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#judge melissa dubose
whenweallvote 1 month
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Last week, the U.S. Senate confirmed Judge Melissa DuBose to the U.S. District Court for Rhode Island, making her the first person of color and the first openly LGBTQ judge to serve on this Court.
Judge DuBose is also the 100th Black woman ever confirmed to a lifetime federal judgeship in the United States.聽
Making history during Women鈥檚 History Month? Period! 馃懇馃従鈥嶁殩锔忦煆涳笍馃ぉ
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soberscientistlife 3 months
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President Biden has nominated Judge Melissa DuBose to fill an opening on a U.S. District Court! If she鈥檚 confirmed, Judge DuBose will be the first person of color and openly LGBTQ judge to serve on Rhode Island鈥檚 federal bench! We need MORE Black women leading courtrooms!
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gwydionmisha 3 months
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marymosley 5 years
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On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I鈥檓 pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government鈥檚 second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC鈥檚 School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant鈥檚 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don鈥檛 work in the court system. I say this in the book鈥檚 introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project. 聽
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
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marymosley 5 years
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I鈥檓 pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government鈥檚 second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC鈥檚 School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant鈥檚 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don鈥檛 work in the court system. I say this in the book鈥檚 introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project. 聽
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes
marymosley 5 years
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I鈥檓 pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government鈥檚 second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC鈥檚 School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant鈥檚 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don鈥檛 work in the court system. I say this in the book鈥檚 introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project. 聽
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes
marymosley 5 years
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I鈥檓 pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government鈥檚 second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC鈥檚 School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant鈥檚 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don鈥檛 work in the court system. I say this in the book鈥檚 introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project. 聽
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes
marymosley 5 years
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I鈥檓 pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government鈥檚 second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC鈥檚 School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant鈥檚 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don鈥檛 work in the court system. I say this in the book鈥檚 introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project. 聽
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes