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Posts Tagged ‘incarceration

data-loss-ceos-should-go-to-jail“What’s wrong with young people these days?” is a question often asked. We’ve written over and over again that the problem isn’t really with the young people in our communities but rather with the messages “the system” sends to them as to the value of their lives especially when it comes to the “justice” system.

A new study recently released by NCLR reaffirms what we already knew, that Latino youth are treated unjustly. America’s Invisible Children: Latino Youth and the Failure of Justice specifically looks at how Latino youth are charged and incarcerated as adults more so than other young people in the U.S.

On any given day, close to 18,000 Latino youth are incarcerated in America. The majority of these youth are incarcerated for nonviolent offenses. Most Latino youth are held in juvenile detention facilities (41%) and juvenile long-term secure facilities (34%). However, one out of every four (24%) incarcerated Latino children is held in an adult prison or jail even though youth in adult facilities are in significant danger of suicide and rape.

Latino youth are overrepresented in the U.S. justice system and receive harsher treatment than white youth. In order of rising disparities, Latino youth are: 4% more likely than white youth to be petitioned; 16% more likely than white youth to be adjudicated delinquent; 28% more likely than white youth to be detained; 41% more likely than white youth to receive an out-of-home placement; 43% more likely than white youth to be waived to the adult system; and 40% more likely to be admitted to adult prison. States with the highest levels of disparity of Latino youth in adult prison (rates over 5 times that for white youth) were California, Minnesota, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

Nine out of ten (90%) Latino youth ages 10 to 17 live in states that permit the pre-trial detention in adult jails for youth prosecuted in the adult system. According to a study of 40 large urban jurisdictions, Latino youth prosecuted in the adult system are routinely incarcerated in adult jails. Overall, a higher proportion of white youth are released pretrial (60%) than any other racial or ethnic categories. Most (54%) of Latino youth prosecuted in the adult system were detained pretrial; of the Latino youth detained pretrial, 72% were held in adult jails.

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Being Macho and Driving Drunk

4:57 pm By Maegan La Mala · society · Comments Off

1 Dec 2005

DUI.jpg

State officials and Latino leaders plan to launch a statewide campaign in January that aims to curb drunken driving by Hispanics. Spanish-speaking immigrants make up less than 10 percent of the state’s population, but they accounted for nearly one-quarter of all driving while intoxicated convictions statewide last year.

Why is it that Latinos have such a high percentage of DWI’s in Raleigh, North Carolina even though they constitute only a small percentage of the community? It’s similar to the incarceration rate of African Americans. They constitute about 13 percent of the U.S. population yet make up about 40 percent of the prison population.

In no way am I defending drunk driving but one has to question why this is occurring. I think it’s a great idea that Latino leaders in the area are getting out the word and educating other Latinos on drunk driving but are Latinos really more “macho” and that’s the reason for the high rate of DWI’s? Can it be that we are getting pulled over at a higher rate because of the color of our skin? Is it another case of “driving while brown”?

The effort, which is funded by a grant from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, will focus on the Triangle, the Triad and Charlotte markets. It will include short public-service announcement and handouts called photo-novellas that are intended to teach Hispanic immigrants that being “macho” doesn’t have to include drinking and driving.

Via / NBC17


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