Home News Volunteer Now! Links Buy Books About the CJPC Contact Us Search Web Site

Criminal Justice Policy Coalition
CJPC Special News


 

Responding to issues raised by the testimony of the Criminal Justice Policy Coalition and Northeastern Law Professors Patricia Gearan and Wallace Holohan at the Governor's Council public hearing  for Parole Board nominee John Kivlan, the Boston Bar Association issued the following press release on November 4, 1999...

BOSTON BAR ASSOCIATION TO SCRUTINIZE PAROLE BOARD POLICIES

Saying that "the role of the Massachusetts Parole Board in the criminal justice system is extraordinarily important to the corrections system, the community and the families of those inmates who are serving sentences in our prisons," Boston Bar Association President Thomas E. Dwyer, Jr. today announced that he will convene a special committee to examine the makeup, procedures and policies of the Parole Board over the last ten years.

The special committee is expected to consider these and other issues:

Are appointments to the Parole Board in compliance with the spirit of MGL ch. 27, Section 4, the statute calling for a diverse range of professional experience in subject areas including social work, sociology, psychiatry, psychology, law enforcement, law, corrections, parole, and probation?
How have appointments to the Parole Board affected the rates of parole in Massachusetts?
What is the purpose of parole and what is its social and economic impact on society?
What role does parole play in the corrections system?

The special committee is expected to include members of the BBA's Criminal Law Section and also its individual Rights and Responsibilities Section.

Dwyer's announcement came in the wake of allegations that recent policies and appointments drawn almost exclusively from the world of law enforcement
are creating a lack of balance the Massachusetts Legislature mandated when it passed MGL ch. 27, Section 4.  Dwyer also indicated that press reports alleging an increasingly draconian view of criminal justice will be reviewed as well.

A report is expected by April 1, 2000.

 

Previous Page ]

 


Criminal Justice Policy Coalition
99 Chauncy Street, Suite 310
Boston, MA 02111
phone: (617)482-3170, ex. 319
fax: (617)451-0009
[email protected]
www.cjpc.org
Copyright � 1999 Criminal Justice Policy Coalition

 

Up ]

 


Criminal Justice Policy Coalition
99 Chauncy Street, Suite 310
Boston, MA 02111
phone: (617)482-3170, ex. 319
fax: (617)451-0009
[email protected]
www.cjpc.org
Copyright � 1999 Criminal Justice Policy Coalition