エピソード

  • S1EP22: Phillip Alvin Jones, In Prison but "Already Free"
    2025/06/10
    Phillip Alvin Jones is incarcerated in a Washington prison, where he is serving two life sentences plus twenty years. Although he has been in prison for over thirty years, he has used his time to be an agent of change, both inside and outside the walls. Phillip hosts the podcast, The Wall: Behind and Beyond, and runs his own company, Phillip A. Jones, LLC., which seeks to transform our justice system by working towards a future where justice and rehabilitation meet. In this episode of Just Justice, Phillip and I talk about prison, books, and his positive orientation toward freedom and society. For more information about Phillip Alvin Jones: To contact Phillip directly at Airway Heights Corrections Center in Washington: 1. Create a Securus account here: https://securustech.online/#/login 2. Search for Airway Heights Corrections Center 3. Alvin Jones,DOC number: 881507 To learn more about Phillip's work, go to https://www.phillipajonesconsultingllc.com/. To listen to his podcast, The Wall: Behind and Beyond, https://www.youtube.com/c/TheWallBehindandBeyondPodcast For more information about Jessica Henry, go to www.jessicahenryjustice.com.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    45 分
  • S1EP21:Bryan Widenhouse: Advocate, Artist and JLWOP Survivor
    2025/05/27
    S1EP21 Bryan Widenhouse: Advocate, Artist and JLWOP Survivor

    Bryan Widenhouse received a life without parole sentence when he was only 17 years old. During his 31 year incarceration, some of which was spent at the notorious Angola prison, Bryan chose to serve others as a path toward accountability and redemption. When a change in law allowed Bryan to be released, he seized the opportunity to continue serving others. Bryan now works as a State Legislative Affairs Manager for FAMM, challenging extreme sentences and promoting second look laws. He has spoken to members of Congress, testified to legislators, and helped to develop a Speakers’ Bureau to change the narrative around extreme sentences. In this episode of Just Justice, I talk with Bryan about the importance of second chances, his art, and the power of community service to heal and transform.

    To see a small sample of Bryan's art: ELLGE4907.JPG IMG_2669.JPG To learn more about the National LWOP Leadership Council and the Speakers' Bureau of former lifers, as well as a wealth of information about LWOP and our efforts to abolish the sentence: https://www.beyondlwop.org/national-lwop-leadership-council/ To learn about FAMM: https://famm.org/ To learn more about Jessica Henry, go to www.jessicahenryjustice.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    51 分
  • S1E20: Massachusetts Mama of Medical Parole, with Ruth Greenberg
    2025/05/13

    Ruth Greenberg is often referred to as the Massachusetts mama of medical parole. As a defense lawyer, she's fought for years on behalf of the poor and the incarcerated. On this episode of Just Justice, Ruth tells us about her leading role in the push for compassionate release in Massachusetts. She also was at the forefront in fighting the groundbreaking case that lead to the prohibition of life without parole for anyone under the age of 21 in her state.

    To learn more about Ruth and her work: POV: Governor Baker Should Not Be Afraid to Set Dying Prisoners Free, https://www.bu.edu/articles/2019/pov-governor-baker-should-not-be-afraid-to-set-dying-prisoners-free-2/

    Cement Head’s last fight: He was denied parole six times — until he was about to become a Covid-19 statistic, https://www.statnews.com/2021/04/14/deathbed-double-standard-its-hard-to-get-released-on-medical-parole-unless-you-have-covid19/

    Massachusetts high court rules younger adults cannot be sentenced to life without parole, https://whdh.com/news/massachusetts-high-court-rules-younger-adults-cannot-be-sentenced-to-life-without-parole/ Learn more about Jessica Henry at www.jessicahenryjustice.com

