Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities, U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 2019
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U . S . C O M M I S S I O N O N C I V I L R I G H T S COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities BR I E F I N G R E P O R U.S . CO M M IS S IO N O N CIVIL RIG HT S Washington, DC 20425 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 Visit us on the Web: www.usccr.gov JUNE 2019 T U.S. COM M I SS ION ON CIVI L R IG HTS M E M B E RS OF TH E COM M I SS ION The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights is an independent, bipartisan agency established by Congress in 1957. It is directed to: Catherine E. Lhamon, Chairperson Patricia Timmons-Goodson, Vice Chairperson Debo P. Adegbile Gail L. Heriot Peter N. Kirsanow David Kladney Karen Narasaki Michael Yaki • Investigate complaints alleging that citizens are being deprived of their right to vote by reason of their race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin, or by reason of fraudulent practices. • Study and collect information relating to discrimination or a denial of equal protection of the laws under the Constitution because of race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin, or in the administration of justice. • Appraise federal laws and policies with respect to discrimination or denial of equal protection of the laws because of race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin, or in the administration of justice. • Serve as a national clearinghouse for information in respect to discrimination or denial of equal protection of the laws because of race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin. • Submit reports, findings, and recommendations to the President and Congress. • Issue public service announcements to discourage discrimination or denial of equal protection of the laws.* *42 U.S.C. §1975a. Mauro Morales, Staff Director U.S. Commission on Civil Rights 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20425 (202) 376-8128 voice TTY Relay: 711 www.usccr.gov Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing Before The United States Commission on Civil Rights Held in Washington, DC Briefing Report June 2019 [This page intentionally left blank] UNITED STATES COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS 1331 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Suite 1150 Washington, DC 20425 www.usccr.gov Letter of Transmittal June 13, 2019 President Donald J. Trump Vice President Mike Pence Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi On behalf of the United States Commission on Civil Rights (“the Commission”), I am pleased to transmit our briefing report, Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities. The report is also available in full on the Commission’s website at www.usccr.gov. This report provides an overview of the relevant data and arguments for and against the imposition of collateral consequences on people with criminal records. Each year, federal and state prisons release more than 620,000 people to return to their communities. While these individuals have often completely exited criminal supervision (for example, through a prison sentence or probation), individuals with criminal records still face potentially thousands of collateral consequences upon reentering society. These collateral consequences are sanctions, restrictions, or disqualifications that attach to a person because of the person’s criminal history. For example, individuals with criminal histories can face barriers to voting, jury service, holding public office, securing employment, obtaining housing, receiving public assistance, owning a firearm, getting a driver’s license, qualifying for financial aid and college admission, qualifying for military service, and maintaining legal status as an immigrant. The reach of each collateral consequence extends past people with criminal records to affect families and communities. The Commission majority (six Commissioners in favor, one Commissioner in opposition) approved key findings including the following: Collateral consequences exacerbate punishment beyond the criminal conviction after an individual completes the court-imposed sentence. Valid public safety bases support some collateral consequences, such as limitations on working with children for people convicted of particular dangerous crimes. Many collateral consequences, however, are unrelated either to the underlying crime for which a person has been convicted or to a public safety purpose. When the collateral consequences are unrelated in this way, their imposition generally negatively affects public safety and the public good. Evidence shows harsh collateral consequences unrelated to public safety increase recidivism by limiting or by completely barring formerly incarcerated persons’ access to personal and family support. In addition, the general public, attorneys, and the courts often lack knowledge of what the totality of the collateral consequences are in their jurisdiction, how long they last, and whether they are discretionary or mandatory, or even if they are relevant to public safety or merely an extended punishment beyond a criminal sentence. This absence of public and judicial awareness of collateral consequences of conviction undermines any deterrent effect that might flow from attaching such consequences, separate and apart from the punishment itself, to criminal convictions. The processes people must undertake to restore rights, for example through applications for pardon or for judicial record sealing, are often complicated, opaque, and difficult to access. The Commission majority voted for key recommendations, including the following: Collateral consequences should be tailored to serve public safety. Policymakers should avoid punitive mandatory consequences that do not serve public safety, bear no rational relationship to the offense committed, and impede people convicted of crimes from safely reentering and becoming contributing members of society. Jurisdictions that impose collateral consequences should periodically review the consequences imposed by law or regulation to evaluate whether they are necessary to protect public safety and if they are related to the underlying offenses. The Commission majority specifically calls on Congress to limit discretion of public housing providers to prevent them from categorically barring people with criminal convictions from access to public housing; lift restrictions on access to student loans based on criminal convictions, except for convictions related to financial fraud; eliminate restrictions on TANF and SNAP benefits based on criminal convictions; and require federal courts to give comprehensive notice of federal restrictions on individuals’ rights before guilty plea entry, upon conviction, and upon release from incarceration. We at the Commission are pleased to share our views, informed by careful research and investigation as well as civil rights expertise, to help ensure that all Americans enjoy civil rights protections to which we are entitled. For the Commission, Catherine E. Lhamon Chair TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents Table of Contents............................................................................................................................................................i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ......................................................................................................................................... iii Executive Summary .......................................................................................................................................................1 Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview ..........................................................................................................................9 Overview of Collateral Consequences ......................................................................................................................9 Demographics of the Corrections Population .......................................................................................................... 18 Federal Statutes that Impose Collateral Consequences ........................................................................................... 22 State and Local Statutes that Impose Collateral Consequences .............................................................................. 29 Restoration of Certain Rights .................................................................................................................................. 30 Notification of Collateral Consequences ................................................................................................................. 31 Chapter 2: Access to Self-Sufficiency and Meeting Basic Needs ............................................................................... 35 How a Criminal Record Can Affect Employment Opportunities ............................................................................ 35 Criminal Background Checks for Employment .................................................................................................. 41 Removing Barriers to Employment for People with Criminal Records .............................................................. 47 Occupational Licensing Barriers ......................................................................................................................... 49 Fair Chance Hiring Policies ................................................................................................................................ 54 How a Criminal Record Can Affect Housing Opportunities ................................................................................... 60 Barriers to Subsidized Housing for Individuals with Criminal Records ............................................................. 65 Barriers to Private Housing for Individuals with Criminal Records ................................................................... 72 How a Criminal Record Can Affect Access to Public Benefits .............................................................................. 76 The Disproportionate Impact of Lifetime Drug Bans for Public Benefits .......................................................... 80 Barriers to Financial Aid for Higher Education .................................................................................................. 84 Chapter 3: Access to Civic Participation ..................................................................................................................... 89 Voting...................................................................................................................................................................... 89 The Current Landscape of State Felony Disenfranchisement Laws ................................................................... 90 Arguments For and Against Felony Disenfranchisement ................................................................................... 97 The Racial Origins of Disenfranchisement Laws and Ongoing Disparities ...................................................... 104 Legal Challenges............................................................................................................................................... 108 The Restoration of Voting Rights ..................................................................................................................... 113 Jury Service ........................................................................................................................................................... 124 The Impact of Jury Exclusion on People of Color ............................................................................................ 129 Chapter 4: Findings and Recommendations .............................................................................................................. 133 Findings ................................................................................................................................................................. 133 Recommendations ................................................................................................................................................. 135 i ii COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES Commissioners’ Statements....................................................................................................................................... 139 Statement of Chair Catherine E. Lhamon .............................................................................................................. 139 Statement of Commissioner David Kladney ......................................................................................................... 141 Statement of Commissioner Peter N. Kirsanow .................................................................................................... 145 Joint Statement of Commissioners Gail Heriot and Peter N. Kirsanow ................................................................ 149 Commissioners’ Rebuttals ......................................................................................................................................... 161 Statement of Commissioner David Kladney ......................................................................................................... 161 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Commission’s Office of Civil Rights Evaluation (OCRE) produced this report under the direction of Katherine Culliton-González, Esq, OCRE Director. Social Scientist Sarale Sewell and Contractor Elizabeth Paukstis, Esq. performed the principal research and writing. OCRE Civil Rights Analysts LaShonda Brenson and Marik Xavier-Brier provided valuable research assistance. Commissioners’ Special Assistants Sheryl Cozart, Jason Lagria, Carissa Mulder, Amy Royce, Rukku Singla, Alison Somin, and Irena Vidulovic assisted their Commissioners in reviewing the report. With the assistance of Contractor Julie Bush, Esq. and Law Clerk Lamayli Huguet (J.D. Candidate 2020, American University), the Commission’s General Counsel Maureen Rudolph, Esq., reviewed and approved the report for legal sufficiency. Commission State Advisory Committees in Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Ohio, Tennessee, and West Virginia collected and provided testimony, findings, and recommendations to the Commission on collateral consequences and related civil rights issues within their jurisdictions. iii [This page intentionally left blank] EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 Executive Summary More than 620,000 people are released from federal and state prisons each year and return to their communities. 1 This substantial number is nearly equivalent to the population of Boston annually. 2 While these and other individuals have already served their prison or jail sentences, are currently serving probation or parole, or have completely exited criminal supervision, they still face numerous collateral consequences of their conviction or criminal history upon reentering society. 3 According to the National Institute of Justice, more than 44,000 collateral consequences exist nationwide. 4 These include civil law sanctions, restrictions, or disqualifications that attach to a person because of the person’s criminal history and can affect the person’s ability to function and participate in society. 5 For example, individuals with criminal histories can face barriers to voting, 6 serving on a jury, 7 holding public office, 8 securing employment, 9 obtaining housing, 10 receiving public assistance, 11 owning a firearm, 12 getting a driver’s license, 13 qualifying for financial aid and 0F 1F 2F 3F 4F 5F 6F 10F 7F 1F 8F 9F 12F E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2016, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2018, at 10, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p16.pdf; Kate Walz and Marie Claire Tran-Leung, The Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 2-3 [hereinafter Walz and Tran-Leung Statement]. 2 U.S. Census Bureau, “Quick Facts: Boston city, Massachusetts,” July 1, 2017, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/bostoncitymassachusetts (estimating the mid-2017 population of Boston as 685,094 people). 3 Margaret Love, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 4 [hereinafter Love Statement]. 4 Council of State Governments, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction,” https://niccc.csgjusticecenter.org/about/ (last accessed Nov. 24, 2018) [hereinafter CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction”]. 5 Sarah B. Berson, National Institute of Justice, “Beyond the Sentence—Understanding Collateral Consequences,” National Institute of Justice Journal, no. 272, at 25, https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/241924.pdf. 6 See Chapter 3, “Voting,” infra notes 625-889. 7 See Chapter 3, “Jury Service,” infra notes 890-955. 8 Michael Campagna, Cheyenne Foster, Stephanie Karas, Mary K. Stohr, Craig Hemmens, “Restrictions on the Citizenship Rights of Felons: Barriers to Successful Reintegration,” Journal of Law and Criminal Justice, vol. 4, no. 1 (2016), 24, 25, http://jlcjnet.com/journals/jlcj/Vol_4_No_1_June_2016/2.pdf. 9 See Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Employment Opportunities,” infra notes 222-409. See also U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Assessing the Impact of Criminal Background Checks and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Conviction Records Policy, 2013 [hereinafter USCCR, 2013 Briefing Report], http://www.eusccr.com/EEOC_final_2013.pdf. 10 See Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Housing Opportunities,” infra notes 410-525. 11 See Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Access to Public Benefits,” infra notes 526-624. 12 18 U.S.C. § 922(d)(1); see also U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences Upon Conviction, 2000, at 15-20, https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/pardon/legacy/2006/11/13/collateral_consequences.pdf. 13 See, e.g., 23 U.S.C. § 159 (withholding federal funding from any state that does not revoke or suspend the driver’s licenses of individuals convicted of drug offenses); see also Grace Sankey-Berman, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, April 24, 2017, at 1 (indicating that the “most critical of these barriers is access to ID credentials, vital documents that are essential for the successful transition of individuals from prison 1 college admission, 14 qualifying for military service, 15 and deportation (for noncitizens). 16 As one scholar noted, “the United States has a uniquely extensive and debilitating web of collateral consequences that continue to punish and stigmatize individuals with criminal records long after the completion of their sentences.” 17 13F 14F 15F 16 F The United States has the largest incarcerated population in the world, with about 2.2 million people confined to prisons and jails. 18 The country with the second-largest prison population is China, which incarcerates about 1.7 million individuals. 19 The United States also has the highest per capita rate of incarceration worldwide (670 per 100,000 people), followed by Rwanda (434 per 100,000), Russia (413 per 100,000), and Brazil (325 per 100,000). 20 These calculations do not account for the number of adults under correctional supervision, which includes not only those imprisoned but also on probation or parole; as of December 2016, about 6.6 million people in the U.S. were under correctional supervision. 21 Collectively, at least 70 to 100 million people nationwide are currently or will be affected by the collateral consequences of incarceration, arrest, 17F 18F 19F 20F to the community”) [hereinafter Sankey-Berman Statement]; Vikrant Reddy, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 3-4 [hereinafter Reddy Statement]; Marc Levin, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1-6 [hereinafter Levin Statement]. 14 See Chapter 2, “Barriers to Financial Aid for Higher Education,” infra notes 587-624. 15 10 U.S.C. § 504(a) (prohibiting any person “who has been convicted of a felony” from enlisting in “any armed force.”). 16 Michael Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, 86 B.U. L. REV. 623, 636 (2006). 17 Michael Pinard, Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions: Confronting Issues of Race and Dignity, 85 N.Y.U. L. REV. 457, 524 (2010). 18 The Sentencing Project, Fact Sheet: Trends in U.S. Corrections, 2018, at 1, https://sentencingproject.org/wpcontent/uploads/2016/01/Trends-in-US-Corrections.pdf (citing Roy Walmsley, “Highest to Lowest—Prison Population Total,” Institute for Criminal Policy Research, World Prison Brief, http://www.prisonstudies.org/worldprison-brief (last accessed Sept. 30, 2018)). 19 Roy Walmsley, “Highest to Lowest—Prison Population Total,” Institute for Criminal Policy Research, World Prison Brief, http://www.prisonstudies.org/world-prison-brief (last accessed Sept. 30, 2018). 20 The Sentencing Project, Fact Sheet: Trends in U.S. Corrections, supra note 18 at 1; see also J.F. Atlanta, “Why does America have such a big prison population?” The Economist (Aug. 15, 2013), https://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2013/08/economist-explains-8 (noting that the U.S. has an incarceration rate “nearly five times that of Britain, seven times that of France and 24 times that of India.”). 21 Danielle Kaeble & Mary Cowhig, Correctional Populations in the United States, 2016, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2018, at 1, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/cpus16.pdf. See also “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” infra notes 96-130. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3 or conviction. 22 Due to overrepresentation in the criminal justice system, people of color, 23 people with disabilities, 24 and LGBT individuals 25 are disproportionately impacted by collateral consequences. Because the female incarceration rate has accelerated, collateral consequences increasingly impact women, many of whom are single mothers whose children will be affected.26 Immigrants who are not U.S. citizens (and those misidentified as noncitizens) often face the unique collateral consequence of deportation, which can disrupt familial relationships. 27 The reach of each collateral consequence extends past people with criminal records to affect families and communities. 28 21F 2F 23F 24F 25F 26F 27F 22 The Sentencing Project, Half in Ten, Community Legal Services, Americans with Criminal Records, 2015, at 1, https://www.sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Americans-with-Criminal-Records-Poverty-andOpportunity-Profile.pdf (estimating that “100 million Americans have a criminal record”); U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems, 2012, 2014, at 3, https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/244563.pdf (finding more than “100.5 individuals offenders” in state criminal history repositories); Gary Fields and John R. Emshwiller, “As Arrest Records Rise, Americans Find Consequences Can Last a Lifetime,” Wall Street Journal, Aug. 18, 2014, https://www.wsj.com/articles/as-arrestrecords-rise-americans-find-consequences-can-last-a-lifetime-1408415402 (reporting that “the FBI currently has 77.7 million individuals on file in its master criminal database—or nearly one out of every three American adults.”). 23 See generally, Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (New York: The New Press, 2012); see also Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” infra notes 96-130. 24 See Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” infra notes 96-130. 25 See Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” infra notes 96-130. “LGBT” is an acronym for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender. 26 E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 5 (finding that the number of women sentenced to more than a year increased by 700 prisoners in 2016); see also The Sentencing Project, Fact Sheet: Trends in U.C. Corrections, supra note 18 at 4 (stating that “[t]he number of women in prison has been increasing at twice the rate of growth for men since 1980”); Annie E. Casey Foundation, A Shared Sentence: The Devastating Toll of Incarceration on Kids, Families, and Communities, KIDS COUNT Policy Report, 2016, at 2, https://www.aecf.org/m/resourcedoc/aecfasharedsentence-2016.pdf (stating that roughly half of women ages 24 and younger in prisons are mothers); Elizabeth Swavola, Kristine Riley, Ram Subramanian, Overlooked: Women and Jails in an Era of Reform, Vera Institute of Justice, 2016, at 7, http://www.safetyandjusticechallenge.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/overlookedwomen-in-jails-report-web.pdf (reporting that nearly 80 percent of women in jails are mothers and, most likely, single mothers). See also Chapter 2, “The Disproportionate Impact of Lifetime Drug Bans for Public Benefits,” infra notes 563-94 (discussing the economic effects of criminal convictions on women and children). 27 Yolanda Vázquez, Perpetuating the Marginalization of Latinos: A Collateral Consequence of the Incorporation of Immigration Law into the Criminal Justice System, 54 HOW. L.J. 639, 666-71 (2011); Michael Pinard & Anthony C. Thompson, Offender Reentry and the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions: An Introduction, 30 N.Y.U. REV. L. & SOC. CHANGE 585 (2005); National Immigration Law Center, How ICE Uses Local Criminal Justice Systems to Funnel People Into the Detention and Deportation System, 2014, at 1, https://www.nilc.org/wpcontent/uploads/2015/11/state-local-enforcement-and-ice-2014-03-25.pdf (reporting that “it is becoming more common for citizens, too, to be swept into the detention-deportation system”). See also Rose Cahn, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, June 19, 2017, at 1-9 [hereinafter ILRC Statement]; Victoria Moreno, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 19, 2017, at 1-3 [hereinafter Moreno Statement]. 28 See, e.g., Annie E. Casey Foundation, A Shared Sentence: The Devastating Toll of Incarceration on Kids, Families, and Communities, supra note 26 at 2-3, https://www.aecf.org/m/resourcedoc/aecf-asharedsentence2016.pdf. The authors report that at least 5 million children have had a parent incarcerated at some point during their childhood, and children of incarcerated parents are at higher risk of dropping out of school. Moreover, research has shown that living in a neighborhood with a high incarceration rate “increases residents’ chances of suffering from Collateral consequences, and their disproportionate impact on people of color and other distinct populations, implicate key civil rights issues. 29 Many advocates believe that an arrest or conviction should not unduly hinder an individual’s ability to reintegrate into society and attain selfautonomy. 30 Ideas for reforming the scope of collateral consequences—with the goals of 28 F 29F depression and anxiety.” Ibid. at 4. See also Chapter 3’s discussion of how felony disenfranchisement may adversely affect communities at notes 635-762, infra. 29 See this report’s discussion of how people impacted by collateral consequences face unequal access to employment, housing, and public benefits, infra at notes 222-624, and face restrictions on the right to vote and serve on a jury, infra at notes 625-955. 30 Katherine Katcher, Founder and Executive Director, Root and Rebound, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1-2 [hereinafter Katcher Statement]; Faiz Shakir and Vanita Gupta, Joint Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1-17 [hereinafter ACLU and LCCHR Joint Statement]; CLASP, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, June 13, 2017, at 1-6 [hereinafter CLASP Statement]; Cynthia W. Roseberry, Executive Director, Council for Court Excellence, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 19, 2017, at 1-8 [hereinafter Council for Court Excellence Statement]; Craig DeRoche, Senior Vice President of Advocacy and Public Policy, Prison Fellowship, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 19, 2017, at 1-6 [hereinafter Prison Fellowship Statement]; Gerald Unger, Freeborn Institute of Public Policy, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 15, 2017, at 1-6 [hereinafter Unger Statement]; Ryan Haygood, President and CEO, New Jersey Institute for Social Justice, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 17, 2017, at 1 [hereinafter Haygood Statement]; Shon Hopwood, Associate Professor, Georgetown University Law Center, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 17, 2017, at 1-5 [hereinafter Hopwood Statement]; Human Rights Campaign (HRC), Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, June 19, 2017, at 1-8 [hereinafter HRC Statement]; Roberta Meyers, Director of National H.I.R.E. Network, on behalf of the Legal Action Center (LAC), Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 17, 2017, at 1-14 [hereinafter LAC Statement]; Brian Cladoosby, on behalf of the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 18, 2017, at 1-2 [hereinafter NCAI Statement]; ILRC Statement at 1-9; Robin Chand, on behalf of U.S. Congressman Hank Johnson, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 16, 2017, at 1-3 [hereinafter Congressman Hank Johnson Statement]; The Reentry Working Group, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 19, 2017, at 1-9 [hereinafter Reentry Working Group Statement]; Marina Duane and Emily Reimal, on behalf of the Urban Institute, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, July 19, 2017, at 1-4 [hereinafter Urban Institute Statement]; Pamela F. Rodriguez, on behalf of Treatment Alternatives for Safe Communities (TASC), Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 17, 2017, at 1-4 [hereinafter TASC statement]; Richard T. Cassidy, on behalf of Uniform Law Commission, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the EXECUTIVE SUMMARY promoting public safety, allowing formerly incarcerated individuals to become self-sufficient, keeping families together, and reducing stigma—have received bipartisan support. 31 In recent years, advocates, academics, researchers, and government officials have proposed reforms to improve transparency and mitigate or remove some of the consequences that formerly incarcerated individuals face. 32 In 2012, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued a guidance about hiring some applicants with criminal backgrounds. 33 Corporations like Koch Industries, Walmart, Target, and Bed Bath & Beyond have taken affirmative steps to expand employment opportunities for individuals with criminal records. 34 States have also acted to lift restrictions on the right to vote and restore the franchise to people with criminal convictions. 35 30F 31F 32 F 3F 34F Alleviating the collateral consequences of conviction can help formerly incarcerated individuals lead more productive lives, secure gainful employment, find housing, and obtain the resources they need to become self-sufficient. 36 Ultimately, these positive effects may benefit the economy overall. According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, the vastly diminished employment opportunities for men with criminal records “cost the U.S. economy between $57 and $65 billion in lost output” in 2008. 37 These data illustrate the potential economic value of lowering hurdles to employment for people with criminal records. 38 Furthermore, allowing formerly 35F 36F 37 F U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1-50 [hereinafter Uniform Law Commission Statement]; U.S. Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, June 19, 2017, at 1-11 [hereinafter Senator Cardin Statement]; Moreno Statement at 1-3; Southern Poverty Law Center, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, June 19, 2017, at 1-11 [hereinafter SPLC Statement]. 31 See Ibid. See also John Malcolm, Vice President of the Institute for Constitutional Government and Director of the Meese Center for Legal & Judicial Studies, The Heritage Foundation, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1-15 [hereinafter Malcolm Statement]; Levin Statement at 1-6; Sankey-Berman Statement at 1. 32 See, e.g., supra notes 30-31. 33 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, “Consideration of Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1965,” Enforcement Guidance 915.002, Apr. 25, 2012, https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/guidance/arrest_conviction.cfm [hereinafter EEOC, 2012 Guidance]; see also infra notes 264-307 (discussing debate of the legality of this guidance). 34 Christine Owens & Wade Henderson, “Koch Brothers are right on fair chance hiring,” CNN, April 28, 2017, http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/28/opinions/owens-henderson-koch-brothers-fair-chance-hiring/index.html. 35 See Chapter 3, “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra at notes 805-889. 36 The Leadership Conference, Fact Sheet: Fair Chance Hiring, 2017, http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/criminaljustice/Fair_Chance_Hiring.pdf; Marie Claire Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, 2015, http://www.povertylaw.org/files/docs/WDMD-final.pdf; Amy E. Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents with Criminal Records, Center for Law and Social Policy and Community Legal Services, 2002, https://clsphila.org/sites/default/files/issues/every_door_closed.pdf. 37 John Schmitt & Kris Warner, Ex-offenders and the Labor Market, Center for Economic and Policy Research, November 2010, at 2, http://cepr.net/documents/publications/ex-offenders-2010-11.pdf (also accounting for recidivism to determine lifetime probability of impacts, at 14, Table 6). 38 Ibid. at 1. 5 incarcerated individuals to participate in civic society strengthens their connections with their communities and can thereby foster meaningful rehabilitation. 39 Research strongly suggests that relieving some formerly incarcerated individuals from the burdens of certain collateral consequences cultivates successful reintegration into society, helps reduce recidivism, and promotes public safety. 40 38F 39F The main arguments against such reforms reflect concerns about the continuing risks that people with criminal records may pose to society. The prospect of recidivism, and its attendant threat to public safety, becomes an issue if individuals convicted of violent crimes 41 are permitted to interact closely with the public, particularly with more vulnerable populations such as children. 42 Although some opponents of reform insist that states should remain free to impose any collateral consequences they deem reasonable, 43 others advocate for a more balanced approach, where the exact consequences flow from the nature of the crime (i.e., prohibiting a person convicted of fraud or theft from working in a bank). 44 40 F 41F 42 F 43F 39 Marc Mauer, Voting Behind Bars: An Argument for Voting by Prisoners, 54 HOW. L.J. 549, 562 (2011). See Steven D. Bell, The Long Shadow: Decreasing Barriers to Employment, Housing, and Civic Participation for People with Criminal Records Will Improve Public Safety and Strengthen the Economy, 42 W. ST. L. REV. 1, 10-11 (2014) (“Providing individuals the opportunity for stable employment actually lowers crime recidivism rates and thus increases public safety.”) (quoting American Correctional Assoc., 135th Cong. of Correction, Presentation by Art Lurigio (Loyola University), Safer Foundation Recidivism Study (Aug. 8, 2005)); see also Tanya N. Whittle, “Felony Collateral Sanctions Effects on Recidivism: A Literature Review,” Criminal Justice Policy Review, vol. 29, issue 5 (2016): 505-24, http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0887403415623328 (citing research suggesting that collateral consequences restricting access to housing and public assistance may increase recidivism). 41 The Commission notes that the national violent crime rate has been declining for nearly 30 years, and the rate of nonviolent property crimes is at least 6 times the rate of violent crime. See FBI, Uniform Crime Reports, “Estimated crime in United States-Total,” https://www.ucrdatatool.gov/Search/Crime/State/RunCrimeStatebyState.cfm (last accessed Nov. 18, 2018). Moreover, most felony convictions stem from nonviolent crimes, and the relatively small percentage of people convicted of violent crimes tend to serve longer sentences in prison, where they cannot interact with the general public. See U.S. Sentencing Commission, Overview of Federal Criminal Cases: Fiscal Year 2016, 2017, at 1-2, 4, https://www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/research-and-publications/researchpublications/2017/FY16_Overview_Federal_Criminal_Cases.pdf (finding that nonviolent drug, immigration, and fraud offenses accounted for about 70 percent of federal cases and that length of imprisonment depended upon seriousness of the crime, with people convicted of murder serving the longest sentences); U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Felony Sentences in State Courts, 2006—Statistical Tables, revised 2010, at 2-3, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/fssc06st.pdf (reporting that about 72 percent of felony convictions in state courts were for nonviolent drug or property offenses, and people convicted of violent felonies received the longest prison sentences). 42 See, e.g., Malcolm Statement at 3 (noting that “it is perfectly reasonable to prohibit convicted sex offenders from running a day care center” and “violent felons from purchasing or possessing firearms”). 43 See, e.g., U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Briefing on Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities, May 19, 2017 [hereinafter Briefing Transcript] at 82 (statement by Hans von Spakovsky, Senior Legal Fellow with the Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, The Heritage Foundation) (arguing, for example, that “Congress does not have the constitutional authority to force states to restore voting rights of convicted felons . . .”.) Note, however, von Spakovsky’s acknowledgement that certain collateral consequences “don't make any sense, particularly for example, the loss of driver’s licenses for crimes that have nothing to do with driving.” Ibid. at 85. 44 Malcolm Statement at 7 (contending that collateral consequences should be “reasonably related to the offense committed”). 40 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This report provides an overview of the relevant data and arguments for and against the imposition of collateral consequences on people with criminal records. Chapter 1 summarizes the diverse range of collateral consequences, the demographics of the populations affected, and the numerous federal and state laws imposing collateral consequences in various localities. This chapter also analyzes under what circumstances collateral consequences can be removed through government restoration of a person’s civil rights, and the reported lack of transparency about how a person is notified of the potential collateral consequences of a criminal record. Chapter 2 summarizes the collateral consequences that can impede a person’s access to basic needs like housing, employment, and public benefits. Chapter 3 examines the collateral consequences that hinder an individual’s access to civic participation through voting and jury service and explores the racial origins and racial disparities of collateral consequences. Finally, the Commission sets forth findings and recommendations. 45 4F 45 See Chapter 4, “Findings and Recommendations.” 7 [This page intentionally left blank] CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview Overview of Collateral Consequences The U.S. Department of Justice estimates that between 70 and 100 million adults in the U.S. have a criminal record, which could include a felony conviction, a misdemeanor, or an arrest without a conviction. 46 The collateral consequences of criminal records can create an array of lifelong barriers that hamper successful reentry into society—including barriers to voting and other civic participation, education, employment, professional licensing, housing, and receipt of public benefits. 47 These collateral consequences can profoundly affect individuals and families and their economic security. 48 45F 46F 47 F Collateral consequences are sanctions, restrictions, or disqualifications that stem from a person’s criminal history. 49 When a person is convicted of a crime, the court may deliver a sentence like imprisonment, probation, 50 or payment of a fine. 51 In some cases, a parole board may grant parole 48F 49F 50F U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems, 2014, 2015, at 2-3, https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/249799.pdf. The Dep’t of Justice reports that 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico have 105,569,200 persons in their criminal history files, of whom 100,024,400 are automated records. The DOJ notes that a person may have records in more than one state. See National Employment Law Project (NELP), Research Supports Fair-Chance Policies, 2016, at 1 n.1, http://www.nelp.org/content/uploads/Fair-Chance-Ban-the-Box-Research.pdf. By reducing by 30 percent the DOJ’s reported number of persons to 70,417,410 persons, NELP conservatively estimated that approximately 70 million individuals have criminal histories; this calculation accounts for the duplication of records. See also Jo Craven McGinty, “How Many Americans Have a Police Record? Probably More Than You Think,” Wall Street Journal, Aug. 7, 2015, https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-many-americans-have-a-police-record-probably-more-than-youthink-1438939802. The author indicates that there is no easy way to arrive at the number of people with criminal histories, as a complete data set of arrests and prosecutions does not exist. Ibid. 47 Berson, “Beyond the Sentence—Understanding Collateral Consequences,” supra note 5 at 25-27; see also The Sentencing Project, et al., Americans with Criminal Records, supra note 22 at 1. 48 See Joshua Kaiser, Revealing the Hidden Sentence: How to Add Transparency, Legitimacy, and Purpose to “Collateral” Punishment Policy, 10 HARV. L. & POL’Y REV. 123, 132-33 (2016) (documenting thousands of laws and regulations relating to collateral consequences that impact economic security, including ones involving employment (23,715), occupational licensing and certification (15,623), government benefits (1,180), and government loans and grants (293)). See also Chapter 2, “Access to Self-Sufficiency and Meeting Basic Needs,” infra notes 222-624. 49 See. e.g., Berson, “Beyond the Sentence—Understanding Collateral Consequences,” supra note 5 at 25. According to Berson, collateral consequences are “a host of sanctions and disqualifications that can place an unanticipated burden on [criminally convicted] individuals trying to re-enter society and lead lives as productive citizens.” 50 See Black’s Law Dictionary, Probation (10th ed. 2014) (defining “probation” as “[a] court-imposed criminal sentence that, subject to stated conditions, releases a convicted person into the community instead of sending the criminal to jail or prison”). See also U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, “FAQ Detail: What is the Difference Between Probation and Parole?,” https://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=qa&iid=324 (last accessed Oct. 8, 2018). 51 See Black’s Law Dictionary, Fine (10th ed. 2014) (defining “fine” as “[a] pecuniary criminal punishment or civil penalty payable to the public treasury”). 46 9 to an incarcerated individual, allowing the person’s release before full completion of the sentence. 52 But unlike the direct sentence imposed by the court, a collateral consequence is imposed by federal, state, or local laws and policies. 53 Some collateral consequences are discretionary, but most are automatic upon conviction under federal, state, or local laws.54 Collateral consequences can attach to felony and misdemeanor convictions, and can last a lifetime or a finite period. 55 51 F 52F 53F 54 F Collateral consequences are traditionally deemed civil sanctions, in that they curtail constitutional civil rights (particularly under the 13th, 14th, 15th, and 19th Amendments); civil statutory protections (such as under the Voting Rights Act); and eligibility for public benefits like food stamps and subsidized housing. 56 Collateral consequences may serve public safety or regulatory 5F See Black’s Law Dictionary, Parole (10th ed. 2014) (defining “parole” as “[t]he conditional release of a prisoner from imprisonment before the full sentence has been served”); see also Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 634 (noting that direct consequences of a criminal conviction “include the duration of the jail or prison sentence imposed upon the defendant as well as, in some jurisdictions, the defendant’s parole eligibility or imposition of fines.”); Bureau of Justice Statistics, “FAQ Detail: What is the Difference Between Probation and Parole?,” https://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=qa&iid=324. 53 Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 634. 54 Id. at 635 (describing discretionary collateral consequences as those “imposed at the discretion of agencies acting independently of the criminal justice system,” and mandatory collateral consequences as those triggered “upon the conviction by operation of law”); Sanchez v. United States, 572 F.2d 210, 211 (9th Cir. 1977) (deeming revocation of parole a collateral consequence, but not one that occurs automatically by law because a parole board “may in its discretion determine whether the remainder of [a convicted person’s] preexisting sentence will be consecutive to or concurrent with the new sentence imposed by the trial judge.”). See also American Bar Association, ABA Standards for Criminal Justice, Third Edition: Collateral Sanctions and Discretionary Disqualifications of Convicted Persons, 2004, at 1, https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/publishing/criminal_justice_section_newsletter/crimjust_standards_c ollateralsanctionwithcommentary.authcheckdam.pdf (defining a “discretionary” collateral consequence as “a penalty, disability or disadvantage, however denominated, that a civil court, administrative agency, or official is authorized but not required to impose on a person convicted of an offense on grounds related to the conviction.”). 55 Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 648. 56 See, e.g., Black’s Law Dictionary, Civil Right (10th ed. 2014) (defining civil right as “[a]ny of the individual rights of personal liberty guaranteed by the Bill of Rights and by the 13th, 14th, 15th, and 19th Amendments, as well as by legislation such as the Voting Rights Act. Civil rights include [especially] the right to vote, the right of due process, and the right of equal protection under the law.”). See also Nora V. Demleitner, Preventing Internal Exile: The Need for Restrictions on Collateral Sentencing Consequences, 11 STAN. L. & POL’Y REV. 153, 155 (1999) (noting that a criminal conviction can restrict “the ability to work for the government,” and “lead to the loss of public benefits…to adopt, be a foster parent, or maintain custody of [one’s] own children [and]…can lead to the loss of civil rights…forfeiture of a pension, a requirement for registration or monitoring, or a prohibition on living in a particular area.”); Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 643-44 (asserting that “[Collateral] consequences are considered to be the ‘indirect’ ramifications of criminal convictions, as they impose ‘civil’ rather than ‘criminal’ penalties. . . . Moreover, these distinctions shield trial judges from having to inform defendants of collateral consequences when accepting guilty pleas or pronouncing sentences.”). Note that because of the “sustained social stigmatization” of collateral consequences, some scholars have questioned whether collateral consequences should be characterized as criminal rather than civil penalties. See id. at 559-60 (stating that “some scholars have challenged the legal distinctions between criminal and civil penalties. Specifically, scholars have 52 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW 11 purposes; examples include prohibiting convicted sex offenders from managing day care centers or forcing public officials convicted of bribery to resign from office. 57 Some collateral consequences directly relate to the specific crime, such as driver’s license suspensions for people convicted of a serious traffic offense. 58 Other collateral consequences apply regardless of any connection between the consequence and the nature or severity of the crime, how long ago the crime was committed, or the individual’s post-conviction record. 59 56F 57F 58F Collateral consequences can be characterized as “invisible” punishments, because they restrict freedom and opportunity for people with criminal convictions but operate outside of the formal sentencing framework and beyond the public view. 60 In the absence of clear tabulation of the range of collateral consequences that may attach to particular convictions, judges, prosecutors, and even defense counsel may lack an understanding or knowledge about which crimes trigger certain (or how many) collateral consequences. 61 Moreover, because defense counsel, prosecutors, and judges are not legally required to inform defendants of these collateral consequences (except for the consequence of deportation for noncitizens), 62 many individuals accused of committing crimes are not fully aware of the ramifications of a guilty plea or conviction. 63 59 F 60 F 61F 62F Collateral consequences have been a feature of the American justice system since colonial times.64 “Civil death” was historically the fate of many criminals dating back to Greek and Roman times, but also existed in English colonial society, 65 as individuals were essentially stripped of their civil 63F 64F critiqued appellate court classifications of certain consequences as indirect ‘civil’ penalties that do not constitute ‘criminal’ punishment.”). 57 See Love Statement at 3; Malcolm Statement at 4. 58 Love Statement at 3. 59 Ibid. For example, driver’s licenses are often restricted for “underlying crimes that have nothing to do with the operation of motor vehicles. In the State of Virginia, for example, in the Year 2015, 39,000 people . . . had their driver's licenses suspended . . . 99% of the underlying offenses had nothing to do with the operation of motor vehicles.” Statement of Vikrant Reddy, Briefing Transcript at 20. 60 Berson, “Beyond the Sentence—Understanding Collateral Consequences,” supra note 5; Jeremy Travis, “Invisible Punishment: An Instrument of Social Exclusion,” in Invisible Punishment: The Collateral Consequences of Mass Imprisonment, ed. Marc Mauer and Meda Chesney-Lind, (The New Press: New York, 2002), at 16, http://webarchive.urban.org/UploadedPDF/1000557_invisible_punishment.pdf. 61 Berson, “Beyond the Sentence—Understanding Collateral Consequences,” supra note 5; see also Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 639 (pointing out that “even institutional actors such as judges, prosecutors, and defense attorneys are often unaware of the array of consequences that can attach to a criminal conviction.”). 62 Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. 356, 374 (2010) (holding that counsel must inform a client whether a guilty plea may result in deportation). 63 Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 673. 64 U.S. General Accountability Office, Nonviolent Drug Convictions: Stakeholders Views on Potential Actions to Address Collateral Consequences, GAO-17-691, 2017, at 2, http://www.gao.gov/assets/690/687003.pdf. 65 Mark Hasse, Civil Death in Modern Times: Reconsidering Felony Disenfranchisement in Minnesota, 99 MINN. L. REV. 1913, 1913-14 (2015), http://www.minnesotalawreview.org/wpcontent/uploads/2015/09/Haase_4fmt_PDF.pdf. rights and property and could face banishment from society—a status akin to death. 66 In the United States, the disenfranchisement of criminally convicted people dates back to colonial times, and since then, many states have written restrictive provisions into their constitutions, starting in the late 18th century and continuing into the Jim Crow era. 67 For example, after the 15th Amendment granted the right to vote to black men, several states enacted laws to disenfranchise individuals with criminal convictions. 68 65F 6F 67F Throughout the years, collateral consequences proliferated in number and severity, affected more and more people, and became more difficult to mitigate. 69 Several such laws impose permanent disqualifications or limitations and provide no opportunities for individuals to avoid or escape their effects. 70 In her statement to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights (the Commission), Executive Director of the Collateral Consequences Resource Center Margaret Love wrote: 68F 69F Many [collateral consequences] consist of nothing more than a direction to an official decision-maker to conduct a criminal background check, frequently understood as an unspoken warning that it is safest to reject anyone with a criminal record. Others are implied by a requirement that eligibility for a benefit or opportunity depends upon a person having “good moral character,” a status considered unattainable after criminal conviction. 71 70F While most people agree that accountability matters for individuals who are convicted of crimes, many also believe that society must allow formerly incarcerated individuals a chance to 66 Gabriel Chin, The New Civil Death: Rethinking Punishment in the Era of Mass Conviction, 160 U. PA. L. REV. 1789, 1793-94, n.24 (2012), https://www.pennlawreview.com/print/old/G%20Chin.pdf. 67 Angela Behrens, Christopher Uggen, Jeff Manza, “Ballot Manipulation and the “Menace of Negro Domination”: Racial Threat and Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 1850-2002,” American Journal of Sociology, vol. 109, no. 3 (2003), at 563, https://users.cla.umn.edu/~uggen/Behrens_Uggen_Manza_ajs.pdf. 68 See Chapter 3, “The Racial Origins of Disenfranchisement Laws and Ongoing Disparities,” infra notes 730-62. 