General

Speaker at a Town Hall on violence

Youth town hall generates solutions to stop Chicago violence

Youth from across the city joined us at the ABC7 studios Friday afternoon to discuss solutions to help stop the violence. The youth town hall is part of a joint effort with United Way of Metropolitan Chicago called the "positive image initiative." The goal is to engage young people from under-served neighborhoods in conversation about how to stem violence. They have some strong ideas.

Youth town hall generates solutions to stop Chicago violence Read Full Article »

Illinois House committee holds emergency hearing on reported youth prison sex abuse

State Rep. La Shawn Ford (D-Chicago) has called for an emergency hearing of his Restorative Justice Committee to address high levels of reported sexual abuse inside Illinois youth prisons. Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice Director Arthur Bishop is expected to attend the committee meeting, where he will face questions about a June federal report that named Illinois as one of the worst states when it comes to reported sexual abuse in its youth prisons.

Illinois House committee holds emergency hearing on reported youth prison sex abuse Read Full Article »

Representative Bobby Rush speaks at a podium

Reps. Davis, Rush plan summit on urban violence

Three Illinois lawmakers joined other members of the Congressional Black Caucus today in announcing a summit on urban violence July 25-26 at Chicago State University. Rep. Bobby Rush, a Chicago Democrat, spoke at a morning news conference in the Capitol Visitors Center, unveiling plans for the national summit, which is expected to draw participants from across the country.

Reps. Davis, Rush plan summit on urban violence Read Full Article »

Police officer questions juvenile

The Potential Perils of the Youth PROMISE Act

Reintroduced in Congress this March, the Youth PROMISE Act has been advertised as a common-sense, cost-saving measure to reduce the U.S. prison population by focusing on youth violence prevention and intervention. But some juvenile justice experts express concern about the impact the Act could have on policing in black and Latino communities and how effective the bill could be in the absence of broader structural change.

The Potential Perils of the Youth PROMISE Act Read Full Article »

Juvenile boy crying

Therapy Helps Troubled Teens Rethink Crime

Late one night in November 2007, a student at the University of Chicago named Amadou Cisse was accosted by a young man named Demetrius Warren. Warren demanded Cisse's backpack and water bottle — at the point of a .22-caliber gun. When the bag and bottle were not forthcoming — or not forthcoming quickly enough — Warren shot Cisse at point-blank range, killing him. The 29-year-old Cisse was a month shy of completing his Ph.D. in chemistry. In 2011, Warren was sentenced to 120 years in prison.

Therapy Helps Troubled Teens Rethink Crime Read Full Article »

Fewer kids in Illinois prisons – sexual assault and other problems remain

During the late 1980s and 1990s, Illinois’ youth prisons began filling up rapidly. The tough-on-crime approach that began in the 1960s was at the peak of popularity, and state law reflected it in mandatory minimum sentences and other provisions. From 1985 to 2000, the state’s population of incarcerated youth more than doubled, from 1,534 to 3,074.

Fewer kids in Illinois prisons – sexual assault and other problems remain Read Full Article »