Friday, August 23, 2013
Monday, August 19, 2013
Tickets! Get Your Tickets!!
CCJRC’s 2013 Annual Fundraiser


buy tickets
I'd like to Sponsor this event!!!
VOICES FOR JUSTICE
Thursday September 26, 2013
5:00-9:30 p.m.
Appetizers
Silent and Live Auctions
Dinner and Open Bar
Appetizers
Silent and Live Auctions
Dinner and Open Bar
Mile High Station
2027 West Colfax Avenue Denver, CO 80204
(720) 946-7721
(720) 946-7721
Catered by Biscuits and Berries
Tickets are only $85 each
PLEASE JOIN US FOR ANOTHER WONDERFUL EVENING!
$1000--Contributing Sponsors
JFM Consulting Christie Donner
$500 – Freedom Fighter Sponsors
Signal Behavioral Health Thormodsgaard, Jeff Iredale and Yoo, APC
$250 – Justice Sponsors
Alphagraphics Elizabeth Anderman Tony and Leigh Bubb
Roberta Burrington Center for Spirituality at Work
Coloradans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty Brian Connors Endpoint Direct
Harm Reduction Action Center ICCS It Takes a Village Lila Jimenez
Justice Strategies How to Read Your Baby James Laurie Jan MacKenzie
Sean McAllister Hans Meyer Stephen Raher Mandy & Michael Rigg
Ann Roan Bonnie Saltzman Second Chance Center Marshall Seufert
Deb Simmons St. Francis Center Jay
Tiftickjian Ellen Toomey-Hale Trine & Metcalf, PC
Craig Truman Taryn Van Deusen Rox Wheeler-Bell Doug Wilson Barbara Wood
Some of our Silent and Live Auction Items
DIGITAL STORYTELLING PREMIERE !
Magalie Lerman, CCJRC Board member, will premiere her digital storytelling project which explains the experience of incarceration and its after-effects through the voices of those who have been there. Magalie knows that the voices of those incarcerated are often hard to hear. Magalie spent six years of her life in chronically homeless conditions battling drug addiction. She spent six months in jail and was charged with a felony in 2009. Magalie is now in recovery, and is passionate about addressing injustices impacting the community. She is Co-Director at Prax(us) and also volunteers her time to the Harm Reduction Action Center and the Eating Disorder Foundation.
Magalie Lerman, CCJRC Board member, will premiere her digital storytelling project which explains the experience of incarceration and its after-effects through the voices of those who have been there. Magalie knows that the voices of those incarcerated are often hard to hear. Magalie spent six years of her life in chronically homeless conditions battling drug addiction. She spent six months in jail and was charged with a felony in 2009. Magalie is now in recovery, and is passionate about addressing injustices impacting the community. She is Co-Director at Prax(us) and also volunteers her time to the Harm Reduction Action Center and the Eating Disorder Foundation.
Rupert-Tate Game Changer Award
The ONE LESS PROJECT in Mesa County, CO
CCJRC has selected the One Less Project
as this year's recipient of the Rupert-Tate Game Changer Award, because
of its innovation and collaboration in implementing evidence-based
practices in criminal cases and its focus on outcomes that have already
reduced the jail population, recidivism, and incarceration costs.