69 Love Statement at 2; Margaret Colgate Love, Jenny Roberts, and Cecelia Klingele, Collateral Consequences Of Criminal Conviction: Law, Policy And Practice, at 1-35 (West/NACDL, 2d ed. 2016); Gabriel Chin, “Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction,” Criminology, Criminal Justice, Law & Society, 2017, vol. 18, no. 3 (2017), at 2, https://ccjls.scholasticahq.com/article/2721-collateral-consequences-of-criminal-conviction. 70 Love Statement at 3; see also The Collateral Consequences Resource Center (CCRC), Forgiving and Forgetting in American Justice: A 50-State Guide to Expungement and Restoration of Rights, 2018, at 2, http://ccresourcecenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Forgiving-Forgetting-CCRC-Aug-2018.pdf (compiling and analyzing information about relief from collateral consequences to “facilitate a national conversation about how people who have been convicted of a crime may best regain their legal rights and social status.”). The CCRC report reviews the state mechanisms available for obtaining relief from collateral consequences, including record-sealing to expand job opportunities for people with criminal records, certificates of relief to lift occupational licensing requirements, and executive pardons to restore voting rights. Ibid. at 2-3, 7-11, 15-17, 22-24. The report’s authors note that many states are enacting reforms to alleviate the effects of collateral consequences, but acknowledge the limits of such reforms and the often lengthy or cumbersome processes involved for people seeking relief from collateral consequences. Ibid.at 2-3, 5-17, 22-24. 71 Love Statement at 3. CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW successfully reintegrate into society. 72 Vikrant Reddy, Senior Research Fellow at the Charles Koch Institute, explained in his testimony before the Commission in 2017: 71F [A]t a certain point the accountability portion ends and you have to help people reenter society. You have to do this for two reasons; the first is the obvious moral reason, but the second reason is really a hard-nosed question of public safety. More than 90% of the people who enter state prisons in this country will come out of those prisons and they will live next door to you and me, and we all have an interest in making sure that they are successfully reintegrated so they are not hurting people again. 73 72F Furthermore, some scholars believe that it is time to reexamine the collateral consequences that hinder the reintegration of individuals with criminal records, whenever doing so does not jeopardize public safety. 74 As John Malcolm, Vice President of the Institute for Constitutional Government and Director of the Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, wrote in his statement to the Commission: 73F It is not in anyone’s best interests to consign ex-offenders to a permanent secondclass status. Doing so will only lead to wasted lives, ruined families, and more crime. . . . Other collateral consequences, though, have a tenuous connection to public safety, appear to be more punitive in nature, and they certainly make it more difficult for an ex-offender to reintegrate into society. State and federal legislators should periodically review existing collateral consequences to ensure that they are truly necessary to protect public safety, not punitive in nature, and are reasonably related to the offense that was committed. Collateral consequences that do not fit these parameters should be amended or repealed so that ex-offenders who are earnestly working to lead lawful, prosperous lives and to provide for their families are not needlessly thrown off-course. 75 74F According to the National Inventory of Collateral Consequences of Conviction (NICCC) of the Council of State Governments, over 44,000 separate collateral consequences have been established through federal and state laws and regulations. 76 Additional collateral consequences may be imposed at the local level among the country’s estimated 3,000 county governments and nearly 75F 72 Briefing Transcript at 16 (statement of Vikrant Reddy, Senior Research Fellow, Charles Koch Institute). Ibid. 74 See, e.g., John G. Malcolm and John-Michael Seibler, Collateral Consequences: Protecting Public Safety or Encouraging Recidivism?, The Heritage Foundation, 2017, at 2, http://www.heritage.org/sites/default/files/201703/LM-200.pdf. 75 Malcolm Statement at 3-4. 76 CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” 73 13 36,000 municipal, town, and township governments. 77 Notably, the NICCC database does not track private entities that limit or deny opportunities to individuals with criminal records, including nongovernment employers and private educational and vocational program administrators. 78 Moreover, evaluations of candidates’ “character and fitness” for certain professions or job positions may encompass review of their criminal records. 79 For example, state bar associations use these evaluations to assess applicants’ suitability for practicing law, and federal agencies incorporate these evaluations into their hiring decisions for federal contractors. 80 76F 7F 78F 79F Figure 1 shows the categories of collateral consequences imposed by U.S. jurisdictions as specified in the NICCC database. 81 Among all the states, the District of Columbia, and American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Northern Mariana and Virgin Islands, employment (19,334) and occupational licensing (13,791) are the most common collateral consequences. 82 80F 81F 77 U.S. Census Bureau, 2012 Census Of Governments: Organization Component Preliminary Estimates, July 23, 2012, http://www2.census.gov/govs/cog/2012/formatted_prelim_counts_23jul2012_2.pdf; Amy P. Meek, Street Vendors, Taxicabs, and Exclusion Zones: The Impact of Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions at the Local Level, 75 OHIO ST. L.J. 1, 4-5 (2014), https://kb.osu.edu/bitstream/handle/1811/71617/OSLJ_V75N1_0001.pdf. 78 Joshua Kaiser, Revealing the Hidden Sentence: How to Add Transparency, Legitimacy, and Purpose to “Collateral” Punishment Policy, 10 HARV. L. & POL’Y REV. 123, 132-33 (2016). See also Chapter 2, “Occupational Licensing Barriers,” infra notes 318-70 (discussing the lawful discretion of private entities to deny occupational licenses to people with criminal records). 79 See, e.g., Aaron M. Clemens, Facing the Klieg Lights: Understanding the “Good Moral Character” Examination for Bar Applicants, 40 AKRON L. REV. 255, 278-80 (2007) (discussing how findings from character and fitness assessments may prevent people from entering the legal profession); U.S. Office of Personnel Management, “Memo for Chief Human Capital Officers,” May 15, 2013, at 1-4, https://chcoc.gov/sites/default/files/trans5585.pdf (discussing authority of federal agencies to include assessments of character and fitness, which may involve review of criminal records, as selection criteria for hiring federal contractors). 80 Clemens, Facing the Klieg Lights: Understanding the “Good Moral Character” Examination for Bar Applicants, supra note 79; U.S. Office of Personnel Management, “Memo for Chief Human Capital Officers,” supra note 79. See also National Conference of Bar Examiners, American Bar Association Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, Comprehensive Guide to Bar Admission Requirements (2018), at 5-6, http://www.ncbex.org/pubs/bar-admissions-guide/2018/mobile/index.html (revealing that in some jurisdictions, a felony conviction automatically disqualifies a candidate who wishes to practice law). Note that some jurisdictions will admit candidates with felony convictions after a specified waiting period or if they are pardoned, overcome a rebuttable presumption of lack of good moral character, or meet other requirements. Ibid. 81 CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” For a full explanation of each category, see the CSG National Inventory website, https://niccc.csgjusticecenter.org/. Ibid. 82 Ibid. CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW 15 Figure 1: Collateral Consequences by Category Immigration Government loans and grants Housing Government benefits Education Judicial rights Recreational licensure, including firearms General relief provision Family and domestic rights Government contracting and program participation Motor vehicle licensure Civil fines, liability, forfeiture, and property rights Registration, publication, and notification Political and civic participation Business licensure and participation Occupational and professional licensure and certification Employment 94 252 1,025 1,042 1,277 1,284 1,348 1,370 1,600 1,628 1,755 2,079 2,357 3,948 11,137 13,791 19,334 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 Collateral Consequences Imposed by U.S. States and Territories Source: Compiled by U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from CSG, National Inventory of Collateral Consequences of Conviction (NICCC), February 2019 Figure 2 shows the types of state and territorial collateral consequences in terms of whether they are mandatory, discretionary, or invoked by an authorized or required background check. 83 Approximately 18,073 collateral consequences are imposed automatically or because of a statutory mandate. 84 There are 13,567 collateral consequences that are discretionary (authorizing but not requiring a decision-maker to impose the consequence), 85 and 1,202 that are mandatory but may be waived by the appropriate decision-maker upon the affected individual’s request. 86 82 F 83F 84 F 85F Ibid. “General Relief” refers to a collateral consequence that cannot be lifted without a pardon, order, or reprieve from a government official. For example, the NICCC databases classifies Alabama’s statute authorizing the State Board of Pardons and Paroles to restore voting rights to people convicted of certain felonies as “General Relief.” See CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction: Consequence Details, Restoration of right to vote upon pardon (relief),” https://niccc.csgjusticecenter.org/database/entry/restoration-of-right-to-voteupon-pardon-relief/; see also Ala. Code § 15-22-36 (granting power to the State Board of Pardons and Paroles “to grant pardons and paroles and to remit fines and forfeitures” after a person’s conviction), § 17-3-31 (stating that a person who was disqualified from voting because of a conviction “and who has been pardoned, may be restored to citizenship with the right to vote by the State Board of Pardons and Paroles when specifically expressed in the pardon.”). 84 Ibid. (CSG). 85 American Bar Association, ABA Standards for Criminal Justice, Third Edition: Collateral Sanctions and Discretionary Disqualifications of Convicted Persons, supra note 54 at 1 (a “discretionary” collateral consequence is defined as “a penalty, disability or disadvantage, however denominated, that a civil court, administrative agency, or official is authorized but not required to impose on a person convicted of an offense on grounds related to the conviction.”) 86 CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” For a full explanation of collateral consequences that are discretionary by waiver, see Council of State Governments, “Discretion: Discretionary (waiver),” https://niccc.csgjusticecenter.org/help/ (last accessed Nov. 19, 2018). 83 Figure 2: Collateral Consequences by Type Discretionary by waiver 1,202 Varies 1,555 Background check 4,463 Discretionary 13,567 Mandatory/automatic 18,073 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 16,000 18,000 20,000 Number of Collateral Consequences Imposed by U.S. States and Territories Source: Compiled by U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from CSG, National Inventory of Collateral Consequences of Conviction (NICCC), February 2019 The American Bar Association has provided guidance on when discretionary collateral consequences should be imposed and advised: The legislature should prohibit discretionary disqualification of a convicted person from benefits or opportunities, including housing, employment, insurance, and occupational and professional licenses, permits and certifications, on grounds related to the conviction, unless engaging in the conduct underlying the conviction would provide a substantial basis for disqualification even if the person had not been convicted. 87 86F For example: [U]nder this Standard a public housing authority authorized by law to evict tenants who engage in drug trafficking could properly consider an individual’s conviction of drug trafficking as sufficient to establish the conduct warranting eviction. In this case, it is the conduct (engaging in drug trafficking) that may trigger eviction; anyone who engages in drug trafficking is subject to the penalty, not just those who have been convicted of drug trafficking. On the other hand, the penalty is not automatic but discretionary: the housing authority is authorized to evict, but is not required to evict. Conviction for drug trafficking will generally establish that the conduct took place, but eviction may or may not be imposed as a result. In other words, a criminal conviction for drug trafficking is neither necessary nor sufficient 87 American Bar Association, ABA Standards for Criminal Justice, Third Edition: Collateral Sanctions and Discretionary Disqualifications of Convicted Persons, supra note 54 at 41. CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW 17 to warrant eviction, and a convicted person whose conduct is established by the judgment is no better off and no worse off than if the same conduct was shown through civil or administrative proceedings or an admission. 88 87F The remainder of collateral consequences are triggered by criminal background checks or by other means such as disclosure requirements. 89 While criminal background checks are not necessarily considered collateral consequences themselves, they operate as a mechanism by which many collateral consequences are imposed, whether it be through an examination of government records or self-disclosure. 90 Under certain circumstances, an applicant must demonstrate “good moral character” or meet similar standards for a professional license, or a background check or disclosure may be explicitly required to determine an applicant’s criminal history. 91 8F 89F 90F Figure 3 shows state and territorial collateral consequences by the duration of the consequence. 92 About 77 percent (26,589) of all collateral consequences are permanent or last for an indefinite period, 14 percent (4,684) are time-limited or set for a specific term, 8 percent (2,721) vary in terms of duration, and 1 percent (429) are conditional upon circumstances enumerated in the statute. 93 91F 92F Figure 3: Collateral Consequences by Duration Conditional 429 Varies 2,721 Time-limited 4,684 Permanent/indefinite 26,589 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 Number of Collateral Consequences Imposed by U.S. States and Territories Source: Compiled by U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from CSG, National Inventory of Collateral Consequences of Conviction (NICCC), February 2019 88 Ibid. at 42. CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” 90 See Jenny Roberts, Why Misdemeanors Matter: Defining Effective Advocacy in the Lower Criminal Courts, 45 U.C. DAVIS L. REV. 277, 287-88 (2011) (pointing out that “[i]ncreased access to criminal records coincides with a recent, and exponential, growth in the collateral consequences of criminal convictions” and “employers and landlords can now quickly search criminal records, so that even when there is no legal barrier to housing or employment for the individual, there is an effective bar.”). 91 See supra notes 79-80 (discussing character and fitness assessments). 92 CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” 93 Ibid. 89 Figure 4 shows state and territorial collateral consequences by the specific type of triggering offense. 94 Among approximately 44,631 collateral consequences, nearly 40 percent (17,436) are triggered by any felony conviction, and about 19 percent (8,294) are triggered by any misdemeanor. 95 93 F 94F Figure 4: Collateral Consequences by Triggering Offense Election-related offenses Recreactional licensing offenses Child support offenses Weapons offenses Public corruption offenses Motor vehicle offenses Crimes of moral turpitude Sex offenses Controlled substances offenses Crimes of violence, including "person offenses" Any misdemeanor Other Crimes involving fraud, mispresentation, or money… Any felony 0 340 911 913 1,677 2,454 3,111 4,226 5,013 6,312 6,389 8,294 8,824 11,001 17,436 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,00012,00014,00016,00018,00020,000 Number of Collateral Consequences Imposed by U.S. States and Territories Source: Compiled by U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from CSG, National Inventory of Collateral Consequences of Conviction (NICCC), February 2019 Demographics of the Corrections Population As of December 2016, about 6.6 million people were under correctional supervision nationwide. 96 Approximately 1.5 million of those individuals were housed in prisons, 0.7 million were housed in jails, and about 4.5 million were under community supervision, on parole, or on probation. 97 Jails are operated and maintained by local jurisdictions (cities, counties, or municipalities) and typically serve as short-term holding facilities for newly arrested individuals, people awaiting sentencing, or people serving a shorter sentence (less than one year). 98 Prisons are institutional facilities that fall under state or federal jurisdiction and confine individuals serving longer 95F 96F 97F 94 Ibid. Ibid. 96 Kaeble & Cowhig, Correctional Populations in the United States, 2016, supra note 21 at 2. 97 Ibid. 98 Prison Fellowship, “FAQ: Jail vs. Prison,” https://www.prisonfellowship.org/resources/training-resources/inprison/faq-jail-prison/ (last accessed Oct. 8, 2018). 95 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW sentences. 99 Typically, people convicted of a crime under state law will serve time in a state prison, and people convicted of a federal crime will serve time in a federal prison. 100 In addition, people may be placed under probation and parole, which are alternatives or extensions to incarceration. 101 Probation is a sentence where an individual is ultimately placed under supervision in the community in lieu of incarceration, and parole is a conditional release from jail or prison to allow an individual to serve the remainder of their sentence under community supervision. 102 98F 9F 10F 10F People of color are more likely to be arrested, convicted, and sentenced more harshly than are white people, which amplifies the impact of collateral consequences on this population.103 Statistics illustrating the disproportionate overrepresentation of people of color in the criminal legal system are summarized below: 102F In 2017, black people represented 13.4 percent of the U.S. population but 27.2 percent of all arrests by law enforcement, whereas white people represented about 76.6 percent of the population and 68.9 percent of arrests. 104 For certain offenses, the disparities were particularly striking: black people represented 31.8 percent of arrests for disorderly conduct and 40.5 of arrests for curfew and loitering violations, whereas white people represented 62.9 percent and 56.0 percent of arrests for such offenses, respectively. 105 Despite accounting for 18.1 percent of the population, people identifying as Hispanic or Latino represented 20.8 percent of arrests for curfew and loitering violations and 19.8 percent of drug abuse offenses. 106 103F 104F 105F 99 Ibid. Ibid. 101 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, “FAQ Detail: What is the Difference Between Probation and Parole?,” supra note 50. 102 Ibid. See also definitions of “Probation” and “Parole” under Black’s Legal Dictionary, supra notes 50, 52. 103 The Sentencing Project, Report of The Sentencing Project to the United Nations Human Rights Committee Regarding Racial Disparities in the United States Criminal Justice System, 2013, at 1, https://nicic.gov/reportsentencing-project-united-nations-human-rights-committee-regarding-racial-disparities-united; Darren Wheelock, “Collateral Consequences and Racial Inequality: Felon Status Restrictions as a System of Disadvantage,” Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, vol. 21, no. 1 (2005): 83, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238431800_Collateral_Consequences_and_Racial_Inequality_Felon_Statu s_Restrictions_as_a_System_of_Disadvantage; American Civil Liberties Union, “Racial Disparities in Sentencing,” Written Statement submitted to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Oct. 27, 2014, https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/files/assets/141027_iachr_racial_disparities_aclu_submission_0.pdf. 104 U.S. Census Bureau, “Quick Facts: Population Estimates,” July 1, 2017, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/US/PST045217; FBI, Uniform Crime Reports, “Arrests by Race and Ethnicity, 2017,” https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s/2017/crime-in-the-u.s.-2017/topic-pages/tables/table-43. 105 FBI, Uniform Crime Reports, “Arrests by Race and Ethnicity, 2017,” https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-theu.s/2017/crime-in-the-u.s.-2017/topic-pages/tables/table-43. 106 U.S. Census Bureau, “Quick Facts: Population Estimates,” July 1, 2017, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/US/PST045217; FBI, Uniform Crime Reports, “Arrests by Race and Ethnicity, 2017,” https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s/2017/crime-in-the-u.s.-2017/topic-pages/tables/table-43. Note that this report follows the U.S. Census Bureau rule, which “defines ‘Hispanic or Latino’ as a person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin regardless of race.” See U.S. 100 19 A study focused on California found that although adult arrests overall declined from 2008 to 2017, Latino people were the only racial/ethnic group to experience an increase in share of arrests for both misdemeanors and felonies. 107 And a Denver Post analysis found that Latino juveniles represent 41 percent of the city’s 15- to-17-year-old population but account for 67 percent of the curfew violation arrests among that population. 108 Among male prisoners in 2016, 39.0 percent were white, 41.3 percent were black, 16.6 percent were Latino, 1.4 percent were Native American, 0.6 percent were Asian, and 0.2 percent were Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander. 109 Among female prisoners in 2016, 61.0 percent were white, 23.9 percent were black, 10.6 were Latina, 2.6 were Native American, 0.6 percent were Asian, and 0.4 percent were Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander. 110 In 2016, black people were nearly six times as likely and Latino people were approximately three times as likely to be incarcerated as white people. 111 About 60.0 percent of male prisoners were men of color. 112 In federal prisons, almost a third of inmates are Latino. 113 In 2016, black men between the ages of 18 and 19 were 11.8 times as likely to be imprisoned as white men of the same age group. 114 Among adults on probation in 2016, 55 percent were white, 28 percent were black, and 14 percent were Latino. 115 The disparities were similar among adults on parole in 2016: 45 percent were white, 38 percent were black, and 15 percent were Latino. 116 106F 107F 108F 109F 10F 1F 12F 13F 14F 15F People with mental health disorders are also disproportionately incarcerated in the United States; the Department of Justice estimates that at least half of incarcerated persons have a mental health diagnosis. 117 Statistics detailing the entanglement of people with mental health disorders or other disabilities with the criminal legal system are summarized below: 16F Census Bureau, “Hispanic Origin,” https://www.census.gov/topics/population/hispanic-origin/about.html (last accessed Dec. 12, 2018). This report uses the term “Latino,” unless the source instructs otherwise. 107 Sonja Diaz and Dora Armenta, Disrupting the Black-White Paradigm: Latino Arrests in California, Latinos Policy & Politics Initiative, 2018, at 3, https://latino.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/CJ-Report-10.8.1812.pdf. 108 Andrew Kennedy, “‘It’s a dragnet’: Denver police far more likely to cite Latino kids for violating curfew,” Denver Post, Nov. 18, 2018, https://www.denverpost.com/2018/11/18/denver-police-latinos-curfew-violations/. 109 E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 7. 110 Ibid. 111 Ibid. at 5, 8. 112 Ibid. at 7. 113 U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons, “Inmate Ethnicity,” Nov. 24, 2018, https://www.bop.gov/about/statistics/statistics_inmate_ethnicity.jsp (last accessed Feb. 11, 2019). 114 E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 13. 115 Danielle Kaeble, Probation and Parole in the United States, 2016, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2018, at 17, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/ppus16.pdf. 116 Ibid. at 23. 117 Doris J. James and Lauren E. Glaze, Special Report: Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006, at 1, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/mhppji.pdf. CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW Approximately 56 percent of state prisoners, 45 percent of federal prisoners, and 64 percent of jail inmates suffer from a mental health disorder. 118 Incarcerated individuals are three to five times more likely to meet criteria for serious psychological distress than adults in the general population. 119 People who have been arrested and those on probation or parole are also more likely to meet such criteria than adults with no criminal justice involvement. 120 Incarcerated women experience mental health disorders at higher rates than incarcerated men; 65.8 percent of female prisoners and 67.9 percent of female jail inmates report a history of mental health problems, compared to 34.8 percent of male prisoners and 40.8 percent of male jail inmates. 121 Incarcerated people are twice as likely to have an intellectual disability, four to six times more likely to have a cognitive disability, twice as likely to have a mobility disorder, three to four times more likely to be blind or have a vision impairment, and two to three times more likely to have a hearing impairment than the general population. 122 53 percent of state prisoners and 45 percent of federal prisoners report having a substance use disorder, and 70 percent of prisoners have a history of drug use. 123 17F 18F 19F 120F 12F 12F The Department of Justice has also found that many incarcerated individuals who report at least one disability are people of color. 124 Because people with disabilities have a more limited range of 123F 118 Ibid. Jennifer Bronson & Marcus Berzofsky, Indicators of Mental Health Problems Reported by Prisoners and Jail Inmates, 2011-12, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2017, at 3, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/imhprpji1112.pdf. 120 Ibid. 121 Ibid. at 4. See also Joint Statement of Disability Advocates (including the American Civil Liberties Union, Amplifying Voices of Inmates with Disabilities (AVID) Prison Project of Disability Rights Washington, Center for Public Representation, DC Jail & Prison Advocacy Project, University Legal Services, Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund, Inc., Equal Rights Center, Helping Educate to Advance the Rights of Deaf communities, Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, National Alliance on Mental Illness, National Association of the Deaf, National Disability Rights Network, National Federation of the Blind, Prison Law Office, Rooted in Rights, Rosen Bien Galvan & Grunfeld LLP, The Arc, Who Speaks for Me?) to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Washington, D.C., May 19, 2017, at 1-2 [hereinafter Joint Statement, Disability Advocates]. 122 Joint Statement, Disability Advocates, at 3-4; Jennifer Bronson & Marcus Berzofsky, Disabilities Among Prison and Jail Inmates, 2011-2012, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015, at 3, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/dpji1112.pdf; Leigh Ann Davis, People with Intellectual Disability in the Criminal Justice System: Victims & Suspects, The Arc, 2009, http://www.thearc.org/page.aspx?pid=2458. 123 Joint Statement, Disability Advocates, at 3; Christopher J. Mumola & Jennifer C. Karberg, Drug Use and Dependence, State and Federal Prisoners, 2004, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006, at 7, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/dudsfp04.pdf. 124 Bronson & Berzofsky, Disabilities Among Prison and Jail Inmates, 2011-2012, supra note 122 at 5 (finding that 37 percent of white prisoners, 26 percent of black prisoners, and 42 percent of prisoners of two or more races reported at least one disability; and that 40 percent of white jail inmates, 35 percent of black jail inmates, and 55 percent of jail inmates of two or more races reported at least one disability). Note that the Commission is also investigating the issue of students of color with disabilities who are subjected to school discipline policies that may lead to imprisonment. See U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “U.S. Commission on Civil Rights to Hold Public Briefing: The School-to-Prison Pipeline: The Intersections of Students of Color with Disabilities,” Dec. 6, 2017, https://www.usccr.gov/press/2017/12-06-PR.pdf (announcing briefing for report forthcoming in 2019). 119 21 employment opportunities available to them, these disabilities may exacerbate the difficulties faced by people reentering society after criminal convictions. 125 124F Researchers at the University of California Los Angeles School of Law have also reported that the incarceration rate of lesbian, gay, and bisexual men and women is more than three times that of the U.S. adult population. 126 Statistics reflecting the disproportionate involvement of LGBT individuals with the criminal legal system are summarized below: 125F Although 4.1 percent of American adults identify as LGBT, 127 9.3 percent of male prisoners and 42.1 percent of female prisoners identified as LGBT or reported having same-sex encounters before incarceration. 128 6.2 percent of men in jails and 35.7 percent of women in jails identified as LGBT or reported having same-sex encounters before incarceration. 129 Twenty-one percent of transgender women and 10 percent of transgender men report that they have spent time in jail or prison. 130 126 F 127F 128F 129F The demographic characteristics of the corrections population confirm that people of color, individuals with disabilities, and LGBT individuals are disproportionately represented in the criminal justice system and hindered by the impact of collateral consequences. Federal Statutes that Impose Collateral Consequences Numerous federal statutes impose collateral consequences upon conviction for federal or state crimes, including felonies and other types of convictions. These laws can impact an individual’s civic engagement and economic opportunity, including: 131 130F The right to vote. While the 14th, 15th, 19th, and 26th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution prohibit disenfranchisement on the basis of race, gender, and age, 132 and the Voting Rights Act prohibits discrimination in voting on the bases of race, national origin, 13F See Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Employment Opportunities,” infra notes 222-409. Ilan H. Meyer, Andrew R. Flores, Lara Stemple, Adam P. Romero, Bianca D. M. Wilson, Jody L. Herman, “Incarceration Rates and Traits of Sexual Minorities in the United States: National Inmate Survey, 2011-2012,” Am. Journal of Public Health, vol. 107, no. 2 (2017): 234-40. 127 Gary J. Gates, “In US, More Adults Identifying as LGBT,” Gallup, Jan. 11, 2017, http://www.gallup.com/poll/201731/lgbt-identification-rises.aspx; Naomi Goldberg, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 2 [hereinafter Goldberg Statement]. 128 Meyer et al., “Incarceration Rates and Traits of Sexual Minorities in the United States: National Inmate Survey, 2011-2012,” supra note 126 at 236. 129 Ibid. 130 Jaime M. Grant, Lisa A. Mottet, Justin Tanis, Jack Harrison, Jody L. Herman, Mara Keisling, Injustice at Every Turn: A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, National Center for Transgender Equality and National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, 2011, at 163, http://www.transequality.org/sites/default/files/docs/resources/NTDS_Report.pdf; Goldberg Statement at 2. 131 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences Upon Conviction, supra note 12. 132 U.S. CONST. amend. XIV; U.S. CONST. amend. XV; U.S. CONST. amend. XIX; U.S. CONST. amend. XXVI. 125 126 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW and disability status (among other characteristics), 133 the U.S. Constitution dictates that states determine the qualifications for voting in federal elections. 134 Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment grants power to the states to deny the right to vote “for participation in rebellion, or other crime.” 135 According to the Supreme Court, this clause permits states to curtail the voting rights of people with felony convictions. 136 Therefore, the effect of a criminal conviction on an individual’s right to vote will vary from state to state. For further discussion of state laws governing disenfranchisement of persons with felony convictions, as well as related federal court decisions, see infra Chapter 3, “The Current Landscape of State Felony Disenfranchisement Laws.” 137 The right to serve on a federal jury. Federal law prohibits individuals from serving on a federal jury if they have been charged with or convicted of a crime punishable by incarceration for more than one year in state or federal court and have not had their civil rights restored. 138 Although some states automatically restore a person’s civil rights after completion of the person’s sentence, this automatic restoration does not apply to federal jury service. 139 The right to serve on a federal jury may be restored only through a pardon or through some affirmative government action. 140 132F 13F 134F 135F 136F 137F 138 F 139F 133 Voting Rights Act, 52 U.S.C. § 10301 (Section 2, prohibiting discriminatory denial or abridgement of the right to vote). 134 U.S. CONST. art. I § 2, c. 1; U.S. CONST. art. I § 4; U.S. CONST. art. II § 1, c. 2; U.S. CONST. amend. XVII; U.S. CONST. amend. XXIII (for District of Columbia). 135 U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 2. 136 Richardson v. Ramirez, 418 U.S. 24, 54-55 (1974). 137 See Discussion and Sources at infra notes 634-44, Table 1 (discussing state laws) and 757-804 (discussing related federal cases). Note also that federal lawmakers have proposed federal legislation that would require more uniformity among state laws governing felony disenfranchisement. See Chapter 3, “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra notes 805-889. 138 28 U.S.C. § 1865(b)(5). See also Black’s Law Dictionary, Civil Right, supra note 56 (defining a civil right as “[a]ny of the individual rights of personal liberty guaranteed by the Bill of Rights and by the 13th, 14th, 15th, and 19th Amendments, as well as by legislation such as the Voting Rights Act,” especially “the right to vote, the right of due process, and the right of equal protection under the law.”). The exercise of certain civil rights such as voting, serving on a jury, and “participating in or enjoying any benefit, service, privilege, program, facility or activity provided or administered by any State or subdivision thereof” constitutes federally protected activity, the interference with which is prohibited under federal law. See 18 U.S.C. § 245(b). However, the latter statute “does not in terms confer substantive rights; it is solely a criminal statute permitting federal prosecution for interference” with these rights, and it does not proscribe “the ordered functioning of state legal processes, whatever the motivation.” People v. State of N. Y., 424 F.2d 697, 703-03 (2d Cir. 1970), cert. denied 90 S. Ct. 1839 (1970). 139 See generally U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences Upon Conviction, supra note 12 at 1-2, 13. See also Chapter 3, “Restoration of Civil Rights,” infra notes 798-882. 140 United States v. Hefner, 842 F.2d 731, 732-33 (4th Cir. 1988) (concluding that “some affirmative act recognized in law must first take place to restore one’s civil rights”). See also U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences upon Conviction, supra note 12 at 13-14 (citing Hefner to assert that “the automatic restoration of civil rights that occurs in many states upon completion of sentence will not operate to restore the right to serve on a federal jury.”). 23 The right to hold federal office or employment. While the U.S. Constitution does not prohibit individuals with criminal convictions from holding federal office, many statutes render individuals with certain types of convictions ineligible for federal office. 141 Service in the armed forces. Federal law prohibits individuals with felony convictions from enlisting in any service of the armed forces unless they receive exceptions.142 Furthermore, individuals convicted of certain offenses can be required to forfeit “accrued or future gratuitous benefits” from military service. 143 Occupational restrictions. At sentencing, a federal court may impose certain occupational restrictions as a condition of probation or supervised release when there is a “reasonably direct relationship” between the occupation and the offense, in the interest of upholding public safety. 144 Certain convictions, particularly for drug offenses, can result in ineligibility for numerous federal occupational licenses. 145 While not all convictions will result in the automatic loss of a federal license, federal agencies may consider a conviction when reviewing a license application. 146 o Banking, commodities, and securities. Certain criminal convictions involving dishonesty can disqualify individuals from working for or with a federally insured depository institution. 147 In certain cases, this disqualification can be waived after a period of 10 years. 148 The Commodities Futures Trading Commission and the 140F 14F 142F 143 F 14F 145F 146F 147F 141 See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 2381 (ineligibility due to a conviction of treason); 18 U.S.C. § 201(b) (a federal court may order a disqualification from federal office as a result of a conviction of bribing a public official or accepting a bribe); 5 U.S.C. § 7313 (removal from federal or District of Columbia office and ineligibility for employment by U.S. or District of Columbia for five years upon conviction from being involved in riots or civil disorder, or any offense related to a riot or civil disorder); 18 U.S.C. § 1901 (based on a conviction of a collecting or disbursing officer engaged in trading in public funds or property); 18 U.S.C. § 2071 (concealing, removing, falsifying, or mutilating public documents); 18 U.S.C. §§ 2385, 2387 (ineligibility for federal employment for five years from a conviction of overthrowing or conspiring to overthrow the federal government by force or violence, or interfering with the U.S. armed forces); 25 U.S.C. § 2704 (b)(5)(A) (ineligibility from National Indian Gaming Commission because of a felony conviction or gaming offense). 142 10 U.S.C. § 504. 143 These offenses include mutiny, treason, sabotage, or rendering assistance to an enemy of the U.S. or its allies. See 38 U.S.C. § 6104(a). 144 18 U.S.C. § 3563(b)(5). 145 7 U.S.C. § 85 (grain inspector license); 18 U.S.C. § 843(d) (license to import, manufacture, or deal in explosives or permit the use of explosives); 19 U.S.C. § 1641(d)(1)(B) (customs broker license or permit); 22 U.S.C. § 2778(g)(4) (license to export defense articles and services); 46 U.S.C. § 7503 (merchant mariner’s document, license or certificate of registry); 49 U.S.C. § 20135(b)(4) and 49 C.F.R. §§ 240.111, 240.115 (locomotive engineer/operator license); 49 U.S.C. §§ 44709(b)(2) and 44710(b) (airman certificates); 14 C.F.R. § 61.15 (pilot, flight instructor, or ground instructor certifications); see also U.S.S.G. §5F1.6 (describing statutes that deny federal benefits, which in this context are defined as “any grant, contract, loan, professional license, or commercial license provided by an agency of the United States or by appropriated funds of the United States,” to people convicted of certain drug offenses under certain circumstances). 146 See, e.g., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences Upon Conviction, supra note 12 at 5. 147 12 U.S.C. §§ 1818(e), 1818(g); 12 U.S.C. § 1829(a). 148 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. § 1829(a). CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW Securities and Exchange Commission may also impose licensing restrictions on individuals with certain criminal offenses dating back within a 10-year period. 149 o Labor organizations. Certain criminal convictions will disqualify individuals from serving (in many capacities) in labor organizations or employee benefit plans for a period of time, determined by the sentencing court. 150 o Participation in federal contracts or programs. Individuals with certain criminal convictions are prohibited from working in certain capacities for a defense contractor or subcontractor that is receiving federal contracts for a minimum of five years (with an exception for interests of “national security”), and from participating in a federal contract or program (both procurement and non-procurement programs). 151 Exclusions from participation in federal or state health care programs or in the drug industry on a temporary or permanent basis also exist for certain types of convictions. 152 Federal benefits. Individuals with certain criminal convictions may become ineligible to receive certain federal benefits, particularly for drug-related offenses. 153 o Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. Under TANF, the federal government provides grants to states to provide financial assistance to qualifying low-income families.154 Under SNAP, the federal government appropriates funding to states for qualifying low-income households to purchase food. 155 Both TANF financial assistance and SNAP family nutrition benefits are permanently restricted if an individual has a conviction that involves the possession, use, or distribution of drugs, unless a state elects to limit or revoke the restriction. 156 These restrictions particularly impact people of color, not only because people of color are disproportionately convicted and incarcerated, 157 but also because they are more likely to meet the poverty threshold qualifying them for such public benefits. 158 Most TANF recipients are black or Latino: in 2016, 29.1 percent of TANF recipients were black and 36.9 percent were Latino, 148F 149F 150F 15F 152F 153F 154F 15F 156F 157F 149 7 U.S.C. § 12a(2)-(3) (commodities dealer registration); 15 U.S.C. §§ 80b-3(e)-(f) (investment adviser registration); 15 U.S.C. §§ 78o(b)(4)(B), (b)(6)(A) (registration of brokers and dealers). 150 29 U.S.C. § 504 (labor organizations); 29 U.S.C. § 1111 (employee benefit plans). 151 10 U.S.C. § 2408(a) (defense contractor roles). 152 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7 (Medicare and state health care programs); 21 U.S.C. § 335a (debarment from submitting an FDA “drug product” application). 153 21 U.S.C. §§ 862, 862a. 154 42 U.S.C. §§ 603, 604. 155 7 U.S.C. §§ 2012, 2013. 156 21 U.S.C. § 862a. See also Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Access to Public Benefits,” infra notes 526-624 for information about states that have limited or revoked the restriction on TANF and SNAP benefits. 157 See “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130. 158 See U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Services, Office of Family Assistance, Characteristics and Financial Circumstances of TANF Recipients: Fiscal Year 2016, 2017, at Table 10, https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/ofa/fy16_characteristics.pdf; see also Chapter 2, “The Disproportionate Impact of Lifetime Drug Bans for Public Benefits,” infra notes 563-94. 25 whereas 27.6 percent of recipients were white. 159 Similarly, in 2015, 25.8 percent of SNAP households were black and 11.4 percent were Latino, whereas 39.3 percent of households were white. 160 Moreover, because people with criminal convictions face barriers to employment, they are more likely to need financial assistance to survive and avoid recidivism; in this way, the bans on TANF and SNAP may further impair returning citizens’ successful reintegration into society. 161 o Financial aid. A person convicted of any federal or state law involving the possession or sale of drugs “for conduct that occurred during a period of enrollment for which” the person was receiving federal aid is ineligible to receive federal student grants, loans, or work assistance for higher education. 162 The period of ineligibility varies according to whether the person has committed a first, second, or third offense. 163 An individual can regain eligibility by completing a drug rehabilitation program with certain criteria and passing “two unannounced drug tests,” or if the conviction is set aside or reversed. 164 The Department of Education advises every applicant to submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) regardless of eligibility “because most schools and states use FAFSA information to award nonfederal aid.”165 Research from the National Poverty Center revealed that students of color were more likely to need federal grants, but also more likely to be convicted of the disqualifying drug offenses. 166 Moreover, according to a survey by the Center for Community Alternatives, 66 percent of public and private colleges collect criminal justice information on applicants, and most use this information in the admissions—rather than financial aid—process. 167 Citing the disproportionate involvement of people of color with the criminal justice system, the Department of Education released a report advising postsecondary institutions to limit their consideration of applicants’ criminal 158F 159F 160 F 16F 162F 163F 164F 165 F 16F U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Services, Office of Family Assistance, Characteristics and Financial Circumstances of TANF Recipients: Fiscal Year 2016, supra note 158. 160 U.S. Dep’t of Agriculture, Characteristics of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Households: Fiscal Year 2015, 2016, at Table A.21, https://fns-prod.azureedge.net/sites/default/files/ops/Characteristics2015.pdf. Note that 12.5 percent of SNAP households were described as “race unknown.” Ibid. See also Chapter 2, “The Disproportionate Impact of Lifetime Drug Bans for Public Benefits,” infra notes 563-94. 161 See Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Employment Opportunities,” infra notes 222-409. 162 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r)(1). 163 Id. 164 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r)(2). 165 U.S. Dep’t of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “Students with criminal convictions have limited eligibility for federal student aid,” https://studentaid.ed.gov/sa/eligibility/criminal-convictions (last accessed Nov. 20, 2018). See also Free Application for Federal Student Aid, “Question 23,” https://fafsa.ed.gov/fotw1819/help/fotw12b.htm (indicating that the FAFSA form, which postsecondary schools use to determine federal and nonfederal aid, asks all applicants about prior drug convictions) (last accessed Nov. 20, 2018). 166 Darren Wheelock and Christopher Uggen, Race, Poverty and Punishment: The Impact Of Criminal Sanctions On Racial, Ethnic, and Socioeconomic Inequality, National Poverty Center, 2006, at 21, http://www.npc.umich.edu/publications/workingpaper06/paper15/working_paper06-15.pdf. 167 Center for Community Alternatives, The Use of Criminal History Records in College Admissions Reconsidered, 2010, at 8, 9, http://communityalternatives.org/pdf/Reconsidered-criminal-hist-recs-in-college-admissions.pdf. 159 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW backgrounds during the admissions process, in order to expand educational opportunities for people of color and people with criminal records. 168 For more discussion of how criminal records affect access to financial aid, see infra Chapter 2, “Barriers to Financial Aid for Higher Education.” For discussion of financial aid restrictions applicable to in-prison educational programs, see infra Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Employment Opportunities.” o Low-income housing assistance. Individuals with convictions related to the manufacturing or producing of methamphetamine on the premises of federally subsidized housing are permanently restricted from occupying such housing and receiving low-income housing assistance, as are individuals subject to a lifetime registration requirement under a state sex offender registration program. 169 For more discussion of housing-related barriers, see infra Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Housing Opportunities.” o Social Security and/or Disability Insurance. Individuals with certain criminal convictions are restricted from receiving federal benefits such as Social Security or disability while incarcerated; certain individuals or their beneficiaries also may be barred from receiving federal benefits if convicted of certain offenses related to national security or from receiving workers compensation benefits if convicted of fraud-related crimes. 170 o Access to a passport. Additionally, the passport of an individual with certain criminal convictions may be revoked or denied during or after imprisonment, parole, or supervised release, except if emergency circumstances or humanitarian reasons exist.171 Immigration. There are immigration consequences for noncitizens of the U.S. with certain criminal convictions, 172 including deportation. 173 The Supreme Court describes deportation as “a particularly severe ‘penalty,’” that is “uniquely difficult to classify as either a direct or a collateral consequence.” 174 Deportation severely restricts reentry by relocating the individual to an often unfamiliar country and severing ties with family and community. 175 Immigrants may be deported upon conviction of various offenses, 167F 168F 169F 170F 17F 172F 173F 174F U.S. Dep’t of Education, Beyond the Box: Increasing Access to Higher Education for Justice-Involved Individuals, 2016, at 1, 4-5, 18, https://www2.ed.gov/documents/beyond-the-box/guidance.pdf. 169 42 U.S.C. § 1437n(f); 42 U.S.C. § 13663. 170 42 U.S.C. § 402(x) (limiting payments to prisoners, certain other inmates of publicly funded institutions, fugitives, probationers, and parolees); 5 U.S.C. § 8312 (prohibiting payment of annuities or retired pay for certain convictions); 42 U.S.C. § 402(u)(1) (limiting or eliminating old-age and survivors insurance benefit payments for conviction of “subversive activities”); 5 U.S.C. § 8148 (disallowing workers’ compensation benefit payments for incarcerated individuals convicted of certain fraud-related crimes). 171 22 U.S.C. § 2714 (denying passports to certain convicted drug traffickers). 172 8 U.S.C. §§ 1182(a)(2)(A), (B); 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a); 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101(f)(3), (5), (7), (8); 8 U.S.C. 1427(a). 173 Exec. Order No. 13,768, 82 Fed. Reg. 8799 (Jan. 25, 2017); 8 U.S.C. § 1227. 174 Padilla, 559 U.S. at 365. 175 Vázquez, Perpetuating the Marginalization of Latinos: A Collateral Consequence of the Incorporation of Immigration Law into the Criminal Justice System, supra note 27 at 666-71. 168 27 including crimes “involving moral turpitude,” which are defined broadly. 176 Immigrants may also be deported for drug possession and certain firearms offenses, and for the status of being a “drug abuser or addict,” or becoming “a public charge from causes not affirmatively shown to have arisen since entry.” 177 Registration and notification. Federal law sets minimum national standards for state sex offender registration programs and dictates the types of offenses that trigger registration requirements, the duration of the registration requirement, and the frequency by which an individual would need to verify his or her place of residence with state law enforcement. 178 Possessing a firearm. Individuals with criminal convictions that resulted in imprisonment for over a year are prohibited from possessing a firearm. 179 However, the right to possess a firearm can be restored through a formal pardon, or if the individual “has had civil rights restored.” 180 175 F 176F 17F 178F 179 F 176 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a); Sara Salem, Should They Stay or Should They Go: Rethinking the Use of Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude in Immigration Law, 70 FLA. L. REV. 225, 227-28 (2018). See also U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Office of the Att’y Gen., Matter of Silva-Trevino, 26 I. & N. Dec. 550, 552 (2015) (vacating a 2008 Attorney General opinion on how immigration judges should identify convictions for crimes of moral turpitude because circuit courts disagreed about the three-step process for determining such convictions). The Immigrant Legal Resource Center has interpreted “crimes involving moral turpitude” as offenses committed with “bad intent,” citing as examples fraud, theft (with intent to permanently deprive the owner of possession), assault or battery (if the statute requires intent to cause “great physical injury”), and some offenses involving “lewd or reckless intent.” See Rose Cahn, Clean Slate for Immigrants: Reducing Felonies to Misdemeanors: Penal Code § 18.5, Prop 47, Penal Code § 17(b)(3), and Prop 64, Immigrant Legal Resource Center, 2018, at 4, https://www.ilrc.org/sites/default/files/resources/clean_slate_for_immigrants-rc-20180201.pdf. See also FloresMolina v. Sessions, 850 F.3d 1150, 1163 (10th Cir. 2017) (identifying “a broader pattern visible” in cases addressing fraud or deception as crimes involving moral turpitude, defining such crimes as “explicitly” encompassing “‘fraudulent intent’ (or some variation thereof)”). 