"In
The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets
, Jane Addams, the Nobel Prize winning socialworker and crusader for the juvenile court, emphasized that youth above all is aboutpossibility and that 'we may either smother the divine fire of youth or we may feed it.' Wereject life without the possibility of parole sentences because they smother the divine fireof youth. They are an expression of despair that has no place in any system that aims totake seriously youth as a mitigating factor." —David S. Tanenhaus, Steven A. Drizin,
"Owing to the Extreme Youth of the Accused": The Changing Legal Response to Juvenile Homicide
, 92
T
HE
J
OURNAL OF
C
RIMINAL
L
AW AND
C
RIMINOLOGY
(1973-) 641
(2002)
December 25, 2007The Honorable Paul CondinoState RepresentativeState CapitolP.O. Box 30014Lansing, MI 48909-7514Dear Representative Condino and Other Distinguished Members of the Michigan Legislature:I write to express that I echo the call of the proponents to end the imposition of life without parolesentences on juveniles in the State of Michigan. Their opposition to this human rights violation iscommensurate with 192 other nations of conscience in the civilized world. I support their appeal tothis honorable legislative body for the reasons they have raised and I include additional reasonsbelow.For nearly 19 years I have been imprisoned for a crime I did not commit. I was convicted in 1989 of one count of murder and one count of armed robbery. I was subsequently sentenced to two terms of life without parole for the murder charge and one parolable life sentence for the armed robbery. Myguidelines for the armed robbery charge was 3 to 8 years.I was 15-years-old at the time of my arrest. Previous to this arrest I had no criminal history of anykind in adult or juvenile court and was a high school honor student. I lived in St. Joseph, Michigan ina good community, enjoyed the strong support of family, and was involved in various extracurricularactivities.I have maintained my innocence for the crime since the day of my arrest. My innocence, however, isnot the subject of this letter. I did not compose this letter to re-try my case in the court of publicopinion, rather I want to bring to your attention a broader issue that is adversely affecting our youthand threatening their future.I was the first juvenile in Berrien County to be tried and sentenced under the October 1988 law whichauthorized prosecutors to automatically transfer juveniles to adult court and try them as adults. Myrefusal to admit guilt to a crime I did not commit resulted in me receiving the aforementionedsentences amid a barrage of print, radio and television media publicity. The sentences I receivedhave been cited in various reports as one of the most egregious cases of injustice against a juvenile.
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