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Related: About this forumJeff Sessions Takes a Stand for Debtors' Prisons
Retweeted by RogueAltGov: https://twitter.com/RogueAltGov
Jeff Sessions withdrew Justice Department guidance to courts that helped protect low-income people from being thrown in jail for unpaid fines and fees.
Link to tweet
Jeff Sessions Takes a Stand for Debtors Prisons
By Nusrat Choudhury, Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU Racial Justice Program
DECEMBER 28, 2017 | 11:15 AM
During the holiday season, many of us think about what we can do to help people struggling with poverty. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, on the other hand, decided just before Christmas to rescind a guidance meant to protect low-income Americans. ... The 2016 guidance, issued by former President Obamas Justice Department, urged state and local courts nationwide to abide by constitutional principles prohibiting the jailing of poor people who cannot afford to pay court fines and fees. Jeff Sessions action makes clear that he and his Justice Department are unconcerned by courts trampling on the rights of poor people.
The Obama Justice Department issued the 2016 letter after reports and lawsuits by the ACLU and other groups revealed how modern-day debtors prisons function in more than a dozen states, despite the fact that the U.S. two centuries ago formally outlawed jailing people simply because they have unpaid debts.
These efforts revealed that poor people were being locked up in Georgia, Washington, Mississippi, and elsewhere without court hearings or legal representation when they could not pay fines and fees for traffic tickets or other civil infractions or criminal offenses. These efforts also show that modern-day debtors prisons result from state laws allowing or requiring the suspension of drivers licenses for unpaid court fines or fees without first requiring confirmation that the person could actually pay.
Modern-day debtors prisons received unprecedented national attention in 2015 when the Justice Department issued a 185-page report in its investigation of the Ferguson Police Department after the shooting of teenager Michael Brown. It documented how Ferguson police sought to advance the Citys focus on revenue rather than ... public safety needs, leading to the routine incarceration of poor people to elicit court fine and fee payments, which raised due process concerns and reflected racial bias.
By Nusrat Choudhury, Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU Racial Justice Program
DECEMBER 28, 2017 | 11:15 AM
During the holiday season, many of us think about what we can do to help people struggling with poverty. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, on the other hand, decided just before Christmas to rescind a guidance meant to protect low-income Americans. ... The 2016 guidance, issued by former President Obamas Justice Department, urged state and local courts nationwide to abide by constitutional principles prohibiting the jailing of poor people who cannot afford to pay court fines and fees. Jeff Sessions action makes clear that he and his Justice Department are unconcerned by courts trampling on the rights of poor people.
The Obama Justice Department issued the 2016 letter after reports and lawsuits by the ACLU and other groups revealed how modern-day debtors prisons function in more than a dozen states, despite the fact that the U.S. two centuries ago formally outlawed jailing people simply because they have unpaid debts.
These efforts revealed that poor people were being locked up in Georgia, Washington, Mississippi, and elsewhere without court hearings or legal representation when they could not pay fines and fees for traffic tickets or other civil infractions or criminal offenses. These efforts also show that modern-day debtors prisons result from state laws allowing or requiring the suspension of drivers licenses for unpaid court fines or fees without first requiring confirmation that the person could actually pay.
Modern-day debtors prisons received unprecedented national attention in 2015 when the Justice Department issued a 185-page report in its investigation of the Ferguson Police Department after the shooting of teenager Michael Brown. It documented how Ferguson police sought to advance the Citys focus on revenue rather than ... public safety needs, leading to the routine incarceration of poor people to elicit court fine and fee payments, which raised due process concerns and reflected racial bias.
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Jeff Sessions Takes a Stand for Debtors' Prisons (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Dec 2017
OP
rzemanfl
(30,288 posts)1. K&R n/t.
Me.
(35,454 posts)2. SOB
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)3. It is such a good idea
to jail people who can't pay fines and fees. I mean, they can work for 25cents an hour, or what ever outrageously large wage is paid to inmates to do work of some kind. Stay in prison long enough, all of the wages to go pay off the fines and fees and Voila! Debt paid, problem solved! Plus, of course, there's no need for a pesky drivers license if you don't have to drive to work. Win win, right?
Okay, everyone knows I'm being sarcastic, right?
JDC
(10,490 posts)4. "Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?"
So *45 DID bring back Christmas! Scrooge's cruelty is alive and well!