177 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a). 178 See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 4042(c) (notification requirements for sex offenders); 18 U.S.C. §§ 3563(a)(8) (probation registration requirements for sex offenders). 179 18 U.S.C. § 922(d)(1). 180 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(20) (stating that any “conviction which has been expunged, or set aside or for which a person has been pardoned or has had civil rights restored shall not be considered a conviction for purposes of this chapter, unless such pardon, expungement, or restoration of civil rights expressly provides that the person may not ship, transport, possess, or receive firearms.”). See also U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences upon Conviction, supra note 12 at 15-20. This document explains that: The phrase ‘has had civil rights restored’ is not monolithic but varies in practical effect from state to state depending on the laws regarding loss and restoration of rights . . . because of the considerable variation among the states concerning the loss and restoration of civil rights and firearms privileges, the determination whether a person convicted of a state offense is subject to the federal law prohibiting possession of firearms is complex and requires a painstaking consideration of both state and federal law. While the Supreme Court has answered some of the significant questions of interpretation concerning the federal statute, the variation among the lower courts in addressing issues that have not been definitively settled further underscores the intricacy of the interplay between federal and state law in this area. CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW State and Local Statutes that Impose Collateral Consequences State and local laws may also impose added restrictions for individuals with criminal records. 181 Laws can differ drastically across different states, counties, and other local jurisdictions in terms of the type of collateral consequence (i.e., voting, jury service, occupational licensing), how the law is applied (i.e., mandatory versus discretionary), the length of time enforced (i.e., permanent, temporary, conditional), and which types of crimes, criminal activity, or sentences trigger the collateral consequence (i.e., arrests versus convictions; felonies versus misdemeanors; incarceration, probation, or parole). 182 Currently, states and local jurisdictions impose thousands of collateral consequences, which are “scattered throughout state and federal statutory and regulatory codes and can be unknown even to those responsible for their administration and enforcement,” making it difficult to identify all of the penalties. 183 180F 18F 182F The NICCC, a project initially developed by the American Bar Association and funded by the U.S. Department of Justice, has created a publicly searchable database of all collateral consequences in every U.S. jurisdiction, to make it easier to identify these collateral consequences. 184 While this website was created solely for educational and informational purposes, 185 it can potentially inform judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and ultimately those who are facing conviction about the collateral consequences attached to certain types of convictions. 183F 184F Regarding voting rights, federal courts have held that under the U.S constitution, state law governs voter eligibility, enabling states to restrict access to the ballot. 186 Twenty-two states prohibit people convicted of a felony from voting until they complete their sentence, which includes parole or probation. 187 Twelve states disenfranchise people with felony convictions indefinitely or until the governor pardons them, or they enforce an extra waiting period (which may include parole or probation) before restoring their voting rights. 188 For further discussion of state laws governing 185F 186F 187F See, e.g., Chapter 2, “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Access to Public Benefits,” infra notes 524-624 (discussing state laws prohibiting or allowing people with felony drug convictions to receive certain public benefits and financial aid); Chapter 3, “The Current Landscape of State Felony Disenfranchisement Laws,” infra notes 63574 (discussing state laws prohibiting or allowing people with felony convictions to vote). See also CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction” (containing searchable database of state laws imposing collateral consequences). 182 Love Statement at 3. See also CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction” (containing searchable database of state laws imposing collateral consequences and categorizing by type of offense, duration, and application (i.e., mandatory versus discretionary)). 183 CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” 184 Ibid. 185 Ibid. 186 See Chapter 3, “Voting,” infra notes 625-889. 187 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” 2018, http://www.ncsl.org/research/electionsand-campaigns/felon-voting-rights.aspx (last accessed Dec. 5, 2018). 188 Ibid. 181 29 felony disenfranchisement, see infra Chapter 3, “The Current Landscape of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws.” 189 18F The collateral consequences attached to a conviction, such as denial of voting rights, may be removed or nullified under certain circumstances. Removal of the collateral consequence will restore the right that the individual had lost by virtue of their conviction. Federal, state and local rights may be restored. The mechanisms vary, but generally involve a pardon, amnesty, expunction of the conviction, or another affirmative act specifying restoration. 190 The next section discusses the restoration of rights in greater detail. 189F Restoration of Certain Rights Federal law allows for the undoing of some, but not all, collateral consequences under certain conditions through statutory provisions that permit an individual’s rights to be restored. 191 There is no federal statutory procedure for complete rights restoration or expungement of a criminal record. 192 A rare presidential pardon or a judicial expungement is needed to fully restore an individual’s rights following a federal criminal conviction. 193 However, eligibility for some federal benefits or licenses, such as a firearms license, may be restored automatically after a period of time or may be restored by administrative or judicial action. 194 190F 19 F 192F 193F 189 See infra notes 635-74. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences upon Conviction, supra note 12 at 1-2, 13; see also Hefner, 842 F.2d at 732-33 (concluding that “some affirmative act recognized in law must first take place to restore one’s civil rights”). 191 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Statutes Imposing Collateral Consequences upon Conviction, supra note 12 at 13. 192 Ibid. 193 See, e.g., 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(vi) (authorizing waivers of deportation for noncitizens with certain criminal convictions who have received “full and unconditional” presidential or gubernatorial pardons); 42 U.S.C. § 402(u)(3) (waiving certain penalties imposed on recipients of old-age and survivors insurance benefits for conviction of “subversive activities” where a presidential pardon has been issued); 38 U.S.C. § 6105(a) (restoring, upon presidential pardon, rights to certain veterans’ benefits that would otherwise be forfeited upon conviction for certain offenses). Some federal courts have held that, under their inherent equitable powers, they may expunge criminal records, but such power is of “exceedingly narrow scope” and only appropriate when “unwarranted adverse consequences” which are “extraordinary or extreme” outweigh the “public interest in maintaining criminal records.” U.S. v. Buggs, No. 2:89-CR-180, 2010 WL 1956581 (S.D. Ohio May 13, 2010). See also 6 AM. L. REP. 6th 1 (2011), Judicial Expunction of Criminal Record of Convicted Adult in Absence of Authorizing Statute. 194 6 AM. L. REP. 6th 1 (2011), at 14; see, e.g., 29 U.S.C. §§ 504 (removing prohibitions on holding office in labor organization upon reversal of conviction), 1111 (removing prohibitions on holding office in employee benefit plan upon reversal of conviction); 8 U.S.C. 1227(a)(7) (authorizing Attorney General to waive deportation of noncitizens convicted of domestic violence under certain circumstances, such as when convicted individual acted in selfdefense); 10 U.S.C. § 504 (authorizing exceptions to the ban on military service for certain criminally convicted individuals); 12 U.S.C. § 1829(a)(1)-(2) (authorizing a court to grant exceptions to the ban on service in federally insured depository institutions for certain criminally convicted individuals); 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r)(2) (permitting resumption of eligibility for federal financial aid for students convicted of certain drug-related offenses to access upon reversal of conviction or completion of certain rehabilitation programs); 21 U.S.C. § 335a(d) (authorizing the termination of debarment for certain criminally convicted persons from submitting FDA drug approval applications upon reversal of conviction or approval from the Secretary of Health and Human Services). 190 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW A state government may restore a person’s rights and remove state-imposed collateral consequences like disenfranchisement, 195 for instance by statute 196 or via a gubernatorial pardon. 197 And if federal law allows the removal of a federally imposed collateral consequence (such as a firearms ban), then state law permitting removal of collateral consequences may not necessarily lead to the release from that federally imposed collateral consequence. 198 194F 195F 196F 197F Notification of Collateral Consequences Due to the substantial number of people with criminal records, collateral consequences affect a sizable portion of the U.S. population. 199 Collateral consequences multiply as federal, state, and local governments increase them—yet they remain often invisible and difficult to discover. 200 This opacity results in part because they are “vast and wide-ranging,” as they can vary by type, nature, severity, effect, and duration. 201 The lack of public awareness about collateral consequences calls into question their effectiveness in deterring people from committing crimes. 202 198F 19F 20F 201F 195 See infra Chapter 3, notes 635-74, for discussion of states that permit or do not permit people with felony convictions to vote if their civil rights have been restored. 196 See, e.g., WIS. STAT. ANN. § 304.078 (restoring a person’s civil rights, including the right to vote, upon completion of his or her sentence). 197 See, e.g., VA. CONST. art. V, § 12 (empowering the governor to “remove political disabilities consequent upon conviction for offenses committed”). Note that the Virginia Supreme Court has interpreted this clause as authority for the governor to pardon people with felony convictions “on a case-by-case basis” and not to pardon all people with felony convictions categorically. See Howell v. McAuliffe, 292 Va. 320, 349-50 (2016) (finding that where the Virginia governor restored the voting rights of Virginia residents with felony convictions, “the Governor can use his clemency powers to mitigate a general rule of law on a case-by-case basis. But that truism does not mean he can effectively rewrite the general rule of law and replace it with a categorical exception.”). See Chapter 3, infra notes 798-882, for more discussion of voting rights restoration and the McAuliffe case. 198 See Beecham v. United States, 511 U.S. 368, 373 (1994) (recognizing that “[m]any jurisdictions have no procedure for restoring civil rights” and so one state’s restoration of a convicted person’s civil rights does not automatically remove a federally imposed ban on firearm possession for a person with a federal conviction. Because only some states offer the procedures authorized by a federal statute—such as pardon, expungement set-aside, and civil rights restoration—to lift a consequence, “people in some jurisdictions would have options open to them that people in other jurisdictions may lack.”). See also Fisher v. Kealoha, 855 F.3d 1067, 1070 (9th Cir. 2017) (recognizing that federal law “create[d] exceptions” to the federal ban on firearm possession for persons convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence where the person’s civil rights had been restored); see also Fisher, 855 F.3d at 1070 (concluding that even if federal law allows the removal of a federally imposed collateral consequence when a person’s civil rights have been restored, “the unavailability of a [state] procedure for… civil rights restoration” does not remove that federally imposed collateral consequence.”). 199 Gabriel Jackson Chin, “Collateral Consequences,” Academy for Justice, A Report on Scholarship and Criminal Justice Reform (Eric Luna ed., 2017, forthcoming), at 2, http://academyforjustice.org/wpcontent/uploads/2017/10/17_Criminal_Justice_Reform_Vol_4_Collateral-Consequences.pdf. 200 Ibid. 201 Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 634-35. 202 See Tracy Sohoni, The Effect of Collateral Consequence Laws on State Rates of Returns to Prison, 2014 (Ph.D. dissertation), at 47, https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/247569.pdf (reasoning that “considering that many people are unaware of these consequences prior to conviction, and in fact, many are unaware until after their release from custody, it is unlikely to serve as a general deterrent from crime since even if potential offenders were to consider the effect of their criminal actions on their future chances for housing, employment or voting, many are unaware that these consequences exist”) (internal citation omitted)). 31 Increasingly, issues involving collateral consequences and reentry have been recognized by elected officials, legal scholars, policymakers, and advocates as central to the criminal process and criminal justice policy; still, they are not considered to be legally central or sometimes even relevant to the criminal process because they fall under the separate realm of civil law. 203 In most cases, there are no requirements for judges or defense counsel to notify individuals upon conviction about the collateral consequences that will result from the conviction. 204 Because it is often so difficult to identify when and how they will be triggered, individuals involved in the criminal justice system are rarely properly informed about the collateral consequences of entering guilty pleas. 205 Until recently, federal and state courts had ruled that a guilty plea was constitutionally valid even if the individual was unaware of the collateral consequences of conviction, as long as that individual was advised of the direct consequences (such as incarceration, probation, or fines). 206 20F 203F 204F 205F In 2010, the Supreme Court ruled in Padilla v. Kentucky that counsel must inform a client whether a guilty plea may result in deportation. 207 This ruling was significant because the Court acknowledged that, at least in the immigration context, an individual considering a guilty plea must be advised by counsel about the plea’s collateral consequences to make an informed decision. 208 While the scope of this particular case was limited to advice regarding the risk of deportation, some legal scholars argue that Padilla’s logic could be extended to argue cases involving other types of collateral consequences. 209 206F 207F 208F The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws produced the Uniform Collateral Consequences of Conviction Act in 2009, and amended it in response to the Padilla decision in 2010. 210 The six provisions of this model legislation include: 209F 203 Pinard, An Integrated Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, supra note 16 at 629-31. 204 Testimony of Mathias H. Heck, Jr. on behalf of the American Bar Association, Hearing on Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction and the Problem of Over-Criminalization of Federal Law Before the H. Comm. on the Judiciary Task Force on Over-Criminalization, June 26, 2014, at 3-4, https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/uncategorized/GAO/2014jun26_collateralconsequences_t_final.authc heckdam.pdf. 205 Jenny Roberts, Ignorance is Effectively Bliss: Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions, Silence and Misinformation in the Guilty Plea Process, 95 IOWA L. REV. 119, 124 (2009). 206 Id. 207 559 U.S. 356, 374 (2010). The Supreme Court found that a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to “effective assistance of competent counsel” encompasses the right to be informed by counsel about whether a guilty plea “carries a risk of deportation.” Id. at 364, 374. In this case, because Padilla’s counsel failed to inform him of that risk, counsel was “constitutionally deficient.” Id. at 374. 208 Id. at 373-75. 209 Margaret Colgate Love, Collateral Consequences After Padilla v. Kentucky: From Punishment to Regulation, 31 ST. LOUIS U. PUB. L. REV. 87, 126-27 (2011). 210 National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, Uniform Collateral Consequences of Conviction Act (2010), https://www.uniformlaws.org/viewdocument/committee-archive-3?CommunityKey=74d9914f-f15e49aa-a5b0-f15f6e5f258a&tab=librarydocuments; see also 13 V.S.A. § 8001 et seq. (enacted in Vermont); S.F. 965, CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW Simplified, published collection of collateral consequences. A designated government agency or official would have to collect information about constitutional provisions, laws, and rules that impose collateral consequences or disqualifications and publish it online in a single document; this collection would also include federally imposed sanctions. 211 Required notification of collateral consequences. A government agency or official would have to notify defendants of any potentially applicable collateral consequences at or before the formal notification of charges, so that the defendant could make an informed decision about how to proceed; notice of these sanctions (including any effects on voting eligibility) would also be required at sentencing to account for the time elapsed between the charging and sentencing stages. 212 The model legislation recommends that the state legislature designate the agency or official responsible for notification and adds that “appropriate actors” would include “the court or court clerk, pretrial services, jail authorities, or the prosecution.” 213 Procedural limitations on authorization of collateral consequences. Blanket or automatic collateral consequences could be imposed only by statute, ordinance, or formal rulemaking; furthermore, if any ambiguity existed as to whether the collateral consequence was mandatory or discretionary, the consequence would be construed as discretionary. 214 Disqualifications based on criminal conviction would be discretionary. The model legislation provides guidance and offers standards for decision-makers to impose disqualifications on a discretionary basis, after conducting an individualized assessment based on all the facts and circumstances of the offense, rather than the fact of the conviction alone. 215 The decision-maker could consider the underlying conduct of the person convicted, and the time elapsed since the misconduct occurred, when deciding if the collateral consequence should apply. 216 Overturned and pardoned convictions, and relief granted by other jurisdictions. Collateral consequences could not be imposed for convictions that were pardoned or overturned, or for charges that were dismissed pursuant to deferred prosecution or diversion programs. 217 210F 21F 21F 213F 214F 215 F 216F 90th Leg. (Minn. 2017) (proposed in Minnesota); S.B. 328, 79th Leg. (Nev. 2017) (proposed in Nevada); S.B. 292, 2017 Reg. Sess. (N.M. 2017) (passed but not enacted in New Mexico due to pocket veto); S. 4911, New York Assemb. (N.Y. 2017) (proposed in New York). 211 National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, Uniform Collateral Consequences of Conviction Act, 2010, at 10-12, https://www.uniformlaws.org/viewdocument/committee-archive-3?CommunityKey=74d9914ff15e-49aa-a5b0-f15f6e5f258a&tab=librarydocuments. 212 Id. at 13-19. Section 5 of the Act would require courts to ensure that defendants have received notification of any applicable collateral consequences, have understood them, and have had the opportunity to discuss them with defense counsel. Id. 213 Id. at 14. 214 Id. at 20. 215 Id. at 20-23. 216 Id. at 21-22. 217 Id. at 23-27. 33 The model legislation also would confer flexibility on jurisdictions to allow relief granted by other jurisdictions for rehabilitation or good behavior. 218 Procedures for granting relief from collateral consequences. Individuals with criminal records could obtain relief from collateral consequences by Orders of Limited Relief (available as early as sentencing) and Certificates of Restoration of Rights (available after a period of law-abiding conduct). 219 Both measures could transform a mandatory collateral consequence into a discretionary one, enabling decision-makers to perform individualized assessments. 220 217F 218F 219F The Uniform Act has been enacted in Vermont, and has been introduced previously, but at this writing not enacted, in Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, and Massachusetts. 221 20F 218 Id. Id. at 27-37 220 Id. 221 Uniform Law Commission Statement at 3; see also National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, “Collateral Consequences of Conviction Act: Enactment Status Map,” https://www.uniformlaws.org/committees/community-home?CommunityKey=74d9914f-f15e-49aa-a5b0f15f6e5f258a (last accessed Feb. 26, 2019). 219 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Chapter 2: Access to Self-Sufficiency and Meeting Basic Needs A criminal conviction jeopardizes the ability of convicted individuals to meet basic needs, as collateral consequences often impose barriers to employment, affordable housing, and public assistance. These barriers can affect the well-being of not only convicted individuals but also their families and communities, and they may have public safety implications. This chapter discusses some of these specific collateral consequences related to access to self-sufficiency, namely barriers to employment and housing and, to a lesser degree, public assistance. How a Criminal Record Can Affect Employment Opportunities Employment discrimination can be one of the most “serious and pervasive” collateral consequences faced by people with criminal convictions. 222 A criminal record adversely impacts employment prospects for millions of working-age people in the United States. 223 Of the over 44,000 state and federal collateral consequences, most (roughly 70%) relate to employment, and thousands of additional local ordinances also restrict employment opportunities for people with criminal convictions. 224 Many public and private employers also have barriers in place to block the hiring of people with criminal convictions. 225 These barriers may stem from policies or practices of private employers that do not favor applicants with criminal records, occupational licensing laws that disqualify workers with criminal records, and statutory hiring restrictions imposed by federal or state agencies. 226 This section explores each of those barriers in detail. 21F 2F 23F 24F 25F Due to the collateral consequences of criminal convictions, 1 in 4 Americans are locked out of the labor market, leading to between $57 and $65 billion in lost output and a significant loss in human capital. 227 An audit study that measured the negative impact of criminal records on employment found that applicants with a criminal record are 50 percent less likely to receive a callback or job offer than applicants without criminal records. 228 The study’s findings were more pronounced for 26F 27F 222 Bell, The Long Shadow: Decreasing Barriers to Employment, Housing, and Civic Participation for People with Criminal Records Will Improve Public Safety and Strengthen the Economy, supra note 40 at 10. 223 Schmitt & Warner, Ex-offenders and the Labor Market, supra note 37 at 1, http://cepr.net/documents/publications/ex-offenders-2010-11.pdf. 224 Malcolm & Seibler, Collateral Consequences: Protecting Public Safety or Encouraging Recidivism?, supra note 74 at 1-3; CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” 225 Leroy D. Clark, A Civil Rights Task: Removing Barriers to Employment of Ex-Convicts,” 38 U.S.F. L. REV. 193, 196 (2004). 226 Id. at 195-95. 227 Schmitt & Warner, Ex-offenders and the Labor Market, supra note 37 at 1. 228 Devah Pager, Bruce Western, Naomi Sugie, “Sequencing Disadvantage: Barriers to Employment Facing Young Black and White Men with Criminal Records,” Ann Am Acad Pol Soc Sci., vol. 623 (2009): 199. 35 black applicants; about 60 percent of all black applicants with criminal records did not receive callbacks or job offers, compared to 30 percent of all white applicants with criminal records. 229 The ability to work is important to successful reintegration because it allows an individual to earn a living and supports attaining self-sufficiency. 230 Working can also bolster a person’s sense of purpose. 231 According to many researchers, employment contributes to strong, stable communities, helps to build a strong economy, and helps to drastically reduce recidivism. 232 28F 29F 230F 231F On the other hand, important public safety concerns may justify placing reasonable restrictions on employment for people with certain types of convictions, and some argue that this can “outweigh any burden it places on the ex-offender.” 233 For example, prohibiting a convicted sex offender from running a day care center is a legitimate restriction that serves to protect the public safety of children. 234 However, others argue that placing “irrational” restrictions on employment, when no discernible link between the conviction and the job position exists, “undermines efforts to promote public safety and a cost-effective criminal justice system.” 235 23F 23F 234 F Because of the significant stigma attached to a criminal conviction, an employer could view an applicant with a criminal record as untrustworthy or lacking in “job readiness,” which is generally perceived as a requisite qualification for both skilled and unskilled positions. 236 In addition to their criminal records, some people with criminal convictions may suffer from disadvantages that can 235F 229 Ibid. Maurice Emsellem, Talk Poverty: We Need Fair Chance Hiring of People with Criminal Records, National Employment Law Project, 2014, http://www.nelp.org/commentary/talk-poverty-we-need-fair-chance-hiring-ofpeople-with-criminal-records/. 231 Ibid. 232 Ibid; Jeremy Travis, Amy L. Solomon, Michelle Waul, From Prison to Home: The Dimensions and Consequences of Prisoner Reentry, Urban Institute, 2001, at 31, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/61571/410098-From-Prison-to-Home-The-Dimensions-andConsequences-of-Prisoner-Reentry.PDF; Briefing Transcript, at 146-47 (statement of Marc Levin); Reddy Statement at 2-3; Maria Duane, Nancy La Vigne, Mathew Lynch, Emily Reimal, Criminal Background Checks: Impact on Employment and Recidivism, Urban Institute, 2017, at 12-13, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/88621/criminal-background-checks-impact-on-employmentand-recidivism.pdf; Bell, The Long Shadow: Decreasing Barriers to Employment, Housing, and Civic Participation for People with Criminal Records Will Improve Public Safety and Strengthen the Economy, supra note 40 at 10. 233 John G. Malcolm, “The Problem with the Proliferation of Collateral Consequences,” 19 Federalist Society Review, Jan. 29, 2018, at 37, https://fedsoc-cmspublic.s3.amazonaws.com/update/pdf/HKcg8n9ZK2vcHFfRpWuncIyrB9yIC30iZb6dKubC.pdf. 234 Ibid. 235 Ibid. at 41. See also Levin Statement at 1-5; Malcolm Statement at 2-8. 236 Travis et al., From Prison to Home: The Dimensions and Consequences of Prisoner Reentry, supra note 232 at 31; Harry J. Holzer, Steven Raphael, Michael A. Stoll, Employment Barriers Facing Ex-Offenders, Urban Institute, 2003, at 7, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/59416/410855-Employment-Barriers-Facing-ExOffenders.PDF; Harry J. Holzer and Michael A. Stoll, “Employers and Welfare Recipients: The Effects of Welfare Reform in the Workplace,” Public Policy Institute of California, (San Francisco: 2001), at 41, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228628422_The_effect_of_an_applicant's_criminal_history_on_employer _hiring_decisions_and_screening_practices_Evidence_from_Los_Angeles. 230 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS challenge their employability. 237 These disadvantages may include inadequate education, limited work experience, substance abuse, or other physical or mental health conditions, all of which can further deteriorate with time spent behind bars. 238 Incarceration can also cause formerly incarcerated individuals to lose their social networks, rendering it more difficult to find gainful employment. 239 Some research indicates that incarceration may also connect inmates with harmful social networks that make them more likely to engage in criminal activity than to obtain gainful employment post-release. 240 236F 237F 238F 239F Figure 5 shows stark aggregate differences in educational attainment between individuals who are incarcerated and individuals who are not. According to the most recent data available from the Department of Justice, 18.4 percent of the general (nonincarcerated) population have not received a high school diploma; among the incarcerated population, the rate is more than double that at 41.3 percent. 241 Nearly half of the general population has obtained postsecondary education, but only about 13 percent of the incarcerated population have done so. 242 240 F 241F Figure 5: Educational Attainment for Correctional Populations and General Population, 2003 Postsecondary 48.4% 12.7% High school diploma GED* 23.4% 18.4% Some high school or less 0.0% 33.2% 22.6% 10.0% 20.0% General Population 41.3% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% Total Incarcerated Population Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Education and Correctional Populations, January 2003 *Information about GED attainment for the general population was not available in this data report. More recent state-level studies reflect similar patterns. According to 2016 data from Georgia, more than half of incoming state prisoners had not obtained a high school diploma or GED, and fewer 237 Holzer et al., Employment Barriers Facing Ex-Offenders, supra note 236 at 4-5. Ibid. at 7; Schmitt & Warner, Ex-offenders and the Labor Market, supra note 37 at 8. 239 Schmitt & Warner, Ex-offenders and the Labor Market, supra note 37 at 8. 240 Ibid. 241 Caroline Wolf Harlow, Education and Correctional Populations, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2003, at 2, https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED477377.pdf. 242 Ibid. 238 37 than 10 percent had attended college. 243 A 2018 study revealed that nearly three-quarters of Minnesota’s prisoners had not graduated from high school, and only 18.5 percent had received any postsecondary education. 244 24F 243F Figure 6 shows the estimated effect that incarceration has on wages and annual earnings for men. According to a 2010 report, by the age of 45, a man who has been incarcerated can expect to earn on average $1.76 less per hour than a man who has not been incarcerated. 245 On an annual basis, by the same age, a man who has been incarcerated will earn an estimated $15,600 less than a man who has not been incarcerated. 246 24 F 245F Figure 6: Estimated Effect of Incarceration on Male Wages and Annual Earnings, Predicted at Age 45 Wages $16.50 Annual Earnings $16.33 $16.00 $15.50 $15.00 $14.57 $14.50 $14.00 $13.50 If not Incarcerated Post-Incarceration $45,000 $40,000 $35,000 $30,000 $25,000 $20,000 $15,000 $10,000 $5,000 $0 $39,100 $23,500 If not Incarcerated Post-Incarceration Source: The Pew Charitable Trusts, Collateral Costs: Incarceration’s Effect on Economic Mobility, 2010 According to a Brookings Institution study in 2018, during their first full year after release, only 55 percent of formerly incarcerated people reported earnings. 247 Among the formerly incarcerated who were employed, their median annual income was only $10,090, and only 20 percent of these 246F Georgia Dep’t of Corrections, Inmate Statistical Profile, 2016, at 36, http://www.dcor.state.ga.us/sites/all/themes/gdc/pdf/profile_inmate_admissions_fy2016.pdf. 244 Minnesota Dep’t of Corrections, Adult Prison Population Summary, 2018, at 2, https://mn.gov/doc/assets/Minnesota%20Department%20of%20Corrections%20Adult%20Prison%20Population%2 0Summary%207-1-2018_tcm1089-347924.pdf. 245 The Pew Charitable Trusts, Collateral Costs: Incarceration’s Effect on Economic Mobility, 2010, at 11, https://csgjusticecenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/2010-Pew.pdf. The Pew Charitable Trusts authored and published this report based on research conducted by Bruce Western and Becky Pettit. Ibid. at cover page. Note that although incarcerated men do not earn reportable income while incarcerated, the authors state that the expected lost earnings “do not include earnings forfeited during incarceration; they reflect instead a sizable lifelong earnings gap between former inmates and those never incarcerated.” Ibid. at 12. 246 Ibid. 247 Adam Looney & Nicholas Turner, Work and Opportunity Before and After Incarceration, Brookings Institution, 2018, at 1, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/es_20180314_looneyincarceration_final.pdf. 243 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS individuals earned more than $15,000 that year. 248 The Commission notes that most studies are limited to men because 93 percent of the national prison population is male; 249 however, the rate of incarceration of women is increasing. 250 Given that the average annual income of women is about $10,169 less than that of men, incarceration may impede women’s access to a sustainable income even more drastically than it does for men. 251 247F 248F 249 F 250F Research has shown that unemployment is a major cause of recidivism, and if formerly incarcerated individuals can obtain a job with a living wage that meets their basic needs, the risk of reoffending decreases. 252 Employment serves as a “linchpin to the successful rehabilitation of ex-offenders and their full and productive participation in society.” 253 251 F 25 F Reentry programs exist in each state, and may be privately operated (i.e., by a nonprofit organization) or publicly operated (i.e., by a state government or division). 254 The Federal Interagency Reentry Council also represents more than 20 federal agencies, including the Department of Labor and the Department of Education, to coordinate and recommend best 253F 248 Ibid. E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 3, 6. 250 Ibid. at 1, 3 (reporting that at year-end 2016, 7 percent of the national prison population was female, “an increase of more than 100 prisoners since 2015,” and that the number of women sentenced to a year or more in state or federal prison increased by 700 from 2015 to 2016). In September 2018, the Commission voted in favor of studying female incarceration and producing a report. See U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Business Meeting, Sept. 14, 2018, transcript, at 65-66 (on file); see also U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Will Examine the Confinement Conditions of Incarcerated Women Who Are under the Care of the Bureau of Prisons,” Aug. 23, 2016, https://www.usccr.gov/press/2016/PR-08-23-16.pdf; U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “Women in Prison: Seeking Justice Behind Bars,” Feb. 22, 2019, https://www.usccr.gov/calendar/2019/02-08Meeting-Notice2.pdf (announcing details and agenda of public briefing focused on the civil rights of incarcerated women). 251 National Partnership for Women and Families, America’s Women and the Wage Gap, September 2018, at 1, http://www.nationalpartnership.org/research-library/workplace-fairness/fair-pay/americas-women-and-the-wagegap.pdf (citing U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, Annual Social and Economic (ASEC) Supplement: Table PINC-05: Work Experience in 2017—People 15 Years Old and Over by Total Money Earnings in 2017, Age, Race, Hispanic Origin, Sex, and Disability Status, https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/incomepoverty/cps-pinc/pinc-05.html). The National Partnership based this calculation on “the median annual pay for all women and men who worked full time, year-round in 2018.” Ibid. at 5. See also U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, The Economics Daily: Women’s and Men’s Earnings by Age in 2016, August 2017, https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2017/womens-and-mens-earnings-by-age-in-2016.htm (finding that among full-time wage and salary workers ages 16 and older, median weekly earnings were $749 for women and $915 for men). 252 Travis et al., From Prison to Home: The Dimensions and Consequences of Prisoner Reentry, supra note 232 at 31; Bell, The Long Shadow: Decreasing Barriers to Employment, Housing, and Civic Participation for People with Criminal Records Will Improve Public Safety and Strengthen the Economy, supra note 40 at 10; Briefing Transcript at 145-47 (statement of Marc Levin); Duane et al., Criminal Background Checks: Impact on Employment and Recidivism, supra note 232 at 12-13. 253 Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 14. 254 National Reentry Resource Center, “Reentry Services Directory,” https://csgjusticecenter.org/nrrc/reentryservices-directory/ (last accessed Sept. 27, 2018). The National Reentry Resource Center lists organizations and programs in each state that provide various reentry services that focus on employment, health, housing, and reunification of families. Ibid. 249 39 practices for reentry services. 255 Reentry programs may focus on preparing inmates to reenter the community during their incarceration or may offer short- or longer-term services to individuals post-incarceration. 256 The Second Chance Act, which was enacted in part to “break the cycle of criminal recidivism” and “assist offenders reentering the community from incarceration to establish a self-sustaining and law-abiding life,” provides federal grants to states for reentry projects and programs. 257 The effectiveness of reentry programs varies, depending in part on the resources and funding available to them. 258 Reentry programs that address job training and job readiness can include pre-release vocational training, work release programs, or halfway houses, and some may include substance abuse and mental health treatment. 259 Research has suggested that the most successful programs begin while the individual is incarcerated and continue on an intensive basis during his or her reintegration into the community (i.e., the non-correctional setting). 260 Some scholars have pointed out that implementing in-prison programs can pose challenges, as the prison system may prioritize certain goals (such as population management) over others (such as reentry-focused work programs). 261 But research supports the post-release value of in-prison programs for former inmates seeking employment; for example, a meta-analysis of 18 studies found that inmates who participated in education programs (either academic or vocational) had a 13 percent higher chance of finding employment after incarceration than those 254F 25F 256F 257F 258F 259F 260F U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Interagency Reentry Council, A Record of Progress and a Roadmap for the Future, 2016, at v-x, xiii, https://csgjusticecenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/FIRC-Reentry-Report.pdf. 256 Nathan James, Offender Reentry: Correctional Statistics, Reintegration into the Community, and Recidivism, Congressional Research Service, 2015, at 1, https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL34287.pdf. 257 Pub. Law 110-199, 122 Stat. 657 (April 9, 2008); 34 U.S.C. § 60501; 34 U.S.C. § 10631. Under the Innovations in Reentry Initiative, the Dep’t of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Assistance provides grants for states to assess the “jurisdiction’s approach to contracting reentry services” and support “cognitive-behavioral programming; educational, vocational, and job placement services; transitional employment; substance use treatment; supportive housing; mental health and medical care; programs that promote family reunification; mentoring and peer support; and civil legal aid.” See Council of State Governments Justice Center, “Second Chance Act Innovations in Reentry Initiative,” https://csgjusticecenter.org/nrrc/second-chance-act-innovations-in-reentry-initiative/ (last accessed Nov. 24, 2018). 258 James, Offender Reentry: Correctional Statistics, Reintegration into the Community, and Recidivism, supra note 256 at 11 (noting that “[t]he policies affecting prisoners and the kinds of programs available to them both in and out of prison depend on a variety of factors, including the availability of funding for social programs within states and communities”). 259 Richard P. Seiter & Karen R. Kadela, Prisoner Reentry: What Works, What Does Not, and What is Promising, CRIME & DELINQUENCY, vol. 49, no. 3, at 368 (2003), http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.917.9453&rep=rep1&type=pdf; see also Briefing Transcript at 57-58 (statement of John Malcolm) (discussing the value of pre-release programs for incarcerated individuals). 260 See Shawn Bushway, Reentry and Prison Work Programs, Urban Institute Reentry Roundtable Paper, 2003, at 34, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/59406/410853-Reentry-and-Prison-Work-Programs.PDF (describing a vocational program as “one of the best conceived programs” because “it tried to organize the incarceration experience from intake to release, including a community component, around the goal of obtaining work upon release.”); see also James, Offender Reentry: Correctional Statistics, Reintegration into the Community, and Recidivism, supra note 256 at 21 (stating that the “reportedly most successful programs focus on high-risk offenders, are intensive in nature, begin during institutional placement, and take place mostly in the community.”). 261 Bushway, Reentry and Prison Work Programs, supra note 260 at 3. 255 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS who did not participate. 262 Moreover, researchers argue that because financial aid can be crucial to obtaining an education, lifting the federal ban on Pell Grants to fund in-prison college programs would enable inmates to gain valuable job skills and significantly boost their employment rates post-incarceration. 263 261F 26F Criminal Background Checks for Employment To help ensure safety in the workplace, criminal background checks can be a mechanism for employers to screen out applicants with criminal records who may pose safety risks, particularly in industries where employees interact with vulnerable populations, carry weapons, have access to money, or drive vehicles. 264 Employers may also conduct criminal background checks to protect their vulnerability to negligent hiring claims, under which employers could be liable for employees’ wrongful actions if they knew, should have known, or could have discovered the risk posed by an employee. 265 263F 264 F 262 Lois M. Davis, et al., How Effective Is Correctional Education, and Where Do We Go From Here?, RAND Corporation, 2014, at 15, 18, https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR564.readonline.html. The authors acknowledge that their findings were statistically significant with the caveat that among the 18 studies included in the meta-analysis, only one study had a high-quality, robust research design. Ibid. 263 See Vera Institute of Justice, Investing in Futures: Economic and Fiscal Benefits of Postsecondary Education in Prison, 2019, at 21, 23, https://storage.googleapis.com/vera-web-assets/downloads/Publications/investing-infutures-education-in-prison/legacy_downloads/investing-in-futures.pdf. The Vera Institute’s study estimated that restoring Pell Grant funding for incarcerated individuals “would increase state employment rates of formerly incarcerated workers who participated in a postsecondary program by 4.7 percentage points, or nearly 10 percent.” Ibid. at 23. Although the federal ban on Pell Grants for people in prison remains, a limited number of prisoners are able to access Pell Grants through the Second Chance Pell Experimental Sites Initiative, which provides need-based Pell Grants to certain incarcerated people through partnerships with 65 colleges in 27 states. See Vera Institute of Justice, Statement from Vera on U.S. Department of Education's Decision to Renew Second Chance Pell, February 14, 2019, https://www.vera.org/newsroom/press-releases/statement-from-vera-on-u-s-department-of-educationsdecision-to-renew-second-chance-pell. For more discussion of the obstacles facing criminally convicted people who wish to obtain financial aid for education, see infra notes 595-624. 264 See, e,g., Morris v. JTM Materials, Inc., 78 S.W.3d 28, 49, 51 (Tex. App. 2002) (stating that “[a]n employer owes a duty to its other employees and to the general public to ascertain the qualifications and competence of the employees it hires, especially when the employees are engaged in occupations that require skill or experience and that could be hazardous to the safety of others” and concluding that an employer’s failure to conduct a criminal background check was relevant to determining whether the employer had fulfilled that duty) (emphasis added) (internal citations omitted); Duane et al., Criminal Background Checks: Impact on Employment and Recidivism, supra note 236 at 13; Holzer et al., Employment Barriers Facing Ex-Offenders, supra note 232 at 8; Eric J. Ellman, on behalf of the Consumer Data Industry Association, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, June 15, 2017, at 2-3 [hereinafter Ellman Statement]. Ellman’s testimony pointed out that criminal background checks are legally protected under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and that “employers should be able to hire the best people for the jobs available, and job applicants should not fear unlawful discrimination.” Ibid. 265 See, e,g., Munroe v. Universal Health Servs., Inc., 277 Ga. 861, 864 n.4, 865 (2004) (noting that “while there may be no statutory requirement that employers in other businesses conduct background or criminal checks on potential employees, we reject the position that employers who fail to conduct such searches can never be found liable for negligent hiring because of this failure” and concluding that the employer’s performance of a criminal background check protected the employer from liability); see also Morris, 78 S.W.3d at 49, 51 (asserting that “an employer is liable for negligent hiring, retention, or supervision if it hires an incompetent or unfit employee whom it 41 But when employers use criminal background checks to indiscriminately disqualify all applicants with criminal records, these employers severely curtail employment opportunities for formerly incarcerated people. 266 Because black and Latino individuals are likelier to have criminal records than white and Asian people, and men are likelier to have criminal records than women, black and Latino males are disproportionately affected by criminal background checks. 267 Some critics of criminal background checks also allege that they yield incomplete or inaccurate results. 268 For example, a background check may reveal an applicant’s arrest record without the case disposition to show that no conviction ensued, or an applicant’s expunged records may be wrongfully revealed to the employer. 269 The extent of these inaccuracies has been disputed. 270 In 2006, the Attorney 265 F 26F 267F 268F 269F knows, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known, was incompetent or unfit” and concluding that the employer could have discovered the risk posed by the employee had it performed a criminal background check). Negligent hiring claims are state causes of action and must satisfy the elements of the state’s laws to be successful. See Eniola O. Akinrinade, Caught Between A Rock, Negligence, Racism, and A Hard Place: Exploring the Balance Between the EEOC’s Arrest and Conviction Investigation Guidelines and Society’s Best Interest, 2 TEX. A&M L. REV. 135, 137-38 (2014) (discussing case law related to the role of criminal background checks in negligent hiring claims); see also Clark, A Civil Rights Task: Removing Barriers to Employment of Ex-Convicts, supra note 225 at 196 (discussing the “strong incentive for private employers to avoid hiring persons with a criminal record is the fastgrowing tort of negligent hiring”). Because an employer can be liable for the harm that an employee inflicts on a third party, employers may choose to perform criminal background checks when the employee’s job requires public interaction (e.g., when a salesperson or technician visits a personal residence and interacts privately with the resident). See, e.g., Read v. Scott Fetzer Co., 990 S.W.2d 732, 734-37 (Tex. 1998) (finding that the employer’s failure to conduct a criminal background check on an in-home salesman was a substantial factor in holding the employer liable for negligent hiring after the salesman raped a customer whose home he visited). 266 Duane et al., Criminal Background Checks: Impact on Employment and Recidivism, supra note 232 at 2; National Employment Law Project, Faulty FBI Background Checks for Employment: Correcting FBI Records Is Key to Criminal Justice Reform, 2015, http://www.nelp.org/content/uploads/NELP-Policy-Brief-Faulty-FBIBackground-Checks-for-Employment.pdf. 267 Duane et al., Criminal Background Checks: Impact on Employment and Recidivism, supra note 232 at 2, 10. 268 Ibid. at 2-9. Employers conduct background checks using information drawn from FBI data that uses fingerprints for identity verification, or from commercial sources that typically use a person’s name, date of birth, and Social Security number for identity verification, as well as government records regarding criminal sentences. Ibid. See also National Employment Law Project, Faulty FBI Background Checks for Employment: Correcting FBI Records Is Key to Criminal Justice Reform, supra note 269 at 1; Ellman Statement at 6-7. In his statement, Ellman disputed the levels of inaccuracy of background checks, citing a 2014 audit of the four largest criminal background check companies, which found a dispute rate of 0.3% and a 99.2% rate of accuracy of background checks performed by LeasingDesk, a member of the Consumer Data Industry Association. The statement also asserted that these “high rates of reliability are consistent with the findings of several federal courts.” Ibid. But in one case cited by the statement, the federal court did not indicate whether these accuracy levels were acceptable; instead, the court described an inaccuracy rate of 0.38 percent as “quite frankly, unflattering.” See Williams v. First Advantage LNS Screening Sols., Inc., 238 F. Supp. 3d 1333, 1356 (N.D. Fla. 2017). Ellman’s statement noted that courts often redact identifying information such as dates of birth, social security numbers, and addresses from public records, making the conclusive matching of a criminal record to an individual “an increasingly complex undertaking that has required criminal background check providers to innovate.” Ellman Statement at 6-7. 269 Ibid. 270 At the Commission’s 2013 briefing about the use of criminal background checks in hiring, Nick Fishman of EmployeeScreenIQ testified that his company’s dispute rate was “just 0.15 percent.” See U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Assessing the Impact of Criminal Background Checks and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Conviction Records Policy, 2013, at 79, http://www.eusccr.com/EEOC_final_2013.pdf (including the statement of Nick Fishman, Co-Founder, Chief Marketing Officer, and Executive Vice President, EmployeeScreenIQ, that “when disputes do occur we handle them quickly so in the unlikely event information CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS General estimated that approximately 50 percent of the FBI records are incomplete or inaccurate. 271 A 2015 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report confirmed that while improvements in data quality were cognizable, data inaccuracies are still prevalent in most states’ data, and the GAO recommended that actions be taken to further improve data quality. 272 270F 271 F In 2013, the Commission held a briefing on the use of criminal background checks in employment. The briefing specifically focused on guidance 273 issued by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in 2012 on criminal records and hiring practices (“2012 Guidance”). 274 The Commission evaluated how the 2012 Guidance, which recommended that employers individually assess applicants rather than implement blanket policies disqualifying applicants due to criminal records, 275 had affected employers and workers. 276 27F 273F 274 F 275F The federal government may offer guidance to states and private employers on hiring practices that implicate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as the 2012 Guidance did. 277 The legality of such EEOC guidance has been generally upheld but also sometimes challenged. Federal courts have held that “the EEOC gets deference in accordance with the thoroughness of its research and the persuasiveness of its reasoning.” 