The One Less Executive Committee being honored:
Ms. Bert Nieslanik (Deputy Director of the Alternate Defense Counsel)
Honorable David A. Bottger (Twenty-First Judicial District Chief Judge)
Mr. Stan Hilkey (Mesa County Sheriff)
Mr. Dennis Berry (Criminal Justice Services Department)
Mr. Pete Hautzinger (Mesa County District Attorney)
Ms. Trish Mahre (Chief Deputy District Attorney)
Ms. Linda Robinson (Twenty-First Judicial District Probation Services)
Ms. Sandy Castleberry (Twenty-First Judicial District Administrator)
Ms. Sue Gormley (One Less Site Coordinator)
Mr. Steve Colvin (Managing Attorney – Grand Junction Public Defender Trial Office)
Honorable Craig Henderson (Twenty-First Judicial District County Court Judge)
Ms. Jennifer Sheetz (Mesa County Criminal Justice Analyst)
Ms. Bert Nieslanik (Deputy Director of the Alternate Defense Counsel)
Honorable David A. Bottger (Twenty-First Judicial District Chief Judge)
Mr. Stan Hilkey (Mesa County Sheriff)
Mr. Dennis Berry (Criminal Justice Services Department)
Mr. Pete Hautzinger (Mesa County District Attorney)
Ms. Trish Mahre (Chief Deputy District Attorney)
Ms. Linda Robinson (Twenty-First Judicial District Probation Services)
Ms. Sandy Castleberry (Twenty-First Judicial District Administrator)
Ms. Sue Gormley (One Less Site Coordinator)
Mr. Steve Colvin (Managing Attorney – Grand Junction Public Defender Trial Office)
Honorable Craig Henderson (Twenty-First Judicial District County Court Judge)
Ms. Jennifer Sheetz (Mesa County Criminal Justice Analyst)
CCJRC will also be paying tribute to two of our late Colorado leaders in criminal justice reform:
Tom Clements, Director Reverend Elaine Smith
Colorado Department of Corrections
Colorado Department of Corrections
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Sponsorship Opportunities
Voices for Justice Sponsor - $10,000
- Your Company name used in title of event ~ “Voices for Justice” presented by Your Company
- Four seats at dinner
- Your Company name and logo on all marketing and materials, including programs
- Your Company name used in all media promotion
- Full page ad/logo in Event Program
- CCJRC website and blog recognition with link to your website
- Recognition in Colorado Justice Report, our tri-annual newsletter to over 7,500 members
- Table signage
- Listing in Annual Report with Company logo
- Sponsor banner at event
- Opportunity for sponsor representative to speak
Game Changer Sponsor - $5,000
- Your Company name used in title of event ~ “Game Changer” presented by Your Company
- Four seats at dinner
- Your Company name and logo on all marketing and materials, including programs
- Your Company name used in all media promotion
- Full page ad/logo in Event Program
- CCJRC website and blog recognition with link to your website
- Recognition in Colorado Justice Report, our quarterly newsletter to over 7,500 members
- Table signage
- Listing in Annual Report with Company logo
- Sponsor banner at event
- Opportunity for sponsor representative to speak
Supporting Sponsor - $2,500
- Four seats at dinner
- Your Company name and logo on all marketing and materials, including programs
- Your Company name used in all media promotion
- ½ page ad/logo in Event Program
- CCJRC website and blog recognition with link to your website
- Recognition in Colorado Justice Report, our quarterly newsletter to over 7,500 members
- Table signage
- Sponsor banner at event
- Listing in Annual Report with Company logo
Contributing Sponsor $1,000
- Four seats at dinner
- Your Company name on all marketing and materials, including program
- ¼ page ad/logo in Event Program
- CCJRC website and blog recognition with link to your website
- Recognition in Colorado Justice Report, our quarterly newsletter to over 7,500 members
- Table Signage
- Sponsor banner at event
- Listing in Annual Report
Freedom Fighter Sponsor - $500
- Two seats at dinner
- CCJRC website and blog recognition with link to your website
- Listing in Event Program
- Recognition in Colorado Justice Report, our quarterly newsletter to over 7,500 members
- Table signage
- Listing in Annual Report
Justice Sponsor - $250
- Two seats at dinner
- Listing in Event Program
- CCJRC website recognition
- Table signage
- Listing in Annual Report
I'd like to Sponsor this event!!!
Monday, August 12, 2013
Attorney General Holder To Address Drug Sentencing
NY TIMES
WASHINGTON — In a major shift in criminal justice policy, the Obama administration will move on Monday to ease overcrowding in federal prisons by ordering prosecutors to omit listing quantities of illegal substances in indictments for low-level drug cases, sidestepping federal laws that impose strict mandatory minimum sentences for drug-related offenses.
