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It’s Great That Cyntoia Brown Was Freed — But It’s Time for Systemic Change (barf alert)
National Review ^ | August 7th 2019 | Katherine Timpf

Posted on 08/07/2019 2:31:07 PM PDT by Ennis85

Cyntoia Brown has been granted clemency after serving 15 years of her life sentence — but she never should have had to spend so much time behind bars in the first place.

As a condition of her release, Brown will remain on parole supervision and be required to follow state and federal laws, hold a job, and go to counseling sessions.

In case you aren’t familiar with Brown’s story, she was just 16 and an alleged sex-trafficking victim when she shot and killed a real-estate agent, Johnny Allen, who was intending to pay her for sex. According to Brown, she had been living with abusive man named “Kut Throat” after running away from her adoptive family, and had been engaging in sex work on the street at his urging. Before meeting up with Allen, Brown says that Kut Throat had hit her and demanded that she bring back some money.

When Allen brought Brown back to his home, Brown said that she was afraid of some of his behavior. For example, she alleges that Allen kept standing over her after she said she wanted to go to sleep, and that Allen had aggressively grabbed her by the genitals. When he eventually reached for something under the bed, Brown said she believed he was reaching for a gun and shot him with her own. She then left, taking two of Allen’s guns and his money — which prosecutors claimed proves that she had gone to his house with the intention to rob him. Her defense, however, argued that Brown had suffered brain damage due to her mother drinking while Brown was in the womb, which gave her the decision-making capacity of a ten-year-old.

Make no mistake: Brown’s life at the time that this incident occurred was a difficult one. While she was in prison, however, she worked hard to turn things around. She earned a GED and an associate degree with a 4.0 GPA, as well as a bachelor’s degree. She also mentored other women in her prison. Clearly, Cyntoia Brown today is not the same Cyntoia Brown who was arrested all those years ago, and it is absolutely wonderful and just that she has been freed.

The thing is, though, Brown should have never had to spend so much time behind bars in the first place. Anyone can see that Brown was not so much a danger or threat to society as she was a lost soul, a child, just looking for some help and direction. All too often, though, our legal system tends to focus on punishing people rather than rehabilitating them — and that’s wrong, wrong, wrong.

Brown, of course, was lucky enough to be released because her case had garnered so much public attention and support. Many other women have not been so lucky. According to the ACLU, women “are the fastest growing segment of the incarcerated population,” despite the fact that only 36 percent of arrested women were arrested for violent crimes, and the fact that women make up only 8 percent of convicted violent felons. Draconian drug laws, unfortunately, are what have placed many of them behind bars — and it costs the U.S. taxpayer $25,000 per year to keep them there, plus an additional $25,000 per year for each of their children. It’s true: In addition to incarceration for nonviolent drug crimes, in my view, flying in the face of our values as a “free country,” it’s also a hell of a waste of taxpayer money.

What’s more, many of these women are, like Brown, just people who really need some help. In fact, according to the ACLU, “79% of women in federal and state prisons reported physical abuse and over 60% reported past sexual abuse.” In other words, the vast majority of them have been victims — just like Brown was. The ACLU also reports that almost 23 percent of female prisoners in this country have a mental illness.

It is great that Brown has been freed, but unfortunately, we are still pretty clearly dealing with a larger, more systemic issue. The bottom line is, we need to take a long hard look at the way we view criminal offenses — particularly nonviolent drug crimes — in this country. The current system disproportionately punishes women of color, as well as trauma survivors. What’s more, it’s often putting people behind bars, away from their families, who are really no threat to society. We have tried the punitive approach; and it’s proven to be both expensive and unjust — and we’d be better served by trying a more humanitarian one instead.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: criminals; drugoffenders; drugs; prison
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To: Ennis85

Am I the only one irritated no end by the “barf alerts” and “major hurl alerts” included in headlines?

Just the articles with headlines, please.
Don’t tell me how to react to it.