278 The 2012 Guidance sought to address the effects of racial disparities, by cautioning employers that hiring practices that check criminal records could run afoul of Title VII if they create disparate impact based on race and are “not job related and consistent with business necessity.” 279 The EEOC followed case law holding that while protecting 276F 27F 278F needs to be modified it can be done without penalizing the candidate or unnecessarily delaying the hire.”). However, this only reflects the rate of disputes undertaken by impacted individuals and may not reflect all errors. Moreover, even an accuracy rate of 99.9 percent will still negatively impact the lives of millions of people who are seeking employment. See U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Selected Age Groups by Sex for the United States, States, Counties and Puerto Rico Commonwealth and Municipios: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2017, https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/index.xhtml (last accessed Dec. 10, 2018) (claiming that the current U.S. adult population is approximately 201 million). If this estimate is correct, then an accuracy rate of 99.9 percent could yield errors for at least 1 million adults. 271 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Office of the Attorney General, The Attorney General’s Report on Criminal Background Checks, 2006, at 3, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/ag_bgchecks_report.pdf. 272 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Criminal History Records: Additional Actions Could Enhance the Completeness of Records Used For Employment-Related Background Checks, Report 15-162, 2015, https://www.gao.gov/assets/670/668505.pdf. 273 EEOC, 2012 Guidance. 274 See U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Assessing the Impact of Criminal Background Checks and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Conviction Records Policy, 2013 [hereinafter USCCR, 2013 Briefing Report], http://www.eusccr.com/EEOC_final_2013.pdf. 275 EEOC, 2012 Guidance at 25. 276 USCCR, 2013 Briefing Report at 1. 277 See generally EEOC, 2012 Guidance. 278 El v. Se. Pennsylvania Transp. Auth. (SEPTA), 479 F.3d 232, 244 (3d Cir. 2007). See also Discussion and Sources, infra notes 285-94 (discussing Texas’ litigation attempting to enjoin enforcement of the EEOC 2012 Guidance). 279 EEOC, 2012 Guidance at 24. 43 safety is compelling, discriminatory practices are prohibited. 280 Citing the disproportionate overrepresentation of black and Latino people in the criminal justice system, the 2012 Guidance recommended that employers perform an individualized assessment of candidates with criminal records and consider factors such as the nature and circumstances of the offense, the duration of time since the offense, any evidence of rehabilitation, relevant job experience, and character references (among other factors). 281 279F 280 F Some critics of the 2012 Guidance on hiring people with criminal records later characterized it as overreach by the federal government. For instance, Texas sued the EEOC over the guidance, alleging that Texas had “the sovereign right to impose categorical bans on the hiring of criminals,” and that neither EEOC nor the Attorney General “has authority to say otherwise.” 282 Texas went to court to prevent the federal government from enforcing the guidance in the state. 283 In February 2018, a federal district court in Texas ruled that the 2012 Guidance qualified as a “substantive rule” requiring public notice and the opportunity to comment under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA). 284 The court found that because the EEOC had not complied with the APA’s noticeand-comment requirements, the federal government could not enforce the guidance against the state of Texas as an employer. 285 Under this ruling, the EEOC could remedy the error the court identified by submitting its proposal for new substantive rules as new federal regulations subject to the APA’s public notice-and-comment procedures, rather than a mere guidance. 286 Still, the court rejected Texas’s request for a declaratory judgment—which would have authorized the state to broadly prohibit anyone with any felony conviction from working for the Texas government— specifically stating: 281 F 28F 283F 284 F 285F 280 Id. at 10, 18. The EEOC cited cases where courts found that statistical evidence showing the disproportionate overrepresentation of African Americans in the criminal justice system could establish a prima facie case of racial discrimination. See Green v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 523 F.2d 1290, 1295, 1298-99 (8th Cir. 1975) (finding, based on statistical data, that the employer’s criminal record policy “disqualifies black applicants or potential black applicants for employment at a substantially higher rate than whites” and thus the plaintiff “established a prima facie case of discrimination,” and holding that a complete bar of all applicants with felony convictions for office job positions presented potential civil rights violations); El v. Se. PA Transp. Auth., 418 F. Supp. 2d 659, 668-69 (E.D. Pa. 2005), aff’d sub nom. El v. Se. Pennsylvania Transp. Auth. (SEPTA), 479 F.3d 232 (3d Cir. 2007) (concluding that the employer’s criminal record policy “had a disparate impact on African Americans” after reviewing statistical data and expert testimony). 281 EEOC, 2012 Guidance at 18; see also El, 479 F.3d 232 at 244-45 (explaining that Title VII “does not ask the impossible” but “require[s] that the policy under review accurately distinguish between applicants that pose an unacceptable level of risk and those that do not” and holding that person with a 40-year old murder conviction could be denied a job in public transportation of persons with disabilities). 282 First Amended Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief at 1, Texas v. E.E.O.C., WL 1372008 (N.D. Tex. 2014) (No. 513-CV-255-C). 283 Id. 284 Order, Texas v. E.E.O.C., No. 513-CV-255-C, at *3 (N.D. Tex. Feb. 1, 2018), http://www.naacpldf.org/files/about-us/Doc.%20117.pdf. 285 Id. at *4. 286 Id. CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS The Court declines to declare that Texas has a right to maintain and enforce its laws and policies that absolutely bar convicted felons (or certain categories of felons) from serving in any job the State and its Legislature deems appropriate. There are certainly many categories of employment for which specific prior criminal history profiles of applicants would be a poor fit and pose far too great a risk to the interests of the State of Texas and its citizens. However, there may well be instances in which otherwise qualified job applicants with certain felony convictions in their criminal histories pose no objectively reasonable risk to the interests of the State of Texas and its citizens. To find otherwise would be illogical. Thus, a categorical denial of employment opportunities for all job applicants convicted of a prior felony paints with too broad a brush and denies meaningful opportunities of employment to many who could benefit greatly from such employment in certain positions. 287 286F Texas has appealed this decision, and as of this writing, the federal court of appeals has not yet ruled on it. In its appeal, Texas has argued that the district court “did not go far enough.” instead, Texas contends, the district court should have prohibited the 2012 Guidance under all circumstances “because EEOC has no power to promulgate a substantive rule.” 288 In response, the EEOC pointed out that the 2012 Guidance “imposes no legal obligations or consequences” on employers 289 and only explained EEOC’s “views on how employers’ use of criminal history records in employment decisions may implicate Title VII’s prohibitions against discrimination.”290 But Texas disagrees and argues that the 2012 Guidance puts “pressure on [the] state” to hire people with felony convictions, even if the guidance does not mandate this. 291 287F 28F 289F 290F At the Commission’s 2013 briefing, some employers expressed another concern: that despite the 2012 Guidance’s recommendation that employers perform individualized assessments, it could dilute discretion to assess a candidate’s suitability according to the employers’ own needs and expertise in the field. 292 In 2013, Todd McCracken of the National Small Business Association testified that safety is a significant issue when hiring for certain jobs, especially those that involve caring for children and visiting people’s homes. 293 Both McCracken and Richard Mellor of the 291F 29F 287 Id. at *3. Brief for Appellee/Cross-Appellant at 44-46, Texas v. E.E.O.C., 2018 WL 6380924, No. 18-10638 (5th Cir. Nov. 2, 2018). 289 Cross-Appellee Response/Reply Brief for Appellants Cross-Appellees at 1-5, Texas v. E.E.O.C., 2018 WL 6828468, No. 18-10638 (5th Cir. Dec. 20, 2018). 290 Id. at 2-3 (emphasis in original). 291 Cross-Appellant’s Reply Brief at 3, 19, Texas v. E.E.O.C., 2019 WL 359642, No. 18-10638 (5th Cir. Jan. 24, 2019). 292 USCCR, 2013 Briefing Report at 8. 293 Ibid. at 205 (statement of Todd McCracken, president of the National Small Business Association, who testified: “It is…a fact of life that not everyone should be employed in certain types of jobs. We do not want rapists entering people’s homes. We do not want child molesters working in day care centers. And we do not want embezzlers handling large sums of cash.”). 288 45 National Retail Federation were worried about exposing employers to lawsuits alleging negligent hiring or inventory theft and embezzlement. 294 At the Commission’s 2017 Commission briefing on collateral consequences, employers discussed their fear of facing excessive insurance rates or restrictions. 295 Expert witness Vikrant Reddy testified that even if employers wanted to hire employees with criminal records, they may encounter barriers from the insurance industry. 296 But as noted at the 2013 briefing by Harry Holzer, Georgetown University Professor of Public Policy and Senior Fellow at the American Institute Research: “The very high costs of criminal histories on employment are borne not only by the offenders themselves, but also by their families and their children, their communities, and the U.S. economy broadly.” 297 293F 294F 295F 296F Other experts, including Carol Miaskoff, then-Acting Associate Legal Counsel of the EEOC, argued that because the 2012 Guidance did not mandate individualized assessments or prohibit criminal background checks, employers maintained the authority to exercise discretion in their hiring decisions. 298 According to Miaskoff, the EEOC intended to emphasize that an employer should not automatically disqualify a candidate with a criminal record, but should instead inform the candidate that his or her criminal record could disqualify the candidate and allow the candidate the opportunity to explain or contextualize past conduct. 299 Holzer reasoned that this more nuanced approach could better prevent the racial imbalances in the criminal justice system from infecting the hiring process. 300 297F 298F 29F At the 2017 briefing, Marc Levin, Policy Director at the Right on Crime Initiative of the Texas Public Policy Foundation, stated: “Given the public interest in reducing recidivism, it does not make sense to hold employers…liable simply for giving ex-offenders a second chance that will contribute to greater prosperity and public safety.” 301 Levin recommended that states pass laws to seal criminal records automatically after a set time period, such as five to seven years. 302 He also suggested that states consider legislation to immunize employers from negligible hiring lawsuits when the employee’s alleged offense is unrelated to the job. 303 30F 301F 302F 294 Ibid. at 8, 205 (statement of Todd McCracken), 211 (statement of Richard Mellor, Vice President, Loss Prevention, National Retail Federation). 295 Briefing Transcript at 41 (statement of John Malcolm), 42 (statement of Margaret Love). 296 Ibid. at 44 (statement of Vikrant Reddy). 297 USCCR, 2013 Briefing Report at 21 (statement of Harry Holzer, Professor of Public Policy at Georgetown University and Senior Fellow at the American Institute Research). 298 USCCR, 2013 Briefing Report at 15-17 (statement of Carol Miaskoff, Acting Associate Legal Counsel, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission). 299 Ibid. 300 Ibid. at 19-22 (statement of Harry Holzer). 301 Levin Statement at 3. 302 Ibid. at 2-3. See also notes 396-409, infra, for more discussion of record-sealing and expungement policy proposals. 303 Levin Statement at 3. CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Some states have experimented with the legislative mechanisms to which Levin alluded. For instance, Texas enacted a statute immunizing employers from negligent hiring lawsuits if the employee’s conviction was for an offense substantially unrelated to his job. 304 The immunity does not apply if the employer “knew or should have known” of the conviction and the conviction was for a certain violent, sexual, or theft offense. 305 Colorado also enacted a statute to address employers’ apprehension about negligent hiring lawsuits. Under the statute, a plaintiff alleging negligent hiring against an employer may not introduce the employee’s criminal history if “the nature of the criminal history does not bear a direct relationship to the facts underlying the cause of action;” if the criminal record had been sealed; if the employee received a pardon or deferred judgment; or if the arrest record or charge did not lead to a conviction. 306 30F 304F 305F The Texas and Colorado legislation illustrate how states can protect employers while boosting employment rates among people with felony convictions, strengthening their local economies, and improving public safety. 307 306 F Removing Barriers to Employment for People with Criminal Records Some states permit correctional departments or courts to issue certificates of rehabilitation (or qualification for employment) to eligible individuals with criminal records. 308 A court may decide to issue such a certificate based on certain factors, including the nature of the offense, the individual’s economic and social circumstances, the individual’s actions and conduct since the conviction, and any evaluations of the individual’s character. 309 In 2012, Ohio enacted a law allowing courts to issue Certificates of Qualification for Employment, if the petitioner can prove “all of the following by a preponderance of the evidence: 307F 308F 304 TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 142.002. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 142.002(b)(1)-(2). Immunity also does not apply if the employer “knew or should have known” of the employee’s conviction for an offense committed while performing duties “substantially similar” to those performed in the course of employment. Id. 306 COLO. REV. STAT. ANN. § 8-2-201. 307 Shristi Devu, Trapped in the Shackles of America’s Criminal Justice System, 20 SCHOLAR: ST. MARY’S L. REV. & SOC. JUST. 217 (2018), https://commons.stmarytx.edu/thescholar/vol20/iss2/3/ (reviewing policies designed to mitigate the collateral consequences of felony convictions). 308 Peter Leasure and Tia Stevens Andersen, The Effectiveness of Certificates of Relief as Collateral Consequence Relief Mechanisms: An Experimental Study, 35 YALE L. & POL’Y REV. INTER ALIA 11, 14-15 (2016), http://ylpr.yale.edu/inter_alia/effectiveness-certificates-relief-collateral-consequence-relief-mechanismsexperimental. See also OHIO REV. CODE ANN. § 2953.25(B) (allowing some individuals with criminal convictions to petition the state Dep’t of Rehabilitation and Correction’s parole division or the county court of common pleas for a certificate of qualification for employment under certain circumstances). 309 See Doe v. United States, 168 F. Supp. 3d 427, 446 (E.D.N.Y. 2016) (issuing a federal certificate of rehabilitation to the plaintiff based on, inter alia, the nonviolent nature of her crime, her “current economic and social circumstances,” her lack of criminal activity post-release from prison, and her “tenacity in overcoming the obstacles imposed on her by law due to her conviction.”). Upon finding that the plaintiff’s incarceration and supervision “had its intended [deterrent] effect, the court concluded: “There is no longer a need to deprive Doe of her liberty interests in the way collateral consequences imposed by the law have been doing. As her sentencing judge, I owe it not only to Doe, but to her family and community, to do my part to lift any remaining hardship on her.” Id. at 441. 305 47 Granting the petition will materially assist the individual in obtaining employment or occupational licensing; The individual has a substantial need for the relief requested in order to live a law-abiding life; Granting the petition would not pose an unreasonable risk to the safety of the public or any individual; and The submission of an incomplete petition by an individual shall not be grounds for the designee or court to deny the petition.” 310 309F An empirical study of Ohio’s program found that the state’s certificates of rehabilitation nearly tripled the odds of formerly incarcerated individuals obtaining an interview or job offer, and that they nearly equalized the rate at which certificate holders and individuals without criminal records received interviews or job offers. 311 310F Other states offer tax credits to employers who hire people with criminal records. 312 In California, the credit extends to 50 percent of the qualified wages for the first year of employment, and gradually diminishes with each subsequent year of employment. 313 Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, and Texas also have—or have experimented with—tax-credit programs for employers who hire people with criminal records. 314 The criteria and conditions attached to the tax credits vary. In Illinois, tax credits are available for employers who hire an employee within three years after the employee has been released from an Illinois “adult correctional center.” 315 In Louisiana, the tax credit applies only to “employment [of] an individual who has been convicted of a firsttime nonviolent offense.” 316 These policies may begin to proliferate as more states understand that employing people with criminal records provides tax revenue, whereas incarceration represents a significant tax expenditure. 317 31F 312F 31F 314 F 315F 316F 310 OHIO REV. CODE ANN. § 2953.25(C)(3). Note that the law exempts certain collateral sanctions from relief via the certificate of rehabilitation, including (under certain circumstances) sanctions applying to sex offenses, vehicular homicide, felony drug offenses committed by medical professionals, among several others. See OHIO REV. CODE ANN. § 2953.25(C)(5). 311 Leasure & Andersen, The Effectiveness of Certificates of Relief as Collateral Consequence Relief Mechanisms: An Experimental Study, supra note 308 at 17-20. 312 Devu, Trapped in the Shackles of America’s Criminal Justice System, supra note 307 at 253-55. 313 CAL. REV. & TAX. CODE § 17053.34. 314 National Hire Network, “State Tax Credits,” 2017, http://www.hirenetwork.org/content/state-tax-credits (last accessed Nov. 25, 2018). 315 35 ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/216 316 LA. STAT. ANN. § 47:287.752. 317 Devu, Trapped in the Shackles of America’s Criminal Justice System, supra note 307 at 253-54. CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Occupational Licensing Barriers In the United States, many professions require individuals to obtain licenses to practice in their chosen field. 318 The criteria for obtaining an occupational license vary under federal and state laws and may exclude people who have criminal convictions. 319 The EEOC has found that some occupational licensing requirements for persons with felony convictions are permissible under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, 320 which prohibits race and national origin discrimination in employment. 321 In 2012, “building on longstanding court decisions,” the EEOC found that due to causing disparate impact 322 “use of an individual’s criminal history in making employment decisions may, in some instances, violate the prohibition against employment discrimination under Title VII.” 323 The EEOC’s 2012 Guidance, which is still in force, recommends that employers “develop[] a targeted screen considering at least the nature of the crime, the time elapsed, and the nature of the job,” followed by an individualized assessment of the applicant with a criminal record. 324 317F 318F 319F 320F 321F 32F 32 F About 30 percent of U.S. workers now need licenses, which is a five-fold increase since the 1950s. 325 Occupational licenses can be important to ensure the delivery of quality goods and services to protect consumer health and safety. 326 Examples of when a license may be necessary to serve the public interest can be found in the medical profession. 327 324F 325F 326F 318 National Employment Law Project, The Consideration of Criminal Records in Occupational Licensing, National Reentry Resource Center, Council of State Governments Justice Center, 2015, at 1, https://csgjusticecenter.org/wpcontent/uploads/2015/12/TheConsiderationofCriminalRecordsinOccupationalLicensing.pdf. 319 Ibid. See also EEOC, 2012 Guidance at 21-23. 320 EEOC, 2012 Guidance at 21-23. See also Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.). 321 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.). 322 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(k)(1)(A)(i); see also Lewis v. City of Chicago, 560 U.S. 205, 208, 211 (2010) (asserting that “Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employers from using employment practices that cause a disparate impact on the basis of race (among other bases)” and reaffirming disparate impact analysis from Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424, 431 (1971), interpreting Title VII to “proscrib[e] not only overt discrimination but also practices that are fair in form, but discriminatory in operation.”). 323 EEOC, 2012 Guidance at 1. 324 Id. at 2; see also National Employment Law Project, The Consideration of Criminal Records in Occupational Licensing, supra note 318 at 1. 325 Brad Hershbein, David Boddy, Melissa S. Kearney, Nearly 30 Percent of Workers in the U.S. Need a License to Perform Their Job: It Is Time to Examine Occupational Licensing Practices, Brookings Institution, 2015, https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2015/01/27/nearly-30-percent-of-workers-in-the-u-s-need-a-license-toperform-their-job-it-is-time-to-examine-occupational-licensing-practices/ (last accessed Aug. 31, 2018). See also The White House, Occupational Licensing: A Framework for Policymakers, 2015, at 3, https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/docs/licensing_report_final_nonembargo.pdf [hereinafter White House, Occupational Licensing]. 326 White House, Occupational Licensing at 3-5. 327 Reddy Statement at 1. 49 But licensing policies can also restrict access to jobs where no discernible nexus between the job and the license exists. 328 Many scholars and advocates believe that occupational licensing bans should be limited to circumstances where the nature of the conviction bears on the ability of the individual to perform the job duties. 329 Others have raised another salient point: licensing policies can limit workers’ ability to practice across state lines. 330 327F 328F 329F Licensing requirements vary drastically from state to state. More than 1,100 different occupations are licensed in at least one state, but fewer than 60 occupations are regulated in all states. 331 This variability can restrict workers’ ability to move from state to state and can frustrate business’s needs to transfer workers when necessary. 332 When these policies adversely affect employees and businesses, they hurt the overall economy as well; one study estimated that occupational licensing laws cost the U.S. economy “between $34.8 and $41.7 billion per year.” 333 The brunt of these costs is eventually borne by American consumers, without necessarily enhancing the quality of any products or services. 334 30F 31 F 32F 3F As licensing policies can limit job choices for unlicensed workers, they can also diminish their earning potential. For instance, unlicensed workers earn an estimated 10 to 15 percent less than licensed workers with the same training, education, and experience. 335 Even the path toward obtaining a license can be cumbersome and costly; one speaker informed the Commission that “2,000 hours [are] required to become a cosmetologist in Utah.” 336 34F 35F States commonly require individuals to pass a criminal background check before obtaining a license. Currently, there are more than 13,000 documented state licensing restrictions for individuals with a criminal record. 337 Among these, about 8,000 restrictions apply to people 36 F White House, Occupational Licensing at 3 (pointing out that “often the requirements for obtaining a license are not in sync with the skills needed for the job”). 329 Michelle Natividad Rodriguez and Beth Avery, Unlicensed and Untapped: Removing Barriers to State Occupational Licenses for People with Criminal Records, National Employment Law Project, 2017, at 4, http://www.nelp.org/publication/unlicensed-untapped-removing-barriers-state-occupational-licenses/. See also Stephen Slivinski, Turning Shackles Into Bootstraps: Why Occupational Licensing Reform Is the Missing Piece of Criminal Justice Reform, Center for the Study of Economic Liberty at Arizona State University, 2016, at 1-2, https://research.wpcarey.asu.edu/economic-liberty/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/CSEL-Policy-Report-2016-01Turning-Shackles-into-Bootstraps.pdf; Malcolm & Seibler, Collateral Consequences: Protecting Public Safety or Encouraging Recidivism?, supra note 74 at 4. 330 White House, Occupational Licensing at 3. 331 Ibid. 332 Ibid. 333 Levin Statement at 3 (citing Daniel S. Hamermesh, Labor Demand (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), Chapter 2). 334 Reddy Statement at 2. 335 White House, Occupational Licensing at 4. 336 Reddy Statement at 2. 337 CSG, “The National Inventory of the Collateral Consequences of Conviction.” Visitors to CSG’s National Collateral Consequence Inventory site may search by offense type, consequence type, duration, jurisdiction, and application (mandatory versus discretionary). The numbers cited in this section were produced by searching for state 328 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS convicted of any felony conviction and over 4,000 apply to people convicted of any misdemeanor. 338 Moreover, at least 9,000 state licensing disqualifications apply for an indefinite period and could last a lifetime, and more than 4,000 are mandatory disqualifications, for which licensing agencies have no choice but to deny a license. 339 37F 38F Additional hurdles can compound the obstructive impact of licensing laws. For instance, formerly incarcerated individuals often lack the education and training to qualify for many skilled labor jobs; this disadvantage likely disqualifies them from licensed jobs that may require a greater degree of education or training. 340 Further, many states use “good moral character” as a standard for granting occupational licenses. 341 A uniform definition of “good moral character” appears nonexistent as of yet. 342 States’ criteria for lack of good moral character can range from convictions for “deadly weapons or firearms offenses” to convictions for “petty offenses indicating an irresponsible attitude toward the law.” 343 Given the subjectivity and vagueness of phrases such as “irresponsibility toward the law,” critics have argued that moral character should not serve as a standard for granting occupational licenses, at least unless it is more precisely defined. 344 Since there is often no uniform set of standards for licensing boards when making determinations under a “good moral character” standard, individual prejudices of licensing officials may contribute to the decision-making process. 345 One idea is that licensing boards could consider consulting the legal and medical professions for guidance on defining the contours of “good moral character,” given that these professions have historically included this standard when licensing physicians and attorneys. 346 39 F 340F 341F 342F 34F 34F 345F Moreover, a recent study found that states with heavy occupational licensing burdens suffered increased rates of recidivism, 347 while states with no “character” provisions and lower licensing burdens saw their recidivism rates drop. 348 Given that the recidivism rate for people who are 346F 347F “occupational & professional licensure & certification” consequences, and then narrowing by offense type (felony or misdemeanor), duration (indefinite or temporary), and application (mandatory or discretionary). Ibid. 338 Ibid. 339 Ibid. 340 Slivinski, Turning Shackles Into Bootstraps: Why Occupational Licensing Reform Is the Missing Piece of Criminal Justice Reform, supra note 329 at 1. 341 Larry Craddock, “‘Good Moral Character’ as a Licensing Standard,” Journal of the Nat’l Ass’n of Admin. Law Judiciary, vol. 28, no. 2 (2008): 450-51, http://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1117&context=naalj; Reddy Statement at 2. 342 Craddock, “’Good Moral Character’ as a Licensing Standard,” supra note 341 at 451. 343 Id. 344 Id. at 451-52. 345 Id. at 451, 456. 346 Id. 347 Slivinski, Turning Shackles Into Bootstraps: Why Occupational Licensing Reform Is the Missing Piece of Criminal Justice Reform, supra note 329 at 5-6; Reddy Statement at 2. 348 Slivinski, Turning Shackles Into Bootstraps: Why Occupational Licensing Reform Is the Missing Piece of Criminal Justice Reform, supra note 329 at 2. 51 unemployed post-incarceration is nearly twice that of those who find employment, 349 correctional facilities could be wise to offer job training programs that can equip inmates to earn occupational licenses. But even when facilities do offer training, the statutory bans on granting licenses to people with criminal convictions impede the formerly incarcerated from using their skills to earn a living. 350 For instance, some individuals receive training to become barbers while incarcerated, but then are blocked from obtaining a license to practice “in the one field in which they now have a marketable skill” once they are released. 351 348F 349F 350F Inmates who fight fires in California offer another compelling example of how licensing restrictions can impact formerly incarcerated people and public safety overall. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation partners with the Los Angeles Fire Department to train incarcerated people to fight deadly wildfires. 352 The New York Times reported that, for their labor in 2017, the inmates only earned about $1 per hour. 353 They may have also learned valuable work skills, but could be stymied in their efforts to apply them post-release due to licensing restrictions for individuals with criminal records. 354 Axios reported that in August 2018, an estimated 2,000 incarcerated people fought fires in California, 355 earning approximately $3 per day for their work. 356 But most fire departments require prospective firefighters to obtain an EMT license, and EMT certifying boards routinely deny licenses to applicants who have criminal records. 357 Thus, while the state may accrue value from the service of these individuals during their incarceration, and incarcerated people may learn marketable skills that could ease their reentry and protect public safety, post-release licensing restrictions can then nullify the potentially positive effects of this arrangement. 358 Speaking to this point, one advocate questioned why the state should bother releasing prisoners, “[if] there’s still an invisible prison around them.” 359 351F 352F 35F 354F 35F 356 F 357F 358F 349 Ibid. Malcolm & Seibler, Collateral Consequences: Protecting Public Safety or Encouraging Recidivism?, supra note 74 at 4. 351 Ibid. 352 Jaime Lowe, “The Incarcerated Women Who Fight California’s Wildfires,” New York Times, Aug. 31, 2017, https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/31/magazine/the-incarcerated-women-who-fight-californias-wildfires.html. 353 Ibid. 354 Ibid. 355 Clark Mindock, “California wildfire: Should inmates be fighting the state’s worst ever blaze?,” The Independent, Aug. 8, 2018, https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/california-wildfires-latest-inmate-firefightersprisoners-mendocino-complex-carr-fire-a8483571.html. 356 Ibid. 357 Stef W. Kight, “How inmates who fight wildfires are later denied firefighting jobs,” Axios, Aug. 9, 2018, https://www.axios.com/how-inmates-who-fight-wildfires-are-later-denied-firefighting-jobs-1513306736-c63805ddc2fb-4c04-a81e-1f9a7058ef34.html. 358 See, e.g., CAL. CODE REGS. tit. 22, § 100079(a)-(b) (requiring individuals to complete “the criminal background check requirement” and to disclose pending or current criminal investigations, pending criminal charges, and prior convictions to qualify for initial certification as an EMT). 359 Kight, “How inmates who fight wildfires are later denied firefighting jobs,” supra note 357. 350 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Several advocates testified to the Commission’s West Virginia State Advisory Committee about formerly incarcerated individuals who had paid for training and education in a particular field, only to find out that they were barred from practicing due to their criminal records. For instance, one young woman went to college with the intention of working as a drug counselor, after she had served time for a drug offense and a related burglary offense (after stealing family jewelry to serve her drug addiction). It was only after paying for and completing 2.5 years of her academic program that she found out she would not be able to be certified as a counselor with her record. 360 359F Moreover, in his testimony before the Commission in 2017, Vikrant Reddy pointed out that licensing barriers “come down much harder on minority communities, disadvantaged communities because those communities are disproportionately represented in the criminal justice system,” and while these policies are well-intentioned, they can “have a counterproductive effect, and have a counterproductive effect on the most vulnerable communities also.” 361 360F Some advocates believe that the process of obtaining a license is often confusing to the applicant, and denial of licensure lacks transparency. 362 Therefore, many advocates believe that taking the following steps would reduce barriers to certain professions that individuals with criminal records face: making the licensing application review process more transparent; clarifying the application questions regarding criminal history; standardizing the application process across all professions; restricting licensing boards from considering arrests and certain older convictions; considering rehabilitation; and creating a pre-licensing petition process for people with criminal records. 363 361F 362F Other advocates believe that certain licensing restrictions for certain jobs are necessary to maintain public safety, and can boost both practitioner wages and respect for the profession. 364 Yet others disagree with a standard approach to licensing across all professions, as a more nuanced approach may be more sensible to determine commonsense restrictions. 365 At the Commission’s 2017 briefing, John Malcolm theorized that broad occupational licensing restrictions can be used to diminish market competition. 366 He noted that: 36F 364F 365F [P]eople who are ex-offenders, they’re the low-hanging fruit in terms of keeping out competition. Just come up with a blanket rule and you're eliminating a whole slew of competitors. So one thing I think that has to happen is that state legislators 360 West Virginia State Advisory Committee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights, Public Meeting, Felony Records: Collateral Consequences for West Virginians, July 19, 2018, Meeting Transcript at 237-39. 361 Reddy Statement at 21-22. 362 Council for Court Excellence Statement at 2; Rodriguez & Avery, Unlicensed and Untapped: Removing Barriers to State Occupational Licenses for People with Criminal Records, supra note 329. 363 Ibid. 364 Rodriguez & Avery, Unlicensed and Untapped: Removing Barriers to State Occupational Licenses for People with Criminal Records, supra note 329. 365 Briefing Transcript at 47 (statement of John Malcolm). 366 Ibid. at 47-48. 53 ought to be paying more attention to avoiding rent-seeking with professional licensing boards . . . it would plumb the depths of my imagination to come up with a legitimate public safety reason why an ex-offender could not be an interior decorator, particularly in the days of Yelp in which people can post bad reviews if an ex-offender is a bad interior decorator. And so I think that they need to be far more scrutinizing in terms of looking at categories and coming up with scalpel-like approaches to eliminating people from professional licenses and jobs than the meat cleaver that is usually employed by people who have a vested interest in keeping out competition. 367 36F In his testimony before the Commission, Reddy further noted that: I think that some of these licensing boards probably just need to be eliminated altogether, they don’t really make a lot of sense, and the criminal justice benefits would be incidental, but you’d have these really broad economic benefits, more competition, lower prices, more innovation. 368 367F Finally, during his testimony before the Commission, Marc Levin from Right on Crime discussed model legislation in Texas that would allow individuals with criminal records to obtain provisional or probationary occupational licenses if they meet certain criteria. 369 If these individuals comply with all of the rules of the occupation and do not commit new criminal offenses, the probationary license would become permanent after a period of time, such as six months. 370 368 F 369F Fair Chance Hiring Policies As of September 2018, the District of Columbia, more than 30 states, and over 150 cities and counties have adopted what advocates characterize as fair chance hiring practices. 371 According to advocates, these practices enable formerly incarcerated individuals to obtain gainful employment despite the stigma attached to their criminal history. 372 As mentioned, several private corporations have adopted policies along these lines, and some higher education institutions have released 370F 371F 367 Ibid. Briefing Transcript at 48 (statement of Vikrant Reddy). 369 Briefing Transcript at 151 (statement of Marc Levin). 370 Ibid. 371 Beth Avery & Phil Hernandez, Ban the Box: U.S. Cities, Counties, and States Adopt Fair Chance Policies, National Employment Law Project, 2018, https://www.nelp.org/publication/ban-the-box-fair-chance-hiring-stateand-local-guide/ (last accessed Nov. 26, 2018). See also The Leadership Conference, Fact Sheet: Fair Chance Hiring, 2017, http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/criminal-justice/Fair_Chance_Hiring.pdf. See generally Michelle Natividad Rodriguez and Anastasia Christman, The Fair Chance/Ban the Box Toolkit, National Employment Law Project, 2015, http://www.nelp.org/publication/the-fair-chance-ban-the-box-toolkit/ (last accessed Nov. 26, 2018). 372 The Leadership Conference, Fact Sheet: Fair Chance Hiring, 2017, http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/criminaljustice/Fair_Chance_Hiring.pdf. 368 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS guidance on fair chance hiring as well. 373 The following sections discuss the Ban the Box and Clean Slate initiatives addressing hiring practices as applicable to people with criminal convictions. 374 372F 37F “Ban the Box” laws and policies prohibit employers from inquiring about criminal history on a job application, deferring the consideration of criminal history to a later point in the hiring process.375 In addition to the numerous states and localities that have already adopted Ban the Box or other fair chance hiring policies, many private employers have voluntarily chosen to implement such policies, and President Obama called on Congress to implement Ban the Box policies in hiring for federal employment. 376 The Obama administration then issued a final rule to prohibit federal 374F 375F See, e.g., Owens & Henderson, “Koch Brothers are right on fair chance hiring,” supra note 34; Calif. Community Colleges, Office of the Chancellor, (Revised) California Community Colleges Fair Chance Hiring Best Practices, 2019, at 3, http://extranet.cccco.edu/Portals/1/AA/PrisonEd/2019/Revised_Policy_Guidance_California_Community_Colleges _Fair_Chance_Hiring_Best_Practices.pdf (outlining best practices for California’s community colleges to hire individuals with criminal records as “advanced by federal and state Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) law and policies, and in the criminal history background check process in California’s new Fair Chance Act.”). 374 For further discussion of policy proposals to expand employment opportunities for people with criminal records, see supra notes 266-72 (discussion of improving the reliability of criminal background checks), notes 273-291 (discussion of implementing EEOC guidelines for hiring people with arrest and conviction records), notes 292-307 (discussion of legal liability protections for employers who hire people with criminal convictions), notes 308-11 (discussion of certificates of rehabilitation or qualification for employment), and notes 312-17 (discussion of tax credits and incentives for employers who hire people with criminal records). See also Legal Action Center, “Beyond ‘Ban the Box”: Four Steps to Build on Fair Chance Hiring,” https://lac.org/beyond-ban-the-box-four-steps-to-buildon-fair-chance-hiring/ (last accessed Nov. 27, 2018); Rebecca Beitsch, “‘Ban the Box’ Laws May Be Harming Young Black Men Seeking Jobs,” Pew Charitable Trusts, Aug. 22, 2017, http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-andanalysis/blogs/stateline/2017/08/22/ban-the-box-laws-may-be-harming-young-black-men-seeking-jobs (last accessed Nov. 27, 2018) (discussing alternatives to Ban the Box policies). 375 National Employment Law Project, ‘Ban the Box’ is a Fair Chance for Workers with Records, 2017, http://www.nelp.org/content/uploads/Ban-the-Box-Fair-Chance-Fact-Sheet.pdf. In 2004, a national civil rights movement of formerly incarcerated individuals launched the Ban the Box campaign to challenge “the stereotypes of people with conviction histories by asking employers to choose their best candidates based on job skills and qualifications, not past convictions.” See Ban the Box Campaign, “About: The Ban the Box Campaign,” http://bantheboxcampaign.org/about (emphasis in original) (last accessed Nov. 26, 2018); Lori Walker, testimony on behalf of Women Against Registry for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1. Walker noted that Ban the Box is essential to ensure equal treatment of people with felony convictions and stated that “if the government would encourage companies to hire felons they would benefit at the federal and state levels by receiving tax dollars in return from these convicted felons.” Ibid. 376 Avery & Hernandez, Ban the Box: U.S. Cities, Counties, and States Adopt Fair Chance Policies to Advance Employment Opportunities for People with Past Convictions, supra note 371; Marianne Levine, “Koch Industries to Stop Asking About Job Candidates’ Criminal History,” Politico, April 27, 2015, http://www.politico.com/story/2015/04/koch-industries-brothers-criminal-history-job-applicants-ban-the-box117382; The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Fact Sheet: President Obama Announces New Actions to Promote Rehabilitation and Reintegration for the Formerly Incarcerated, 2015, https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2015/11/02/fact-sheet-president-obama-announces-newactions-promote-rehabilitation. 373 55 agencies from asking about an applicant’s criminal background until the agency makes a conditional job offer. 377 376F While there has been momentum from the Ban the Box movement, some believe that Ban the Box is not necessarily the best way to help individuals with criminal records secure employment. 378 First, some critics view Ban the Box policies as expanded government regulation that forces employers to spend money on “administrative red tape” and detracts from their freedom to design their own hiring procedures. 379 Others have pointed out that Ban the Box policies delay the hiring process, which can be expensive and inefficient for employers. 380 These delays may also hurt applicants, who could still face discrimination but must wait longer for the employer’s final decision. 381 Employers may still perform criminal background checks, albeit later in the process, and some employers may never intend to hire an applicant with a criminal record. 382 37 F 378F 379F 380F 381F Another major criticism of Ban the Box policies stems from research suggesting that they may exacerbate racial disparities in the hiring process instead of eliminating them. 383 The findings of a few recent studies support the claim that Ban the Box policies encourage what researchers have termed “statistical discrimination,” where employers assume that black people have a criminal record and that white people do not. 384 382F 38F 5 C.F.R. § 731.103(d)(1) (“A hiring agency may not make specific inquiries concerning an applicant’s criminal or credit background of the sort asked on the OF-306 or other forms used to conduct suitability investigations for Federal employment (i.e., inquiries into an applicant’s criminal or adverse credit history) unless the hiring agency has made a conditional offer of employment to the applicant.”); see also Eric Katz, “Obama Makes More Changes to Federal Hiring Through Regulatory Process,” Government Executive, Dec. 1, 2016, https://www.govexec.com/management/2016/12/obama-makes-more-changes-federal-hiring-through-regulatoryprocess/133561/. 378 Gail Heriot, “The Unintended Consequences of ‘Ban the Box’: Statistical Discrimination and Employment Outcomes When Criminal Histories are Hidden,” Reason, Oct. 10, 2018, https://reason.com/volokh/2018/10/10/theunintended-consequences-of-ban-the-b; Derek M. Cohen, “You Don’t Love ‘Fair Chance Hiring’, You Love the Idea of ‘Fair Chance Hiring’,” Texas Public Policy Foundation, April 4, 2016, https://www.texaspolicy.com/blog/detail/you-dont-love-fair-chance-hiring-you-love-the-idea-of-fair-chance-hiring. 379 Greg Glod, “An Alternative to ‘Ban the Box’,” Real Clear Policy, Aug. 5, 2015, http://www.realclearpolicy.com/blog/2015/08/05/ban_the_box_alternative_1387.html; Reddy Statement at 5. 380 Nina Kucharczyk, Thinking Outside the Box: Reforming Employment Discrimination Doctrine to Combat the Negative Consequences of Ban-the-Box Legislation, 85 FORDHAM L. REV. 2803, 2812 (2017). 381 Id. 382 Cohen, “You Don’t Love ‘Fair Chance Hiring,’ You Love the Idea of ‘Fair Chance Hiring,’” supra note 378; see also Glod, “An Alternative to ‘Ban the Box,’” supra note 379. 383 See, e.g., Heriot, “The Unintended Consequences of ‘Ban the Box’: Statistical Discrimination and Employment Outcomes When Criminal Histories are Hidden,” supra note 378; Cohen, “You Don’t Love ‘Fair Chance Hiring,’ You Love the Idea of ‘Fair Chance Hiring’,” supra note 378. 384 Lucy Gubernick, Erasing the Mark of Cain: An Empirical Analysis of the Effect of Ban-the-Box Legislation on the Employment Outcomes of People of Color with Criminal Records, 44 FORDHAM URB. L.J. 1153, 1190-91 (2017); see also Amanda Agan and Sonja Starr, Ban the Box, Criminal Records, and Statistical Discrimination: A Field Experiment, Univ. of Michigan Law and Economics Research Paper No. 16-012 (2016), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2795795; Jennifer L. Doleac and Benjamin Hansen, Does “Ban the Box” Help or Hurt Low-Skilled Workers? Statistical Discrimination and Employment Outcomes When Criminal Histories are Hidden, Working Paper No. 22469, National Bureau of Economic Research (2016), 377 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS One study compared the experiences of white and black male applicants before and after Ban the Box legislation was enacted in New York and New Jersey. 385 It revealed that before the Ban the Box policy took effect and employers could ask about criminal records, the callback rate for applicants with criminal records was nearly the same for both races: 11.1 percent for white applicants and 10.9 percent for black applicants. 386 The study also found that overall, white applicants were 7 percent more likely than black applicants to receive a callback; 387 but after the Ban the Box policy was implemented, white applicants were 45 percent more likely than black applicants to receive a callback. 388 The researchers attributed the results to two possible explanations: statistical discrimination leading employers to believe that all black men likely have criminal backgrounds, and the employers’ belief that white men are much less likely to have criminal backgrounds. 389 Additional research has yielded similar findings. 390 Researchers have hypothesized that when criminal records are unavailable, “employers use race as a proxy for criminal records.” 391 The findings suggest that Ban the Box policies expose the pervasiveness of racial discrimination in hiring, while also possibly excluding more black people from the job market. 384F 385F 386F 387F 38F 389F 390F Some advocacy groups and institutions have responded to this research by pointing out that Ban the Box policies were never intended as “the silver bullet to a racially biased criminal justice system.” 392 They argue that “entrenched racism in the hiring process,” not Ban the Box policies, 391F http://jenniferdoleac.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Doleac_Hansen_BanTheBox.pdf; Osbourne Jackson and Bo Zhao, The Effect of Changing Employers’ Access to Criminal Histories on Ex-Offenders’ Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from the 2010-2012 Massachusetts CORI Reform,” Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Working Paper 1630 (2016), https://www.bostonfed.org/publications/research-department-working-paper/2016/the-effect-ofchanging-employers-access-to-criminal-histories-on-ex-offenders-labor-market-outcomes.aspx. 385 Agan & Starr, Ban the Box, Criminal Records, and Statistical Discrimination: A Field Experiment, supra note 384; see also Nina Kucharczyk, Thinking Outside the Box: Reforming Employment Discrimination Doctrine to Combat the Negative Consequences of Ban-the-Box Legislation, supra note 380 at 2812-13 (discussing the Agan & Starr study). 386 Agan & Starr, Ban the Box, Criminal Records, and Statistical Discrimination: A Field Experiment, supra note 384 at 17. 387 Id. at 33. 388 Id. 389 Id. at 34-35. 390 Gubernick, Erasing the Mark of Cain: An Empirical Analysis of the Effect of Ban-the-Box Legislation on the Employment Outcomes of People of Color with Criminal Records, supra note 384 at 1190-91 (citing Harry J. Holzer et. al., Perceived Criminality, Criminal Background Checks, and the Racial Hiring Practices of Employers, 49 J.L. & ECON. 451 (2006)); Kucharczyk, Thinking Outside the Box: Reforming Employment Discrimination Doctrine to Combat the Negative Consequences of Ban-the-Box Legislation, supra note 380 at 2813-14 (citing Doleac & Hansen, Does “Ban the Box” Help or Hurt Low-Skilled Workers? Statistical Discrimination and Employment Outcomes When Criminal Histories are Hidden, supra note 384). 391 Kucharczyk, Thinking Outside the Box: Reforming Employment Discrimination Doctrine to Combat the Negative Consequences of Ban-the-Box Legislation, supra note 380 at 2813. 392 Maurice Emsellem & Beth Avery, Racial Profiling in Hiring: A Critique of New “Ban the Box” Studies, National Employment Law Project, 2016, at 1, http://www.nelp.org/content/uploads/Policy-Brief-Racial-Profilingin-Hiring-Critique-New-Ban-the-Box-Studies.pdf. See also Christina Stacy and Mychal Cohen, Ban the Box and Racial Discrimination: A Review of the Evidence and Policy Recommendations, Urban Institute, 2017, at 14, https://www.urban.org/research/publication/ban-box-and-racial-discrimination/view/full_report (suggesting that 57 ultimately facilitates racial profiling. 393 Scholars have also maintained that Ban the Box has been more valuable than harmful and have urged closer examination of the research, which shows that people of color with criminal records received callbacks and obtained employment at higher rates after Ban the Box policies took effect. 394 Many proponents of reform endorse a stronger and more comprehensive approach to expand employment opportunities for individuals with criminal records, and to tackle the deep-seated racism within the hiring process. 395 392F 39F 394F Policies other than Ban the Box have been proposed to increase employment opportunities for individuals with criminal records. 396 One viable alternative to Ban the Box is expungement or record sealing, through which people with criminal records for certain offenses can petition a court to seal or “shield” their records from public inquiry, enabling them to refrain from disclosing a criminal record to an employer without violating the law. 397 Various state laws allow for the expungement of certain criminal records, although jurisdictions generally take a conservative approach when determining which offenses are eligible for expungement. 398 In his testimony 395 F 396F 397F other policy interventions, in addition to Ban the Box, are needed “to achieve the desired outcome for people with criminal records and reduce (or at least not increase) discrimination based on race”) (emphasis in original). 393 Emsellem & Avery, Racial Profiling in Hiring: A Critique of New “Ban the Box” Studies, supra note 392 at 1. See also Terry-Ann Craigie, “Employment After Incarceration: Ban the Box and Racial Discrimination,” Brennan Center for Justice, Oct. 13, 2017, https://www.brennancenter.org/blog/employment-after-incarceration-ban-box-andracial-discrimination (contending that “Ban the Box is being used a scapegoat for discriminatory hiring practices that have been going on for decades”). 