NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

Nick Hillary's Civil Rights Case, Amidst a Broader Moment of Reckoning

https://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/story/42057/20200805/nick-hillary-s-civil-rights-case-and-how-it-links-to-a-broader-moment-of-reckoning

 
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It’s been nearly four years since Nick Hillary was found not guilty in the murder of 12 year-old Garrett Phillips in Potsdam. The trial gripped the region. Now, Hillary is pursuing a lawsuit of his own, against the law enforcement officials who charged him with Garrett’s death.

 
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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

Questions Arise Over 13-Year Old in Custody for Homicide

18 year-old Treyanna Summerville was found dead in her home in Gouverneur a few weeks ago. The St. Lawrence district attorney says the investigation is ongoing. They’ve released very few details regarding the case, in part because a minor, a 13-year-old, is facing charges of second degree homicide.

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18-year-old Treyanna Summerville was found dead in her home in Gouverneur a few weeks ago. The St. Lawrence district attorney says the investigation is ongoing. They’ve released very few details regarding the case, in part because a minor, a 13-year-old, is facing charges of second degree homicide.

 
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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

Transfer of Elderly Inmates to Adirondack Correctional Ignites Fear, Outrage Amongst Their Families

New York's Department of Corrections and Community Supervision outlined what it calls its "reopening" plans for the state prison system at the end of May. In four pages, it goes into the process for phasing staff in, and how visits are still suspended. But one little bullet point in those four pages has become a flashpoint: the announcement that it would transfer around one hundred elderly inmates out of other prisons and up to a prison in the Adirondacks.

 
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New York's Department of Corrections and Community Supervision outlined what it calls its "reopening" plans for the state prison system at the end of May. In four pages, it goes into the process for phasing staff in, and how visits are still suspended. But one little bullet point in those four pages has become a flashpoint: the announcement that it would transfer around one hundred elderly inmates out of other prisons and up to a prison in the Adirondacks.

 
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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

How the Pandemic is Playing Out in NY Prisons, Through One Man’s Eyes

While the number of people testing positive or being hospitalized for COVID-19 continues to fall around the state, those numbers are going up inside New York prisons, where nearly two thousand staff and inmates have gotten sick. Inmate Stanley Jamel Bellamy describes his experience of the crisis thus far.

 
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While the number of people testing positive or being hospitalized for COVID-19 continues to fall around the state, those numbers are going up inside New York prisons, where nearly two thousand staff and inmates have gotten sick. Inmate Stanley Jamel Bellamy described his experience of the crisis thus far.

 
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Here & Now Natasha Haverty Here & Now Natasha Haverty

1st Massachusetts Prisoner To Apply For Compassionate Release Awaits Answer

If someone in prison has a terminal illness and poses no risk to society, they should be allowed to die at home — that's the idea behind what's called "compassionate release." So far, 49 states have adopted the policy. Any day now, the first prisoner in the Massachusetts correctional system to apply for compassionate release is due a final answer.

 
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If someone in prison has a terminal illness and poses no risk to society, they should be allowed to die at home — that's the idea behind what's called "compassionate release." So far, 49 states have adopted the policy. Any day now, the first prisoner in the Massachusetts correctional system to apply for compassionate release is due a final answer.

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NPR Natasha Haverty NPR Natasha Haverty

After Half A Century, Inmates Resurrect The Norfolk Prison Debating Society

Half a century ago, a team of inmates in a Massachusetts prison held an outstanding record on the academic debate circuit. By 1966 the Norfolk Prison Debating Society boasted 144 wins and only eight losses. They won and lost against Harvard, MIT, Princeton and the like. But when a more punitive approach to prisons swept across the U.S., the debate team dissolved. Until now.

 
Credit: Yale Joel / Getty Images

Credit: Yale Joel / Getty Images

Half a century ago, a team of inmates in a Massachusetts prison held an outstanding record on the academic debate circuit. By 1966 the Norfolk Prison Debating Society boasted 144 wins and only eight losses. They won and lost against Harvard, MIT, Princeton and the like. But when a more punitive approach to prisons swept across the U.S., the debate team was dissolved. Until now.

 
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NPR Natasha Haverty NPR Natasha Haverty

Video Calls Replace In-Person Visits In Some Jails

Many jails are turning to video chats as a way for inmates to connect with loved ones on the outside. For families, there are financial and emotional costs.

 
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Many jails are turning to video chats as a way for inmates to connect with loved ones on the outside. For families, there are financial and emotional costs.

 
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New York Times Natasha Haverty New York Times Natasha Haverty

Video Caps State’s Case in Trial Over Potsdam Boy’s Killing

Banking their hopes on an array of circumstantial evidence, prosecutors in the murder trial of an upstate boy rested their case on Tuesday after showing a video of the suspect’s car in proximity to the boy as he was heading home, minutes before the fatal attack.