WASHINGTON — In a major shift in criminal justice policy, the Obama administration will move on Monday to ease overcrowding in federal prisons by ordering prosecutors to omit listing quantities of illegal substances in indictments for low-level drug cases, sidestepping federal laws that impose strict mandatory minimum sentences for drug-related offenses.
Darrell Havens" New report blasts "reckless" police shooting
Westword
A former police chief's analysis of a 2007 police shooting during an auto-theft sting -- one that left an unarmed nineteen-year-old suspect paralyzed for life -- contends that Arvada police detective Bill Johnson's use of deadly force in the incident was "unwarranted, unnecessary and extreme." The report, prepared in support of Darrell Havens's federal lawsuit against Johnson, also characterizes the sting operation as poorly planned and executed and claims that the detective has significantly changed his account of the incident over the course of depositions in the case.
As detailed in my 2010 feature "Wheel Man," the Havens shooting has become both a legal quagmire for law enforcement and a medical conundrum for the state prison system; now serving twenty years on convictions for theft and assault, Havens is a paraplegic in need of constant care.
Havens
had a reputation as an elusive and prolific car thief when a team of
eighteen police investigators from seven different agencies targeted him
in a sting operation almost six years ago. The plan devised by Arvada
detective Bill Johnson was to use an informant to lure Havens and a
stolen Audi to a Target parking lot, pin him in with undercover
vehicles, and taser him if he resisted arrest. Instead, Johnson ended up
firing his .45 nine times, striking Havens with three bullets in the
chest, neck and jaw.
Johnson told shoot-team investigators that Havens began ramming the
police vehicles in an effort to escape and that he fired to protect
himself. Since the Audi was revving its engine and poorly pinned on one
side as Johnson approached, he explained, he thought "this son of a
bitch is about ready to run my ass over." Interviews with other officers
supported Johnson's account, and Jefferson County District Attorney
Scott Storey found that Johnson used "lawful and appropriate force."
Havens, though, has always maintained that the police began ramming his car before he could even attempt to escape. His right arm useless from a previous motorcyle accident, he claims he was already helpless and not in control of the Audi, which was sliding on ice but pinned between a truck and an SUV, when Johnson shot him.
Expert witnesses retained by Havens's attorneys have pored over witness statements and other evidence and confirmed key points of Havens's version. Last year high-profile investigator Ellis Armistead filed an affidavit in the case, contending that physical evidence at the scene contradicted Johnson's account of his actions. The latest salvo comes in a detailed report of the incident prepared by forensic consultant Tommy Burns, a former police chief of Henderson, Nevada.
A former police chief's analysis of a 2007 police shooting during an auto-theft sting -- one that left an unarmed nineteen-year-old suspect paralyzed for life -- contends that Arvada police detective Bill Johnson's use of deadly force in the incident was "unwarranted, unnecessary and extreme." The report, prepared in support of Darrell Havens's federal lawsuit against Johnson, also characterizes the sting operation as poorly planned and executed and claims that the detective has significantly changed his account of the incident over the course of depositions in the case.
As detailed in my 2010 feature "Wheel Man," the Havens shooting has become both a legal quagmire for law enforcement and a medical conundrum for the state prison system; now serving twenty years on convictions for theft and assault, Havens is a paraplegic in need of constant care.
Havens, though, has always maintained that the police began ramming his car before he could even attempt to escape. His right arm useless from a previous motorcyle accident, he claims he was already helpless and not in control of the Audi, which was sliding on ice but pinned between a truck and an SUV, when Johnson shot him.
Expert witnesses retained by Havens's attorneys have pored over witness statements and other evidence and confirmed key points of Havens's version. Last year high-profile investigator Ellis Armistead filed an affidavit in the case, contending that physical evidence at the scene contradicted Johnson's account of his actions. The latest salvo comes in a detailed report of the incident prepared by forensic consultant Tommy Burns, a former police chief of Henderson, Nevada.
Friday, August 09, 2013
Dr. Gupta: Why I changed my mind on weed
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