U.S.
Rep. Ayanna Pressley has reintroduced her People’s Justice Guarantee,
mapping out her vision for a more equitable and dignified American
justice system.
In a
May 27 call with Andrea James, executive director of the National
Council for Currently and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls, the two
discussed how root causes of criminal behavior, especially in young
Black boys and girls, are caused by departments meant to protect them.
James
has been fighting mass incarceration after her own prison sentence in
2009. As the founder of Families for Justice as Healing, she has
advocated for state and federal legislation that reduces mass
incarceration and fights for better conditions within prisons.
Pressley said the U.S. government now has an obligation to repair the harm it has caused through its justice system.
“The
PJG was crafted in partnership with Andrea James, DA [Rachael] Rollins,
lawyers and advocates and community organizers alike, folks that have
direct involvement with the system, impacted families,” Pressley said.
“We brought everyone together in order to confront these injustices.”
The
United States incarcerates a disproportionate amount of its population
compared to other countries and spends more on incarcerating immigrants
than all other federal enforcement agencies combined. Black and brown
people are affected the most, making up 56% of the incarcerated
population.
Pressley will be tackling the justice system through the core values of shared power, freedom, equality, safety and dignity.
“The
PJG offers a vision of justice and serves as an intersectional guide
for my legislative agenda, speaking to a range of issues, from transit
equity and housing justice to immigration and decarceration,” Pressley
said.
The provisions
the congresswoman is calling for include an end to the death penalty; a
cap on sentences that do not cause serious harm; trauma-informed mental
and physical care in prisons; and designation of a non-911 number for
crisis and intervention teams.
James,
who grew up in Roxbury, calls the neighborhood the “most incarcerated
corridor in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,” making this issue
particularly close to her heart. “My granddaughters live in that
corridor right now. It’s the fifth generation in our home in Roxbury,
and so this is a part of my life, as it is yours,” she told Pressley.
One
issue they are fighting for is a reduction in prison populations by
decriminalizing minor infractions, including drug possession and
consensual sex work.
Pressley
regards these as “byproducts of poverty, homelessness, discrimination
and/or addiction.” She and James spoke about the effects these hardships
have on women and girls.
“A
prison will never be a place for a woman or a girl to heal, for
anybody, but particularly for a woman or a girl, to heal and advance her
life,” James said.
The
culture of mandatory minimums on minor crimes keep cycling them into
the system, and James said it isn’t changing fast enough, despite recent
reforms. She’s doing work helping the community in the meantime.
The
two spoke at length about Black girls who are criminalized simply for
the way they show up; their hairstyles, personalities and other personal
choices incur bias, and later, criminalization.
“I feel like people don’t always believe that it starts that early,” Pressley said.
“To
be a Black girl is to be hyper-visible and invisible at the same time.
And as a survivor myself, of childhood sexual abuse, within a school
environment, so often our girls are neglected,” she continued.
James added that while incarcerated, she found that sexual trauma is a common thread in incarcerated women.
“It
just is so painful. Because what we hear mostly, and from our own
accounts, and from the accounts of the sisterhood … Is that nobody
really believes them,” James said.
Pressley
refers to James as a teacher in her life, and one of the motivators for
reintroducing this legislative framework. James ended the call by
thanking the Congresswoman for listening to the community and letting
their concerns inform her policy.
PJG details
Pressley’s
vision for helping impacted communities like Roxbury includes limiting
the amount of firearms and military equipment for police and civilians
and eliminating qualified immunity, a crucial protection from lawsuits
that police officers in Massachusetts continuously defend.
Removing
the money tied up in incarceration is also crucial to the plan.
Pressley wants to prohibit private companies from profiting off
incarceration, ban incarceration for debt and end money for bail.