Ayouzi (Eyvazi) executed in Zanjan on August 19
IRAN - 5 men executed in Yazd on August 19
USA - Ohio. David Lee Myers, 60, White, was released on Monday
IRAN - Unidentified man executed in Yazd at an unspecified date
IRAN - 43 Human Rights Organisations Against Crackdown in Evin Prison
IRAN - Mohammad Karami-Zadeh and Esmaiel Jawadi executed in Karaj on August 19
IRAN - Abbas A’laei Aqblagh and Ali Azmoon executed in Tabriz on August 18
IRAN - 3 men executed in Shiraz on August 17
IRAN - Peymanollah Veysi executed in Sanandaj on August 15
IRAN - Reza Zardkouhi and Mousa-alreza Ebrahimi executed in Sabzevar on August 14.
IRAN - Dissident rapper Toomaj Salehi cleared of charge after death sentence overturned

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