21 posted on 08/07/2019 5:36:40 PM PDT by mumblypeg
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To: mumblypeg

If you don’t use barf alerts for some articles, people will bitch about that. The safest thing to do is use them, I think. I would rather be warned before I stepped into a manure pile so I had the option to skip it entirely, rather than be ankle deep in do-do before I realize it.


22 posted on 08/07/2019 5:57:56 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: sparklite2

Yeah, you’re right, but it irks meeeeeee. :^)


23 posted on 08/07/2019 6:05:57 PM PDT by mumblypeg
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To: Anti-Bubba182

Probably marijuana. She’s a Libertarian.


24 posted on 08/07/2019 6:09:24 PM PDT by Tax-chick (It's the guitar solo! Everybody polka!!!)
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To: mumblypeg

It irks me, too. I’m an adult, and I can decide what I think about media content.


25 posted on 08/07/2019 6:10:01 PM PDT by Tax-chick (It's the guitar solo! Everybody polka!!!)
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To: mumblypeg

+1


26 posted on 08/07/2019 6:14:24 PM PDT by x
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To: Pollard; mrsmel

Thank you thank you

In a sea of usual stupid didn’t read the article posters

Finally some sanity

I swear folks like you on these threads give me hope thank you

I’m here

I know this case

Crazy bitch killed and robbed her john

Then the women’s rights and lefties started with this victim crap story

She did 15 years

He’s dead.

Of yes the puritans here think johns should just be murdered anyhow...idiots

Mrs Mel....(excluded of course from my rant)


27 posted on 08/07/2019 6:19:15 PM PDT by wardaddy (I applaud Jim Robinson for his comments on the Southern Monuments decision ...thank you)
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To: Ennis85

From the detective who handled the murder (for dumbasses here’s)

“”””

As supporters of Cyntoia Brown’s release are celebrating her newfound freedom, others are standing by their belief that the killing was not justified.

It’s been 15 years since detective Charles Robinson led the homicide investigation on then 16-year-old Brown.

“I’m happy that she has a second chance at life. I hope she uses this time and does well,” said Det. Robinson.

But in his well wishes, he still stands firm with what he said are the facts of the case.

“Absolutely not. It wasn’t justified. There was nothing that Johnny Allen did to her that night he was asleep that would justify what she did other than her motivation to kill him so that she could take stuff out of the house,” said Det. Robinson.

Det. Robinson argues the narrative that won Brown her freedom that she was a sex slave for four years, just had too many red flags, starting from the very first time she met her alleged pimp.

“There’s no way that that could be true,” said Det. Robinson. “Number one, he met her a little less than a month before I charged her with the murder of Johnny Allen. He was from Murfreesboro, Tennessee, she was from Clarksville, Tennessee.”

Second, the claim that Brown shot Allen in self-defense.

“The man was asleep when she shot him because he was still clasped together, like this near his head,” said Det. Robinson.

Det. Robinson felt so strong about the evidence, in 2017, he wrote a seven-page letter to then-governor Bill Haslam before Haslam made his decision about clemency.

In that letter, he detailed the inconsistencies in Brown’s statements, including what she did after she shot and killed Allen.

After the interview with detectives, Robinson said one thing has stuck after all these years.

Brown used a telephone to make a call.

“She got on the phone and was talking to a friend of hers and telling them that she was in custody and she was going to be charged with murder and she was on the phone laughing about it,” he said. “I found that to be unusual.”

As Robinson stands by his beliefs, he hopes Brown will make good of her future.

“She served 15 years in prison and I hope for her sake that she uses this time well,” said Det. Robinson.


28 posted on 08/08/2019 12:12:16 AM PDT by wardaddy (I applaud Jim Robinson for his comments on the Southern Monuments decision ...thank you)
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To: Tax-chick

She is cute, but not too swift.


29 posted on 08/08/2019 3:09:58 AM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: Anti-Bubba182

She’s supposed to be well-educated, but I often find her argumentation to be shallow.


30 posted on 08/08/2019 3:55:11 AM PDT by Tax-chick (It's the guitar solo! Everybody polka!!!)
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