394 Ibid. at 5; see also Office of the D.C. Auditor, The Impact of “Ban the Box” in the District of Columbia, 2016, http://dcauditor.org/report/the-impact-of-ban-the-box-in-the-district-of-columbia/; Southern Coalition for Social Justice, The Benefits of Ban the Box: A Case Study of Durham, NC, 2014, http://www.southerncoalition.org/wpcontent/uploads/2014/10/BantheBox_WhitePaper-2.pdf; Ellie Anzilotti, “How “Ban the Box” has helped (and hurt) the job prospects of people with criminal records,” Fast Company, Nov. 15, 2018, https://www.fastcompany.com/90267016/how-the-ban-the-box-movement-has-helped-and-hurt-the-job-prospectsof-people-with-criminal-records (arguing that Ban the Box policies “create an overall positive affect on employment for people with criminal records,” and, as a whole, “increase the odds of public employment for people with criminal records by 30%.”). 395 See. e.g., Emsellem & Avery, Racial Profiling in Hiring: A Critique of New “Ban the Box” Studies, supra note 392 at 1; Stacy & Cohen, Ban the Box and Racial Discrimination: A Review of the Evidence and Policy Recommendations, supra note 392 at 15 (supporting stronger and better enforced antidiscrimination laws and regulations in combination with Ban the Box); Craigie, “Employment After Incarceration: Ban the Box and Racial Discrimination,” supra note 393 (stating that Ban the Box is “only a starting point” and recommending “hold[ing] employers accountable for their discriminatory practices.”). 396 Legal Action Center, “Beyond ‘Ban the Box”: Four Steps to Build on Fair Chance Hiring,” https://lac.org/beyond-ban-the-box-four-steps-to-build-on-fair-chance-hiring/ (last accessed Nov. 27, 2018); Glod, “An Alternative to ‘Ban the Box’,” supra note 379. 397 See, e.g., MD. CODE ANN., CRIM. PROC. §§ 10-303, 10-306 (statutory provisions in Maryland allowing recordsealing petitions and explaining the legal effects of nondisclosure of sealed records); Brian M. Murray, A New Era for Expungement Law Reform? Recent Developments at the State and Federal Levels, 10 HARV. L. & POL’Y REV. 361, 369-70 (2016); Michael Haugen, “The Truth About ‘Ban the Box,’” Right on Crime, April 13, 2016, http://rightoncrime.com/2016/04/the-truth-about-ban-the-box/; Glod, “An Alternative to ‘Ban the Box,’” supra note 379; see also Council of State Governments, Justice Center, “About the Clean State Clearinghouse,” https://cleanslateclearinghouse.org/about/ (last accessed Oct. 11, 2017); Levin Statement at 2. 398 Stacy & Cohen, Ban the Box and Racial Discrimination: A Review of the Evidence and Policy Recommendations, supra note 392 at 18; Murray, A New Era for Expungement Law Reform? Recent Developments at the State and CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS before the Commission in 2017, Marc Levin discussed record sealing, expungement, and nondisclosure. 399 Levin described record sealing as distinct from record expungement, indicating: 398F [I]f your record is sealed or nondisclosed, the prosecutor or law enforcement, judges, they can still see it, it can still be used to enhance under repeat offender statutes, so it’s not a physical destruction of the record. Now, of course, for people that are exonerated, we absolutely should physically destroy the record and there may be some role for that, I think even for people, especially after 20 years, if somebody had a low-level drug possession, maybe we should expunge it. 400 39F He further explained that laws in Texas, Indiana, and a few other states follow this model, and described how these laws benefit both the individual and law enforcement by giving individuals the chance to successfully reintegrate while maintaining commonsense exceptions for public safety purposes. 401 40F The “Clean Slate” campaign endorses automatic record-sealing policies that do not require an individual to petition a decision-maker. 402 In 2017, the Pennsylvania State Senate passed a Clean Slate bill, which allows certain criminal records to be automatically sealed by the state, without petition. 403 Clean Slate would rely on the computerized criminal record databases to automatically identify cases eligible for sealing, which could reduce caseloads for courts. 404 Supporters of the legislation point out that automatic record sealing would save individuals from hiring an attorney and incurring court costs, which often limits people who are not “savvy and wealthy enough to navigate the legal process.” 405 This model legislation could be tailored for other states that have electronic records to match with the data in other states’ electronic criminal records databases. 406 401 F 402F 403F 40F 405 F Federal Levels, supra note 397 at 367; see also, e.g., TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. §§411.081(d), 411.071-077; ARK. CODE ANN. § 16-93-1207(b)(1); ARK. CODE ANN. § 16-90-901-05; 18 PA. STAT. AND CONS. STAT. ANN. § 9122. 399 Briefing Transcript at 147-49 (statement of Marc Levin). 400 Ibid. at 147. 401 Ibid. at 147-48. Levin specifically discussed statutory exceptions “for certain licensing boards that could still see some sealed records from some occupations that are, you know, involve potential danger to public safety and so forth.” Ibid. 402 Community Legal Services and Center for American Progress, Clean Slate Advocacy Toolkit, 2017, at 1, https://clsphila.org/sites/default/files/issues/Clean%20Slate%20Toolkit%20-%2010-2017.pdf. 403 S.B. 529, 2017-2018 Gen. Assemb., Reg. Sess. (Pa. 2017), https://www.legis.state.pa.us/CFDOCS/Legis/PN/Public/btCheck.cfm?txtType=PDF&sessYr=2017&sessInd=0&bil lBody=S&billTyp=B&billNbr=0529&pn=0854. Note that the bill would generally limit automatic record-sealing to certain misdemeanor convictions and charges not leading to a conviction. Id. 404 Community Legal Services and Center for American Progress, Clean Slate Advocacy Toolkit, supra note 402 at 1. 405 Levin Statement at 3. 406 Community Legal Services and Center for American Progress, Clean Slate Advocacy Toolkit, supra note 402 at 1. 59 A Clean Slate bill was also recently introduced on the federal level. In August 2018, Congresswoman Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) and Congressman Rod Blum (R-Iowa) introduced a federal Clean Slate bill (H.R. 6677) in the House of Representatives. 407 This proposed legislation, which has garnered bipartisan support, follows the Pennsylvania model to allow automatic record sealing for certain criminal records—for individuals who are not violent offenders or sex offenders—and a streamlined petition process for other types of federal criminal records to allow for successful reentry. 408 Backers of the measure have described it as a commonsense approach to reinforce the efforts of people with criminal convictions to successfully reintegrate into society. 409 406F 407 F 408 F How a Criminal Record Can Affect Housing Opportunities Individuals with criminal convictions face barriers to both public and private housing. Federal laws prohibit individuals with certain types of criminal records from living in public or subsidized housing and/or living in certain geographical areas, and private housing providers may implement policies that restrict individuals with arrests or criminal convictions. 410 Many formerly incarcerated people return to low-income communities, and the National Low Income Housing Coalition estimates that only 35 affordable rental units exist for every 100 “extremely low-income” households. 411 Coupled with the collateral consequences that formerly incarcerated individuals face when trying to earn a living, formerly incarcerated individuals face a high risk of housing 409F 410F 407 Clean Slate Act of 2018, H.R. 6677, 115th Cong. (2nd Sess. 2018), https://www.congress.gov/bill/115thcongress/house-bill/6677/text; see also Adam Brandon, “Support the Clean Slate Act, H.R. 6677,” FreedomWorks, Aug. 30, 2018, https://www.freedomworks.org/content/support-clean-slate-act-hr-6677. 408 Adam Brandon, “Support the Clean Slate Act, H.R. 6677,” FreedomWorks, Aug. 30, 2018, https://www.freedomworks.org/content/support-clean-slate-act-hr-6677; Office of Congresswoman Lisa Blunt Rochester, “Blunt Rochester, Blum Introduce Bipartisan, First-in-the-Nation Federal Second Chance Legislation,” Aug. 30, 2018, https://bluntrochester.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=162. 409 Ibid. 410 42 U.S.C. § 1437n(f) (permanently prohibiting from public housing people convicted of manufacturing methamphetamine on the premises); 42 U.S.C. § 13663 (prohibiting from public housing certain individuals registered as state sex offenders); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(a) (prohibiting from public housing a tenant evicted for “drugrelated criminal activity” for three years post-eviction unless the evicted tenant completes a rehabilitation program or obtains a waiver); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(b) (requiring public housing agencies and owners to set standards prohibiting from admission any household with a member determined to be “illegally using a controlled substance”); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(c) (allowing public housing agencies and owners to deny admission to an individual or any member of the individual’s household suspected of engaging “in any drug-related or violent criminal activity or other criminal activity” under certain circumstances). See generally Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 7-8; Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 7 (discussing barriers in the private rental market). 411 Elayne Weiss, Housing Access for People with Criminal Records, National Low Income Housing Coalition, 2017, at 1, http://nlihc.org/sites/default/files/AG-2017/2017AG_Ch06-S06_Housing-Access-Criminal-Records.pdf; National Low Income Housing Coalition, The Gap: A Shortage of Affordable Homes, 2017, at 2, https://nlihc.org/sites/default/files/Gap-Report_2017.pdf (The National Low Income Housing Coalition defines “extremely low-income” as having an income at or below the federal poverty guideline or 30 percent of the area median income, whichever is higher.). CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS insecurity and homelessness. 412 While landlords have an understandable interest in safety, 413 barring formerly incarcerated persons—regardless of the basis for conviction—from tenancy does not categorically serve that interest. In addition, high barriers to housing have severe implications. This section reviews overarching civil rights issues related to housing barriers for persons with felony convictions, and the subsequent sections discuss particular barriers for public and private housing. 41F 412F Without a stable residence, it is difficult for formerly incarcerated individuals to reconnect with society. 414 In turn, this difficulty can lead to increased rates of recidivism. 415 Kate Walz, Director of Housing Justice and Director of Litigation at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, offered a snapshot of the challenges confronting formerly incarcerated individuals who seek adequate housing: 413 F 41F For many, a common question emerges on the first night: “Where will I sleep?” But often, securing safe, decent and affordable housing will present a significant challenge for people long after they have left the criminal justice system… Housing barriers for justice-involved individuals can also severely restrain their ability to reintegrate back into their communities by exacerbating other collateral consequences. 416 415F These housing challenges persist beyond the immediate reentry period because initial housing arrangements are often temporary, and securing permanent housing is a more difficult feat. 417 416F 412 Stephen Metraux, Caterina G. Roman, Richard S. Cho, Incarceration and Homelessness, National Symposium on Homelessness Research, 2007, https://www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/p9.pdf; Claire W. Herbert, Jeffrey D. Morenoff, David J. Harding, Homelessness and Housing Insecurity among Former Prisoners, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Services, 2015, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4762459/pdf/nihms-729845.pdf. 413 See, e.g., Kline v. 1500 Massachusetts Avenue Apt. Corp., 439 F.2d 477, 479-81 (D.D.C. 1970) (recognizing that “[t]he landlord is no insurer of his tenants safety, but he certainly is no bystander” and imposing “upon the landlord a duty to take those steps which are within his power to minimize the predictable risk to his tenants” when the landlord has notice of foreseeable acts of harm by third parties “in the portion of the premises exclusively within his control.”). 414 Katherine Cortes & Shawn Rogers, Reentry Housing Options: The Policymakers’ Guide, Council of State Governments Justice Center, 2010, at vii, http://csgjusticecenter.org/wpcontent/uploads/2012/12/Reentry_Housing_Options-1.pdf. 415 Faith E. Lutze, Jeffrey W. Rosky, Zachary K. Hamilton, “Homelessness and Reentry: A Multisite Outcome Evaluation of Washington State’s Reentry Housing Program for High Risk Offenders,” Criminal Justice and Behavior, vol. 41, no. 4 (2014) at 481, https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/436/2014/11/Criminal-Justice-andBehavior-2014-Lutze-471-91.pdf; Saneta deVuono-powell, Chris Schweidler, Alicia Walters, Azadeh Zohrabi, Who Pays? The True Cost Of Incarceration On Families, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Forward Together, and Research Action Design, 2015, at 26, http://whopaysreport.org/who-pays-full-report/. 416 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 2-3. 417 Jocelyn Fontaine, Jennifer Biess, Housing as a Platform for Formerly Incarcerated Persons,” Urban Institute, 2012, at 3, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/25321/412552-Housing-as-a-Platform-forFormerly-Incarcerated-Persons.PDF. 61 Some individuals are able to stay with family members or friends temporarily or for a lengthy period. 418 Some individuals may qualify for supportive housing programs (transitional or permanent, and depending on various eligibility requirements based on sex or any federal restrictions on eligibility), often serving individuals with mental health needs (and as noted before, over half of the incarcerated population in the U.S. reportedly has a mental health condition 419) or physical disabilities (also as noted previously, the incarcerated population is twice as likely to have a mobility disorder, three to four times likelier to be blind or have a vision impairment, and two to three times likelier to be deaf or hard of hearing than the general U.S. population 420), substance abuse disorders, chronic homelessness, or residential instability. 421 Other individuals must rely on other subsidized housing programs (for low-income individuals) or private housing. 422 One study found that nearly 8 in 10 formerly incarcerated individuals reported ineligibility or denial of housing because of their or a loved one’s conviction history. 423 According to another study, men who had been incarcerated were twice as likely to become homeless as men without a history of incarceration. 424 417F 418F 419F 420F 421F 42F 423F Research confirms a clear connection between incarceration and homelessness: prior incarceration has been identified as a risk factor for homelessness, and individuals experiencing homelessness are vulnerable to incarceration. 425 Many scholars argue that securing housing upon reentry is the most “pressing and immediate short-term need” for formerly incarcerated individuals. 426 Formerly incarcerated individuals are especially likely to experience homelessness within the first 30 days 42F 425F 418 Ibid. at 3. Joint Statement, Disability Advocates at 2; James & Glaze, Special Report: Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates, supra note 117 at 1. 420 Joint Statement, Disability Advocates at 3-4; Davis, People with Intellectual Disability in the Criminal Justice System: Victims & Suspects, supra note 122; Bronson & Berzofsky, Disabilities Among Prison and Jail Inmates, 2011-2012, supra note 122 at 3. 421 Fontaine & Biess, Housing as a Platform for Formerly Incarcerated Persons, supra note 417 at 5. 422 Ibid. at 5. 423 deVuono-powell et al., Who Pays? The True Cost Of Incarceration On Families, supra note 415 at 26, http://whopaysreport.org/who-pays-full-report/; Walz and Tran-Leung, Written Statement, at 2-3. 424 Amanda Geller and Mariah A Curtis, A Sort of Homecoming: Incarceration and the Housing Security of Urban Men, Soc Sci Res. vol. 40, no. 4 (2011): 1196-1213. 425 Herbert et al., Homelessness and Housing Insecurity Among Former Prisoners, supra note 412 at 2; Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9-11, 9-23 to 9-24. Metraux et al. suggested multiple reasons why individuals experiencing homelessness are vulnerable to incarceration, including “the public nature of a homeless existence” and the criminalization of their attempts to survive (manifested by bans on begging and sleeping in public). Ibid. at 9-11. See also National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, No Safe Place: The Criminalization of Homelessness in U.S. Cities, 2014, at 7-8, https://www.nlchp.org/documents/No_Safe_Place. 426 Herbert et al., Homelessness and Housing Insecurity Among Former Prisoners, supra note 412 at 2; Faith E. Lutze, Jeffrey W. Rosky, Zachary K. Hamilton, “Homelessness and Reentry: A Multisite Outcome Evaluation of Washington State’s Reentry Housing Program for High Risk Offenders,” Criminal Justice and Behavior, vol. 41, no. 4 (2014) at 472, https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/436/2014/11/Criminal-Justice-and-Behavior-2014-Lutze-471-91.pdf; Stephen Metraux & Dennis P. Culhane, “Homeless Shelter Use and Reincarceration Following Prison Release,” Criminology and Public Policy, vol. 3, issue 2 (2004) at 139, 141, https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1118&context=spp_papers. 419 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS after leaving prison. 427 Furthermore, more than half of homeless individuals have reported being incarcerated at some point in their lives, 428 and individuals who lack housing are more frequently arrested and rearrested than individuals with stable housing. 429 Some research has shown that homeless people of color are more likely to have an incarceration history than white homeless individuals, 430 which can be explained in part by the disproportionately high rates of incarceration among people of color, particularly black men. 431 Incarcerated persons with mental health diagnoses are also at a higher than average risk of becoming homeless upon reentry into society. 432 426F 427F 428F 429F 430F 431 F Throughout the U.S., many municipal laws prohibit certain public behaviors, such as sleeping or camping in public, begging, loitering, sleeping in vehicles, or sharing food with the homeless. 433 These laws criminalize the actions of homeless people who are trying to survive, and increase the chances that a homeless person will be arrested and then burdened with a criminal record. 434 In turn, people exiting prison or jail are at risk of homelessness because of barriers that deny housing to people with criminal records. 435 In certain localities, municipal officials, law enforcement, and policymakers have justified the laws governing public behavior as necessary to promote public safety, maintain the sanitation of public spaces, and reduce the visibility of homelessness so as not to deter customers from businesses. 436 However, advocates argue that such policies are “unduly 432F 43F 43F 435F Metraux & Culhane, “Recent Incarceration History Among a Sheltered Homeless Population,” supra note 426 at 10. 428 Urban Institute, Homelessness: Programs and the People They Serve: Findings of the National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients, 1999, at 50, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/66286/310291-Homelessness-Programs-and-the-People-TheyServe-Findings-of-the-National-Survey-of-Homeless-Assistance-Providers-and-Clients.PDF. 429 HCH Clinicians’ Network, “Keeping Homeless People Out of the Justice System,” Healing Hands, vol. 8, no. 6 (2004) at 1-2, https://www.nhchc.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/HealingHands12_17_04.pdf. 430 Marian Moser Jones, “Does Race Matter in Addressing Homelessness? A Review of the Literature,” World Med Health Policy, vol. 8, no. 2 (2016): 139-56, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5863922/pdf/nihms924492.pdf. 431 See Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Populations,” supra notes 96-130. 432 Patricia McKernan, “Homelessness and Prisoner Reentry: Examining Barriers to Housing Stability and EvidenceBased Strategies That Promote Improved Outcomes,” Journal of Community Corrections, 2017, at 7, https://www.voa.org/pdf_files/homelessness-and-prisoner-reentry-examining-barriers-to-housing-stability-andevidence-based-strategies-that-promote-improved-outcomes. 433 National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, No Safe Place: The Criminalization of Homelessness in U.S. Cities, supra note 425 at 7-8. See also Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9-11. 434 Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9-11. 435 See supra note 410 (citing 42 U.S.C. § 1437n(f); 42 U.S.C. § 13663; 42 U.S.C. § 13661(a); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(b); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(c)); Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 7-8; Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 7. See also the next two sections of this chapter for more discussion of legal barriers to housing and HUD guidance for people with criminal records. 436 Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic, ‘Forced into Breaking the Law’ The Criminalization of Homelessness in Connecticut, Yale Law School, 2016, at 35, https://law.yale.edu/system/files/area/center/schell/criminalization_of_homelessness_report_for_web_full_report.pdf. 427 63 punitive,” and they can set up or perpetuate a vicious cycle. 437 People who violate these laws typically receive citations that are generally punishable by a fine, unless the individual is unable to pay or plead to a citation, in which case an arrest warrant could be issued that could also lead to jail time. 438 Individuals who cannot secure adequate housing post-incarceration are twice as likely to recidivate. 439 436 F 437F 438F Relatedly, because younger LGBT people often encounter rejection from their families or discriminatory school discipline policies that push them out of home or school, they may struggle to meet basic housing needs. 440 Many LGBT people are at high risk of becoming homeless and/or relying on underground “survival” economies (which may include selling or trading sex, selling drugs, or theft), thus leading to more encounters with law enforcement. 441 Discriminatory enforcement of laws and harmful policing tactics can also cause LGBT individuals to experience more encounters with law enforcement. 442 439F 40F 41F After leaving jail or prison, LGBT individuals frequently face steeper challenges post-reentry. 443 Because they often lack access to culturally competent reentry, parole, and probation programs, LGBT people may not receive relevant advice on how to handle discrimination (based on their sexual orientation or gender identity) while searching for employment or housing, or how to get adequate physical or mental health care (especially for HIV). 444 Transgender people also face unique challenges, such as not being able to obtain official documents that accurately reflect their gender identity, which can be problematic when searching for jobs or housing. 445 42 F 43F 4F Rebecca Vallas & Sharon Dietrich, One Strike and You’re Out: How We Can Eliminate Barriers to Economic Security and Mobility for People with Criminal Records, Center for American Progress, 2014, at 7, https://cdn.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/VallasCriminalRecordsReport.pdf. 438 Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic, ‘Forced into Breaking the Law’ The Criminalization of Homelessness in Connecticut, supra note 436 at 12. See also U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Targeted Fines and Fees Against Low-Income Communities of Color: Civil Rights and Constitutional Implications, 2017, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2017/Statutory_Enforcement_Report2017.pdf. 439 Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 2. 440 Center for American Progress & Movement Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, 2016, at 21-25, http://www.lgbtmap.org/file/lgbt-criminal-justice.pdf; Goldberg Statement at 4. See also LGBTQ Task Force Statement at 5. 441 Center for American Progress & Movement Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, supra note 440 at 33; LGBTQ Task Force Statement at 5. 442 Center for American Progress & Movement Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, supra note 440 at 45-64, http://www.lgbtmap.org/file/lgbt-criminal-justice.pdf; Goldberg Statement at 4-5. 443 Meyer et al., “Incarceration Rates and Traits of Sexual Minorities in the United States: National Inmate Survey, 2011-2012,” supra note 126; Center for American Progress and Movement Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, supra note 440; LGBTQ Task Force Statement at 2; HRC Statement at 2. 444 Center for American Progress & Movement Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, supra note 440 at 45-64; Goldberg Statement at 5-6. 445 Center for American Progress & Movement Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, supra note 440 at 31-33; Goldberg Statement at 5. 437 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Barriers to Subsidized Housing for Individuals with Criminal Records Federal law places several mandatory and discretionary restrictions on individuals with certain types of criminal records who wish to live in subsidized housing. 446 For example, applicants who have been convicted of manufacturing methamphetamine on federally assisted property face a mandatory lifetime ban on obtaining subsidized housing, as do applicants who are registered sex offenders. 447 Under federal law, public housing is also unavailable to anyone determined to be “illegally using a controlled substance” and to anyone evicted from federally subsidized housing for drug-related criminal activity for three years post-eviction. 448 Public Housing Authorities (PHAs) have the discretion to admit an applicant if the applicant completes an approved rehabilitation program. 449 Additionally, if applicants have engaged in any drug-related criminal activity, violent criminal activity, or other criminal activity that would affect the health, safety, or peaceful enjoyment of the property, PHAs may deny the applicant if a “reasonable time” (as defined by the PHA) has not passed since the offense or conviction. 450 45F 46F 47F 48F 49F In 1996, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) issued guidance entitled “One Strike and You’re Out”: Screening and Eviction Guidelines for Public Housing Authorities. 451 The guidance was designed to help PHAs “develop and enforce stricter screening and eviction as a part of their anti-drug, anti-crime initiatives.” 452 The guidance urged PHAs to integrate “one-strike” rules into their screening procedures, emphasizing that any “criminal activity” by the applicant or a household member of the applicant may justify denial of housing. 453 HUD also encouraged PHAs to spell out these rules in each tenant’s lease, specifying that the ban on criminal activity applies to any guest of the tenant and clarifying that an arrest alone may trigger eviction. 454 450F 451F 452F 453F While the HUD guidance called for individualized reviews of applicants that assess a person’s criminal history and evidence of rehabilitation on a case-by-case basis, research has shown that these individualized reviews do not always occur. 455 Critics believe PHAs vary in their 45F 446 See supra note 410 (citing 42 U.S.C. § 1437n(f); 42 U.S.C. § 13663; 42 U.S.C. § 13661(a); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(b); 42 U.S.C. § 13661(c)); Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 7-8. 447 42 U.S.C. § 1437n(f); 42 U.S.C. § 13663. 448 42 U.S.C. § 13661(a)-(b); 24 C.F.R. 960.204(a). 449 42 U.S.C. § 13661(a); 24 C.F.R. 960.204(a). 450 42 U.S.C. § 13661(c); 24 C.F.R. 982.553(a); 24 C.F.R. § 5.100. 451 U.S. Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development, “One Strike and You’re Out”: Screening & Eviction Guidelines for Public Housing Authorities (HAs), HUD Notice PIH 96-16 (1996), https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/9616pihn.doc. 452 Id. at i. 453 Id. at 5-6. 454 Id. at 7-8. 455 Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 10; U.S. Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development, “One Strike and You’re Out”: Screening & Eviction Guidelines for Public Housing Authorities (HAs), supra note 455 at 6. See also Simmons v. T.M. Assocs. Mgmt., Inc., 287 F. Supp. 3d 600, 602, 604-05 (W.D. Va. 2018) (citing HUD’s guidance 65 interpretations of HUD guidance regarding the consideration of an applicant’s criminal history, and many PHAs may be overly restrictive when screening applicants who have any sort of drugrelated or violent offense, no matter how far in the past the offense occurred. 456 45F According to a report presented to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and HUD, the restrictions on federally subsidized housing may limit family supports and other potential supportive housing options available to formerly incarcerated individuals: These restrictions also limit the family support available to these persons if their families are living in subsidized housing, as their presence would put all household members at risk for eviction. Current policies pertaining to federal funding for specialized housing have provided little opportunity for housing to be developed to compensate for such restrictions. Ironically, even persons who were homeless prior to incarceration will have increased difficulty in accessing homeless services upon release. This is because persons released from incarceration, even if homeless prior to their incarceration, will not meet the standard criteria for being “homeless” and will have greater difficulty being eligible for programs targeting the homeless population. 457 456F In February 2015, the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty and Law issued a report on criminal records screening in federally subsidized housing that brings light to four issues that create undue burdens on individuals with criminal records seeking housing, including: 458 457F Unreasonable lookback periods. With the exception of two outlined categories of criminal conduct, federal guidance suggests that any inquiries about criminal activity should focus on activity that occurred within a “reasonable time.” 459 While HUD has suggested that a five-year lookback period is reasonable, some housing providers have implemented screening policies with long lookback periods (exceeding 5 years) or open-ended screening policies that look back indefinitely at a criminal history. 460 458F 459F requiring housing providers to perform “an individualized assessment” of an applicant with a criminal record, finding that the housing provider had not conducted an individualized inquiry, and rejecting the housing provider’s argument that the plaintiff’s “conviction insulates it from any housing discrimination claim as a matter of law.”). 456 Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 10; Gwen Rubinstein and Debbie Mukamal, “Welfare and Housing: Denial of Benefits to Drug Offenders,” in Invisible Punishment: The Collateral Consequences of Mass Imprisonment, ed. Marc Mauer and Meda Chesney-Lind (New York: New Press, 2002), at 37-49. 457 Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9. 458 Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 11-34. 459 Ibid. at 11-15. 460 Ibid. at 12-15; Screening and Eviction for Drug Abuse and Other Criminal Activity, 66 Fed. Reg. 28,776, at 28,779 (May 24, 2001), http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2001-05-24/pdf/01-12840.pdf. CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Unfair Use of Arrests to Prove Criminal Activity. Some housing providers consider arrest records when screening applicants, which essentially equates arrests with criminal activity or construes arrests as evidence of criminal activity. 461 The use of arrest records in screening may disproportionately exclude applicants of color, due to their high rate of arrests compared to white applicants. 462 Overbroad Categories of Criminal Activity. Many housing providers implement blanket bans on felony convictions, or create policies that have vague, broad categories of prohibited criminal activity. 463 These broad categories leave narrow leeway for a successful applicant, can confuse and possibly deter applicants from pursuing subsidized housing options, and can have disparate impact implications. 464 Underuse of Mitigating Circumstances. Many applicants are not aware that they are able to present evidence of “mitigating circumstances” or appeal a denial of their application. 465 Additionally, some PHAs refuse to consider this evidence in making their determinations, contrary to HUD guidance. 466 460F 461F 462F 463F 46F 465F In June 2015, the Supreme Court affirmed that disparate-impact claims are cognizable under the Fair Housing Act, meaning that a plaintiff does not have to show discriminatory intent when challenging a policy that disproportionately harms people of color. 467 However, among other limitations, the Court clarified that plaintiffs must show that public housing authorities could have 46F 461 Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 18-19. 462 Merf Ehman, Fair Housing Disparate Impact Claims Based on the Use of Criminal and Eviction Records in Tenant Screening Policies, 2011, at 12, http://nhlp.org/files/PRRAC%20Disparate%20Impact%201-2011.pdf (defining criminal records as arrest records, criminal court records, and corrections and state criminal repository records, and citing multiple sources to conclude that “blanket policies denying housing to individuals with criminal records have a disparate impact on” people of color). The author asserted that “[t]he disparate impact of criminal records based [sic] tenant screening on certain protected classes is almost incontrovertible.” Ibid. Additionally, as the Ninth Circuit confirmed, “[federal] circuits have held that it is unlawful for housing intermediaries to ‘screen’ prospective housing applicants on the basis of race, even if the preferences arise with landlords.” Fair Hous. Council of San Fernando Valley v. Roommates.Com, LLC, 521 F.3d 1157, 1167 n. 21 (9th Cir. 2008). Applicants and tenants have successfully challenged the use of arrest records by subsidized housing providers. See Landers v. Chicago Hous. Auth., 404 Ill. App. 3d 568, 577 (2010) (finding that an applicant’s record of multiple arrests did not evince a history of criminal activity that would justify the public housing provider’s rejection of the application); Nashua Hous. Auth. v. Wilson, 162 N.H. 358, 362 (2011) (holding that a tenant’s arrest for drug-related offenses did not prove that she engaged in drug-related criminal activity that would justify her eviction from public housing). 463 Tran-Leung, When Discretion Means Denial: A National Perspective on Criminal Records Barriers to Federally Subsidized Housing, supra note 36 at 24. 464 Ibid. at 22-27. 465 Ibid. at 29. 466 Ibid. at 29; 24 C.F.R. § 982.553(a)(2)(ii)(C)(1); Screening and Eviction for Drug Abuse and Other Activity, HUD Notice H. 467 Texas Dep’t of Hous. & Cmty. Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., 135 S. Ct. 2507, 2513, 2525 (2015). See also 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601-3619, 3631. 67 undertaken a less restrictive alternative policy to accomplish any valid government interests at play. 468 467F Some advocates argue that the implications of this ruling could be significant for criminal records screening practices that disproportionately affect people of color. 469 The Court pointed out that plaintiffs who allege disparate impact may uncover “unconscious prejudices and disguised animus that escape easy classification as disparate treatment.” 470 Imposing disparate-impact liability on housing providers could, the Court asserted, “prevent segregated housing patterns that might otherwise result from covert and illicit stereotyping.” 471 468F 469F 470 F After the Supreme Court decision, HUD issued updated guidance that appeared to depart from the 1996 “one-strike” guidance. 472 In the new guidance, HUD stressed that it did not require PHAs to “adopt or enforce so-called ‘one-strike’ rules that deny admission to anyone with a criminal record or that require automatic eviction anytime a household member engages in criminal activity in violation of their lease.” 473 Moreover, HUD cautioned that a mere arrest does not constitute “criminal activity” and that PHAs may not deny admission, terminate assistance, or evict a tenant based on an arrest record. 474 HUD recommended that PHAs read the Shriver Center’s report for examples of best practices in screening and eviction policies. 475 471F 472 F 473F 47F Across the country, some PHAs have taken steps to allow individuals with criminal records to more easily access public housing programs. 476 For example, the Housing Authority of New 475F 468 Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., 135 S. Ct. at 2511 (least restrictive alternative requirement); id. at 2523 (“governmental entities…must not be prevented from achieving legitimate objectives, such as ensuring compliance with health and safety codes”); id. at 2533 (“[D]isparate-impact liability has always been properly limited in key respects that avoid the serious constitutional questions that might arise under the FHA, for instance, if such liability were imposed based solely on a showing of a statistical disparity. Disparate-impact liability mandates the ‘removal of artificial, arbitrary, and unnecessary barriers, not the displacement of valid governmental policies. Griggs, supra note 322, at 431, 91 S.Ct. 849. (FHA is not an instrument to force housing authorities to reorder their priorities. Rather, the FHA aims to ensure that those priorities can be achieved without arbitrarily creating discriminatory effects or perpetuating segregation.”). 469 See Rebecca J. Walter, Jill Viglione, Marie Skubak Tillyer, “One Strike to Second Chances: Using Criminal Backgrounds in Admission Decisions for Assisted Housing,” Housing Policy Debate, vol. 27, no. 5 (2017) at 5, https://nlihc.org/sites/default/files/One-Strike-to-Second-Chances.pdf (arguing that the Supreme Court decision “changed the landscape for housing providers” because “[a]lthough returning citizens are not a protected class, blanket bans on individuals with criminal records are discriminatory since African Americans and Hispanics are disproportionately arrested, convicted, and imprisoned[.]”). 470 Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., 135 S. Ct. at 2522. 471 Id. 472 U.S. Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Guidance for Public Housing Agencies (PHAs) and Owners of Federally-Assisted Housing on Excluding the Use of Arrest Records in Housing Decisions, HUD Notice PIH 2015-19 (2015), https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/PIH2015-19.PDF. 473 Id. at 2. 474 Id. at 3-4. 475 Id. at 5. 476 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 15. CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Orleans revised its screening protocol so that criminal history is no longer an automatic disqualifier for prospective applicants. 477 In 2013, the Vera Institute of Justice partnered with the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), the Corporation of Supportive Housing, the New York City Department of Homeless Services, the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, the New York City Department of Correction, and 13 reentry service providers to launch the Family Reentry Pilot Program (FRPP). 478 The FRPP aimed to reunite 150 formerly incarcerated individuals with their families in NYCHA housing, with the goals of providing stable and safe housing to improve the individuals’ quality of life, decrease their risk of recidivism, and improve public safety. 479 The program’s participants received tailored case management and supportive services from reentry service providers to address their critical needs (employment, education, public benefits, substance-abuse counseling). 480 As of May 2017, 108 remained in the program, and all but a few had avoided additional criminal convictions; nearly half had found or maintained employment, and the remainder had attended employment workshops or were receiving training for certifications, attending school, or enrolling in substance-use treatment programs. 481 The success of the FRPP inspired other PHAs in New York (including the Schenectady Housing Authority, the Syracuse Housing Authority, and the White Plains Housing Authority) and across the country (including the Chicago Housing Authority and the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles) to launch similar pilot programs to help reunite families in public housing. 482 PHAs adopting these types of programs have touted their benefits, which include decreased administrative duties and costs that accompany a shifted focus on providing housing for individuals rather than excluding people with criminal records and spending time at administrative hearings for applicants who were denied housing. 483 PHAs have also reported that the programs did not increase crime at their properties, and some PHAs report that the programs helped to reduce recidivism in their communities. 484 A description of a participant’s participation in the Justice Bridge Housing Program, a similar reentry program in Union County, Pennsylvania, summarizes the benefits of such programs: 476F 47F 478F 479 F 480F 481F 482F 483F 477 Lionel Smith, John Bae, Margaret diZerega, Ryan Shanahan, Jacob Kang-Brown, Ram Subramanian, An Evaluation of the New York City Housing Authority’s Family Reentry Pilot Program: Final Report to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Vera Institute of Justice, 2017, at 11, https://www.huduser.gov/portal/sites/default/files/pdf/NYCHAevaluation-Sept-2017-updated.pdf. 478 Ibid. 479 Ibid. at 11-12. 480 Ibid. at 12. 481 Ibid. at 12, 30. 482 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 16-17. 483 Ibid. 484 Ibid; see also Diana T. Myers & Assocs., Inc., Justice Bridge Housing Program: A Successful Reentry Program of the Housing Authority of Union County, Pennsylvania: Replication Toolkit, 2016, at 9, http://www.unioncountyhousingauthority.org/Documents/JBHP%20Toolkit%20FINAL-PRINT.pdf (reporting that four years after implementing changes, the housing program’s recidivism rate “was 22%, far below both the county recidivism rate of 53% and the state recidivism rate of 60%”) [hereinafter Diana T. Myers & Assocs., Inc., Justice Bridge Housing Program]. 69 AMY: “GRATEFUL FOR [THIS] OPPORTUNITY” Amy’s children were aged 2½ and 1½ when she was accepted into the Justice Bridge Housing Program (JBHP) in Union County, Pennsylvania, her home county. Amy had been discharged from prison to a relative’s home, where she and her son and daughter lived with six other adults and three other children—a situation she described as “chaos.” The JBHP enabled Amy to move to her own suitable and affordable rental housing, which brought many benefits to Amy, chiefly a measure of financial security along with “routine, calmness, and peace.” Amy obtained employment and saved money for college tuition. She continues her employment while attending school, majoring in Human Services, where she is gaining the knowledge and skills to work with abused or addicted women. 485 48F HUD’s current regulations recognize disparate-impact claims consistent with Inclusive Communities, wherein a housing policy that does not intentionally discriminate but still disproportionately harms people of color may be permissible if the policy has a “legally sufficient justification.” 486 HUD’s standards specify that a plaintiff challenging the policy must show that the legally sufficient justification could be advanced by another policy with “less discriminatory effect.” 487 In June 2018, HUD announced its decision to reconsider these standards “to determine what changes, if any, may be necessary in light of the Inclusive Communities decision.” 488 In its notice, HUD claimed that it had received “numerous comments” contending that its “burdenshifting framework for analyzing claims of disparate impact under the Fair Housing Act” conflicted with Inclusive Communities and “created uncertainty for commercial decision-making, as well as public policymaking.” 489 HUD acknowledged that it had also received comments supportive of the disparate-impact standards, but said it acted pursuant to a Treasury Department report recommending reconsideration of the standards, and to executive orders to reform “outdated, ineffective, or excessively burdensome” regulations. 490 HUD invited public comment on several questions, including: whether the burdens of proof were clear, appropriate, and sufficient to ensure that only “artificial, arbitrary, and unnecessary barriers result in disparate impact liability;” whether the standards “strike the proper balance in encouraging legal action for legitimate disparate impact cases” with avoiding meritless actions; if the standards should “clarify 485F 486F 487F 48 F 489F 485 Diana T. Myers & Assocs., Inc., Justice Bridge Housing Program at 3. 24 C.F.R. § 100.500. 487 Id. 488 Reconsideration of HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard, 83 Fed. Reg. 28,560-01 (proposed June 20, 2018) (to be codified at 24 C.F.R. pt. 100). 489 Id. 490 Id. (citing U.S. Dep’t of Treasury, A Financial System That Creates Economic Opportunities, Asset Management and Insurance, 2017, https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Documents/A-Financial-System-ThatCreates-Economic-Opportunities-Asset_Management-Insurance.pdf). 486 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS the causality standard for stating a prima facie” disparate-impact claim; if the standards should include “defenses or safe harbors” to disparate-impact claims; and if HUD should revise the standards to “add to the clarity, reduce uncertainty, decrease regulatory burden, or otherwise assist the regulated entities” and public in determining the legality of policies. 491 490F In response, HUD received more than 500 comments, 492 including from the Attorneys General of California, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington—who submitted a joint letter strongly opposing revision of the standards, arguing that any revision “would reduce clarity and add uncertainty, especially because any revision would likely fail to rely on the half century of disparate impact case law.” 493 The Attorneys General asserted that HUD’s standards already comply with Inclusive Communities, and pointed out that enforcement actions “based on disparate impact theories are a critical component of states’ efforts to combat discrimination and ensure greater equality of opportunity.” 494 The National Fair Housing Alliance submitted a letter on behalf of over 100 advocacy groups and local agencies urging HUD not to revise the standards, maintaining that the standards promote “significant administrative efficiency by creating national uniformity and regulatory certainty for the rental, real estate, lending, and insurance industries.” 495 By contrast, supporters of revising the standards included Roger Clegg of the Center for Equal Opportunity, who argued that the current standards are “misguided as a matter of policy and inherently inconsistent with the constitutional presumption against race-based decision-making.” 496 As of this writing, HUD has submitted an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs 491F 492F 493F 49F 495F Id. (As examples of defenses or safe harbors, HUD suggested “when another federal statute substantially limits a defendant’s discretion or another federal statute requires adherence to state statutes.”). 492 See Regulations.gov, “FR-6111-A-01 Reconsideration of HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard,” https://www.regulations.gov/docketBrowser?rpp=50&so=ASC&sb=postedDate&po=0&dct=PS&D=HUD-20180047 (last accessed Nov. 29, 2018). 493 The Attorneys General of North Carolina, California, District of Columbia, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington, “Comment Regarding the Reconsideration of HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard (Docket No. FR-6111-A-01),” Aug. 20, 2018, at 10, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/assets/media/files/fha_ag_comment_final.pdf. 494 Ibid. at 1. 495 The National Fair Housing Alliance et al., “Re: Reconsideration of HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard, Docket No. FR-6111-A-01,” Aug. 20, 2018, at 10, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/assets/media/files/2018-08-20_nfha_signon_letter_re_hud_disparate_impact_anpr_comment_(final).pdf. 496 Roger Clegg, Center for Equal Opportunity, “Comment on the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Proposed Rule: FR-6111-A-01 Reconsideration of HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard,” June 20, 2018, https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=HUD-2018-0047-0003. 491 71 regarding HUD’s implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s disparate impact standard, and the content of the proposed rulemaking was issued on February 1, 2019. 497 496F Barriers to Private Housing for Individuals with Criminal Records Formerly incarcerated individuals face financial challenges due to employment-related or public assistance barriers, or other financial burdens (supervision fees, child support, restitution), and thus need to find housing that is affordable. 498 Living with family members can provide stability for formerly incarcerated people with few resources. 499 Approximately two-thirds of formerly incarcerated individuals rely on family members for housing, but sharing their homes with formerly incarcerated family can threaten that family’s housing due to restrictions on residents who have criminal records. 500 For individuals who are legally blocked from living with family or who lack family support, the private market is often the only alternative. 497F 498F 49F The private housing market poses its own set of barriers and challenges for formerly incarcerated individuals. First, private housing can be more expensive than public housing, especially for people who reenter society without jobs or appreciable income. 501 There is a widespread lack of affordable housing all across the U.S., and many housing markets—particularly in urban areas— are increasingly tight, which spurs additional competition. 502 Formerly incarcerated individuals often lack sufficient funds to cover move-in costs, and face landlords who are unwilling to rent to individuals with criminal records. 503 Applicants with criminal records compete against applicants 50F 501F 502F 497 On February 1, 2019, HUD released an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; given the timing of that announcement, the contents of the proposed rulemaking are not discussed in this report. See Proposed Rule, HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard (FR-6111-P-01), Feb. 1, 2019, https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/eoDetails?rrid=128817 (last accessed May 6, 2019). 498 Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9; Christy Visher, Nancy LaVigne, Jeremy Travis, Returning Home: Understanding the Challenges of Prisoner Reentry, Maryland Pilot Study: Findings from Baltimore, Urban Institute, 2004, at 54-55, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/42841/410974Returning-Home-Understanding-the-Challenges-of-Prisoner-Reentry.PDF. For more discussion of barriers to public assistance for people with criminal convictions, see “How a Criminal Record Can Affect Access to Public Benefits” supra notes 222-409. 499 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 4; Claire Herbert, Jeffrey Morenoff, David Harding, Liam Purvis, Residential Instability among The Formerly Incarcerated, National Poverty Center, 2016, at 2-3, http://www.npc.umich.edu/publications/policy_briefs/brief42/policybrief42.pdf. 500 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 3-4; deVuono-powell et al., Who Pays? The True Cost of Incarceration on Families, supra note 417. 501 Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9-9; National Low Income Housing Coalition, The Gap: A Shortage of Affordable Homes, supra note 411 at 2-4. 502 Ibid. 503 Katherine Cortes & Shawn Rogers, Reentry Housing Options: The Policymakers’ Guide, Council of State Governments Justice Center, 2010, at vii, http://csgjusticecenter.org/wpcontent/uploads/2012/12/Reentry_Housing_Options-1.pdf. CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS without criminal records, often to their disadvantage. 504 An estimated 4 out of 5 private landlords utilize background checks to screen out applicants with criminal records. 505 503 F 504 F Private landlords frequently ask for both background and credit checks. Beverly Sharp, Reentry Initiatives Coordinator for the West Virginia Council of Churches, testified to the Commission’s West Virginia State Advisory Committee that these checks almost certainly create barriers for formerly incarcerated individuals, who may not have “been able to establish a credit history while incarcerated or their credit history was poor prior to their felony conviction and they have not had time to rebuild it. 506 50F The stigma of a criminal record also impairs applicants’ ability to obtain housing on the private market. 