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Miles Archer

(18,837 posts)
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 11:05 AM Jan 2017

Sessions supported the use of chain gangs and life sentences for children under the age of 14



http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/01/alabama-jeff-sessions-held-views-criminal-justice-would-scare-reformers-today

During his campaign for Alabama attorney general in 1994, Sessions came out in support of a series of reforms to crack down on juvenile offenders—even nonviolent ones. According to a Birmingham News series at the time that was shared by the Democratic research firm American Bridge, Sessions proposed tough penalties "that emphasize discipline and responsibility to deter non-violent first-time offenders from further crimes." Sessions also wanted to treat repeat juvenile offenders as adults and to use juvenile records when sentencing people for crimes they commit as adults. Further, Sessions hoped to move funding from the Department of Corrections to pay for more jail space and boot camps for juvenile offenders. He also suggested using work camps and recycling programs to "make punishment meaningful."

Once elected attorney general, Sessions supported legislation in 1995 to crack down on juvenile offenders. Under the bill, according to the Birmingham News, children younger than 14 "who commit crimes that would make them eligible for the death penalty if they were adults" could be tried as adults in criminal court. Though they would not be eligible for the death penalty, they could be sentenced to life in prison and would serve no less than 20 years.

Sessions was also a fan of tough punishments, even those that were constitutionally questionable. In 1995, Alabama reinstituted chain gangs in its prisons—the practice of shackling prisoners to one another and forcing them to perform hard labor. The custom had died out, but in 1995 Alabama Republican Gov. Fob James brought it back. Sessions, then state attorney general, was on board. "I believe it's constitutional and proper," he said at the time. He also said he intended to "aggressively defend any legal challenge against it.'' In December 1996, days before Sessions left for the US Senate, his office released a legal opinion declaring the chain gangs legal.

Though these proposals were made years ago, Sessions remains a hardliner when it comes to sentencing and criminal justice reform more broadly. Last year, Sessions successfully opposed bipartisan legislation to loosen mandatory minimum sentences for some crimes and reduce recidivism rates. Sessions was one of a handful of law-and-order Republicans who helped stall the bill in the Senate Judiciary Committee despite the support of many Republicans. If Sessions is confirmed as attorney general, his departure from the Senate could help the bill pass this year. But Sessions will have significant power in his new role to set sentencing guidelines, in addition to overseeing police departments and prisons. Through so-called charging memos, the attorney general sets sentencing guidelines for prosecutors throughout the country. Sessions would also have a voice on the US Sentencing Commission, which develops sentencing guidelines for federal courts.
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Sessions supported the use of chain gangs and life sentences for children under the age of 14 (Original Post) Miles Archer Jan 2017 OP
Shame on Susan Collins cilla4progress Jan 2017 #1
Sessions - and to a degree, most Republicans - believe they're today's plantation barons of old. BlueCaliDem Jan 2017 #2

BlueCaliDem

(15,438 posts)
2. Sessions - and to a degree, most Republicans - believe they're today's plantation barons of old.
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 11:47 AM
Jan 2017

FREE labor, including using American children, in order to fatten the plantation owners' bottom line and make them wealthier beyond their wildest dreams.

All their policies point in that direction. It's why I'm dumbfounded how any working American could support and vote for these elitists who don't care one whit about their constituents' families, jobs, education, etc.

All Republicans care about is using working Americans as cashcows for their already obscenely wealthy friends - and themselves. Everyone else is canon fodder and wage-slaves for tax money that they fight in order to reap for themselves.

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