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Jay-Z, Meek Mill |
The Reform Alliance,
which was inspired by Meek Mill's recent stint in prison for a minor probation violation,
hopes to free one million prisoners in five years.
The
owners of the New England Patriots and Philadelphia 76ers, Robert Kraft and
Michael Rubin, are co-founders.
Reform
says it wants to help people who are "trapped in the system".
The
group's "mission" is to "dramatically reduce the number of
people who are unjustly under the control of the criminal justice system,
starting with probation and parole".
"To
win, we will leverage our considerable resources to change laws, policies,
hearts and minds," it says.
More than six
million people can currently count themselves as part of the "correctional
population" of the USA - which includes people in prisons and local jails,
but is mostly made up of the more than four million people on probation or
parole, according to Bureau of Justice statistics.
Probation
is often given as a sentence instead of time in prison and can include
conditions like being on a curfew or going to rehab.
Parole
is when an inmate is released early from prison with similar conditions to
probation.
Meek
Mill has experienced all three: probation, parole and jail.
The
Reform Alliance says his case is an example of the "devastating and
long-lasting effects" that can occur after one interaction with the
criminal justice system.
The
rapper was arrested in 2007 - he says wrongfully - for drug and gun charges,
aged 19.
He
was sentenced in 2009 to between 11 and 23 months in county prison, but was
released on parole after five months and put on house arrest.
It
was during this time he started to make his name nationally as a rapper, signing
to Rick Ross's label and releasing a string of hugely successful mixtapes.
Before
long he was a platinum-selling artist.
But
a parole violation for suspected cannabis use resulted in a ban on touring, and
then after failing to get his travel plans approved by the court Meek was
sentenced to prison again in 2014.
Examples of parole
violations that can land people back in prison range from being late to
appointments with parole officers or missing a curfew, to things more specific
to the crime that was committed - like failing to attend an Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting.
"When
you talk about these so-called technical violations, it's not technical to the
kid who can never see her mum again because she showed up late for a meeting.
That's not technical, that's devastating for that individual child,"
Reform Alliance CEO Van Jones said.
Violations
over the next few years resulted in his probation period being extended - it
now lasts up until 2023 - as well as the five months in prison which ended in
April 2018 and birthed the #FreeMeek movement.
It's
people with a similar story to Meek's, that have been "caught up on
probation and parole", that Reform says it wants to focus on first.
"Being from the
environment I'm from, I don't even think it's possible for you to be an
angel," Meek said as the organisation was announced in New York.
"You
grow up around murder on a daily basis, you grow up in drug-infested
neighbourhoods.
"And
every time I started to further my life with the music industry, there was
always something that brought me back to ground zero," he said.
Pennsylvania
Governor Tom Wolf, who attended the event, said he was a supporter of criminal
justice reforms that are "fair, help our system work better and smarter,
and save crucial taxpayer dollars while balancing public safety and victim
concerns".
Across
the US, roughly a third of people on parole are black, according to Bureau of
Justice statistics - something Jay-Z raised at the event.
"We
want to be very clear. If someone commits a crime they should go to jail. But
these things are just disproportionate and the whole world knows it," he
said.
Jay-Z has been vocal
about Meek's case, writing in the New York Times while he was imprisoned.
"On the
surface, this may look like the story of yet another criminal rapper who didn't
smarten up and is back where he started," he wrote.
"What's
happening to Meek Mill is just one example of how our criminal justice system
entraps and harasses hundreds of thousands of black people every day.
"I
saw this up close when I was growing up in Brooklyn during the 1970s and 1980s.
Instead of a second chance, probation ends up being a land mine, with a random
misstep bringing consequences greater than the crime. A person on probation can
end up in jail over a technical violation like missing a curfew."
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