 
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Banking their hopes on an array of circumstantial evidence, prosecutors in the murder trial of an upstate boy rested their case on Tuesday after showing a video of the suspect’s car in proximity to the boy as he was heading home, minutes before the fatal attack.

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/21/nyregion/potsdam-murder-trial-garrett-phillips-oral-nicholas-hillary.html

 
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NPR Natasha Haverty NPR Natasha Haverty

Amid Backlash Against Isolating Inmates, New Mexico Moves Toward Change

Level 6 of New Mexico's state penitentiary in Santa Fe is a dense complex of prison cells, stacked tight. As the gate opens, men's faces press against narrow glass windows. They spend 23 hours a day in solitary.

 
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Level 6 of New Mexico's state penitentiary in Santa Fe is a dense complex of prison cells, stacked tight. As the gate opens, men's faces press against narrow glass windows. They spend 23 hours a day in solitary. Security is so high that talking to one of the inmates, Nicklas Trujeque, requires a guard passing a microphone through the food port of his cell door.

 
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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

Why is Justice for Garrett Phillips So Complicated?

People in St. Lawrence County know his face: the smiling, golden-haired 12-year-old boy, Garrett Phillips. It’s going on four years since his murder, and the posters demanding "Justice for Garrett" are still in the hardware store and the laundromat windows, on bumper stickers and front lawns.

 

People in St. Lawrence County know his face: the smiling, golden-haired 12-year-old boy, Garrett Phillips. It’s been almost four years since his murder, and the posters demanding "Justice for Garrett" are still in the hardware store and laundromat windows, on bumper stickers and front lawns.

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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

Grappling with 40 Years of the Drug War In Brownsville, Brooklyn

Aaron Hinton says the 40-year drug war in Brownsville has almost made spending time behind bars normal. “It’s subliminally attacking out minds and making us believe that socially this is acceptable.” One out of every 50 men in New York’s prisons comes from Brownsville. The state of New York spends $40 million a year – and this has been going on for generations — locking up black and Hispanic men from this one neighborhood. What does that do to a community?

 
Brownsville 1972, photo by Winston Vargas

Brownsville 1972, photo by Winston Vargas

Aaron Hinton says the 40-year drug war in Brownsville has almost made spending time behind bars normal. “It’s subliminally attacking out minds and making us believe that socially this is acceptable.” One out of every 50 men in New York’s prisons comes from Brownsville. The state of New York spends $40 million a year – and this has been going on for generations — locking up black and Hispanic men from this one neighborhood. What does that do to a community?

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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

Dying Inmates in New York Struggle to Get Home

Over the last four decades, New York’s prison population has soared, with many people serving long mandatory sentences for low-level crimes. As a result, the number of elderly inmates is surging—growing by almost eighty percent from 2000 through 2009.

 
Coxsackie Correctional Facility - Greene County, NY

Coxsackie Correctional Facility - Greene County, NY

Many terminally ill inmates are forced to remain behind bars even when they no longer appear to be a threat to society. This is the story of Daryl Bidding’s long struggle to get home before he dies.

 
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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

When Should Infants Stay with Their Mothers in Prison?

The number of women in American prisons has gone up by 800 percent over the past thirty years, according to the Federal Bureau of Justice. Most of these women are mothers, and about one in twenty of them are pregnant. In New York State, a woman who gives birth while serving time has the chance to stay with her baby in a prison nursery for up to one year, or eighteen months if the mother is eligible for parole by then.

 

In New York State, a woman who gives birth while serving time has the chance to stay with her baby in a prison nursery, for up to one year, or eighteen months if the mother is eligible for parole by then. A Department of Corrections study found that participating in prison nurseries lowers recidivism rates dramatically—cutting the chances of a woman coming back to prison in half. Researchers say these programs also help the babies, giving them a chance to form secure attachments to their moms. But in recent years, the state’s prison nursery is slowing its admission rate.

 
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NCPR Natasha Haverty NCPR Natasha Haverty

A Look Inside Moriah Shock Prison

Two years ago, Moriah Shock Prison near Port Henry was next on the list of correctional facilities New York State wanted to close. Camp Gabriels near Saranac Lake and the Summit Shock Prison near Albany had already been shut down, and the prisons in Lyon Mountain and Ogdensburg were also on the chopping block. But the local community and Essex County officials rallied enough support to keep Moriah open. Today, 188 men live on the spartan campus, set in a former mining facility at the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains.

 

It’s lunchtime in the chow hall at Moriah Shock Prison. The room looks like a high school cafeteria. There are fifty men sitting in their seats, eyes straight ahead or locked on their trays of food. When the prison captain Boyce Rawson walks in, one inmate breaks discipline: he turns his head to look, and gets dressed down.

 
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