507 Studies in various cities including Austin, Baltimore, Dallas, Cleveland, and New York show that few providers would approve applicants with felony convictions (although landlords may be more willing to overlook a misdemeanor conviction). 508 Many housing providers implement blanket policies that restrict access to individuals with criminal records or even arrest records, which can disproportionately limit options for people of color because they are overrepresented in the criminal justice system. 509 Additionally, many housing providers are inconsistent in the enforcement of their policies, and may use a criminal record as a proxy for race. 510 A recent study conducted by the Equal Rights Center examined the practices of private District of Columbia-area housing providers when considering both white and black applicants with similar criminal backgrounds, and found that the potential white tenants experienced preferential treatment 47 percent of the time; white applicants more often received sympathetic reactions when disclosing their criminal record and were more often encouraged to apply, despite their criminal record, than black applicants. 511 Moreover, property agents imposed tougher 506F 507F 508F 509 F 510F 504 Metraux et al., Incarceration and Homelessness, supra note 412 at 9-9. Vallas & Dietrich, One Strike and You’re Out: How We Can Eliminate Barriers to Economic Security and Mobility for People with Criminal Records, supra note 437 at 19. 506 West Virginia State Advisory Committee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights, Public Meeting, Felony Records: Collateral Consequences for West Virginians, July 19, 2018, Meeting Transcript at 15-16. 507 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 7. 508 Ibid; Austin/Travis County Reentry Roundtable, Locked Out: Criminal History Barriers to Affordable Rental Housing in Austin & Travis County, Texas, 2016, at 4, http://www.reentryroundtable.net/wpcontent/uploads/2013/10/Criminal-Background-White-Paper.final_.pdf; Phillip Garboden & Eva Rosen, “When Landlords Discriminate,” Talk Poverty, May 17, 2016, https://talkpoverty.org/2016/05/17/when-landlords-discriminate/. 509 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 7; Austin/ Travis County Reentry Roundtable, Locked Out: Criminal History Barriers to Affordable Rental Housing in Austin & Travis County, Texas, supra note 508 at 4; Garboden & Rosen, “When Landlords Discriminate,” supra note 508. See also Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130. 510 Walz and Tran-Leung Statement at 7; Austin/Travis County Reentry Roundtable, Locked Out: Criminal History Barriers to Affordable Rental Housing in Austin & Travis County, Texas, supra note 508 at 4; Garboden & Rosen, “When Landlords Discriminate,” supra note 508. 511 Equal Rights Center, Unlocking Discrimination: A DC Area Testing Investigation about Racial Discrimination and Criminal Records Screening Policies in Housing, 2016, at 20-26, https://equalrightscenter.org/wpcontent/uploads/unlocking-discrimination-web.pdf. 505 73 criminal records screening criteria and sometimes higher fees on black applicants than white applicants. 512 Furthermore, this study documented that policies like blanket bans on felony convictions rendered over 4,600 housing units in the Washington, D.C. area essentially unavailable to individuals with criminal histories, disproportionately limiting housing opportunities for black applicants. 513 51F 512F In April 2016, HUD issued guidance for all housing providers when considering applicants with criminal records. 514 As noted previously, the Fair Housing Act prohibits housing discrimination, and if a facially neutral business policy has a disparate impact upon a protected class, it may violate the Act if there is not a “legally sufficient justification” for the policy. 515 This guidance explains: 513F 514F . . . where a policy or practice that restricts access to housing on the basis of criminal history has a disparate impact on individuals of a particular race, national origin, or other protected class, such policy or practice is unlawful under the Fair Housing Act if it is not necessary to serve a substantial, legitimate, nondiscriminatory interest of the housing provider, or if such interest could be served by another practice that has a less discriminatory effect. 516 51F HUD recognized that the substantial, nondiscriminatory interests of the housing provider include safety interests: Although the specific interest(s) that underlie a criminal history policy or practice will no doubt vary from case to case, some landlords and property managers have asserted the protection of other residents and their property as the reason for such policies or practices. Ensuring resident safety and protecting property are often considered to be among the fundamental responsibilities of a housing provider, and courts may consider such interests to be both substantial and legitimate, assuming they are the actual reasons for the policy or practice. A housing provider must, however, be able to prove through reliable evidence that its policy or practice of making housing decisions based on criminal history actually assists in protecting resident safety and/or property. Bald assertions based on generalizations or 512 Ibid. at 21-23. Ibid. 514 U.S Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development, Office of General Counsel Guidance on Application of Fair Housing Act Standards to the Use of Criminal Records by Providers of Housing and Real Estate-Related Transactions, 2016, https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/HUD_OGCGUIDAPPFHASTANDCR.PDF. 515 Ibid. at 2 (citing Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., 135 S. Ct. at 2523, 2525 (holding that “disparate-impact claims are cognizable under the Fair Housing Act” but “housing authorities and private developers [must] be allowed to maintain a policy if they can prove it is necessary to achieve a valid interest.”)); see also 42 U.S. § 3601. 516 U.S Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development, Office of General Counsel Guidance on Application of Fair Housing Act Standards to the Use of Criminal Records by Providers of Housing and Real Estate-Related Transactions, supra note 514 at 2; 24 C.F.R. § 100.500. 513 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS stereotypes that any individual with an arrest or conviction record poses a greater risk than any individual without such a record are not sufficient to satisfy this burden. 517 516F Therefore, the HUD guidance clarified that among other policy choices, denying applicants housing based on arrest records that did not result in conviction is not a sufficient justification, as there is insufficient proof that the denial will help protect the safety of other residents or the property. 518 Furthermore, HUD warned that a housing provider who imposes a blanket ban on individuals with criminal records has not met the burden of showing that the policy is “necessary to achieve a substantial, legitimate, nondiscriminatory interest.” 519 Research suggests that because this guidance is relatively new, housing providers are still in the process of updating their policies and procedures, and the effects (if any) of the updated guidance on providers’ practices are not yet known. 520 517F 518 F 519F In 2017, Seattle’s City Council formally recognized that “racial inequities in the criminal justice system are compounded by racial bias in the rental application process” and that “there is no sociological research establishing a relationship between a criminal record and an unsuccessful tenancy.” 521 Accordingly, the City Council enacted the Fair Chance Housing Ordinance, which prohibits landlords from: advertising or implementing policies that categorically reject applicants with an arrest or conviction record; asking about applicants’ criminal history; and denying tenancy based on a criminal record or background check, unless a “legitimate business reason” exists. 522 A legitimate business reason exists when the policy is necessary to advance a “substantial, legitimate, nondiscriminatory interest,” and a nexus between the policy and the safety of residents 520 F 521F U.S Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development, Office of General Counsel Guidance on Application of Fair Housing Act Standards to the Use of Criminal Records by Providers of Housing and Real Estate-Related Transactions, supra note 514 at 4-5 (citing Charleston Hous. Auth. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 419 F.3d 729, 742 (8th Cir. 2005) (noting that “in the abstract, a reduction in the concentration of low income housing is a legitimate goal that has been recognized by Congress” but finding that “the Housing Authority had not shown a need for deconcentration in this instance, and in fact, had falsely represented the density [of low-income housing] at the location in question in an attempt to do so.”)). 518 Ibid. at 5 (citing United States v. Berry, 553 F.3d 273, 284 (3d Cir. 2009) (holding that “a bare arrest record— without more—does not justify an assumption that a defendant has committed other crimes and it therefore can not support increasing his/her sentence in the absence of adequate proof of criminal activity.”); United States v. ZapeteGarcia, 447 F.3d 57, 60 (1st Cir. 2006) (concluding that “a mere arrest, especially a lone arrest, is not evidence that the person arrested actually committed any criminal conduct.”)). 519 Ibid. at 6; see also Green v. Missouri Pacific R.R., 523 F.2d 1290, 1298 (8th Cir. 1975) (upholding the finding that a blanket ban was a violation of Title VII and stating that the court “cannot conceive of any business necessity that would automatically place every individual convicted of any offense, except a minor traffic offense, in the permanent ranks of the unemployed.”). 520 Walter et al., One Strike to Second Chances: Using Criminal Backgrounds in Admission Decisions for Assisted Housing, supra note 469 at 6. 521 Seattle, Wash., Ordinance 119015 (Aug. 23, 2017), at 2, http://seattle.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=F&ID=5387389&GUID=6AA5DDAE-8BAE-4444-8C1762C2B3533CA3; see also SEATTLE, WASH., MUN. CODE §§ 14.09.005-14.09.120. 522 Id. at § 14.09.025. 517 75 is evident based on several factors, including the nature, severity, and number of convictions, the time elapsed since the conviction, and other relevant circumstances. 523 52 F In order to mitigate the barriers presented in both public and private housing for formerly incarcerated individuals, several advocates testified to the Commission’s West Virginia State Advisory Committee about the specific value of transitional housing, sometimes referred to as “work release centers,” “community release centers” or “halfway houses.” 524 One advocate testified that such residences “allow individuals to transition slowly into the community, not immediately walk out of an institution and have to find housing immediately,” giving them an opportunity to work with community organizations who can assist with placement. 525 523F 524F How a Criminal Record Can Affect Access to Public Benefits Individuals reentering society from incarceration often lack the support needed to attain selfsufficiency. 526 With barriers to finding gainful employment and housing, formerly incarcerated individuals often need temporary assistance until they can secure jobs to meet their basic needs of paying for rent, food, clothing, and other necessities. 527 52 F 526F People of color with criminal records are disproportionately denied public assistance due to the racially biased enforcement of drug policies, which disproportionately penalizes people of color compared to white people. 528 As a group, Native Americans are particularly deprived of resources necessary for rehabilitation, such as substance abuse and mental health counseling, job training, and other services needed to reintegrate into their tribal communities. 529 Lack of economic resources and infrastructure on Native American lands often makes many of these services difficult to access. 530 Additionally, people of color—particularly black people—are at higher risk of having their families separated, as about 1 in 9 black children has a parent in prison or jail, compared to 1 in 28 children overall with an incarcerated parent. 531 527F 528F 529F 530F 523 Id. at § 14.09.010. West Virginia State Advisory Committee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights, Public Meeting, Felony Records: Collateral Consequences for West Virginians, July 19, 2018, Meeting Transcript at 17-34, 170, 182. 525 Ibid. at 33 526 Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 27. 527 Ibid. 528 Burch Statement at 4-5; Pager et al., “Sequencing Disadvantage: Barriers to Employment Facing Young Black and White Men with Criminal Records,” supra note 231; Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 1-91. See also Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130. 529 NCAI Statement at 2. See generally U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Broken Promises: Continuing Federal Funding Shortfall for Native Americans, 2018, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/12-20-Broken-Promises.pdf. 530 NCAI Statement at 2. 531 Bruce Western & Becky Pettit, Collateral Costs: Incarceration’s Effect on Economic Mobility, Pew Charitable Trusts, 2010, at 18, http://www.pewtrusts.org/~/media/legacy/uploadedfiles/pcs_assets/2010/collateralcosts1pdf.pdf. 524 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Many formerly incarcerated individuals have disabilities that prevent them from working, and thus require supplementary income to survive. 532 Prisons often exclude or fail to accommodate people with physical and mental disabilities from reentry programming, which then blocks people with disabilities from locating information and services for disability-related benefits, educational/vocational programs, employment resources, supportive and/or accessible housing, health care, mental health services, drug treatment programs, or other supportive services. 533 Furthermore, the intersectionality among disability and race/ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, and class affect “many incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals [who] experience overlapping or intersecting social identities—and related systems of oppression and discrimination.” 534 Taking into account the disability of a formerly incarcerated individual and barriers to public benefits and other fundamental needs that accompany a criminal conviction can create seemingly “insurmountable obstacles” to rebuilding a person’s life. 535 531F 532 F 53F 534F At present, certain laws prohibit states from providing public assistance to individuals with certain types of felony convictions. 536 The federal Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA) prohibits states from providing TANF financial assistance and SNAP nutrition benefits to “fleeing” felons avoiding retribution from committing a felony or violating the terms of their probation or parole, and to individuals who have committed welfare fraud by applying for benefits in multiple states. 537 The law also bans individuals convicted of felonies for possession, use, or distribution of illegal drugs before August 22, 1996 (for which some states impose drug testing to determine eligibility) from receiving TANF or SNAP benefits, although states may opt out of the ban or modify the time period for which the ban remains in place. 538 States must affirmatively enact legislation to opt out of the bans on TANF and SNAP benefits, and some states have chosen to keep TANF bans intact despite lifting restrictions on SNAP bans. 539 53F 536F 537F 538F 532 Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 2, 27. Joint Statement, Disability Advocates at 7-14. 534 Ibid. at 5. 535 Elliot Oberholtzer, “Police, Courts, Jails, and Prisons All Fail Disabled People,” Prison Policy Initiative, August 23, 2017, https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2017/08/23/disability/. 536 Maggie McCarty, Gene Falk, Randy Alison Aussenberg, David H. Carpenter, Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance, Congressional Research Service, 2016, at 8, https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R42394.pdf. 537 Ibid. at 10; see also 42 U.S.C. § 608 (detailing prohibitions in the TANF program); 7 U.S.C. § 2015 (detailing prohibitions in SNAP); Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 29. 538 21 U.S.C. § 862a; see also McCarty et al., Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance, supra note 536 at 8. 539 21 U.S.C. § 862a. 533 77 As of 2016, 13 states and the District of Columbia had eliminated all disqualifications to TANF financial assistance benefits based on drug felony convictions, 27 states modified their disqualification standards, and 10 states maintained a lifetime ban. 540 539F As of 2017, 23 states and the District of Columbia eliminated all disqualifications to SNAP food assistance based on drug felony convictions, 23 states enforced modified disqualification bans, and 4 states maintained a lifetime ban. 541 In 2018, Indiana amended its statute to elect out of the lifetime ban on SNAP benefits for people with felony drug convictions; effective 2020, the state will allow SNAP benefits for individuals with drug felony convictions if they have complied with probation, parole, or another court-ordered “postconviction monitoring program.” 542 In February 2019, the West Virginia legislature passed and sent to the Governor a bill amending its statute to exempt West Virginians from the lifetime ban on SNAP benefits for felony drug convictions “unless the offense of conviction has as an element thereof misuse of supplemental nutrition assistance program benefits, loss of life, or the causing of physical injury.” 543 Lida Shepherd of the American Friends Service Committee’s West Virginia Economic Justice Project testified to the Commission’s West Virginia State Advisory Committee that the percentage of people who rely on SNAP benefits in West Virginia is higher than the general population; one in five West Virginians rely on SNAP. 544 As of this writing, the remaining states with lifetime SNAP bans for people with felony drug convictions are Mississippi and South Carolina. 545 540F 541F 542F 543F 54F The rationale for disqualifying people with felony drug convictions stems from judgments and concerns by policymakers about whether such recipients are “worthy” of public assistance. 546 This rationale judges individuals’ worthiness based not only on their economic need, but also on their moral character. 547 At the height of the “War on Drugs” in the 1980s, policymakers struggled with 54F 546F 540 McCarty et al., Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance, supra note 536 at 9. As of this writing, the states that enforced lifetime TANF bans were: Arizona, Delaware, Georgia, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Virginia. 541 U.S. Dep’t of Agriculture, State Options Report: Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, 2018, at 21, https://fns-prod.azureedge.net/sites/default/files/snap/14-State-Options.pdf. 542 Indiana Pub. L. 209 (2018); H.B. 1317, 120th Gen. Assemb. (Ind. 2018), https://legiscan.com/IN/text/HB1317/id/1760045/Indiana-2018-HB1317-Enrolled.pdf. 543 West Virginia H.B. 2459, http://www.wvlegislature.gov/Bill_Status/bills_history.cfm?year=2019&sessiontype=RS&input=2459. 544 WV SAC briefing transcript 203 545 U.S. Dep’t of Agriculture, State Options Report: Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, supra note 539 at 21; see also Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, How SNAP Can Better Serve the Formerly Incarcerated, 2018, at 12, https://www.cbpp.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/3-6-18fa.pdf; Molly Born, “In Some States, Drug Felons Still Face Lifetime Ban On SNAP Benefits,” NPR, June 20, 2018, https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/06/20/621391895/in-some-states-drug-felons-still-face-lifetime-ban-onsnap-benefits. 546 McCarty et al., Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance, supra note 536 at 1. 547 Ibid. at 1-2. In the 1930s, many states historically adopted “suitable home” rules that gave administrators discretion to deny benefits to individuals or households that did not exhibit what they considered proof of good “moral character.” Ibid. In King v. Smith, the Supreme Court recounted how opponents of “suitable home” rules CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS how to deal with crime and drug use, and focused on punishing drug use as a crime rather than treating it as a public health problem. 548 In the late 1980s, specific drug-related sanctions were added to certain federal assistance programs, and supporters of these policies believed that the provisions would deter drug use. 549 The PRWORA’s lifetime bans on SNAP and TANF benefits for individuals with drug convictions were intended to send a “tough on crime” message to the public. 550 Senator Phil Gramm (R-TX), the sponsor of the amendment implementing the bans, argued, “if we are serious about our drug laws, we ought not to give people welfare benefits who are violating the Nation’s drug laws.” 551 547F 548 F 549F 50F There are additional collateral consequences attached to Social Security, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits, Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), and Medicaid. 552 During incarceration, inmates are ineligible for SSI or SSDI benefits, so their benefits are suspended during that period. 553 For individuals who received SSDI and were confined for less than one year, benefits are reinstated the month after their release. 554 If an individual has been incarcerated for more than 12 consecutive months, SSI benefits are terminated, and the individual must reapply for those benefits. 555 To reapply, individuals must provide official documents proving their release from prison or jail. 556 As advocates have testified, the reapplication process can be cumbersome, requiring detailed documentation from prison administrators whose willingness to assist with the bureaucratic process varies. 557 Some prisons and jails offer pre-release programs that help incarcerated individuals navigate the reapplication process; many advocacy groups consider such 51F 52F 53F 54F 5F 56F alleged that such policies were racially discriminatory. See 392 U.S. 309, 321-22 (1968) (“Critics argued, for example, that such disqualification provisions undermined a mother’s confidence and authority, thereby promoting continued dependency; that they forced destitute mothers into increased immorality as a means of earning money; that they were habitually used to disguise systematic racial discrimination; and that they senselessly punished impoverished children on the basis of their mothers’ behavior, while inconsistently permitting them to remain in the allegedly unsuitable homes.”). 548 McCarty et al., Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance, supra note 536 at 2. 549 Ibid. at 2-3; 134 Cong. Rec. H7259-02, 1988 WL 175612 (Sept. 8, 1988) (statement of Representative McCollum urging support of federal policies denying public benefits to people convicted of drug offenses). 550 Marc Mauer & Virginia McCalmont, A Lifetime of Punishment: The Impact of the Felony Drug Ban on Welfare Benefits, The Sentencing Project, 2015, at 1, https://sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/A-Lifetimeof-Punishment.pdf. 551 142 Cong. Rec. S8493, S8498 (July 23, 1996). 552 Social Security Administration, “What Prisoners Need to Know,” at 1-4, https://www.ssa.gov/pubs/EN-0510133.pdf; Joint Statement, Disability Advocates at 9-10. 553 20 C.F.R. § 404.468; Ibid. at 1-3. 554 Ibid. 555 Ibid. 556 Ibid. at 3. 557 Joint Statement, Disability Advocates at 10-11; Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 36 n.43 (stating that the “process [of reapplying for Social Security benefits] is made more difficult by the refusal of some prison medical care providers to complete disability evaluation forms.”). 79 reentry assistance a best practice for ensuring that formerly incarcerated individuals receive benefits immediately post-release. 558 57F As noted above, federal law prohibits incarcerated individuals from receiving Medicaid benefits during confinement. 559 But Medicaid-eligible inmates admitted to a hospital for more than 24 hours may receive Medicaid coverage during that hospital stay. 560 Some states have opted to suspend, rather than terminate, Medicaid enrollment during the incarceration period, so that coverage reactivates automatically post-release. 561 By suspending instead of ending coverage, states save the time and costs of reenrolling people who are reentering society and ensure that formerly incarcerated individuals continue to receive the care they need. 562 58F 59F 560F 561F The Disproportionate Impact of Lifetime Drug Bans for Public Benefits A study of women with drug convictions in Pennsylvania noted that many women developed substance abuse issues early in their lives because of their difficult life circumstances—such as surviving and fleeing sexual or physical abuse, lacking access to education and job-market skills, resorting to homelessness and prostitution, and suffering physical and mental health problems related to drug use. 563 In federal prisons, 56 percent of women are incarcerated for drug offenses, compared to 47 percent of men; in state prisons, 25 percent of women are incarcerated for drug offenses, compared to only 14 percent of men. 564 With a criminal record, these women will face denial of welfare benefits and difficulties attaining self-sufficiency to provide for themselves and their families. 565 On average, women also earn less money than men for the same amount of work. 566 562 F 563F 564F 56F 558 Hirsch et al., Every Door Closed: Barriers Facing Parents With Criminal Records, supra note 36 at 36-37. Joint Statement, Disability Advocates at 10-11. 559 42 U.S.C. § 1396d(a)(30)(A); 42 C.F.R. § 435.1009. 560 42 C.F.R. § 435.1010; see also U.S. Government Accountability Office, Medicaid: Information on Inmate Eligibility and Federal Costs for Allowable Services, 2014, at 1, https://www.gao.gov/assets/670/665552.pdf (explaining that inmates admitted to a medical institution for at least 24 hours for inpatient services become eligible for Medicaid during the stay). 561 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Medicaid: Information on Inmate Eligibility and Federal Costs for Allowable Services, supra note 560 at 6-7. 562 Ibid. See also Families USA, “Why States Should Suspend Medicaid for People During Incarceration,” 2016, https://familiesusa.org/blog/2016/03/why-states-should-suspend-medicaid-people-during-incarceration (last accessed Dec. 3, 2018). 563 Amy E. Hirsch, “Some Days Are Harder than Hard”: Welfare Reform and Women with Drug Convictions in Pennsylvania, Center for Law and Social Policy, 1999, at 5-35, http://www.clasp.org/sites/default/files/public/resources-and-publications/files/0167.pdf. 564 Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 13. 565 Hirsch, “Some Days Are Harder than Hard”: Welfare Reform and Women with Drug Convictions in Pennsylvania, supra note 563 at 35-41. 566 U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, The Economics Daily: Women’s and Men’s Earnings by Age in 2016, supra note 254 (finding that among full-time wage and salary workers ages 16 and older, median weekly earnings were $749 for women and $915 for men). CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS The lifetime bans on TANF and SNAP benefits often disproportionately impact women, children, and people of color. 567 The number of women in prison from 1980 to 2010 rose by 646 percent, compared to a 419 percent increase for men, 568 and the number of female prisoners has continued to climb since then. 569 Moreover, in 2016, the incarceration rate for black women was almost double that for white women, 570 and the incarceration rate for Latina women was 1.2 times the rate for white women in 2014. 571 The American Civil Liberties Union reports that women of color are arrested and imprisoned for drug crimes at far higher rates than white women. 572 An estimated 180,000 women were affected by the TANF ban from 1996-2011 due to felony drug convictions or other convictions that would trigger the ban. 573 Approximately 85 percent of adult TANF recipients are women, and most TANF recipients are people of color (27.6 percent white, 29.1 percent black, and 36.9 percent Latino). 574 Twice as many women (23 percent) as men (12 percent) have received SNAP benefits at any time in their life, and women of color are much likelier to have received SNAP benefits (for example, 39 percent of black women and 31 percent of Latina women versus 19 percent of white women). 575 In 2015, over half of SNAP’s non-elderly adult recipients were women (62 percent), and just under half of SNAP participants were children (44 percent). 576 By extension, the bans on public benefits impact children being cared for by a parent who is subject to the ban. 577 Under the law, parents with felony drug convictions can collect SNAP 56 F 567F 568F 569F 570F 571F 572 F 573F 574F 57F 576F 567 Mauer & McCalmont, A Lifetime of Punishment: The Impact of the Felony Drug Ban on Welfare Benefits, supra note 550 at 4; Amy E. Hirsch, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 5 [hereinafter Hirsch Statement]. 568 Mauer & McCalmont, A Lifetime of Punishment: The Impact of the Felony Drug Ban on Welfare Benefits, supra note 550 at 4. 569 Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 1, 3. 570 Ibid. at 13. 571 E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2014, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015, at 15, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p14.pdf; The Sentencing Project, Fact Sheet: Incarcerated Women and Girls, 2015, at 2, http://www.sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Incarcerated-Women-and-Girls.pdf. 572 American Civil Liberties Union, “Words From Prison: Drug Policy, Race and Women’s Incarceration,” https://www.aclu.org/other/words-prison-drug-policy-race-and-womens-incarceration (last accessed Dec. 3, 2018). 573 Mauer & McCalmont, A Lifetime of Punishment: The Impact of the Felony Drug Ban on Welfare Benefits, supra note 550 at 3. 574 U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Services, Office of Family Assistance, Characteristics and Financial Circumstances of TANF Recipients: Fiscal Year 2016, supra note 159 at Tables 17, 18 (showing that among 2016 adults TANF recipients, 94,967 were men and 542,506 were women) and Table 10 (showing TANF recipients by race and ethnicity). 575 Rich Morin, “The Politics and Demographics of Food Stamp Recipients,” Pew Research Center, July 12, 2013, http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2013/07/12/the-politics-and-demographics-of-food-stamp-recipients/; Hirsch Statement at 5. 576 U.S. Dep’t of Agriculture, Characteristics of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Households: Fiscal Year 2015, supra note 160 at 21. 577 Mauer & McCalmont, A Lifetime of Punishment: The Impact of the Felony Drug Ban on Welfare Benefits, supra note 550 at 4-5. 81 benefits only on behalf of their child, and thus receive far less assistance than parents who were never convicted. 578 57F In her testimony before the Commission in 2017, Amy Hirsch explained how policymakers may not have considered how the lifetime ban for drug convictions could so severely impact women and families, and how much of a difference these benefits could make in a person’s life: When you look at TANF, over 90 percent of the adults who get TANF are women. In order to get TANF, you have to either be pregnant or the custodial parent or other close relative of minor kids . . . And, what you get with those benefits is minuscule . . . [t]he maximum grant [in Pennsylvania] for a mother and child is $316 a month, and there are 21 states that are less generous than Pennsylvania. But, the difference between having that $316 and having nothing, is a world. I mean, it means that you may be able to double up with family or friends because you have a little something you can bring to the table. It means that, if you’re eligible for transitional housing, you can get it because you have to have some income to get in the door. It’s just incredibly huge, the impact of that miserable pittance. The response I would make and the conversation I’ve had with lots of very conservative folks is that [the ban] had unintended counterproductive consequences. 579 578F Hirsch testified that the exclusion of women with drug convictions from eligibility for TANF benefits “absolutely” communicates government animus about which women are eligible and which women are not. 580 579F Critics of these lifetime bans argue that they are counterproductive to safe reentry. 581 Welfare benefits allow a person to meet basic survival needs while searching for employment or housing; without public benefits, individuals with criminal records may be more likely to turn to criminal activity to provide for themselves and their families. 582 One study examined the effects of denying SNAP benefits to individuals with drug convictions and found the denial increased recidivism among those individuals. 583 For individuals banned from receiving benefits, another study reported 580F 581F 582F 21 U.S.C. § 862a(a)-(b); see also Marina Golan-Vilella, “Why SNAP Matters for Formerly Incarcerated People,” Friends Committee on National Legislation, June 26, 2018, https://www.fcnl.org/updates/why-snap-matters-forformerly-incarcerated-people-1526. 579 Briefing Transcript at 164 (statement of Amy Hirsch). 580 Ibid. at 166. 581 Jeremy Haile, “How the Felony Drug Ban Keeps Thousands of Americans Hungry,” Talk Poverty, March 21, 2017, https://talkpoverty.org/2016/03/21/felony-drug-ban-keeps-thousands-hungry/. 582 Ibid.; CLASP Statement at 3. 583 Cody Tuttle, “Snapping Back: Food Stamps Bans and Criminal Recidivism,” SSRN, 2018, at 26, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2845435. 578 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS an elevated risk of food insecurity and other troubling public health implications. 584 In fact, the level of food insecurity reported in this study among individuals upon reentry “mirror[ed] the magnitude of food insecurity in developing countries.” 585 In addition, the bans can prevent individuals from obtaining mental health or substance abuse treatment, including residential treatment programs that rely on funds from public assistance to cover room and board costs. 586 583F 584F 58F A 2018 University of Maryland researcher’s study examined the effects of the SNAP ban on people with felony drug convictions, and found that these individuals were likelier to recidivate for offenses based on “a monetary motive,” like theft or drug distribution, instead of violent crimes. 587 The study illustrated that the desperation driving individuals who are denied public assistance based on their criminal records may explain recidivism; without resources, many individuals resort to criminal activity as a stopgap. 588 Similarly, other studies have found that the first offense resulting in conviction for many women is often a low-level drug crime, which women frequently commit because they are forced to rely on men financially to survive. 589 In a report collecting the stories of incarcerated women, one woman quit her job because of sexual harassment and threats and could not find a job to care for her grandmother and asthmatic son, so eventually resorted to working as a courier for a drug dealer. 590 After her arrest and conviction, she was sentenced to 20 years in prison. 591 Another woman reported that she resumed criminal activity after her release from prison for a drug offense because she was blocked from receiving public assistance and denied numerous jobs; she was subsequently charged with parole revocation and returned to prison, where she attempted suicide. 592 586F 587 F 58F 589F 590F 591F Emily A. Wang, Gefei A. Zhu, Linda Evans, Amy Carroll-Scott, Rani Desai, Lynn E. Fiellin, “A Pilot Study Examining Food Insecurity and HIV Risk Behaviors Among Individuals Recently Released from Prison,” AIDS Educ Prev, vol. 25, no. 2 (2013), at 4, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733343/pdf/nihms469405.pdf; see also Haile, “How the Felony Drug Ban Keeps Thousands of Americans Hungry,” supra note 581; Jeremy Haile, “Thousands of Americans Are Hungry Because of This One Law,” The Nation, March 23, 2016, https://www.thenation.com/article/thousands-ofamericans-are-hungry-because-of-this-one-law/. 585 Wang et al., “A Pilot Study Examining Food Insecurity and HIV Risk Behaviors Among Individuals Recently Released from Prison,” supra note 584 at 5. 586 Mauer & McCalmont, A Lifetime of Punishment: The Impact of the Felony Drug Ban on Welfare Benefits, supra note 550 at 8. 587 Tuttle, “Snapping Back: Food Stamps Bans and Criminal Recidivism,” supra note 578 at 3, 20, 26. The author studied “the effect of the SNAP ban on probability of financially motivated recidivism and probability of nonfinancially motivated recidivism” and found that “the effect is completely driven by recidivism for financially motivated crimes.” Ibid. at 20. The author defined “financially motivated recidivism” as “a return to prison” for property crimes and drug distribution offenses among formerly incarcerated people. Ibid. at 2-3. 588 Ibid. 589 Shimica Gaskins, “Women of Circumstance”—the Effects of Mandatory Minimum Sentencing on Women Minimally Involved in Drug Crimes, 41 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 1533, 1533-34 (2004). 590 American Civil Liberties Union, “Words From Prison: Drug Policy, Race and Women’s Incarceration,” supra note 567. 591 Ibid. 592 American Civil Liberties Union, “Words from Prison: The Collateral Consequences of Incarceration,” https://www.aclu.org/node/23317 (last accessed Feb. 11, 2019). 584 83 In states that have opted out of the bans on public benefits, pre-enrollment in benefits before release from prison or jail reduces gaps in coverage and helps secure access to the resources women need to survive upon release. 593 The availability of immediate coverage post-release also enables women to participate in employment and training programs and lowers their likelihood of recidivism. 594 592F 593F Barriers to Financial Aid for Higher Education Federal law prohibits a person who was convicted of certain drug offenses “during a period of enrollment for which” the person was receiving federal aid from obtaining federal student grants, loans, or work assistance for higher education. 595 The duration of ineligibility for financial aid varies depending on whether the person has committed a first, second, or third offense. 596 For people with drug-related criminal convictions, the obstacles to obtaining a share of the alreadyscarce supply of financial aid for postsecondary education are significant. 594F 59F Moreover, the federal restrictions on financial aid for people with drug-related convictions disproportionately impact people of color. 597 Students of color are not only more likely to be arrested, convicted, and/or incarcerated than white students, they are also more likely to need federal financial aid to attend college. 598 Combined with income inequality, legal barriers to financial aid can frustrate the ability of people of color to attend college—even as research has repeatedly proven that postsecondary education boosts employment and earnings. 599 596F 597 F 598F A postsecondary education can be critical to finding a job with a sustainable wage. 600 Research confirms that people with a college degree are more likely to be employed and earn higher incomes, and are less likely to rely on public assistance programs. 601 Both the Obama and Trump 59F 60F 593 CLASP Statement at 3. Ibid. 595 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r)(1). 596 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r)(2). 597 See Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130. 598 Wheelock & Uggen, Race, Poverty and Punishment: The Impact Of Criminal Sanctions On Racial, Ethnic, and Socioeconomic Inequality, supra note 166 at 21. 599 See Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130; The College Board, Trends in College Pricing 2018, 2018, at 3, https://trends.collegeboard.org/sites/default/files/2018-trends-in-collegepricing.pdf (finding that, after adjusting for inflation, in “the public two-year and private nonprofit four-year sectors, published [college tuition] prices are more than twice as high in 2018-19 as they were in 1988-89,” and the “average in-state tuition and fee price in the public four-year sector is about three times as high in inflation-adjusted dollars as it was in 1988-89.”); U.S. Dep’t of Education, Beyond the Box: Increasing Access to Higher Education for JusticeInvolved Individuals, supra note 168 at 1. 600 U.S. Dep’t of Education, Beyond the Box: Increasing Access to Higher Education for Justice-Involved Individuals, supra note 168 at 1. 601 Jennifer Ma, Matea Pender, Meredith Welch, Education Pays 2016: The Benefits of Higher Education for Individuals and Society, The College Board, 2016, at 3-4, https://trends.collegeboard.org/sites/default/files/education-pays-2016-full-report.pdf. Research has also confirmed that the ability to earn a college degree in prison would expand post-release job opportunities for people once they 594 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS Administrations have sought to broaden opportunities for incarcerated students while the federal ban on Pell Grants for people in prison remains in place. In 2015, the Obama Administration launched the Second Chance Pell program, which partners colleges and universities with penal institutions to allow eligible incarcerated students to receive Pell Grants and pursue a postsecondary education. The Trump Administration has extended this program and is now determining how to evaluate the results of the program, which reaches 10,000 students across 65 schools. 602 601F Because of the steep cost of higher education in the United States, 603 financial aid is often pivotal to a student’s ability to attend and complete college. 604 But as the price of postsecondary tuition has increased, 605 federal financial aid has generally decreased—thus making a college education even more cost-prohibitive for many prospective students. 606 For the seventh consecutive year, federal loans per full-time undergraduate student declined in 2017-18. 607 Persistent income inequality in the United States exacerbates the struggle of lower-income individuals to attain a 602F 603 F 604F 605F 60F are released from prison. See Vera Institute of Justice, Investing in Futures: Economic and Fiscal Benefits of Postsecondary Education in Prison, supra note 263 at 21, 23, https://storage.googleapis.com/vera-webassets/downloads/Publications/investing-in-futures-education-in-prison/legacy_downloads/investing-in-futures.pdf. But the federal ban on Pell Grants as financial aid for incarcerated people has restricted this opportunity. See 20 U.S.C. § 1070a(b)(6) (prohibiting “any individual who is incarcerated in any Federal or State penal institution” from receiving a Pell grant). According to the Vera Institute, restoring Pell grant funding for incarcerated individuals “would increase state employment rates of formerly incarcerated workers who participated in a postsecondary program by 4.7 percentage points, or nearly 10 percent.” Vera Institute of Justice, Investing in Futures: Economic and Fiscal Benefits of Postsecondary Education in Prison supra note 263 at 23. For more discussion of how education programs in the correctional setting could benefit formerly incarcerated individuals, see supra notes 25763. 602 See Andrew Kreighbaum, “Building Momentum Behind Prison Education,” Inside HigherEd, Aug. 29, 2018 https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2018/08/29/trump-administrations-renewed-interest-prison-education; Vera Institute of Justice, Statement from Vera on U.S. Department of Education's Decision to Renew Second Chance Pell, February 14, 2019, https://www.vera.org/newsroom/press-releases/statement-from-vera-on-u-s-department-ofeducations-decision-to-renew-second-chance-pell. 603 See Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Education at a Glance 2018, 2018, at 246, 254 (revealing that the United States spends more money on postsecondary education than any other OECD country except Luxumbourg, which provides mostly government-subsidized education); see also Amanda Ripley, “Why Is College in America So Expensive? The outrageous price of a U.S. degree is unique in the world,” Atlantic, Sept. 11, 2018, https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2018/09/why-is-college-so-expensive-inamerica/569884/. 604 The College Board, Trends in Student Aid 2018, 2018, at 7, https://trends.collegeboard.org/sites/default/files/2018-trends-in-student-aid.pdf (noting that federal grants “and tax benefits lower the overall price of education for students and families, making the net price of college less than the published price” and “loans do not lower the price, but they do make it possible to spread payments out over time.”); see also Rick Seltzer, “Net Price Keeps Creeping Up,” Inside Higher Ed, Oct. 25, 2017, https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2017/10/25/tuition-and-fees-still-rising-faster-aid-college-board-report-shows (reporting that high tuition costs “drive questions about the affordability of higher education for many families”). 605 The College Board, Trends in College Pricing 2018, supra note 599 at 29. 606 The College Board, Trends in Student Aid 2018, supra note 604 at 10. See also Seltzer, “Net Price Keeps Creeping Up,” supra note 604 (pointing out that the “federal share of grant aid topped out at 44 percent in 2010-11 and has since dropped to 32 percent in 2016-17.”). 607 The College Board, Trends in Student Aid 2018, supra note 604 at 10. 85 college degree; from 1987 to 2017, family income inequality mushroomed as the incomes of higher-earning families grew fastest. 608 In 2017, the average income for the highest-earning 20 percent of families was more than triple that of the middle 20 percent ($245,040 versus $75,840). 609 By contrast, in 1987, the average income of the top 20 percent of earners was just 2.6 times higher than the middle 20 percent ($167,390 versus $64,000). 610 The income gap is particularly pronounced for people of color; in 2017, the median incomes for black and Latino families were 59 percent and 62 percent, respectively, of the median income for white families. 611 607F 608F 609F 610F According to a 2010 study, 66 percent of surveyed postsecondary institutions collected criminal history information from applicants. 612 On its website, the U.S. Department of Education advises college applicants to submit the federal financial aid form regardless of their ineligibility for federal aid due to drug-related convictions, because “most schools and states use [the] information to award nonfederal aid.” 613 61F 612 F In 2016, the Department of Education issued guidance that advised colleges against using criminal history information for admissions decisions. 614 The department addressed this issue because data indicated that postsecondary institutions solicited information about applicants’ criminal backgrounds to influence their decisions about admissions (not just financial aid). 615 In the guidance, the department recommended best practices for college and university leaders to remove barriers to higher education for people with criminal convictions. 616 These best practices included encouraging colleges and universities to “assess and consider whether use of [criminal history information] furthers institutional goals of creating safe, inclusive, and diverse campus communities.” 617 The department reasoned that because school disciplinary policies disproportionately impact students of color, leading to entanglement with the criminal justice system and saddling such students with criminal records, college admissions policies that consider criminal records may disproportionately impede students’ access to postsecondary education. 618 613F 614F 615F 61F 617F Moreover, the department cautioned that under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, postsecondary institutions must neither intentionally discriminate on the basis of race nor 608 The College Board, Trends in College Pricing 2018, supra note 599 at 29. Ibid. 610 Ibid. 611 Ibid. 612 Center for Community Alternatives, The Use of Criminal History Records in College Admissions Reconsidered, 2010, supra note 167 at 8-9. 613 U.S. Dep’t of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “Students with criminal convictions have limited eligibility for federal student aid,” https://studentaid.ed.gov/sa/eligibility/criminal-convictions (last accessed Dec. 6, 2018). 614 U.S. Dep’t of Education, Beyond the Box: Increasing Access to Higher Education for Justice-Involved Individuals, supra note 168 at 1-2, 18. 615 Ibid. at 2, 10. 616 Ibid. at 1-2. 617 Ibid. at 18. 618 Ibid at 1-2, 4-6. 609 CHAPTER 2: ACCESS TO SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND MEETING BASIC NEEDS implement facially neutral policies that have a disparate adverse impact on a racial group. 619 The department outlined its three-step process for determining unlawful disparate impact, which includes analyzing whether the policy produces an adverse impact on a racial group, whether the institution can show that the policy is “necessary to meet an important educational goal,” and whether “comparably effective alternative” policies could meet the goal “with less of a discriminatory effect.” 620 According to the department, a school’s policy of asking about an applicant’s criminal history could have a disparate impact on applicants of color because of their disproportionate contact with the criminal justice system. 621 To comply with Title VI and expand opportunities for student of color to attend postsecondary schools, it recommended that school admissions personnel “consider a multistep approach to mitigate barriers to higher education associated with inquiring about [criminal history information] on college applications and conducting background checks.” 622 Under such an approach, the department asserted, admissions personnel should base decisions about applicants on various factors, including their academic record and credentials, test scores, references, essays, and personal interviews. 623 The approach mirrors the “individualized assessment” process recommended by the EEOC in hiring people with criminal convictions. 624 618F 619 F 620F 621F 62F 623F 619 Ibid. at 14-17. See also Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. U.S. Dep’t of Education, Beyond the Box: Increasing Access to Higher Education for Justice-Involved Individuals, supra note 168 at 17. 621 Ibid. at 18. 622 Ibid. 623 Ibid. 624 Ibid. at 21. See also EEOC, 2012 Guidance. 620 87 [This page intentionally left blank] CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION Chapter 3: Access to Civic Participation Civic participation is a term describing engagement with the community, governing institutions, and issues of public concern. 625 A criminal conviction can lead to collateral consequences that limit an individual’s ability to engage in civic participation. 626 For instance, a felony conviction can lead to restrictions on an individual’s right to vote and serve on a jury, both of which embody the principles of civic participation. This chapter discusses the barriers that a criminal conviction can impose on voting and jury service. Many states restrict the voting rights of people with criminal records, through a practice known as felony disenfranchisement. 627 The history of felony disenfranchisement in the United States, and the arguments supporting and opposing it, are explored herein. This chapter also examines the exclusion of persons with criminal convictions from juries and analyzes the perceived benefits and drawbacks of this policy. Finally, this chapter investigates how collateral consequences related to civic participation disproportionately and adversely affect people of color. 624F 625F 62F Voting The United States has a long history of denying individuals with criminal records the right to vote. 628 Supporters of felony disenfranchisement justify it as a way to gauge the rehabilitation of individuals who have been convicted of crimes, believing such barriers are warranted until a state decides that a formerly incarcerated individual “ha[s] changed [his] behavior and ha[s] shown that 627F See American Psychological Association, “Civic Engagement,” http://www.apa.org/education/undergrad/civicengagement.aspx (last accessed Sept. 29, 2018) (defining civic engagement as “individual and collective actions designed to identify and address issues of public concern. Civic engagement can take many forms, from individual voluntarism to organizational involvement to electoral participation. It can include efforts to directly address an issue, work with others in a community to solve a problem or interact with the institutions of representative democracy.”). See also the National Civic League, “Why Civic Engagement Matters,” https://www.nationalcivicleague.org/why-civic-engagement-matters/ (last accessed Sept. 29, 2018) (stating that “[w]here there is inclusive civic engagement, in which everyone has a place at the table to define, direct and implement public services and amenities, there is greater civic pride and responsibility, which then lead to sustained community wellbeing.”). 626 A person can engage in civic participation by exercising certain civil rights, such as voting. See Black’s Law Dictionary, Civil Right, supra note 56 (defining a civil right as “[a]ny of the individual rights of personal liberty guaranteed by the Bill of Rights and by the 13th, 14th, 15th, and 19th Amendments, as well as by legislation such as the Voting Rights Act,” especially “the right to vote, the right of due process, and the right of equal protection under the law.”). 