LSU Research: Justice Reform and Reinvestment Saves Louisiana Tax-Payers $150 Million Annually
LSU Publishes Article That Highlights
Parole Project’s Impact
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LSU Publishes Article That Highlights
Parole Project’s Impact
The Louisiana Parole Project is working within the community to provide second chances to formerly incarcerated individuals.
During the COVID-19 crisis, people coming home after
decades behind bars find loved ones in quarantine, dire
job prospects and overwhelmed social services agencies.
The two-story light gray home that houses the Louisiana Parole Project sits on the south end of Beauregard Town, a well-maintained community known for a mix of residential homes, businesses and offices.
Henry Smith walks past rows of kennels housing hundreds of Baton Rouge’s lost and abandoned dogs.
Two years ago, Louisiana adopted landmark criminal justice reforms that have safely reduced the state’s correctional population.
NBC’s Lester Holt travels to Angola State Penitentiary in a Dateline special, ‘Life Inside, highlighting the issue of mass incarceration in America and Louisiana’s criminal justice reform.
Of the 521 people released since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that people sentenced to life without parole as children must be given a chance at freedom, most are concentrated in several states.
One year into Louisiana’s implementation of landmark criminal justice reforms, the
state no longer leads the nation in imprisonment and has earmarked millions of dollars
in savings for reinvestment into programs that reduce recidivism and support crime
victims.