    続きを読む 一部表示
    51 分
  • S1E19: A Matter of Life, with Dr. Ashley Nellis, Sentencing Scholar
    2025/04/29
    This week on Just Justice, we’re taking a hard look at life sentences in America—a country where one in six incarcerated people is serving life behind bars. That’s nearly 200,000 individuals, making the U.S. one of the most punitive nations in the world. Host Jessica Henry sits down with Dr. Ashley Nellis, a leading sentencing expert and soon-to-be Assistant Professor at American University’s School of Public Affairs. Together, we unpack the findings of Ashley's latest "lifer census"—who’s serving life, for what crimes, and why it matters. Plus, Ashley makes a bold call: end life sentences altogether. Tune in for a powerful conversation about justice, reform, and the future of sentencing in America. Learn More: Learn more about Dr. Ashley Nellis at her website, www.ashleynellis.com Read the report: A Matter of Life: the Scope and Impact of Life and Long Term Imprisonment in the United States Learn more about Jessica Henry at www.jessicahenryjustice.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    41 分
  • S1E18: Restorative Justice: A Smart Alternative to Prison, with Danielle Sered, founder and director of Common Justice
    2025/04/15
    Danielle Sered is the founder and director of Common Justice, the first alternatives-to-incarceration and victim-service program in the United States. Danielle is also a violent crime survivor and author of the award-winning book, Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration, and a Road to Repair. In this episode of Just Justice, Danielle talks about the power of restorative justice to help survivors heal from violent crime, what crime survivors say they want and need, and her view that prison is not the best way to bring accountability and to prevent future crimes. Learn More: About Danielle Sered's impactful work: About Common Justice: https://commonjustice.org/ To find Danielle's excellent book, Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration, and a Road to Repair About your host, Jessica Henry: Website: http://jessicahenryjustice.com/ Subscribe to monthly newsletter Watch my TEDx talk No-Crime Wrongful Convictions here.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    56 分
  • S1EP17: The Cruel World of Compassionate Release, with Mary Price, General Counsel of FAMM
    2025/04/01
    What happens to people in prison who face terminal illnesses? Or develop dementia? Or who are just very old? Do they deserve to spend their final days at home? How do we make that happen? In this episode of Just Justice, Mary Price, General Counsel of FAMM, walks us through the complex and often cruel world of compassionate release. FAMM has led the fight for better and more effective compassionate release policies for the elderly and infirm, and Mary has been at the forefront of that movement. Mary has testified before the U.S. Sentencing Commission, appeared on the PBS NewsHour, NPR's Morning Edition and All Things Considered, and the New York Times, among other major national news outlets. She is the author of Everywhere and Nowhere : Compassionate Release in the States (2018). Join us on this informative and sometimes heartbreaking episode of Just Justice. For more information about Mary Price, FAMM, and her work on compassionate release: You can learn more about Mary Price: https://famm.org/team/mary-price/ You can read her excellent report Everywhere and Nowhere: Compassionate Release in the States To see how your state ranks in compassionate release practices, go to: FAMM's Compassionate Release Report Cards: Grading the States For more information about Jessica Henry, go to her website at: http://jessicahenryjustice.com/
    続きを読む 一部表示
    52 分
  • S1EP16: The False Promise of Criminal Legal Reform, with Eve Hanan, Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Research at UNLV School of Law
    2025/03/18

    Eve Hanan wrote a law review article called Terror and Tenderness in Criminal Law that blew my mind. She makes the argument that opportunities for leniency in the criminal legal system -- parole, clemency, compassionate release -- seduce us into believing the system is just and merciful, when in reality, the system is far too harsh for far too many. She even takes on the idea of hope and suggests that hope is a distraction from the challenges of our system and the path toward real and meaningful reform. I hope you'll enjoy listening to this conversation as much as I enjoyed having it.

    Episode Links: To learn more about Eve Hanan: https://law.unlv.edu/faculty/eve-hanan To read her excellent law review article Terror and Tenderness in Criminal Law: https://cardozolawreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/HANAN.45.2.4_WEB-1.pdf

    To learn more about Jessica Henry go to www.jessicahenryjustice.com

    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分
  • S1EP15: Prosecution Conviction Integrity Units (CIUs) and Wrongful Convictions, with Marissa Bluestine, former innocence lawyer and Assistant Director of the Quattrone Center
    2025/03/04

    This week on Just Justice we talk with Marissa Bluestine, Assistant Director of the Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. Marissa is a former innocence lawyer and one of the nation's leading experts on Conviction Integrity Units (CIUs). CIUs are specialized units within prosecutor offices that review convictions with strong claims of actual innocence. Marissa guides us through the work of CIUs to identify wrongful convictions and exonerate the innocent, and gives us an insider perspective on what works and what doesn't. Join us for this fascinating episode.

    To learn more about Marissa Bluestine and the work of the Quattrone Center: Marissa Bluestine: https://www.law.upenn.edu/faculty/mblu Quattrone Center: https://www.law.upenn.edu/institutes/quattronecenter/

    To learn more about CIUs: Conviction Review Unit: a National Perspective (2016) https://www.law.upenn.edu/live/files/5522-cru-final (report by the Quattrone Center)

    To learn more about Jessica Henry: Website: http://jessicahenryjustice.com/ Watch her TEDx talk No-Crime Wrongful Convictions here. Subscribe to her newsletter Learn more about her award-winning book Smoke but No Fire

    続きを読む 一部表示
    45 分