627 Jean Chung, Felony Disenfranchisement: A Primer, The Sentencing Project, 2018, at 1, https://www.sentencingproject.org/publications/felony-disenfranchisement-a-primer/ (describing felony disenfranchisement laws as “laws that disenfranchise citizens convicted of felony offenses,” which “vary by state.”). It is worth noting, however, that some jurisdictions restrict the right to vote based on convictions for certain misdemeanors in addition to felonies. See, e.g., MO. ANN. STAT. § 115.133(2) (prohibiting people convicted of “a felony or misdemeanor connected with the right of suffrage” from voting). Therefore, this report may generally describe felony disenfranchisement as a restriction applicable to people with criminal records (interchangeably with the term “felony disenfranchisement”). 628 Brian Pinaire, Milton Heumann, Laura Bilotta, Barred from the Vote: Public Attitudes Toward the Disenfranchisement of Felons, 30 FORDHAM URB. L.J. 1519, 1524 (2002). 625 89 [he] can be trusted to once again exercise all of the rights of full citizenship.” 629 In medieval Europe, governments condemned people who committed certain crimes to a “civil death,” which entailed banishment from the community and “the deprivation of all rights, confiscation of property, exposure to injury and even to death.” 630 Individuals deemed offenders were stripped of the right to participate in the political process. 631 During the U.S. colonial period, some states added restrictive disenfranchisement provisions to their constitutions; but most state constitutions expressly empowered their legislatures to enact laws that disenfranchised people who had committed specific offenses. 632 628F 629F 630F 631F During the Jim Crow era, states broadened these laws to apply to individuals convicted of all felonies, often citing a desire to “preserve the [racial] purity of the ballot box.” 633 This section discusses the current landscape of relevant state laws, and arguments for and against felony disenfranchisement, including those that arose from the Commission’s 2018 independent investigation: An Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States. 634 It also evaluates the racial history and ongoing racial disparities of these policies, as well as legal challenges and campaigns to restore voting rights. 632F 63F The Current Landscape of State Felony Disenfranchisement Laws At least 6 million Americans cannot vote because of a felony conviction. 635 Forty-eight states and the District of Columbia prohibit people who are currently incarcerated with felony convictions 634F 629 Hans von Spakovsky, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 3 [hereinafter von Spakovsky Statement]. 630 Jamie Fellner & Marc Mauer, Losing the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, Human Rights Watch and The Sentencing Project, 1998, at 2 (quoting Howard Itzkowitz and Lauren Oldak, Note, Restoring the Ex-Offender’s Right to Vote: Background and Developments, 11 AM. CRIM. L.R. 721, 722 (1973)), http://www.sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Losing-the-Vote-The-Impact-of-FelonyDisenfranchisement-Laws-in-the-United-States.pdf. See also Harry David Saunders, Civil Death—A New Look at an Ancient Doctrine, 11 WM. & MARY L. REV. 988, 990 (1970). 631 George P. Fletcher, Disenfranchisement As Punishment: Reflections on the Racial Uses of Infamia, 46 UCLA L. REV. 1895, 1899 (1999). 632 Behrens et al., “Ballot Manipulation and the ‘Menace of Negro Domination’: Racial Threat and Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 1850-2002,” supra note 67 at 563. 633 Ibid. (quoting Washington v. State, 75 Ala. 582, 585 (1884)). See “Arguments for and Against Felony Disenfranchisement,” infra notes 675-729 for further discussion of arguments for and against felony disenfranchisement. 634 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, An Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States, 2018, at 106, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/Minority_Voting_Access_2018.pdf [hereinafter USCCR, Minority Voting Rights Access]. 635 Christopher Uggen, Ryan Larson, and Sarah Shannon, 6 Million Lost Voters: State-Level Estimates of Felony Disenfranchisement, 2016, The Sentencing Project, Oct. 6, 2016, https://www.sentencingproject.org/publications/6million-lost-voters-state-level-estimates-felony-disenfranchisement-2016/ at 3. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION from voting. 636 The only two states that allow currently incarcerated people to vote are Maine and Vermont. 637 635F 63F Disenfranchisement laws generally fall into four categories applicable to people with felony convictions: (1) currently incarcerated individuals convicted of felonies; (2) formerly incarcerated individuals with felony convictions released on parole; (3) individuals with felony convictions who are serving probation instead of incarceration; and (4) formerly incarcerated individuals who have served their sentence and no longer have contact with the criminal justice system. 638 637F As of 2018, in 14 states and the District of Columbia, people with felony convictions regain their voting rights immediately after release. 639 In 22 states, people with felony convictions lose their voting rights until the full completion of their sentence, which includes parole and/or probation. 640 In 12 states, people with felony convictions lose their voting rights indefinitely or until pardoned by the governor, or until an extra waiting period has passed or additional action has occurred 641 (which may include parole or probation) before regaining their voting rights. 642 Those states are Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin, 643 and Wyoming. 644 638F 639F 640F 641F 642F 643F National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187; see also Marc Mauer, Written Statement for the Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 19, 2017, at 1 [hereinafter Mauer Statement]. 637 Id. See also Maine Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Maine, 2018, at 16, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/06-29-ME-Voting-Rights.pdf (concluding that by allowing incarcerated individuals to vote, “Maine recognizes that there is no government interest served by felon disenfranchisement— much less a compelling one.”). 638 Jeff Manza & Christopher Uggen, Punishment and Democracy: Disenfranchisement of Nonincarcerated Felons in the United States, SYMPOSIUM, U.S. ELECTIONS, vol. 2, no. 3 (2004), at 494, http://users.soc.umn.edu/~uggen/Manza_Uggen_POP_04.pdf. 639 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187. 640 Ibid. 641 Additional action could include formal action undertaken by other state actors, such as the Dep’t of Corrections. See infra note 643. 642 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187. 643 Under Wisconsin law, a person with a felony conviction regains the right to vote after incarceration or probation, but the state’s Dep’t of Corrections or “jailer” (for county jails) must “inform the person in writing at the time his or her right to vote is restored.” See WIS. STAT. ANN. § 304.078(3). Because this notification is required, it constitutes additional action for the purposes of regaining the right to vote. Id. 644 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187. 636 91 Table 1: Restoration of Voting Rights After Felony Convictions Right to Vote Upheld During Incarceration Lost Only While Incarcerated Automatic Registration After Release Lost Until Completion of Sentence Parole and/or Probation Automatic Restoration After Maine District of Columbia Alaska Lost Until Completion of Sentence | In Some States a Post-Sentencing Waiting Period | Additional Action Required for Restoration Alabama Vermont Hawaii Arkansas Arizona Illinois California (note: individuals may vote while incarcerated in county jails, but not in state or federal prisons) Delaware Indiana Colorado Iowa Maryland Connecticut Kentucky Massachusetts Florida (for most felony convictions) Mississippi Michigan Georgia Nebraska Montana Idaho Nevada New Hampshire Kansas Tennessee North Dakota Louisiana Virginia Ohio Minnesota Wisconsin Oregon Missouri Wyoming Pennsylvania New Jersey Rhode Island New Mexico Utah New York North Carolina Oklahoma South Carolina South Dakota Texas Washington West Virginia Sources: National Conference of State Legislatures, Felon Voting Rights, November 2018. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION The Sentencing Project issued a report that estimated the scope and distribution of felony disenfranchisement in the U.S. 645 This report highlighted that, as of 2016: 64F More than 50 percent of the total disenfranchised population (about 3.1 million people) were people who had already completed their sentences (including parole and/or probation). 646 Florida accounted for about 27 percent of the total U.S. disenfranchised population; the state also accounted for 48 percent of the individuals disenfranchised post-sentence (nearly half of the national total). 647 One in 13 (7.4%) African Americans of voting age was disenfranchised, which is 4 times greater than the rate of disenfranchisement of non-African Americans (1.8%). 648 In 1980, only nine states disenfranchised more than 5 percent of their African-American adult population; today, 23 states do so. 649 645F 64F 647F 648F Data on felony disenfranchisement of Latino people are scarce due to insufficient data collection, 650 but research confirms that the incarceration rate of Latino people is growing. 651 From 2015 to 2016, the number of Latino prisoners sentenced to more than one year in prison increased by about 2 percent. 652 Moreover, despite representing about 18 percent of the total U.S. population, close to one third (32.2%) of people confined in federal prisons are Latino. 653 A 2003 report found that felony disenfranchisement laws in 10 states blocked approximately half a million Latino 649F 650F 651F 652F 645 Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 3. Ibid. at 3. 647 Ibid. In November 2018, Florida voters approved a state constitutional amendment restoring voting rights to people with certain felony convictions upon full completion of their sentence (including probation and parole). See Fla. Division of Elections, “Constitutional Amendments,” https://dos.myflorida.com/elections/lawsrules/constitutional-amendments/ (last accessed Dec. 7, 2018); Fla. Division of Elections, “Voting Restoration Amendment 14-01,” https://dos.elections.myflorida.com/initiatives/fulltext/pdf/64388-1.pdf (last accessed Feb. 20, 2019); Fla. Division of Elections, Constitutional Amendment Petition Form, “Voting Restoration Amendment,” https://dos.elections.myflorida.com/initiatives/fulltext/pdf/64388-1.pdf (containing full text of the amendment). See also “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra notes 805-889, for a full discussion of the Florida initiative and related reform efforts. 648 Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 3. 649 Ibid. at 11. 650 See Urban Institute, The Alarming Lack of Data on Latinos in the Criminal Justice System, 2016, http://apps.urban.org/features/latino-criminal-justice-data/?language=english (finding that Alaska was the only state that “consistently included data on Latinos in regularly and recently released reports on arrests and prison, probation, and parole population.”). 651 E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 5. 652 Ibid. 653 U.S. Census Bureau, “Quick Facts: Population Estimates,” July 1, 2017, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/US/PST045217 (listing 18.1 percent of the U.S. population as “Hispanic or Latino” as of July 1, 2018); U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons, “Inmate Ethnicity,” supra note 113 (displaying graph showing that 32.2 percent of federal inmates are “Hispanic.”). 646 93 people from voting. 654 These data suggest that felony disenfranchisement impacts Latino people at an increasingly disproportionate rate. 655 653F 654 F Figure 7: Number Disenfranchised for Selected Years, 1960-2016 7,000,000 6,106,327 5,852,180 5,358,282 6,000,000 4,686,539 5,000,000 4,000,000 3,342,586 3,000,000 2,000,000 1,762,582 1,176,234 1,000,000 0 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Source: Reproduced from “6 Million Lost Voters: State-Level Estimates of Felony Disenfranchisement,” The Sentencing Project, 2016, at 9. Figure 7 shows the number of disenfranchised individuals from 1960 through 2016. 656 While the number of disenfranchised individuals declined from 1960 to 1976, the number rose steadily from 1976 through 2016, increasing sharply from 1996-2000. 657 As the number of people under correctional supervision has ballooned, so too has the number of people who cannot vote. The disenfranchised population nearly doubled from 1996-2016, with the population increasing from 3.3 million to 6.1 million disenfranchised individuals. 658 65 F 65F 657F 654 Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), Diminished Voting Power in the Latino Community: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in Ten Targeted States, 2003, at iii, https://maldef.org/assets/pdf/feb18-latinovotingrightsreport.pdf. In the report, MALDEF cited the difficulties of studying the impact of felony disenfranchisement on Latinos because of inadequate data collection concerning the Latino population. Ibid. at 2. In choosing the 10 states to study, MALDEF considered the following factors: “The total number of Latinos in a state; The percentage of Latinos in each state’s total population; The total number and percentage of Latino population growth in a state between the 1990 and 2000 Decennial Census; The level of restriction of a state’s felony disenfranchisement laws and its voting rights laws; The total prison population; and A regional diversity of states.” Ibid. at 3. 655 Ibid.; see also Wayne Taliaferro, Duy Pham, Anna Cielinski, From Incarceration to Reentry, A Look at Trends, Gaps, and Opportunities in Correctional Education and Training, Center for Law and Social Policy, 2016, at 4, https://www.clasp.org/sites/default/files/public/resources-and-publications/publication1/2016.10.27_fromincarcerationtoreentry.pdf (citing the “disproportionately high rate of incarceration among Black and Latino men”). 656 Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 9. 657 Ibid. 658 Ibid. Note that the growth rate of the total U.S. population is substantially lower than the growth rate of the disenfranchised population, and has even decreased, during relatively the same period. See Worldometers, CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION As previously mentioned, state laws vary significantly in terms of when (if ever) voting rights may be restored. 659 Automatic restoration after release from prison occurs in the District of Columbia and 14 states: Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Utah. 660 Restoration after release from prison, parole, and/or probation occurs in 22 states: Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida (for most felony convictions), Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Washington, and West Virginia. 661 658 F 659F 60F Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming impose restrictions post-sentence, and the restrictions sometimes depend on the nature of the conviction, the number of convictions, the time elapsed since the conviction, or an individualized assessment of the conviction and subsequent rehabilitation. 662 For example, Arizona permanently disenfranchises people with two or more felony convictions unless a judge restores their civil rights. 663 Nevada permanently disenfranchises people convicted of a category A felony, a category B felony “involving the use of force or violence that resulted in substantial bodily harm,” or two or more separate felonies, unless a court restores their civil rights. 664 Nebraska requires people with felony convictions to wait two years after probation to regain their voting rights. 665 Delaware permanently disenfranchises people convicted of certain felonies (murder, bribery, and sexual offenses), but restores the voting rights of people convicted of other felonies upon completion of their sentence or a pardon from the governor. 666 Similarly, Mississippi permanently disenfranchises people convicted of “murder, 61F 62F 63F 64F 65F “Population of the United States (2018 and historical),” Dep’t of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, http://www.worldometers.info/world-population/us-population/ (showing that the U.S. population growth rate was 1.02% in 1995 and 0.70% in 2016) (last accessed Dec. 12, 2018). 659 See supra notes 635-69. See also infra notes 670-74, 724-29, and 838-50 for discussion of reports published by the Commission’s state advisory committees (SACs) that address felony disenfranchisement. 660 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187. 661 Ibid. California is one of these 22 states, but the state does allow people convicted of a felony and incarcerated in jail (but not prison) to vote. See CAL. ELEC. CODE §§ 2101, 2212. In Florida, voters approved a constitutional amendment to restore voting rights to people convicted of felonies, other than murder or sexual offenses, upon completion of their sentence. See Fla. Division of Elections, “Voting Restoration Amendment 14-01,” Constitutional Amendment Petition Form, supra note 647. See also “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra notes 805-889, for a full discussion of the Florida initiative and related reform efforts. 662 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187. 663 ARIZ. REV. STAT. ANN. § 13-905. 664 NEV. REV. STAT. ANN. § 213.157. On Jan. 1, 2019, Nevada implemented a new law that allows the automatic restoration of voting rights for individuals who were convicted of a felony and served their entire sentence, except under the circumstances specified in the above text and in the statute. Id. See also Michelle Price, “New Nevada laws lift tampon tax, restore some voting rights,” Reno Gazette Journal, Jan. 1, 2019, https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2019/01/01/new-nevada-laws-lift-tampon-tax-restore-some-votingrights/2458952002/. 665 NEB. REV. STAT. ANN. § 29-2264. See also Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 14; National Conference of State Legislatures, “Felon Voting Rights,” supra note 187. 666 DEL. CONST. art. 5, § 2. 95 rape, bribery, theft, arson, obtaining money or goods under false pretense, perjury, forgery, embezzlement or bigamy” unless they are pardoned by the governor or obtain approval from twothirds of the state legislature. 667 In Alabama, people convicted of a crime of “moral turpitude” are permanently disenfranchised but may petition for restoration of their rights. 668 Until 2017, Alabama had not defined crimes of moral turpitude, but its statute now specifies that murder, rape, kidnapping, forgery, and certain other offenses belong in that category. 669 6F 67F 68F Several of the Commission’s state advisory committees (SACs) have reported on felony disenfranchisement laws in their respective states. 670 During the Alabama SAC’s hearing on the topic, panelists commended Alabama for its relative transparency about moral turpitude offenses, but questioned its rationale for including some nonviolent offenses as moral turpitude crimes— such as forgery, theft of property, and theft of lost property—while excluding many “white-collar” offenses. 671 The Alabama SAC also heard testimony about the state’s complicated process for voting rights restoration, which first requires a pardon from the State Board of Pardons and Parole and then the submission of a Certificate of Eligibility to Register to Vote to the county board of registers. 672 According to panelists, the state does not notify people awaiting release from prison about how to petition for a pardon or register to vote, leaving the task to “nonprofit entities without the same resources.” 673 The cumbersome process of registering to vote and lack of assistance from states to individuals upon reentry were also flagged as critical issues during the Arizona, Illinois, 69F 670F 671F 672 F 667 MISS. CONST. art. 12, § 241; MISS. CONST. art. 12, § 253; MISS. CODE. ANN. § 47-7-41. ALA. CONST. art. VIII, § 177. 669 ALA. CODE § 17-3-30.1. See also Samantha Michaels, “Alabama’s Republican Governor Just Helped Thousands of Felons Get Their Voting Rights Back,” Mother Jones, May 25, 2017, https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/05/alabama-governor-signs-law-could-restore-voting-rights-thousandspeople/. 670 See Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, 2018, at 1621, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/08-08-AL-Voting-Access.pdf; Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, 2018, at 8-11, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/07-25-AZVoting-Rights.pdf; Fla. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Rules of Executive Clemency Should Allow Level 1 Offenders to Have Their Civil Rights Automatically Restored Upon Completion of Their Sentences, 2014, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/docs/FL_SAC_Ex-Felon-Report.pdf; Ill. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Civil Rights and Voting in Illinois, 2018, at 11-12, 20-30, 56, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/IL-Voting-Rights.pdf; Ky. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Kentucky, 2009, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/docs/KYVotingRightsReport.pdf; La. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Barriers to Voting in Louisiana, 2018, at 22-24, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/08-20-LA-Voting-Barriers.pdf; Me. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Maine, supra note 630, at 12-13, 16; Ohio Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Ohio, 2018, at 4, 16, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/06-27-OHVoting-Rights.pdf; Tenn. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Right to Vote and ExFelon Disenfranchisement in Tennessee, 2014, https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/docs/TN_SAC_Ex-Felon-Report.pdf. 671 Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 18 (testimony of Johnathan Barry-Blocker, Southern Poverty Law Center); ALA. CODE § 17-3-30.1(c). 672 See ALA. CODE § 17-3-31; Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 17-18 (testimony of Brock Boone, American Civil Liberties Union, and Kareem Crayton, Southern Coalition for Social Justice). 673 Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 17 (testimony of Brock Boone, American Civil Liberties Union). 668 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION Ohio, and Tennessee SAC hearings. 674 For more discussion about the SAC reports and voting rights restoration in various states, see “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” below. 673F Arguments For and Against Felony Disenfranchisement A common argument favoring felony disenfranchisement is grounded in the belief that committing a felony violates a social contract, and this violation threatens the order and well-being of the political community. 675 According to this reasoning, the logical response is to deny the violator the right to participate in politics and governance. 676 Another theory embraces the importance of moral character and virtue to the political community, and postulates that any person who commits a felony demonstrates poor moral judgment and an inability to adhere to the moral code of a “civic republic.” 677 Some policymakers believe that if an individual has disregarded the law, that individual should not be entitled to provide input on public policy. 678 Moreover, they believe that an individual’s “impurity” will lead him to “cast [his] votes in a corrupt manner.” 679 This argument dovetails with the justification for why individuals with criminal records cannot hold public office, in that such individuals are perceived to be more susceptible to corruption. 680 Similarly, some contend that people convicted of felonies are more prone to committing voter fraud and should therefore be barred from the electoral system. 681 It is worth noting that scholars studying this issue have identified no data to support this argument. 682 In reviewing voter fraud committed by persons 674F 675 F 67F 67F 678F 679F 680F 681F 674 See Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 9; Ill. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Civil Rights and Voting in Illinois, supra note 670 at 27-30; Ohio Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Ohio, supra note 670 at 4, 16. 675 Pinaire et al., Barred from the Vote: Public Attitudes Toward the Disenfranchisement of Felons, supra note 628 at 1525; see also John Locke, Two Treatises of Government, 269-78 (Peter Laslett ed., Cambridge Univ. Press 1998) (1690). 676 Pinaire et al., Barred from the Vote: Public Attitudes Toward the Disenfranchisement of Felons, supra note 628 at 1526. 677 Id. at 1525-26. 678 Campagna et al., “Restrictions on the Citizenship Rights of Felons: Barriers to Successful Reintegration,” supra note 8 at 24. 679 Id. (citing Gabriel J. Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, 92 GEO. L.J. 259, 312 (2004)). 680 Id. at 24. 681 Id. 682 Id. (citing Tanya Dugree-Pearson, Disenfranchisement-A Race Neutral Punishment for Felony Offenders or A Way to Diminish the Minority Vote?, 23 HAMLINE J. PUB. L. & POL’Y 359, 371-72 (2002)) (reporting a lack of evidence “showing that a convicted felon is more likely to commit voter fraud or vote for unpopular political changes than the average American citizen.”); see also Justin Levitt, The Truth about Voter Fraud, Brennan Center for Justice, 2007, at 16-17, https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/legacy/The%20Truth%20About%20Voter%20Fraud.pdf (stating that “only a handful” of cases existed where individuals with felony convictions voted despite knowing that they were ineligible and therefore not permitted to do so); Human Rights Watch and The Sentencing Project, Losing the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, Part V, 1998, http://pantheon.hrw.org/legacy/reports98/vote/usvot98o-03.htm#P108_2608 (stating that “there is no evidence that ex-felons are more likely to commit voter fraud than anyone else.”). Thus far, researchers have found relatively few instances of voting fraud even among the general population (not just people with felony convictions). See, e.g., 97 with felony convictions, the Commission recently found that, “when voter fraud occurs, it is often aggressively prosecuted, even if the person was mistaken that the person had the right to vote and did not intend to vote illegally.” 683 The Commission found this type of voter fraud (and voter fraud overall) to be exceedingly rare. 684 Federal courts have supported the rights of states to impose some restrictions on the right to vote based upon felony convictions. 685 682 F 683F 684F By contrast, many scholars point out the unique importance of the right to vote and argue that denying this right to even a “subset of the population” jeopardizes democracy for the entire population. 686 Dating back to the nineteenth century, the Supreme Court has recognized the right to vote as “a fundamental political right, because preservative of all rights.” 687 The Court has reaffirmed this principle by declaring that the right to vote is “the essence of a democratic society, 685F 68F John S. Ahlquist, Kenneth R. Mayer, Simon Jackman, “Alien Abduction and Voter Impersonation in the 2012 U.S. General Election: Evidence from a Survey List Experiment,” Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy, vol. 13, no. 4 (2014), https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/elj.2013.0231 (reporting the results of “a survey list experiment fielded immediately after the 2012 U.S. general election” and finding “no evidence of widespread voter impersonation, even in the states most contested in the presidential or statewide campaigns.”); Ray Christensen and Thomas J. Schultz, “Identifying Election Fraud Using Orphan and Low Propensity Voters,” American Politics Research, vol. 42, issue. 2 (2014), http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1532673X13498411 (testing a method “in multiple jurisdictions” measuring “actual instances of fraud rather than waiting for conclusive proof of fraud produced in a criminal prosecution” and finding only two election fraud violations). 683 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Minority Voting Rights Access, supra note 634 at 106 (citing Michael Wines, “Illegal Voting Gets Woman 8 Years in Prison, and Almost Certain Deportation,” New York Times, Feb. 10, 2017, https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/10/us/illegal-voting-gets-texas-woman-8-years-in-prison-and-certaindeportation.html); see also BBC News, “Texas woman jailed for five years for accidental voter fraud,” March 30, 2018, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-43597908?SThisFB (discussing the conviction and sentencing of a woman with a felony conviction who voted while on probation in Texas). 684 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Minority Voting Rights Access, supra note 634 at 103 (“In a 10-year independent study by News21 commissioned by the Knight Foundation (“News21 Study”), researchers examined public news and court records of all allegations of voter fraud in all 50 states. Researchers found that there were 2,068 cases of alleged fraud from 2000-2010, but only 10 cases of allegations of in-person voter fraud (approximately one case per every 15 million eligible voters).”) 685 See Johnson v. Governor of State of Fla., F.3d 1214, 1228 (11th Cir. 2005); Farrakhan v. Gregoire, 623 F.3d 990, 993-94 (9th Cir. 2010); Simmons v. Galvin, 575 F.3d 24, 42 (1st Cir. 2009). For a full discussion of legal challenges and case law pertaining to felony disenfranchisement, see “Legal Challenges,” infra notes 754-97. 686 Campagna et al., “Restrictions on the Citizenship Rights of Felons: Barriers to Successful Reintegration,” supra note 8 at 22. 687 Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 370 (1886); see also Harper v. Virginia State Bd. of Elections, 383 U.S. 663, 670 (1966) (including the right to vote as one of the “fundamental rights and liberties…asserted under the Equal Protection Clause”). But see Burdick v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428, 433-34 (1992) (rejecting the standard of review applied to fundamental rights by stating “[e]lection laws will invariably impose some burden upon individual voters” and “to subject every voting regulation to strict scrutiny and to require that the regulation be narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state interest…would tie the hands of States seeking to assure that elections are operated equitably and efficiently.”); Crawford v. Marion Cty. Election Bd., 553 U.S. 181, 210 (2008) (arguing that the Court has “avoided preset levels of scrutiny [applied to a voting restriction] in favor of a sliding-scale balancing analysis: the scrutiny varies with the effect of the regulation at issue.”); Joshua A. Douglas, Is the Right to Vote Really Fundamental?, 18 CORNELL J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 143, 152 (2008) (pointing out that “the Court has not always used a fundamental rights approach when considering a state election regulation that distinguishes eligible voters from non-eligible voters”), https://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/research/JLPP/upload/Douglas.pdf. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION and any restrictions on that right strike at the heart of representative government.” 688 According to the Court: 687F No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined. Our Constitution leaves no room for classification of people in a way that unnecessarily abridges this right. 689 68F Critics of felony disenfranchisement believe that it is an unnecessary abridgment. They cite the Court’s proclamations to assert that classifying people with felony convictions as undeserving of the right to vote does not enable democracy to thrive—on the contrary, it subverts the democratic process and flies in the face of democratic ideals. 690 689F Another argument against felony disenfranchisement contends that stripping the right to vote from a person with a criminal record can hinder that person’s successful reintegration into society. 691 According to this reasoning, even if incarceration achieved its goal of rehabilitating the alleged criminal (a topic beyond the scope of this report), the continuing disenfranchisement of people post-sentence solidifies their status as ostracized individuals incapable of fully assimilating into society. 692 The authors of one study make the powerful claim that “the act of voting manifests the desire to participate as a law-abiding stakeholder in a larger society.” 693 According to Linda Steele, 690 F 691 F 692 F 688 Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 555 (1964). Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1, 17-18 (1964). 690 Campagna et al. “Restrictions on the Citizenship Rights of Felons: Barriers to Successful Reintegration,” supra note 8 at 24 (citing Reynolds, 377 U.S. at 555 (the right to vote is “the essence of a democratic society”) and Wesberry, 376 U.S. at 17-18 (other rights “are illusory if undermined”) to argue that when the right to vote “is denied to a subset of the population, the definition of democracy becomes inconsistent with the practice of democracy.”); see also Anthony Gray, Securing Felons’ Voting Rights in America, 16 BERKELEY J. AFR.-AM. L. & POL’Y 3, 31 (2014) (arguing that the United States should “strike down prisoner disenfranchisement laws as being contrary to representative democracy”); Courtney Artzner, Check Marks the Spot: Evaluating the Fundamental Right to Vote and Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States and Canada, 13 SW. J. L. & TRADE AM. 423, 428 (2007) (“The principle underlying the extension of the right to vote in the United States is that every citizen is to remain politically equal. Prisoner disenfranchisement laws operate very differently from this general trend by revoking recognition of a prisoner’s political equality, resulting in their exclusion from the political community.”). Critics of felony disenfranchisement frequently cite Reynolds and Wesberry to support their argument that the voting right is fundamental and cannot be denied to a portion of otherwise eligible voters. See also Illinois State Bd. of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party, 440 U.S. 173, 184 (1979) (contending that “[r]estrictions on access to the ballot burden” the “distinct and fundamental” right to vote) (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added); Kramer v. Union Free Sch. Dist. No. 15, 395 U.S. 621, 626 (1969) (asserting that “[a]ny unjustified discrimination in determining who may participate in political affairs or in the selection of public officials undermines the legitimacy of representative government.”). 691 Campagna et al., “Restrictions on the Citizenship Rights of Felons: Barriers to Successful Reintegration,” supra note 8 at 22. 692 Note, The Disenfranchisement of Ex-Felons: Citizenship, Criminality, and “The Purity of the Ballot Box,” 102 HARV. L. REV. 1300, 1314-17 (1989). 693 Id. 689 99 who lost her right to vote due to a felony conviction and later regained it and voted for the first time in November 2008: There were tears in my eyes as I waited to vote. I felt like I was finally a productive member of society . . . I walked out of the polling place felling like I mattered, that I had made a difference. I realized how far I’ve come. 694 693F Some advocates of criminal justice reform have pointed to high recidivism rates as evidence that the government must support initiatives that destigmatize and ease the reentry of formerly incarcerated people into the community. 695 This proposal has garnered bipartisan support. 696 Within the context of voting rights, opponents of felony disenfranchisement assert that protecting the franchise for the formerly incarcerated will foster their reintegration, thereby lowering recidivism rates and improving public safety in the general community. 697 694 F 695F 69F One study explored the relationship between felony disenfranchisement and recidivism using data from the Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics. 698 The authors found that individuals in states with permanent felony disenfranchisement laws were about 10 percent more likely to recidivate than those in states that restore voting rights post-release. 699 The authors acknowledged that they did not identify a direct causal link, but recommended further investigation of this relationship. 700 In another study, researchers pointed out this lack of causal connection, finding that although political participation through voting correlated with reduced criminality, such participation did not necessarily decrease criminal behavior. 701 697F 698F 69F 70F 694 Erika Wood & Liz Budnitz, Jim Crow in New York, Brennan Center for Justice, 2010, at 14. https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/legacy/publications/JIMCROWNY_2010.pdf. 695 See, e.g., Mark Holden & Ryan Norris, “What Opponents Get Wrong About Criminal Justice Reform,” The Hill, Aug. 22, 2018, http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/judicial/403105-what-opponents-get-wrong-about-criminaljustice-reform. 696 See ibid. (the authors represent Koch Industries and Americans for Prosperity, respectively, two traditionally conservative organizations); see also American Civil Liberties Union, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Leadership Conference, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, Sentencing Project, Democracy Imprisoned: A Review of the Prevalence and Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, 2013, at 3, https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/Treaties/CCPR/Shared%20Documents/USA/INT_CCPR_NGO_USA_15128_E.pdf (where the authors state that “[f]elony disenfranchisement operates contrary to the goals of ensuring public safety and reducing reoffending by alienating from society those individuals that the criminal justice system is simultaneously attempting to reintegrate.”). 697 Guy Padraic Hamilton-Smith & Matt Vogel, The Violence of Voicelessness: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement on Recidivism, 22 BERKELEY LA RAZA L.J. 407, 413-14 (2012). 698 Id. at 408. 699 Id. at 427. The authors controlled for individual characteristics and state unemployment, noting that “the crime rate varies with the unemployment rate, and so recidivism can be expected to be higher in states with higher unemployment.” 700 Id. at 429. 701 Alan S. Gerber, Gregory A. Huber, Daniel R. Biggers, David J. Hendry, “Can Political Participation Prevent Crime? Results from a Field Experiment About Citizenship, Participation, and Criminality,” Political Behavior, vol. 39, no. 4, 909-34 (2017), https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11109-016-9385-1. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION Finally, a common argument against felony disenfranchisement stems from the starkly disproportionate effects of these laws on people of color, particularly black men, whose voting rights have historically been imperiled if not denied. 702 The Commission explores this argument further in the next subsection, “The Racial Origins of Disenfranchisement Laws and Ongoing Disparities.” 703 701F 702F This argument relates to another criticism of felony disenfranchisement, which focuses on how these laws affect civic participation overall, especially in communities of color. 704 Since voting can be a communal activity, one that individuals often discuss or practice with friends and family, scholars argue that any limits imposed on that activity may cause a ripple effect. 705 In other words, by disenfranchising a significant portion of the community, these laws discourage civic engagement and create a “culture of political nonparticipation” within that community. 706 703F 704F 705F As advocates of reform have observed, felony disenfranchisement may compound the inequities and socioeconomic disadvantages already facing communities of color on a daily basis: Felony disenfranchisement affects more than individual voters themselves—it diminishes the voting strength of entire communities of color, which are too often already plagued with concentrated poverty, substandard housing, limited access to healthcare services, failing public schools, and environmental hazards. As a result, people in these communities have even less of an opportunity to effect muchneeded positive change through the political process. 707 706F One study found that states with harsher disenfranchisement laws have lower voter turnout among legally eligible voters. 708 The study also revealed that in states with harsher disenfranchisement laws, the probability of voting dropped at a higher rate among black voters than white voters, even for individuals who lacked criminal convictions. 709 Although the study’s authors acknowledged that a direct causal link could not be confirmed, their research suggests that disenfranchisement 70 F 708F 702 Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, supra note 679 at 261-62, 264. 703 See infra notes 730-62. 704 Aman McLeod, Ismail K. White, Amelia R. Gavin, The Locked Ballot Box: The Impact of State Criminal Disenfranchisement Laws on African American Voting Behavior and Implications for Reform, 11 VA. J. SOC. POL’Y & L. 66, 80 (2003). 705 Mauer, Voting Behind Bars: An Argument for Voting by Prisoners, supra note 39 at 561-62. 706 NAACP Legal Defense Fund & The Sentencing Project, Free the Vote: Unlocking Democracy in the Cells and on the Streets, 2016, at 3, http://www.sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/Free-the-Vote.pdf. 707 Ibid. 708 McLeod et al., The Locked Ballot Box: The Impact of State Criminal Disenfranchisement Laws on African American Voting Behavior and Implications for Reform, supra note 704 at 80. 709 Ibid. 101 laws may depress overall non-disenfranchised voter turnout, particularly in the black community. 710 709F In response, supporters of disenfranchisement laws point to the higher rates of black voter turnout in recent elections to contend that felony disenfranchisement does not affect overall black voter turnout. 711 For example, they cite data showing that in 2012, black voter turnout surpassed white voter turnout by about 2 percentage points. 712 Other scholars maintain that black voters would have voted in even higher numbers but for felony disenfranchisement laws. 713 Moreover, data from the 2016 election show that black voter turnout decreased for the first time in 20 years in a presidential election, falling by about 7 percentage points. 714 710F 71F 712F 713F During the Commission’s 2018 voting rights briefing in North Carolina, various experts and community advocates testified about the disproportionate impact of felony disenfranchisement laws on people of color and the need to restore voting rights to persons with felony convictions. 715 In a written statement, former Deputy Assistant Attorney General at the U.S. Department of Justice and current Executive Director of Southern Coalition for Social Justice Anita Earls noted that while over 7 percent of the adult black population are disenfranchised nationwide, over 20 percent 714F 710 Ibid. at 81. See, e.g., Briefing Transcript at 103 (statement of Hans A. von Spakovsky). 712 Id.; see also Jens Manuel Krogstad & Mark Hugo Lopez, “Black Voter Turnout Fell in 2016, Even as a Record Number of Americans Cast Ballots,” Pew Research Center, May 12, 2017, http://www.pewresearch.org/facttank/2017/05/12/black-voter-turnout-fell-in-2016-even-as-a-record-number-of-americans-cast-ballots/. 713 Briefing Transcript at 103 (statement of Marc Mauer). 714 Krogstad & Lopez, “Black Voter Turnout Fell in 2016, Even as a Record Number of Americans Cast Ballots,” supra note 712. Courts have also pointed out that higher voter turnout does not necessarily equate to fair access to the ballot. See, e.g., N. Carolina State Conference of NAACP v. McCrory, 831 F.3d 204, 232 (4th Cir. 2016), cert. denied sub nom. North Carolina v. N. Carolina State Conference of NAACP, 137 S. Ct. 1399 (2017) (stating that in North Carolina, “although aggregate African American turnout increased by 1.8% in 2014, many African American votes went uncounted” because of North Carolina’s restrictive voting law). 715 See generally U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, An Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States, Briefing Meeting, transcript, Feb. 2, 2018 [hereinafter Voting Rights Briefing Transcript]. In their written statements, both Sherrilyn Ifill, President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and Vanita Gupta, the former head of the Dep’t of Justice’s Civil Rights Division and current President and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, discussed the disproportionate racial impact of felony disenfranchisement laws and their support for the Democracy Restoration Act of 2017, which would restore voting rights in federal elections to formerly incarcerated citizens. See Sherrilyn Ifill, Written Statement for the Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Feb. 2, 2018, at 12; Vanita Gupta, President and CEO, Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Written Statement for the Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Feb. 2, 2018, at 5; Voting Rights Briefing Transcript at 128 (statement by Sherrilyn Ifill) (noting that many of the current felon disenfranchisement laws in southern states originated from state officials amending their respective constitutions at the turn of the 20th century to dilute the black vote). See also S. 1588, 115th Cong. (2017), https://www.congress.gov/115/bills/s1588/BILLS-115s1588is.pdf. For more discussion about this legislation, see “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra at notes 805-889. 711 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION of the adult black population are disenfranchised in Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia. 716 In addition, Earls stated that the real impact of felony disenfranchisement laws are difficult to measure. 717 According to Earls, 715F 716F [e]ven as an attorney, I’ve said to voters ‘I’ve looked up [your record] online, [and] you’ve completed your sentence. As a lawyer I’m telling you [that] you’re eligible to register and vote,’ but they don’t believe. They’re scared, they’re intimidated, they won’t try to vote. Also there are people who don't know exactly when they’re able to re-register. 718 71F The Commission’s 2018 report on voting rights also discussed felony disenfranchisement in the context of voter roll purges. 719 For many years, Florida conducted massive voter purges that allegedly disproportionately impacted voters of color. 720 In an earlier report, the Commission studied voter purges in Florida and found that these purges were often based on inaccurate data, denying voting rights to numerous citizens, particularly black voters. 721 Moreover, in 2004, Florida conducted a purge specifically targeting persons with felony convictions, which also disproportionately affected black voters. 722 718 F 719F 720F 721 F Additionally, the Commission’s SACs in Alabama, Arizona, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Ohio, and Tennessee expressed concerns about the disproportionate impact of felony disenfranchisement laws on communities of color. 723 In its report, the Alabama SAC cited testimony about how financial barriers to voting rights restoration (i.e., the state’s mandatory payment of significant court fees) especially affected black voters with felony convictions because of Alabama’s 72F 716 Anita Earls, Executive Director, Southern Coalition for Social Justice, Written Statement for the Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States Briefing before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Feb. 2, 2018, at 2. 717 Voting Rights Briefing Transcript at 163-64 (statement by Anita Earls). 718 Ibid. 719 USCCR, Minority Voting Rights Access, supra note 634 at 145. 720 Ibid. 721 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Irregularities in Florida During the 2000 Presidential Election: Ch. 5 The Reality of List Maintenance, 2001, http://www.usccr.gov/pubs/vote2000/report/ch5.htm (last accessed Sept. 26, 2018). 722 USCCR, Minority Voting Rights Access, supra note 634 at 145-46; see also Ford Fessedon, “Florida List for Purge of Voters Proves Flawed,” New York Times, July 10, 2004, http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/10/us/floridalist-for-purge-of-voters-proves-flawed.html. 723 Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 19; Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 9; Ill. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Civil Rights and Voting in Illinois, supra note 670 at 23; Ky. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Kentucky, supra note 670 at 16; La. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Barriers to Voting in Louisiana, supra note 670 at 24; Ohio Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Ohio, supra note 670 at 4; Tenn. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Right to Vote and Ex-Felon Disenfranchisement in Tennessee, supra note 670 at 1, 18. 103 “systemic [racial] wealth gap.” 724 Arizona’s SAC pointed out that although Native Americans with felony convictions maintained the right to vote in tribal elections, it was unclear whether election officials permitted them to exercise this right, and uncertain whether Native Americans knew the extent of their rights. 725 723F 724F Most of the SACs studying felony disenfranchisement reported that because people of color in their states experienced disproportionate contact with the criminal justice system, these residents experienced disproportionate disenfranchisement. 726 According to the Tennessee SAC, black people represented only 17 percent of the state population in 2014, but comprised nearly one-half of the state’s incarcerated population. 727 And in 2009, black people constituted only 7 percent of Kentucky’s population but more than 30 percent of the state’s prison population. 728 As the authors of the Louisiana SAC report wrote in 2018: 725F 726F 72F This disproportionate racial impact [of felony disenfranchisement] can affect communities and the very concept of proportional representation. If many members of a community are unable to vote, they are denied the opportunity to be governed by people who might best serve their interests. 729 728F The Racial Origins of Disenfranchisement Laws and Ongoing Disparities Research suggests that racially motivated felony disenfranchisement laws pre-date the Civil War. 730 For example, New York amended its state constitution in 1821 to allow counties to pass laws that denied the right to vote among “persons who have been, or may be, convicted of infamous 729F 724 Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 19 (testimony of Johnathan Barry-Blocker). For more discussion of state requirements regarding payment of court fees and voting rights restoration, see “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra notes 805-889. 725 Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 9. 726 See Ill. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Civil Rights and Voting in Illinois, supra note 670 at 23 (“In the state of Illinois, black people are over-represented within the incarcerated population while white people are under-represented.”); Ky. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Kentucky, supra note 670 at 16; La. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Barriers to Voting in Louisiana, supra note 670 at 24; Ohio Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Ohio, supra note 670 at 4; Tenn. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Right to Vote and Ex-Felon Disenfranchisement in Tennessee, supra note 670 at 1, 18. 727 Tenn. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Right to Vote and Ex-Felon Disenfranchisement in Tennessee, supra note 670 at 18. 728 Ky. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Kentucky, supra note 670 at 16. 729 La. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Barriers to Voting in Louisiana, supra note 670 at 24. 730 Erika Wood & Liz Budnitz, Jim Crow in New York, supra note 694 at 6-8, 13. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION crimes.” 731 During the state’s 1821 constitutional convention, the delegates debated whether or not to expand black voting rights. 732 To rationalize restricting the franchise, several delegates argued that black men tended to be criminals who filled “your jails and penitentiaries,” implying that black men could not trusted with the power to vote. 733 Many delegates repeated these allegations at the 1846 constitutional convention, and one delegate claimed that “the relative proportion of infamous crime is nearly thirteen and a half times as great in the colored population as in the white.” 734 The New York Constitution was then amended to add bribery and larceny specifically to the disenfranchisement clause, thereby permitting counties to prohibit anyone convicted of “bribery, larceny, or of any infamous crime” from voting. 735 Finally, in 1874, the state amended the constitution to explicitly require the disenfranchisement of anyone “convicted of bribery or of any infamous crime.” 736 730F 731F 732F 73F 734F 735 F Some scholars argue that rampant racial bias during the Reconstruction spurred the widespread enactment of felony disenfranchisement laws. 737 They point to the former Confederate states’ reliance on Section 2 of the 14th Amendment to implement felony disenfranchisement laws; this section reduces electoral representation in any state that disenfranchises male citizens aged 21 and older for reasons other than “participation in rebellion, or other crime.” 738 Section 2 expanded the franchise to “any” male citizen, thus allowing black men to vote unless they were convicted of a crime. 