Blogstream   -   Create a Blog!   -   Login Chat   -   Options   -   Clean   -   Flag   -   Family Filter: Off   -   Recent   -   Rndm >>    

BLOGSTREAM GOING COMPLETELY OFFLINE JANUARY 31, 2012 -- PLEASE READ FRONT PAGE FOR FINAL NOTICE

Blogstream  >  Government  >  Blog
 
CALIFORNIA CLEMENCY


 Book published
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Compelling New Book from Lulu Press Looks at the Life of a Black, Crippled Homosexual and His Relationship with God

CONTACT:
Allen Jones
Jones-allen@att.net
(415) 756-7733

Allen Jones has lived an interesting life and has come to realize that all he was led to believe needed a 21st century rethinking in the areas of race, sexual orientation and ability. He challenges traditional thinking with true stories in his autobiography CASE GAME. He says he is ready to, "Un-confuse the confused.”

Rising to the challenges, is how Allen Jones of San Francisco came to, what he describes as, the pivotal point of his life, or the Case Game; a term he borrowed from his favorite pastime, billiards.

Attending an elementary school for handicap children, Jones, quickly realized—contrary to what others at the time automatically assumed due to the nature of many of their disabilities—that his fellow classmates were all very much normal; or as he put it, “Normal minds, on top of mangled bodies.”

As a teenager, however, he felt anything but normal. With hidden, innate, homosexual desires, and a disdain for pity from those he perceived overly focused on his handicap, he struggled silently. His high school drafting instructor even at one time, recognizing a rebellious spirit, saying, “Allen, you will never get a drafting job.” Ironically, Jones turned that slight into a drafting position on his first day out of school; a profession he worked in for twenty years.

In his first attempt to get an apartment, he was told, “We already rented it.” Due to that, he was able to furnish his first apartment with a new color TV and stereo after cashing the settlement check. However, in his first apartment, a neighbor once told him in response to the playing of loud music with that same stereo, to “Shut up you crippled, nigger faggot!” From that crude statement, Jones learned to respect others.

Jones has a propensity to inspire but can be very controversial and provocative. He writes why he believes the term, “African-American” is akin to “Whites Only,” and surprisingly does not condemn, but condones the way in which today’s youth use the “N-word.”

Allen Jones is a former Bible study teacher to teenage felons and currently, a prison reform activist living in San Francisco.

Case Game: Lulu Press - Publisher
http://www.lulu.com/content/hardcover-book/case-game/9192737
Posted by Allen Jones at 9:55 PM - 1 Comment   Add a Comment  
 

 Any (over 8000) petty nonviolent 3 Strikes offender qualifies for clemency
 

All of these inmates would qualify for clemency consideration under the description of cruel and unusual punishment.
In this country we have a constitutional law against cruel and unusual punishment. However, The Supreme Court ruled rightfully in my opinion, that it was not cruel and unusual for California to give Santos Reyes a 26 year to life sentence for forging a driving test.
Under California Clemency a similar cruel and unusual punishment provision will establish the fact that California has redefined this portion of our US Constitution 8th Amendment rule to a State of California definition.

Mark Grangetto: serving 20 to live. This is a case of compassionate release.

1. Santos Reyes: serving 26 years to life sentence for forging a DMV text.

2. George Anderson: serving 25 years to life sentence for filling out a false DMV application.

3. Linda Susan Teague: serving 50 years to life for forgery.

4. GARY EWING: Serving 25 years to life for stealing three golf clubs.

5. Thomas Williams: serving 25 years to life sentence for possession of a stolen bicycle.

6. Leandro Andrade: serving 50 years to life for stealing children’s videos.

7. Hayward Doss: serving 25 years to life for possession of $2.00 of a controlled substance.

8. Richard Banales: serving 25 years to life sentence for possession of $3.00 worth of controlled substance while in jail.

9. Joseph Fomby, jr.: Serving 25 years to life sentence for possession for sale of marijuana.

10. John Walker Lindh: Federal prisoner. (Once a new federal clemency law is established many years from now he would still sitting in a federal prison and should be released)
Posted by Allen Jones at 5:15 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 New clemency system could control out of control parole board
 

How California Clemency would help Dennis Anderson

Dennis Anderson is serving a 17 year to life sentence for killing his wife and her boyfriend back in 1985.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported on 10/16/09 that during Anderson’s imprisonment, he has tutored blind inmates in braille, set up a hospice program for terminally ill inmates, served as a Roman Catholic minister and helped establish a financial planning program designed mainly for inmates suffering from AIDS, the court said in his appeal.
The appeals court ruled that the reason the parole board must give Anderson a new hearing is because their reason for denying him parole was not according to law.
California Clemency was not created with the intent to release violent or serious offenders. However any prisoner is eligible for a clemency hearing if the State prison system grossly violated an inmate's rights.
The parole board grossly denied Anderson his right to a fair hearing. Under California Clemency Anderson would not have to wait for the appeals court. He could take his case to a clemency hearing first to save time and not lose his ability to an appeal. And even if the clemency board said no he could still be released solely on the ruling of the appeals court (down the line) granting him a new PAROLE BOARD hearing.
The parole board offered an opinion not allowed by law when it ruled that Anderson lacked insight into his crimes and was using his bipolar disorder as an excuse and of course denied him parole on those grounds. Denying a prisoner parole must have a reason on what makes him unfit for parole.
CALIFORNIA CLEMENCY INSURES THAT A PRISONER WHO WAS PROMISED A FAIR PAROLE HEARING BY LAW GETS ONE OR HE/SHE GETS A FULL CLEMENCY.


