TCJE in the News


Press Contact: For all media inquiries, please contact Madison Kaigh, Communications Manager, at mkaigh@TexasCJE.orgor (512) 441-8123, ext. 108.


 

Solitary Confinement Is Still Used In Texas Jails And Prisons, But At What Cost?

Solitary confinement, administrative segregation, seclusion, disciplinary separation and lockdown are a few of the names for isolating a prisoner in a separate cell. Officials say administrative segregation or "ad seg," is necessary for offenders who require maximum security to ensure the safety of staff, other offenders and the security of the institution.

Read the rest of this article - and stream an interview with various stakeholders, including TCJC's Doug Smith - at Texas Public Radio.

After $2.25 Million in Legal Expenses, How Much More Will Harris County Spend On Bail Suit?

Last week, in a scathing 193-page opinion, a federal judge ruled the misdemeanor bail system violates poor people's constitutional rights, given that people with money can go free within hours of arrest while those without must languish in jail until trial.

Read the rest of this article at Houston Press.

Legislature Plans to Close Four Correctional Facilities. Will They Become Immigrant Detention Centers?

The lean, mean budgets proposed by the Texas House and Senate don’t do much to inspire optimism about the coming two-year cycle. But opponents of mass incarceration have found some solace in funding cuts.

Read the rest of this article at the Texas Observer.

Five strikes law for misdemeanors proposed by Texas legislators

Unofficially known as the “career criminal bill,” House Bill 383 would enhance punishments for repeat offenders who commit crimes less serious than a felony. Similar to the federal “three strikes” law for felony convictions, House Bill 383 would impose a five strikes rule on misdemeanors in Texas.

Read the rest of this article at KXAN.

Will Texas 'Raise The Age' Of Criminal Responsibility?

The cutoff for criminal responsibility in Texas was increased to age 17 in the year 1918. Before that, 9-year-olds could be prosecuted as adults.

Read the rest of this article - and stream an interview with various stakeholders, including TCJC's Lindsey Linder - at Texas Public Radio.

After Raise the Age Bill Passes House, Texas Closer to Considering 17-Year-Olds Juveniles

On Thursday, though, the Legislature got a step closer to passing legislation that would raise the age to 18 after the House passed House Bill 122 with an 82-62 vote, sending the bill over to the Senate. Representative Gene Wu (D-Houston) called it “the most important change to our criminal justice system that we have done in probably five decades.”

Read the rest of this article at Houston Press.

Most Texas voters support criminal justice reform

More than three-fourths of Texas voters believe 17-year-old offenders should be treated as juveniles rather than adults, and an even greater number support alternatives to incarceration for some nonviolent low-level drug-related crimes, a newly released survey revealed.

Read the rest of this article at The Baptist Standard.

In Texas, Pattern of Arrest for 17-Year-Olds Is Closer to Juveniles than to Adults

Texas is one of seven states that automatically classify 17-year-olds as adults in the criminal justice system. That’s important because once a 17-year-old enters the courtroom as an adult, they are cut off from the stated rehabilitative goals and resources of the juvenile justice system.

Read the rest of this article at The Chronicle of Social Change.

Survey Shows Texas Voters in Favor of Criminal Justice Reform Policies

A broad group of smart-on-crime organizations in Texas announced the release of new Texas Voters Survey polling data showing strong Texas voter support for alternatives to incarceration, as well as for other criminal justice reform policies currently being considered during Texas' 85th Legislative Session.

Read the rest of this article at Yahoo Finance.

Study supports call to keep minors out of adult courts and prisons

Although the criminal justice system in Texas treats 17-year-olds as adults rather than juveniles, their arrest rate—and types of crimes for which they are arrested—more closely resembles 16-year-olds than adults, a new study revealed. Criminal justice reform advocates insisted the data supports their call to raise the age of juvenile jurisdiction.

Read the rest of this article at the Baptist Standard.