Sunrise
Ultimate Member
People got exactly what they voted for.I bet if Obama had a son he's look just like....
People got exactly what they voted for.I bet if Obama had a son he's look just like....
Haha. At least they described him.Police Ask Public To Keep An Eye Out For Man Wanted For Kohl's Robbery In Silver Spring
Recognize him? An alert was issued by the Montgomery County Department of Police as they seek the public's assistance in tracking down a wanted man who has been at large since robbing a Kohl's store more than a month ago.Photos have b…dailyvoice.com
Is that nice?
Police described the suspect as a Black man who is approximately 6-foot tall with a thin build who appears to have a permanent injury to one eye and wears his hair in long dreadlocks.
And if all that doesn't work the mayor can go on TV and say that it's unacceptableWe need more hearings, more listening, more walks, more funding and more programs.
Who says there are no restorative justice success stories?
Montgomery County Council Receives Briefing on Juvenile Justice, Crime, and Public Safety Issues
I bet if Obama had a son he's look just like.... :innocent0 People got exactly what they voted for.www.mdshooters.com
"The 16-year-old was charged as an adult, and transported to the Montgomery County Central Processing Unit. At the time of this arrest, the 16-year-old had an active arrest warrant for a carjacking that he allegedly committed on Wednesday, Nov. 8 in Rockville.
The 15-year-old was transported to a juvenile detention center. That teen has also been charged with an armed carjacking that occurred on Tuesday, Nov. 7 in Wheaton."
OK. Not this time. But I'm sure there is one out there!
And this completely omits those that were not caught commiting a crime and also likely those that were caught but not booked.I'll bet the data is the same wherever you go:
Kids in the Crosshairs: Juveniles are being arrested, shot at escalating rate in the DMV
A concerning criminal pattern has emerged in the DMV. Kids are becoming repeatedly entangled with the law.wjla.com
A 2021-2022 review of Washington D.C.’s restorative justice program tracked 659 kids six months, nine months and a year after release. Eighteen percent were caught committing a new crime within six months, 26% reoffended within nine months, and 37% reoffended within a year. Yet, even with repeated arrests in some cases, juvenile accountability and rehabilitation remains elusive. Despite millions of dollars spent on restorative justice programs, a significant percentage of kids re-offend within months of release.
Total failure.
And this completely omits those that were not caught commiting a crime and also likely those that were caught but not booked.
Exactly. It’s even worse than this data.And this completely omits those that were not caught commiting a crime and also likely those that were caught but not booked.
Yup. Great point."A 2021-2022 review of Washington D.C.’s restorative justice program tracked 659 kids six months, nine months and a year after release. Eighteen percent were caught committing a new crime within six months, 26% reoffended within nine months, and 37% reoffended within a year. Yet, even with repeated arrests in some cases, juvenile accountability and rehabilitation remains elusive. Despite millions of dollars spent on restorative justice programs, a significant percentage of kids re-offend within months of release."
That recidivist group is comprised of the thugs that weren't smart enough to evade capture. No telling how many offenders learned a few techniques about avoiding arrest and prosecution, although a diminished police presence, a force of new hires, and the presumed police reluctance to bother arresting folks who will be back on the street before the paperwork is done may play into the totals as well.
That's an 81% recidivism rate. Abject failure."A 2021-2022 review of Washington D.C.’s restorative justice program tracked 659 kids six months, nine months and a year after release. Eighteen percent were caught committing a new crime within six months, 26% reoffended within nine months, and 37% reoffended within a year. Yet, even with repeated arrests in some cases, juvenile accountability and rehabilitation remains elusive. Despite millions of dollars spent on restorative justice programs, a significant percentage of kids re-offend within months of release."
That recidivist group is comprised of the thugs that weren't smart enough to evade capture. No telling how many offenders learned a few techniques about avoiding arrest and prosecution, although a diminished police presence, a force of new hires, and the presumed police reluctance to bother arresting folks who will be back on the street before the paperwork is done may play into the totals as well.
It’s higher. They stopped tracking at a year.That's an 81% recidivism rate. Abject failure.
According to DC Police, 458 young people have been arrested for violent crimes in the first nine months of 2023. According to the Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE), last school year an average of 43% of all D.C. students were deemed chronically absent, meaning they missed more than 10% of school.
Data from Montgomery County schools shows that low-income students and Topstudents of color were more likely to be chronically absent. Nearly 18 percent of Black students were chronically absent during the 2022-23 school year, and about 30 percent of Black students enrolled in the district’s free-and-reduced lunch program were chronically absent. Thirty-two percent of Hispanic students were chronically absent, and about 42 percent of Hispanic students enrolled in free-and-reduced lunch programs were chronically absent.
Council member Gabe Albornoz noted that, according to demographic data provided by the school system, 31.5% of the students who are chronically absent are Hispanic. That’s double the number of white students and nearly 12 percentage points above Black students who are chronically absent.
Albornoz, who served as the director of the county’s recreation department in the past, called the data “incredibly alarming” and said, “I’ve been there, and we’re seeing it again — we’re seeing an increase in gang activity.”
Meet your criminals.
I would posit that those writing the bills knew what they were doing.Md. Gov. Wes Moore: 'No higher priority' than addressing juvenile crime, public safety during General Assembly
[USNS BETHESDA NAMING_00017] 4:30-4:37 Will you side with prosecutors and police who are calling for changes to the juvenile justice reforms, given the juvenilewjla.com
In September, Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy told 7News Maryland Bureau Chief Brad Bell that juvenile justice reforms that state lawmakers passed two sessions ago have made his job more difficult.
"I recognize the motivations and the reasons why these changes were made. I am in sympathy with them but there were certain things that were done that I don’t think people didn’t understand the consequences of what they were doing," McCarthy said in September.
No John. They knew exactly what they were doing.
Moore really rubs me the wrong way.