Posted by Allen Jones at 8:48 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Revised future California Clemency Boards ballot initiatives
 

1. Repeal the authority of the governor’s power to grant clemency in the State of California.
2. Create a new clemency law that supersedes all known and unknown laws in the State of California dealing with clemency. Under this new clemency law a new clemency board shall be created to handle all requests for clemency in California. At least one mini clemency board shall be established in every county in the State of California to handle considerations for clemency do to possible injustice on the part of the State, including prison overcrowding. Five citizens who reside in the county where the inmate was convicted will judge cases only from that same county. If these citizens agree to sit on a clemency board for up to one week (or longer if agreed) they will be paid for their services the sum of $100.00 a day. By random selection using current voter rolls in their county board members will be pre screened before sitting on any panel. The board members will review inmate request for clemency. While in session, they may review many request for that week’s session. Private Citizens, prisoner rights groups and professionals in the field may also petition the board on behalf of an inmate. The citizens of the California Clemency Board will have the power to release any qualified prisoner (once every seven years per individual) reduce his or her sentence or do nothing when the board rules that the prisoner was not unjustly treated by the prison system or judicial process. The California Clemency Board will also have the power to grant clemency for humanitarian reasons and release nonviolent prisoners under established guidelines when prison overcrowding is at unsafe levels. Any county who receives a clemency release shall also receive from the prison budget the sum of $8,000.00 or 1/6 the current California prison incarceration rate per release for rehabilitation services. The county must have State approved rehabilitation services in place to receive these prison budget funds. And the released must register with the county rehab within 30 days of release.
3. Create a State elected administrator to handle the financial responsibilities of the board, ensure that prisoner request are delivered to the county level in a timely manner and make rulings on fairness or fraud in the clemency board. THE CITIZENS OF THE CALIFORNIA CLEMENCY BOARD AND NOT THE ELECTED OFFICIAL WILL HAVE THE FINAL SAY ON CLEMENCY.

Special note:
California Clemency Boards is not a get out of jail free card for those bent on committing crime and has many safe guards to prevent abuse of this new clemency process.
Posted by Allen Jones at 4:58 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 A better plan to meet federal court's deadline to release prisoners
 

On August 4, 2009 a 3 judge panel in a federal court ruled the State of California has 45 days to come up with a plan to release 44,000 prisoners from California’s overcrowded prison system.

While listening to a PBS station earlier this week I learned that the State of California is going to offer up last Friday’s passed prison bill as the solution. If this is true then someone should go to jail for contempt. The deadline is Friday, September 18, 2009 and this Senate bill does not come close especially if you’re trying to pull a fast one over on these 3 judges.

The bill passed last week by the Senate offers no relief to this problem. California releases more than 10,000 prisoners a month already according to the Attorney General’s Office. Nowhere in the bill does it address serious measures for keeping people out of prison. It only tweaks technicalities that can send a person back to prison. This bill also calls for allowing 17,000 of our most healthy prisoners to be released but the Senate rejected a plan to release 6,300 of our most infirm or elderly prisoners which makes little sense when you cry “Public Safety.”

We can safely release 44,000 prisoners in two years as this federal court ruled we must do due to prison overcrowding and health conditions. The math works out to be on average 379 prisoners to each of the 58 counties in California at a rate of 32 prisoners each month to those counties in two years equals about 44,544. And since studies have shown that more than half of those incarcerated in our prison system are nonviolent we can also sleep at night.

Lawmakers must first make the release of prisoner easy to understand. Because the easier it is to understand the better chance you have that the convicted felon would follow it.

Lawmakers must be willing to offer an incentive that only a fool would pass up. Offer a full pardon if the released inmate stays out of any United States prison system for 3, 4 or 5 years, depending on their prison record. This is an incentive that is sure to get the attention of anyone who realizes they made a mistake and here is the best way to prove their remorse. Extend this offer to those currently on parole and watch the rate of returning offender drop. Now no one in their right mind would make this offer to a murderer or sex offender but even they will be released and should be offered some kind of incentive not to re-offend.

Finally but most important the State of California must offer a sum of $8,000.00 going directly to the county (must have State approved services in place) for each prisoner it receives from this release for rehabilitation services only. No release of thousands of inmates without rehabilitation services will succeed.

If that is too radical and we don’t want to spend $352,000,000 on these released inmate’s rehabilitation services then we can simply forget it.

Simply put, prisoners don’t need assistance in going back to prison they need assistance in staying out of prison.
Posted by Allen Jones at 5:17 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
Pages:   1 2 3 4 5
   
  About Me
Author: Allen Jones
From San Francisco CA, USA
Age: 55
 
This blog is about...
POWER TO PUT THE JUSTICE SYSTEM BACK ON TRACK I believe that justice needs a 21st century make... more
 
My: Profile  Bio  Guestbook 
 
Bookmark   History

  Blogstream Sponsors

Find anything & everything at Amazon.com
 
15% OFF all Board Games & Baby Items at
Board Games Plus and Everything Mommy
for Blogstream members. Enter coupon code:
BSTREAM08 at checkout.
 
Send Free
Just Saying Hi
Greeting Cards
at

Greeting Cards.com


Good Morning


  Recent Posts

  Blogs I Like

  Archives

1585 Visitors