Improved economy creates prison staffing crisis for Kansas
"ELLSWORTH, Kan. (AP) Unemployment is down and wages are up in Kansas except for corrections officers.
They are leaving state prisons in droves because of low pay, creating a public safety crisis that legislators will have to deal with on top of plugging a budget hole.
Their starting pay is about 33 percent less than the state's average hourly wage of $20.20, and overall wages are about a quarter lower than the national average. The annual turnover rate is up to nearly 30 percent. Things are so bad that the state is hiring 18-year-olds to manage hardened criminals, despite some prison leaders' misgivings..."
http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/improved-economy-creates-prison-staffing-crisis-kansas
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This Boys Life
"At 16, Taurus Buchanan threw one deadly punchand was sent away for life. Will the Supreme Court give him, and hundreds like him, a chance at freedom?..."
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2016/01/04/this-boy-s-life#.dHbHpt0m0
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Murder Isnt Black or White
"...my 19-year-old brother, Tom Cummins, and our cousins, Julie and Robin Kerry, were brutally attacked by four strangers. Julie was 20, Robin, 19.
The strangers were young people, too. They raped my cousins and restrained my brother before forcing them off a bridge into the Mississippi River. Only my brother survived...
Reginald Clemons, in 1991, he confessed to raping (but not killing) my cousins. He was convicted of their first-degree murders in 1993. He now claims he is innocent, and in November, Missouris Supreme Court ruled to vacate those convictions because it determined that prosecutors might have suppressed evidence suggesting that his confession was coerced. For the purposes of clarity, let us acknowledge that coerced means beaten out of him.
This has been the elephant in our 25-year-old waiting room, and it feels cathartic to finally say: Yes, the police most likely did beat Reginald Clemons. In fact Im quite sure they did, because while they briefly suspected my brother, they beat him, too..."
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/03/o...emc=edit_ty_20160104&nl=opinion&nlid=73927810
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Life in prison: A look at becoming an inmate
"JACKSON, Ga. (AP) They arrive by the busload each Tuesday and Thursday, dozens of new inmates entering Georgia's prison system. Most stay only a week or two. But for those sentenced to die, this is their last stop.
The Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson, the state's biggest, houses about 2,100 male inmates on a wooded, 900-acre campus about 50 miles south of Atlanta. A warden and three deputy wardens oversee more than 600 employees.
Most inmates stay just long enough to determine which of the state's 31 prisons is the best fit. A couple hundred are processed in or out any given Tuesday or Thursday in a hectic scene as off-white buses with red accents pack the transfer yard.
"I'm always amazed that we always seem to put the right inmate on the right bus and he ends up at the right facility," prison Warden Bruce Chatman said as he led an Associated Press reporter and photographer behind the prison walls..."
http://www.seattlepi.com/news/crime/article/Life-in-prison-A-look-at-becoming-an-inmate-6729461.php
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