This is a tough, important read. Elder Qualls is father to a Black 16 y/o boy (now 41 y/o man) sentenced to life w/o parole for murder. Years ago, his other son was murdered. Asks for mercy for Kyle Rittenhouse. "I know that justice & mercy can coexist."theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
"My son Yusef was only 16 when, drunk and high, he drove with two men to a house in Detroit where one murdered two women. Afterward, Yusef’s mother drove him to the police station to tell officers what had happened. He was never free again."
"Yusef is now 41. While incarcerated, he has lost his mother, his brother, & last month, his sister. His good friend—another juvenile lifer who was weeks from his freedom—recently died of COVID-19. Yusef is an artist, a mentor, a leader, a facilitator, & a friend to many."
"When I watched the video of Rittenhouse playing vigilante in the streets of Kenosha, I saw his youth—his demeanor that was impulsive, irrational, dangerous, stupid. I also saw more. Rittenhouse and my son are a product of a country built on fear, violence, and hypocrisy."
"Yusef was in that car bc of his youth & impulsive desire to fit in, but also bc of poverty, shame, isolation, & the ever-present violence in our neighborhood. Rittenhouse was in Kenosha bc of impulsivity, but also bc of a country that has told him Black people are dangerous."
"What Rittenhouse is accused of doing is abhorrent. He must be held accountable, but the courts need to recognize that he is, in fact, a child, & he should not die in prison for decisions he made as one. Years from now, he may become someone unrecognizable from his 17 y/o self."
"I don’t make this decision easily. I understand well how one would justify seeking the maximum punishment for a person accused of taking human life. I understand because I once felt the same way. I am also the father of a murdered son."
"My eldest was shot during a botched robbery. The random victim of an assailant who was armed & ready to do harm. Enduring his untimely death—then having to stare into the face of his apathetic assailant in court—was immeasurably painful, & brought me to the edge of my faith."
"But the experience was also instrumental to my advocacy today. I knew I could not stand on behalf of my youngest son w/o forgiving & advocating for those people entangled in this faulty system. My trauma was not healed by caging yet another person. It only made me feel worse."
"We are, so many of us, victim and victimizer. Those most harmed are so often those who commit harms against others. It is difficult to find mercy and have the emotional flexibility to reckon with those truths."
"I hope a precedent is established in Rittenhouse’s upcoming trial that would extend to others—especially those from Black, brown, poor communities, whom the legal system treats with particular harshness and then casts away and forgets."
"I ask for justice for the people who lost their life, as I asked for justice for my eldest son. For my youngest, and for Rittenhouse, I also ask for mercy. I know that both justice and mercy can coexist. I just hope the courts recognize that too."
Meet Elder Qualls. "Im terrified. Completely terrified. That I’m helpless to do anything in regards to my son." Father's sorrow:
Meet Yusef. 16 when condemned to die in prison. 41 now. Supreme Court ruled his sentence unconstitutional. He's been waiting in Michigan prison for last 5 years for resentencing.

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More from @ScottHech

15 Oct
Meet Cassandra Greer-Lee. Public school teacher. Fierce advocate. In March, her husband was caged in Chicago jail. Strong, but terrified of the COVID outbreak there. “Is anyone surviving this?” She called *132 times* to try to get help. Soap. Masks. Anything. No response. More:
I spoke to Cassandra by phone about a month after her husband died alone. Weeks after she started calling for help. It was a particularly hard day for her. But she told me: “I need to put light on what happened to my husband, so it will not happen to another.” Fought back tears.
Cassandra told me her story. For an hour she spoke. Powerfully. And asked me to record it. I shared it with local artists, who interpreted her words. Watch & listen. This is just part 1 of 3. And here’s what she said:
Read 19 tweets
14 Oct
Thinking about Cassandra. She called a Chicago jail *132 times* to try to save her husband from COVID. She was ignored. While Trump downplays COVID & chooses not to protect himself & others, her husband had no choice. No mask. Soap. Crowded. He died. Watch:
In early April 2020, a man named Nickolas Lee died alone in a hospital from COVID-19. Two weeks earlier, he had contracted the disease while in Cook County Jail in Chicago. Jailed pretrial in horrific conditions. His wife called 132 times. Indifference killed him.
Nickolas Lee was unable to social distance in Cook County Jail in Chicago, like so many others throughout the country. Denied even basic sanitary precautions like soap and a mask, and caged in large groups with others who were symptomatic.
Read 5 tweets
11 Oct
UPDATE: His life dream was to “make apple rainbow playdough slime.” It has begun. Slime ingredients on left. Play dough on right. Apple right on the middle. Updates to come.
Step one: Make slime. Did 3 colors.

1. Blue slime:
2. Purple slime:
Read 7 tweets
9 Oct
Everyday, public defenders witness the dangerous lack of accountability for police. I think often about the officer I crossed examined who laughed when I asked him how many times he had been sued, how much the settlements were. His response: “I have no idea. City pays for me.”
Everyday, public defenders witness the dangerous lack of accountability for police. I think about the officer found incredible by one judge who I then saw weeks later waiting to have another judge sign a warrant sworn by him to search someone's home. nytimes.com/2019/09/25/opi…
Everyday, public defenders witness the dangerous lack of accountability for police. I think about the team of officers in Brooklyn my colleague and I discovered were planting guns on middle age black men to get awards and promotions:nytimes.com/2014/12/12/nyr…
Read 11 tweets
9 Oct
Meanwhile, white people are getting rich on the industry in other states. Legalize marijuana. End the war on drugs. Invest in communities. And then prioritize licenses for entrepreneurs ONLY from the communities the NYPD has devastated with costly & wasteful arrests like this.
Legalization is a civil & human rights issue. I don’t care if you don’t care for the smell of weed. Or buy into false narrative it is a gateway drug. Or oppose drug use on moral grounds. Prohibition is objectively, observably racist & destructive.
Meet Michael Thompson is 68. Serving 60 years in Michigan for a marijuana sale 25 years ago. Mom, dad, & son died while inside. Was cuffed at his mom's funeral. Her dying wish was he wouldn't die in prison. Was hospitalized w/ COVID. More:abcnews.go.com/US/michigan-in…
Read 5 tweets
2 Oct
Meg is a current public defender running to be a judge in New Orleans. Here's just one example of what she would be empowered to change.
Meg is a current public defender running to be a judge in New Orleans. Here's just one example of what she would be empowered to change
Meg is a current public defender running to be a judge in New Orleans. Here's just one example of what she would be empowered to change.
Read 5 tweets

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