739 After the passage of the 15th Amendment, which explicitly prohibited states from restricting the franchise “on account of race,” 740 researchers claim that some states fashioned their felony disenfranchisement laws to encompass crimes that they thought black men were likelier to commit, like burglary, theft, and arson. 741 Because the former Confederate states knew that black people constituted the majority or a sizable minority of their populations, 742 they purportedly 736F 73F 738F 739 F 740F 741F 731 N.Y. CONST. art. II § 2 (1821); see also id. at 8. Wood & Budnitz, supra note 694 at 7-8. 733 Ibid. 734 Ibid. at 9. 735 Ibid. at 10. 736 Ibid. at 13. 737 Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, 29 B.U. INT’L L.J. 197, 217-18 (2011). 738 U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 2; Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, supra note 679 at 267 (citing the recognition of segregationist states that “enfranchisement of African Americans would have given them too much power, [but] Section 2 [of the 14th Amendment] left open the option of de jure disenfranchisement.”). 739 Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, supra note 679 at 266-67; U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 2. 740 U.S. CONST. amend. XV, § 1. 741 Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, supra note 737 at 217-18; see also NAACP Legal Defense Fund and The Sentencing Project, Free the Vote: Unlocking Democracy in the Cells and on the Streets, supra note 706 at 2 (pointing out that “[t]hrough the convoluted reasoning of [one felony disenfranchisement] law, one would be disenfranchised for stealing a chicken, but not for killing the chicken’s owner.”). 742 Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, supra note 679 at 261-62, 266-67; see also Aderson Bellegarde Francois, 732 105 recognized that the only way to maintain electoral representation and simultaneously prevent black people from gaining political power was to convict more black men of crimes. 743 Mississippi offers an example: in 1890 the state amended its constitution to disenfranchise people who committed those crimes, but not people who committed murder. 744 In upholding that amendment’s constitutionality, the Mississippi Supreme Court reasoned that “‘[r]estrained by the [U.S.] Constitution from discriminating against the Negro race, the [Mississippi] convention discriminated against its characteristics and the offenses to which its weaker members were prone.” 745 Here, the Mississippi Supreme Court appeared to acknowledge that the amendment represented a negative reaction to the 15th Amendment, and sanctioned it as such. 746 742F 743F 74F 745F As the popularity of felony disenfranchisement laws grew, researchers documented an increase in black imprisonment rates and a decrease in voter registration rates. 747 For instance, in Alabama in 1850, 2 percent of black people were incarcerated; in 1870, the number had climbed to 74 percent. 748 In Louisiana after the Civil War, black people represented 44 percent of registered voters, but in 1920 the number had dropped to 2 percent. 749 These examples strongly suggest that felony disenfranchisement legislation formed part of a “white backlash” against black voting 746 F 74 F 748 F To Make Freedom Happen: Shelby County v. Holder, the Supreme Court, and the Creation Myth of American Voting Rights, 34 N. ILL. U. L. REV. 529, 542-43 (2014) (reporting that by 1880, black people constituted the majority of the population in Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina, and more than 40 percent of the population in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Virginia) (citing Gabriel J. Chin & Randy Wagner, The Tyranny of the Minority: Jim Crow and the Counter-Majoritarian Difficulty, 43 HARV. C.R.-C.L. L. REV. 65, 88-90 (2008)). 743 See Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, supra note 679 at 261-62 (summarizing how “[c]riminal disenfranchisement was widely used in the South after Reconstruction to suppress the vote of African-Americans”); Andrew L. Shapiro, Challenging Criminal Disenfranchisement Under the Voting Rights Act: A New Strategy, 103 Yale L.J. 537, 543 (1993) (describing criminal disenfranchisement as “an outright barrier to voting that, like the poll tax and literacy test, was adopted in some states with racially discriminatory intent and has operated throughout our nation with racially discriminatory results”); Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, supra note 737 at (stating that after the 15th Amendment’s enactment, “states ‘tailored’ their criminal disenfranchisement legislation to cover crimes they considered African-Americans more likely to commit and excluded crimes they thought both races were equally likely to commit”); Wood & Budnitz, supra note 694 at 4 (concluding that “criminal disenfranchisement laws were part of the effort to maintain white control over access to the polls.”). 744 Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, supra note 737 at 217-18. 745 Ratliff v. Beale, 74 Miss. 247, 20 So. 865, 868 (1896). 746 For more information on Mississippi’s post-Reconstruction efforts to restrict African-American voting rights, see USCCR, Minority Voting Rights Access, supra note 634 at 17 (reporting, inter alia: “In Mississippi, during Jim Crow, voter suppression was based on a new state constitution enacted in 1890, which specifically intended to exclude African Americans from political participation.”). 747 Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, supra note 737 at 217-18. The Commission acknowledges that the decrease in black voter registration rates during the post-Reconstruction period corresponded with the proliferation of not only felony disenfranchisement laws, but also various tactics designed to block African Americans from voting, such as poll taxes and literacy tests. See USCCR, Minority Voting Rights Access, supra note 634 at 17-18. 748 Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, supra note 737 at 217-18. 749 Id. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION rights, and some advocates contend that the continually disproportionate negative impact of these laws on black people evince the laws’ ongoing racially discriminatory purpose. 750 749F Supporters of felony disenfranchisement have tended to downplay the racial origins of these laws. In his testimony at the Commission’s briefing on collateral consequences, attorney Hans von Spakovsky of the Heritage Foundation stated, “[t]he claim that state laws that take away the right of felons to vote are all rooted in racial discrimination is simply historically inaccurate . . . it is true that five Southern states passed race-targeted felon disenfranchisement laws from 1890 to 1910, but those laws have all been changed and amended.” 751 Other supporters argue that because several states had already enacted felony disenfranchisement laws before the Civil War, the more recent laws could not have been racially motivated. 752 However, this argument neglects to address the research showing that former Confederate states shaped their laws to address crimes they deemed more likely to be committed by black people. 753 750F 751 F 752 F Regardless of the origins of felony disenfranchisement laws, the data showing their disproportionate effect on black people today are irrefutable. 754 While felony disenfranchisement laws are facially race neutral to comply with the 15th Amendment, they disproportionately affect people of color because these groups are convicted and incarcerated at disproportionate rates.755 As previously noted in this report, black voters are disenfranchised at four times the rate of nonblack voters. 756 Moreover, black people represent nearly 40 percent of the population in federal prisons, about 28 percent of adults on probation, and approximately 38 percent of adults on 753 F 754F 75 F 750 Id.; see also Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?, supra note 679 at 261-62. 751 von Spakovsky Statement at 4. 752 Roger Clegg, George T. Conway III, & Kenneth K. Lee, The Case Against Felon Voting, 2 U. ST. THOMAS J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 1, 3 (2008). 753 Id.; see also Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and International Human Rights Perspectives, supra note 737 at (stating that after the 15th Amendment’s enactment, “states ‘tailored’ their criminal disenfranchisement legislation to cover crimes they considered African-Americans more likely to commit and excluded crimes they thought both races were equally likely to commit”); Wood & Budnitz, supra note 694 at 4 (concluding that “criminal disenfranchisement laws were part of the effort to maintain white control over access to the polls.”). 754 See “Chapter 1: Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130. 755 Manza & Uggen, Punishment and Democracy: Disenfranchisement of Nonincarcerated Felons in the United States, supra note 638 at 492; Human Rights Watch and the Sentencing Project, Losing the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, 1998, https://www.sentencingproject.org/wpcontent/uploads/2016/01/Losing-the-Vote-The-Impact-of-Felony-Disenfranchisement-Laws-in-the-UnitedStates.pdf; Wheelock, “Collateral Consequences and Racial Inequality: Felon Status Restrictions as a System of Disadvantage,” supra note 103 at 84; Mauer, Voting Behind Bars: An Argument for Voting by Prisoners, supra note 39 at 553-54; American Civil Liberties Union et al., Democracy Imprisoned: A Review of the Prevalence and Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, supra note 696 at 2. See also Chapter 1, “The Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130. 756 Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 3. 107 parole, 757 despite accounting for roughly 13 percent of the U.S. population. 758 An estimated 2.2 million black people are disenfranchised because of their contact with the criminal justice system. 759 In addition, felony disenfranchisement laws increasingly affect Latino people: Although approximately 16.3 percent of the U.S. population is Latino, about 32.4 percent of federal prisoners are Latino. 760 756F 75F 758F 759F But supporters of the laws have contended that “[t]he racial impact of these laws is irrelevant” as a constitutional or policy matter. 761 What matters, according to their reasoning, is that the Constitution authorizes state legislators to determine voting qualifications that are facially neutral in their states; legislators should do so and “let the chips fall where they may.” 762 760 F 761 F Legal Challenges The Supreme Court did not weigh in on the issue of felony disenfranchisement until the 20th century. First, in the 1974 case Richardson v. Ramirez, the Supreme Court interpreted Section 2 of the 14th Amendment as constitutional support for the power of states to disenfranchise those who participate in “rebellion, or other crime” and, by extension, people convicted of felonies.763 But in 1985, the Court added a caveat. In Hunter v. Underwood, the Court held that a disenfranchisement law directed at crimes of “moral turpitude” violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment because, although facially neutral, the law was enacted with a racially discriminatory purpose. 764 The Court examined a section of the Alabama Constitution of 1901, which disenfranchised people convicted not only of certain felonies but also undefined “crime[s] involving moral turpitude” and many misdemeanors. 765 Upon review of the legislative 762F 763F 764F Federal Bureau of Prisons, “Inmate Race,” 2018, https://www.bop.gov/about/statistics/statistics_inmate_race.jsp (last accessed Dec. 13, 2018); Kaeble, Probation and Parole in the United States, 2016, supra note 115 at 17, 23. 758 U.S. Census Bureau, “Quick Facts: Population Estimates,” July 1, 2017, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/US/PST045217. 759 Christopher Uggen, Sarah Shannon, Jeff Manza, State-Level Estimates of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, The Sentencing Project, 2012, at 17, http://www.sentencingproject.org/doc/publications/fd_State_Level_Estimates_of_Felon_Disen_2010.pdf. 760 Sharon R. Ennis, Merarys Rios-Vargas, Nora G. Albert. The Hispanic Population: 2010, 2011, at 2-3, https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2011/dec/c2010br-04.pdf; Carson, Prisoners in 2016, supra note 1 at 5; U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons, “Inmate Ethnicity,” supra note 113. 761 Hans von Spakovsky & Roger Clegg, Felon Voting and Unconstitutional Congressional Overreach, The Heritage Foundation, 2015, at 9, http://thf_media.s3.amazonaws.com/2015/pdf/LM145.pdf. 762 Ibid. 763 418 U.S. 24 at 54. Justice Marshall dissented, noting that “there is little independent legislative history as to the crucial words ‘other crime’,” and pointing out that Section 2 “does not differentiate between felonies and misdemeanors;” he further asserted that “absurd results” would occur if “other crime” was interpreted to mean “any crime.” Id. at 75 n.24, 72-73 (Marshall, J., dissenting). Marshall also argued that “the disenfranchisement of exfelons must be measured against the requirements of the Equal Protection Clause of [section] 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at 77 (Marshall, J., dissenting). 764 471 U.S. 222, 233 (1985). For an in-depth discussion of racial discrimination and disenfranchisement, see “The Racial Origins of Disenfranchisement Laws and Ongoing Disparities,” in this chapter, supra notes 730-62. 765 Hunter, 471 U.S. at 226. 757 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION history, the Court noted that the constitutional convention’s all-white delegates publicly stated their intent “to establish white supremacy” and pointedly chose to disenfranchise individuals convicted of offenses they believed were “more frequently committed by blacks” when enacting the section. 766 The Court concluded that Alabama added the constitutional provision “motivated by a desire to discriminate against blacks,” and that Alabama would not have enacted it “but for” this unconstitutional motive, regardless of whether the state also intended to discriminate against “poor whites.” 767 Moreover, the Court asserted that “events occurring in the succeeding 80 years” could neither validate the provision nor erase the ongoing racial impact of the provision “to this day.” 768 765F 76 F 76F In cases where intentional discrimination cannot be proven, Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA) bans voting qualifications that “result in the denial or abridgement of voting rights of any citizen of the United States on account of race or color.” 769 A 1982 amendment made clear that proof of discriminatory purpose or intent was not required. 770 Given the inequitable impact of disenfranchisement laws on black people, 771 advocates of reform began to question their legality based on Section 2 of the VRA. 772 Some scholars have referred to felony disenfranchisement as a “modern literacy test.” 773 768F 769 F 70F 71F 72F Thus far, arguments about disenfranchisement laws as Section 2 violations have not succeeded in the courts. For instance, in Johnson v. Governor of State of Fla., the Eleventh Circuit acknowledged that Section 2 allows a plaintiff to prove a VRA violation exists without showing discriminatory intent, but viewed felony disenfranchisement laws as “unlike other voting qualifications” partly because they “are deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and are a punitive device stemming from criminal law.” 774 After reviewing the legislative history of the VRA and finding no “clear statement from Congress” that it intended the VRA to “encompass felon disenfranchisement provisions,” the court concluded that Section 2 should not apply to felon 73F 766 Id. at 227-29. Id. at 232. In its defense, Alabama contended that the constitutional provision’s “real purpose” was to disenfranchise both “poor whites” and black people. Id. at 230. The Court responded that even if this additional intent existed and was deemed permissible, it would not negate the unconstitutionality of the state’s racial motivation in enacting the provision. Id. at 232. 768 Id. at 232-33. 769 52 U.S.C. § 10301(a) (formerly cited as 42 U.S.C. § 1973(a)). 770 Kevin J. Coleman, The Voting Rights Act of 1965: Background and Overview, Congressional Research Service, 2015, at 21, https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R43626.pdf. 771 See Chapter 1, “Demographics of the Corrections Population,” supra notes 96-130; see also “Racial Origins of Disenfranchisement Laws and Ongoing Disparities,” supra notes 730-62. 772 52 U.S.C. § 10301(a) (stating that “[n]o voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color…”). 773 Campagna et al., “Restrictions on the Citizenship Rights of Felons: Barriers to Successful Reintegration,” supra note 8 at 23. 774 405 F.3d at 1228 (internal citations omitted). 767 109 disenfranchisement laws. 775 Similarly, in rejecting a Section 2 challenge to a disenfranchisement law, the First Circuit cited “the historic legitimacy of felon disenfranchisement, the constitutional recognition of the authority of states to disenfranchise imprisoned felons, the congressional recognition of that authority and the express congressional statements that the VRA was not meant to proscribe that authority.” 776 74F 75 F By contrast, the Ninth Circuit ruled that disenfranchisement laws were not entirely exempt from Section 2 challenges. 777 However, the court held that a challenger bringing such a claim “based on the operation of a state’s criminal justice system must at least show that the criminal justice system is infected by intentional discrimination or that the felon disenfranchisement law was enacted with such intent.” 778 Moreover, the court was noncommittal about whether a litigant meeting this burden of proof “would necessarily” prove a Section 2 violation. 779 This case law illustrates the extreme difficulties faced by plaintiffs seeking to repeal disenfranchisement laws based on the VRA. 76F 7F 78F In Louisiana, plaintiffs representing and including disenfranchised individuals challenged the state’s felony disenfranchisement law on the ground that it conflicts with the state constitution. 780 The plaintiffs argued that the state law, which prohibits people with felony convictions from voting while on probation or parole, conflicts with the Louisiana Constitution, which forbids people with felony convictions from voting only during “imprisonment.” 781 After the trial court granted the Louisiana Secretary of State’s motion for summary judgment in June 2017, 782 the plaintiffs filed an appeal the following September. 783 But the state court of appeals rejected the plaintiffs’ argument, 784 and the Louisiana Supreme Court denied the plaintiffs’ appeal. 785 In the meantime, Louisiana enacted a law to restore voting rights to people who were convicted of felonies and have 79F 780F 781F 782F 783F 775 784F Id. at 1227-34. Simmons, 575 F.3d at 42. 777 Farrakhan, 623 F.3d at 993-94 (emphasis in original). 778 Id. 779 Id. (emphasis in original). 780 Class Action Petition for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, Voice of the Ex-Offender, et al. v. Louisiana, Docket No. 649587, at 7-10 (La. 6/30/16); see also Joe Gyan, Jr., “Appeal challenging Louisiana Constitution felon voting rights law taken to state’s high court,” The Advocate, June 8, 2018, https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/courts/article_c1f80324-6b5a-11e8-b016-57c105c0e29d.html. 781 Class Action Petition for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, Voice of the Ex-Offender, et al. v. Louisiana, Docket No. 649587, at 8-10 (La. 6/30/16); see also LA. STAT. ANN. § 18:102(A)(1) (disenfranchising people convicted of felonies while incarcerated, on probation, or on parole); LA. CONST. art. I, § 10 (granting state citizens ages 18 and older “the right to register and vote, except that this right may be suspended while a person is interdicted and judicially declared mentally incompetent or is under an order of imprisonment for conviction of a felony.”). 782 Hearing and Oral Reasons for Judgment, Johnson v. Louisiana, Docket No. 649587, at 16 (La. 3/13/17). 783 Voice of the Ex-Offender, et al. v. Louisiana, No. 2017-CA-1141 (La. App. 1 Cir. 9/27/17). 784 Voice of Ex-Offender v. State, 249 So. 3d 857, 863-64, reh’g denied (Apr. 27, 2018), reh’g denied (May 9, 2018), writ denied, 2018-0945 (La. 10/29/18), 255 So. 3d 575. 785 Voice of Ex-Offender v. State, 2018-0945 (La. 10/29/18), 255 So. 3d 575. 776 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION been released from incarceration for five years. 786 The law was scheduled to take effect in March 2019. 787 785F 786F As discussed in the next section, Florida voters approved a constitutional amendment restoring the franchise to people who had served their sentences after felony convictions, 788 but excluding people convicted of murder or a felony sexual offense. 789 In Florida, people convicted of these felonies are permanently banned from voting unless the governor and two cabinet members (collectively, the Clemency Board) restore their civil rights. 790 Florida’s Rules of Executive Clemency specify that qualifying individuals must wait at least seven years after completing their sentences to apply for rights restoration to the board, which may consider selected applications during one of its four scheduled hearings each year. 791 Under the rules, the governor maintains “unfettered discretion to deny clemency at any time, for any reason,” and the governor and two board members have “unfettered discretion to grant” clemency “at any time, for any reason.” 792 78F 78F 789F 790F 791F In Hand v. Scott, a federal court found that Florida’s clemency-based voting rights restoration process violated the 1st Amendment of the Constitution and the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. 793 The court pointed out that these protections include the freedom to associate with a political party and the freedom to express political speech by voting. 794 It then found that despite Florida’s legitimate interest “in limiting the franchise to responsible individuals,” the state had not chosen the least restrictive means possible to advance that interest. 795 The court asserted 792F 793F 794F 786 H.B. 265, 2018 Leg., Reg. Sess., Act 636 (La. 2018) (effective 3/1/19). See also Louisiana Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Barriers to Voting in Louisiana, supra note 670 at 22-23. In this report, the Commission’s Louisiana SAC discussed the legal structure of felony disenfranchisement in the state, including the new law and the ongoing litigation challenging felony disenfranchisement. 787 H.B. 265, supra note 786. 788 See “The Restoration of Voting Rights,” infra notes 805-889. 789 The amendment, which took effect on Jan. 8, 2019, specifies that “[n]o person convicted of murder or a felony sexual offense shall be qualified to vote until restoration of civil rights.” See Fla. Division of Elections, Constitutional Amendment Petition Form, “Voting Restoration Amendment,” supra note 640 at Art. IV, § 4(b). An individual convicted of murder or a felony sexual offense will “continue to be permanently barred from voting unless the Governor and Cabinet vote to restore their voting rights on a case by case basis.” See Floridians for a Fair Democracy, “Voting Restoration Amendment,” https://secondchancesfl.org/about/voting-restoration-amendment/ (last accessed Dec. 18, 2018). See also FLA. STAT. ANN. § 944.292 (suspending the civil rights of a person convicted of a felony until grant of “a full pardon, conditional pardon, or restoration of civil rights” pursuant to the state constitution); FLA. STAT. ANN. § 97.041(2)(b) (prohibiting individuals convicted of felonies from voting until civil rights restoration); FLA. CONST. art. IV, § 8(a) (authorizing the governor, with approval of two cabinet members, to restore a person’s civil rights). 790 FLA. STAT. ANN. §§ 944.292, 97.041(2)(b); FLA. CONST. art. IV, § 8(a). See also Fla. Commission on Offender Review, Rules on Executive Clemency, Rule 1, at 3, https://www.fcor.state.fl.us/docs/clemency/clemency_rules.pdf (declaring that “[t]he Governor and members of the Cabinet collectively are the Clemency Board.”). 791 Fla. Commission on Offender Review, Rules on Executive Clemency, Rules 10(a), 11(A), 12(A), supra note 790 at 14-16. 792 Id. at 4. 793 285 F. Supp. 3d 1289, 1292, 1309 (N.D. Fla. 2018). 794 Id. at 1295-99. 795 Id. at 1300-01. 111 that Florida’s process risked “arbitrary and discriminatory vote-restoration” because the process granted the governor and board “unfettered discretion” to restore the franchise to political supporters and deny the franchise to political opponents. 796 It noted ample evidence in the record showing that viewpoint discrimination (i.e., discriminating against petitioners based on their political views) and lack of clear time limits resulting in years of delays in processing applications had infected the rights restoration process in violation of the 1st Amendment. 797 Moreover, the rights restoration process violated the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause because it allowed the governor and board to “make ‘completely arbitrary distinction[s] between groups of felons.’” 798 795F 796F 79F The federal court ordered Florida to develop “specific and neutral criteria to direct vote-restoration decisions” and prohibited officials from enforcing “the current unconstitutional” voting restoration process. 799 Florida immediately appealed, and in 2018, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals lifted the federal district court’s injunction, thereby allowing the clemency-based rights restoration process (as amended by the Voter Restoration Amendment) to continue pending the appeal. 800 798F 79F Iowa 801 and Kentucky 802 permanently disenfranchise individuals with any felony conviction unless they receive an executive pardon, clemency, or rights restoration. In January 2019, 80F 796 801 F Id. at 1301-03. Id. The court described the risk of viewpoint discrimination in Florida as “distressingly real. Plaintiffs identify several instances of former felons who professed political views amenable to the [executive clemency] Board’s members who then received voting rights, while those who expressed contrary political views to the Board were denied those same rights. Applicants—as well as their character witnesses—have routinely invoked their conservative beliefs and values to their benefit.” Id. at 1302. 798 Id. at 1308 (internal citations omitted). 799 Hand v. Scott, 315 F. Supp. 3d 1244, 1255-56 (N.D. Fla. 2018). 800 Hand v. Scott, 888 F.3d 1206, 1215 (11th Cir. 2018). 801 IOWA CONST. art. II, § 5 (disqualifying “a person convicted of any infamous crime” from voting). The Supreme Court of Iowa held that an “infamous crime under the constitution means felony crime.” Griffin v. Pate, 884 N.W.2d 182, 205 (Iowa 2016). The same court also recognized the power of the governor to restore voting rights via pardon. State v. Richardson, 890 N.W.2d 609, 624 n.11 (Iowa 2017). See also IOWA CODE ANN. § 914.2 (permitting persons convicted of a crime to apply “to the board of parole for recommendation or to the governor for a reprieve, pardon, commutation of sentence, remission of fines or forfeitures, or restoration of rights of citizenship at any time following the conviction.”). ; Office of the Governor, “Executive Clemency,” https://governor.iowa.gov/constituentservices/restoration-of-citizenship-rights (specifying that the “Application for Restoration of Citizenship” must be filed for most individuals to regain the right to vote) (last accessed Feb. 20, 2019). Individuals who had discharged their sentence before July 4, 2005 had their rights restored automatically under Executive Order 42. Ibid. Note that Iowa’s governor has expressed interest in implementing further automatic voting restoration for people with felony convictions in the state. See Tim Lau, “Progress on Voting Rights Restoration in Iowa?” Brennan Center for Justice Blog, Nov. 21, 2018, https://www.brennancenter.org/blog/progress-on-voting-rights-restoration-in-iowa. 802 KY. CONST. § 145 (disqualifying “[p]ersons convicted in any court of competent jurisdiction of treason, or felony, or bribery in an election, or of such high misdemeanor as the General Assembly may declare” from voting, but allowing civil rights restoration upon executive pardon); KY. REV. STAT. ANN. § 196.045 (directing the Dep’t of Corrections to develop regulations for applications of “eligible felony offenders” who have served their full sentence for civil rights restoration, including the right to vote, and to “[f]oward information on a monthly basis of eligible felony offenders who have requested restoration of rights to the Office of the Governor for consideration of a partial pardon.”). 797 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION disenfranchised plaintiffs with felony convictions filed a complaint alleging that Kentucky’s voting rights restoration process violates the 1st Amendment. 803 The plaintiffs argue that the governor’s “unfettered discretion” and the lack of “reasonable, definite time limits” within the restoration process risked “arbitrary, biased, and/or discriminatory treatment of restoration of voting rights applications.” 804 At the time of this writing, the case was still pending. 802F 803F The Restoration of Voting Rights Some states, including Florida, have taken steps through ballot initiatives, legislative processes, or gubernatorial action toward voting rights restoration for persons with felony convictions. 805 804F Florida’s state constitution previously disenfranchised people with any felony conviction indefinitely, 806 who comprised approximately 10.6 percent of the state’s voting-age population. 807 In 2018, Florida voters approved a ballot measure known as the Voting Restoration Amendment, which restores voting rights to people convicted of felonies other than murder or sexual offenses who have completed their sentence (including probation and parole); those individuals convicted of murder or sexual offenses still fall under the clemency regime discussed above. 808 An estimated 1.4 to 1.5 million Floridians regained the right to vote as a result of the new amendment. 809 In Tampa alone, during the first week that the amendment took effect, the average number of voter registrations surged to about 2.5 times the weekly average in the preceding months. 810 Moreover, at the start of 2019, black people represented 22 percent of Tampa’s registered voters; but on the 805F 806F 807F 80F 809F 803 Third Amended Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, Harbin v. Bevin, No. 6:18-CV-277-KKC, ¶¶ 7, 35-36, 46 (E.D. Ky. Jan. 4, 2019), https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/85cfb4_843027b8b9554a63aac28a2c24606ed8.pdf. 804 Id. at ¶¶ 39-40, 49-50. 805 See generally Ballotpedia, “2018 Ballot Measures: Voting Requirements and Ballot Access,” https://ballotpedia.org/2018_ballot_measures (last accessed Oct. 2, 2018). According to research, states generally are not enacting more restrictive felony disenfranchisement laws. See Sarah Jackel & Stuart A. Thompson, “The Myth of the Lazy Nonvoter,” New York Times, Oct. 5, 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/10/05/opinion/midterm-election-voter-turnout-photo-id.html?smid=twnytopinion&smtyp=cur (citing research from the Campaign Legal Center on state felony disenfranchisement laws, at https://campaignlegal.org/restoreyourvote/). See also supra notes 780-86 (discussing the law enacted in Louisiana to restore voting rights to people convicted of felonies when five years have elapsed since their release from incarceration). 806 Advancement Project, Democracy Disappeared: How Florida Silences the Black Vote through Felony Disenfranchisement, 2018, at 29, https://advancementproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Democracydisappeared-FOR-ONLINE-without-blank-pp_26Sep2018.pdf. 807 Ibid. at 21. 808 Fla. Division of Elections, “Voting Restoration Amendment 14-01,” Constitutional Amendment Petition Form, supra note 647. 809 The Brennan Center, “Voting Rights Restoration Efforts in Florida,” https://www.brennancenter.org/analysis/voting-rights-restoration-efforts-florida (last accessed Dec. 8, 2018); Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 3. 810 Langston Taylor, “Amendment 4 is already changing Tampa’s electorate,” Tampa Bay Times, Feb. 7, 2019, https://www.tampabay.com/florida-politics/buzz/2019/02/07/amendment-4-is-already-changing-tampas-electorateheres-how/. 113 first day the amendment took effect (January 8), black people accounted for 47 percent of new voter registrations. 811 Black voters constituted 35 percent of new voter registrations in Tampa during the first week of the amendment’s implementation alone. 812 These numbers illustrate the disproportionate effect of felony disenfranchisement has had on black voters in just one city in Florida. 813 810F 81F 812F Virginia’s state constitution still permanently disenfranchises people convicted of any felony unless the governor restores their rights, but unlike in Iowa and Kentucky, many returning Virginians’ rights have been restored. 814 Individuals whose civil rights are restored by the governor “or other appropriate authority” may vote 815 if the Commonwealth “remove[s] political disabilities consequent upon conviction for offenses committed.” 816 In 2016, then-Governor Terry McAuliffe signed an executive order to restore the civil rights of 206,000 Virginians who had been convicted of felonies and served their sentences. 817 The governor also indicated his intent to issue similar orders at the end of each month going forward. 818 In response, Virginia’s state legislature sued the governor, contending that he had exceeded his authority under the state constitution. 819 The Virginia Supreme Court agreed with the state legislature, finding that the governor could pardon individuals only on a “case-by-case” basis and not categorically. 820 813F 814 F 815F 816F 817F 81F 819 F Governor McAuliffe responded by embarking on an effort to restore voting rights on an individualized basis to Virginians with felony convictions who had served their sentences. 821 The 820F 811 Ibid. Ibid. 813 Ibid. 814 VA. CONST. art. II, § 1. See also infra notes 815-23. 815 VA. CONST. art. II, § 1. 816 VA. CONST. art. V, § 12. 817 Howell v. McAuliffe, 292 Va. 320, 326-28 (2016) (summarizing the governor’s April 22, 2016 executive order); id. at 320: Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution of Virginia sets out a general rule of law and then provides for an exception: “No person who has been convicted of a felony shall be qualified to vote unless his civil rights have been restored by the Governor or other appropriate authority.” Va. Const. art. II, § 1 (emphasis added). On April 22, 2016, Governor Terence R. McAuliffe issued an Executive Order that inverts this rule-exception sequence. The practical effect of this Executive Order effectively reframes Article II, Section 1 to say: “No person who has been convicted of a felony shall be disqualified to vote unless the convicted felon is incarcerated or serving a sentence of supervised release.” 818 Id. at 328. 819 Id. 820 Id. at 349. 821 Lindsey Turok, Howell v. McAuliffe: Felon Disenfranchisement in Virginia and the “Cautious and Incremental Approach” to Voting Equality, 28 GEO. MASON U. CIV. RTS. L.J. 341, 342-43 (2018). 812 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION state legislature’s attempt to hold the government in contempt of court failed, 822 and the governor restored the voting rights of more than 170,000 individuals by the end of his term. 823 821F 82F In April 2018, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order removing voting restrictions for people with felony convictions who are on parole. 824 The order mandates that individuals on parole “be given consideration for a conditional pardon that will restore voting rights without undue delay.” 825 Prior to the order, New York already allowed individuals on probation or released from prison without post-release community supervision to vote. 826 823F 824F 825F Although public opinion is not the arbiter of civil rights, the Commission notes that public opinion reflects a preference for voting rights restoration. In a 2003 study, academic researchers sought to measure public opinion about whether voting rights should be restored to individuals with felony convictions (including currently and formerly incarcerated individuals, and individuals on parole or probation), and found an overwhelming 81.7 percent of individuals surveyed believed that the right to vote should be restored to these individuals at some point. 827 And according to a 2016 report, if state policies reflected current public opinion, 77 percent of the 6.1 million people currently disenfranchised would regain their voting rights. 828 Moreover, Florida’s November 2018 voting rights restoration amendment was supported by 65.5 percent of the state’s total electorate, including voters from both major political parties. 829 826F 827F 82F 822 Motion for an Order Requiring Respondents to Show Cause Why They Should Not Be Held in Contempt for Violating the Writ of Mandamus, Howell v. McAuliffe, 788 S.E.2d 706 (Aug. 31, 2016, Va.) (No. 160784) (motion on behalf of the state legislature to hold the governor in contempt of court); Upon a Petition for Writs of Mandamus and Prohibition, Howell v. McAuliffe, 778 S.E.2d 706 (Sept. 15, 2016, Va.) (No. 160784) (containing the Virginia Supreme Court’s unanimous denial of the motion to hold the governor in contempt of court). See also Graham Moomaw, “Virginia Supreme Court denies Republican effort to hold McAuliffe in contempt over felon voting rights,” Richmond Times-Dispatch, Sept. 15, 2016, https://www.richmond.com/news/virginia/virginia-supremecourt-denies-republican-effort-to-hold-mcauliffe-in/article_397c5a9f-5695-521c-a791-fabae3e17812.html. 823 Vann R. Newkirk III, “How Letting Felons Vote Is Changing Virginia,” The Atlantic, Jan. 8, 2018, https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/01/virginia-clemency-restoration-of-rights-campaigns/549830/. 824 2018 Sess. Law News of N.Y. Exec. Order 181, Restoring the Right to Vote for New Yorkers on Parole (April 18, 2018), https://www.governor.ny.gov/sites/governor.ny.gov/files/atoms/files/EO_181.pdf. 825 Id. 826 N.Y. ELEC. LAW § 5-106; see also Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, “Governor Cuomo Signs Executive Order to Restore Voting Rights to New Yorkers on Parole,” April 18, 2018, https://www.governor.ny.gov/news/governor-cuomo-signs-executive-order-restore-voting-rights-new-yorkersparole. 827 Pinaire et. al., Barred from the Vote: Public Attitudes Toward the Disenfranchisement of Felons, supra note 628 at 1540. 828 Uggen, 6 Million Lost Voters, supra note 635 at 14. 829 See Ballotpedia, “Florida Amendment 4, Voting Rights Restoration for Felons Initiative (2018),” https://ballotpedia.org/Florida_Amendment_4,_Voting_Rights_Restoration_for_Felons_Initiative_(2018) (reporting that 64.5 percent of Florida’s voters supported the amendment) (last accessed Feb. 14, 2019); German Lopez, “Florida votes to restore ex-felon voting rights with Amendment 4,” Vox, Nov. 7, 2018, https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2018/11/6/18052374/florida-amendment-4-felon-voting-rights-results (reporting bipartisan endorsements of the measure). 115 The majority of the American public may disfavor permanent disenfranchisement of people with felony convictions, but opinions differ as to when voting rights should be restored. 830 Research shows that although most people do not support voting rights for the currently incarcerated, about 80 percent support restoration for people who have completed their sentence, 68 percent support restoration for people on probation, and 60 percent support restoration for parolees. 831 Some people advocate for waiting periods or individualized assessments in lieu of automatic restoration, given a perceived likelihood that formerly incarcerated individuals will commit a new crime. 832 Backers of this approach sometimes cite a U.S. Department of Justice report revealing that twothirds of formerly incarcerated individuals in 30 states were arrested for a new crime within three years of release, and three-quarters were arrested within five years of release. 833 The recidivism rate within the three- to five-year period post-release may strengthen the case for waiting periods because, according to this perspective, only formerly incarcerated people who have not been rearrested within those time periods have proven themselves worthy of regaining the franchise. 829F 830F 831F 832F By contrast, other scholars cite the high recidivism rates during the initial post-release period as evidence that current policies are ineffective in helping to reintegrate the formerly incarcerated. 834 They argue that if this is the case, policymakers should intensify their efforts to reintegrate formerly incarcerated people sooner. 835 Some research has identified a positive link between voting and reduced criminality, suggesting that restoring the right to vote may facilitate 83F 834F 830 Manza & Uggen, Punishment and Democracy: Disenfranchisement of Nonincarcerated Felons in the United States, supra note 638 at 500. 831 Ibid. 832 See, e.g., von Spakovsky Statement at 5; Roger Clegg, “If You Can’t Follow Laws, You Shouldn’t Help Make Them,” New York Times, April 22, 2016, https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2016/04/22/should-felons-everbe-allowed-to-vote/if-you-cant-follow-laws-you-shouldnt-help-make-them (arguing that voting rights should be restored “on a case-by-case basis after a person has shown that he or she has really turned over a new leaf”). 833 Matthew R. Durose, Alexia D. Cooper, Howard N. Snyder, Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 30 States in 2005: Patterns from 2005 to 2010, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2014, at 1, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/rprts05p0510.pdf. The report indicated that “states were selected for the study based on their ability to provide prisoner records and the FBI or state identification numbers on persons released from correctional facilities in 2005.” Ibid. at 16. The states included Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia. 834 See, e.g., Holden & Norris, “What Opponents Get Wrong About Criminal Justice Reform,” supra note 695 (asserting that “what tough-on-crime supporters fail to acknowledge is that a high recidivism rate is proof our current approach isn’t working, not an argument against reform”); see also American Civil Liberties Union et al., Democracy Imprisoned: A Review of the Prevalence and Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, supra note 696 (where the authors argue that “[f]elony disenfranchisement operates contrary to the goals of ensuring public safety and reducing reoffending by alienating from society those individuals that the criminal justice system is simultaneously attempting to reintegrate.”). For further discussion about the relationship between felony disenfranchisement and recidivism, see “Arguments For and Against Felony Disenfranchisement,” supra notes 668720. 835 Holden & Norris, “What Opponents Get Wrong About Criminal Justice Reform,” supra note 695; American Civil Liberties Union et al., Democracy Imprisoned: A Review of the Prevalence and Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, supra note 696. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION reintegration. 836 Therefore, policies that automatically restore voting rights post-release may benefit public safety more than those that impose waiting periods. 837 835F 836F As previously noted, some Commission SACs have reported a general lack of awareness about post-release voting rights among individuals with criminal convictions, even in states like Illinois and Ohio that automatically restore the franchise. 838 These findings suggest that the impact of automatic restoration on reintegration may be limited if corrections personnel do not inform people with criminal convictions about their rights. 839 The SAC reports also highlight the vast differences among states in terms of the processes implemented to restore voting rights. 837F 83F For instance, the Tennessee SAC reported that local election officials “had difficulty understanding and accurately applying” the voting rights restoration and registration process. 840 In Tennessee, individuals convicted of a serious felony (aggravated rape, first-degree murder, treason, or voter fraud 841) permanently lose their right to vote; however, individuals convicted of other felonies lose their right to vote but may petition for rights restoration after “expiration of the maximum sentence imposed.” 842 If the pardon is granted, the individual must submit proof of both the pardon and the voting rights restoration to the county elections administrator in order to register to vote. 843 But before authorizing the individual to register, the county elections administrator must first confirm 839F 840F 841F 842F 836 Christopher Uggen & Jeff Manza, Voting and Subsequent Crime and Arrest: Evidence from A Community Sample, 36 COLUM. HUM. RTS. L. REV. 193, 213 (2004). 837 Holden & Norris, “What Opponents Get Wrong About Criminal Justice Reform,” supra note 695; American Civil Liberties Union et al., Democracy Imprisoned: A Review of the Prevalence and Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States, supra note 696. 838 See, e.g., Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 9; Ill. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Civil Rights and Voting in Illinois, supra note 670 at 27-30 (reporting that despite Illinois’s automatic restoration of voting rights post-release, some formerly incarcerated people testified about their mistaken belief that they remained disenfranchised); Ohio Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Ohio, supra note 670 at 4, 16 (reporting that despite Ohio’s automatic restoration of voting rights post-release, the differences among state election laws “create confusion and misinformation” and recommending the “universal and systemic notification of the right to vote to people with felony convictions upon their release from prison”). See also “The Current Landscape of State Felony Disenfranchisement Laws,” supra notes 635-74. 839 See, e.g., Ohio Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Ohio, supra note 670 at 4, 16 (urging the “universal and systemic notification” of voting rights to people upon release from incarceration). For more discussion about the absence of mechanisms that clarify and notify the public about collateral consequences, see Chapter 1, “Notification of Collateral Consequence,” supra notes 199-221. 840 Tenn. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Right to Vote and Ex-Felon Disenfranchisement in Tennessee, supra note 670 at 9. 841 TENN. CODE ANN. § 40-29-105 (outlining the felonies that result in permanent disenfranchisement, based on the year of the conviction); TENN. CODE ANN. § 40-20-112 (prohibiting people with criminal convictions from exercising the right to vote). 842 TENN. CODE ANN. § 40-29-101 (allowing “the circuit court” to restore the rights of citizenship to individuals “rendered infamous or deprived of the rights of citizenship by the judgment of any state or federal court” and permitting individuals who have been pardoned to petition for restoration of their rights); TENN. CODE ANN. § 2-19143 (disenfranchising any individual “convicted of an infamous crime…unless such person has been pardoned by the governor, or the person’s full rights of citizenship have otherwise been restored as prescribed by law.”). 843 TENN. CODE ANN. § 2-2-139(a)-(b). 117 with the state coordinator of elections that the individual is indeed eligible. 844 Moreover, “[t]he state election coordinator is empowered to formulate a uniform procedure for verifying the registration eligibility of any” individual with a felony conviction, and the county elections administrator can allow the individual to register only upon receipt of “sufficient verification of such person’s eligibility to register.” 845 Unsurprisingly, given the complicated nature of this process, the Tennessee SAC reported not only confusion among local elections officials but also widespread “concerns about procedural barriers to restoration,” including limited access to court records needed to comply with the process and “financial hardship” about outstanding child support payments. 846 843F 84 F 845F During SAC hearings in Alabama and Arizona, experts also testified about state regulations that further prohibit people with felony convictions from regaining the franchise until they pay certain fines or fees, even when they are otherwise eligible. 847 One Alabama panelist cited research finding that one-third of applications filed between 2000 and 2014 for regaining voter registration eligibility “were denied due to court debt” even when the applicants met all other conditions for eligibility. 848 About 70 percent of this court debt constituted docket fees (which vary by judicial district), public defender fees, and district attorney collection fees (“equal to 30 percent of outstanding debt after 90 days”). 849 The Arizona SAC also recommended that the state “eliminate the requirement” that people with felony convictions pay outstanding court fees to restore their voting rights. 850 In Arizona, the superior court judge who delivered the sentence (or the judge’s 846F 847F 84F 849F 844 TENN. CODE ANN. § 2-2-139(b). TENN. CODE ANN. § 2-2-139(c) 846 Tenn. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Right to Vote and Ex-Felon Disenfranchisement in Tennessee, supra note 670 at 9. 847 See Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 19-20; Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 9-10. See also Ala. Board of Pardons and Paroles, “About Us: Rules, Regulations, and Procedures, art. 9,” http://www.pardons.state.al.us/DisplayPDF.aspx?sh=Voting (requiring people who were convicted of crimes of moral turpitude, seeking to regain the right to vote, and unable to pay fines to apply for remission of fines, which must be approved by the Board) (last accessed May 6, 2019); Ariz. Board of Executive Clemency, “Frequently Asked Questions,” http://www.pardons.state.al.us/DisplayPDF.aspx?sh=Rules (stating that Arizona's Board of Executive Clemency will consider “[w]hether the applicant is delinquent on any outstanding fees, restitution and/or other obligations” in deciding whether to forward voting restoration applications to the governor, who ultimately decides if the applicant with a felony conviction will receive a pardon restoring the franchise) (last accessed May 6, 2019). 848 Ala. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Access to Voting in Alabama, supra note 670 at 19 (testimony of Johnathan Barry-Blocker) (citing Marc Meredith & Michael Morse, Discretionary Disenfranchisement: The Case of Legal Financial Obligations, 46 J. LEGAL STUD. 309, 329 (2017)). 849 Marc Meredith & Michael Morse, Discretionary Disenfranchisement: The Case of Legal Financial Obligations, 46 J. LEGAL STUD. 309, 324 (2017). 850 Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 10. See also Maricopa Cty. Recorder’s Office, “Restoration of Right to Vote,” https://recorder.maricopa.gov/elections/restorationofvotingrights.aspx (stating that for a person with one felony conviction to qualify for voting rights restoration, “[i]f a fine or restitution was imposed, that fine and/or restitution must be paid in full”) (last accessed Feb. 13, 2019). 845 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION successor) exercises discretion about whether to restore the convicted person’s voting rights; 851 although voting rights restoration generally occurs when applicants pay mandatory fines and satisfy other criteria, this wide judicial latitude sometimes prevents restoration even when applicants are otherwise eligible. 852 Tennessee’s application for voting rights restoration also mandates the payment of “[a]ll of the restitution ordered by the court as a part of the sentence” for a person with a felony conviction to become eligible for exercising the right to vote once again. 853 850F 851F 852F Due in part to the variability of state laws, some policymakers have proposed federal action on the issue of voting rights restoration. In his written testimony to the Commission, Senator Benjamin Cardin (D-MD) discussed the Democracy Restoration Act that he submitted to the 114th Congress (S. 772). 854 The bill sought to create a national standard to restore voting rights to formerly incarcerated individuals. 855 Senator Cardin cited three discrepancies in state laws that the bill would seek to rectify, including: 856 853 F 854F 85F The lack of uniformity in voting in federal elections, which creates an “unfair disparity and unequal participation” based on a person’s residence. 857 The lack of uniformity in state laws that allow or disallow the restoration of rights. 858 The disproportionate impact that disenfranchisement has on racial and ethnic minorities. 859 856F 857F 85F 851 ARIZ. REV. STAT. ANN. § 13-908. See Ariz. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Voting Rights in Arizona, supra note 670 at 9 (reporting that “25 percent of formerly incarcerated individuals who served time in Maricopa County, who did not owe fees, were denied restoration of voting rights due to [a] judge’s decision.”). 853 Tenn. Division of Elections, Certificate of Restoration of Voting Rights, 2017, https://sos-tn-govfiles.tnsosfiles.com/forms/ss-3041.pdf. 854 Cardin Statement at 1; S. 772, 114th Cong. (2015). 855 Cardin Statement at 1; S. 772, 114th Cong. (2015). 856 Cardin Statement at 2-3. 857 Ibid. at 2. 858 Ibid. at 3. 859 Ibid. 852 119 The previously introduced version of the bill drew widespread support from civil rights and reform organizations, religious and faith-based organizations, and law enforcement and criminal justice organizations. 860 In 2017, Senator Cardin reintroduced the bill as S. 1588 in the 115th Congress. 861 In the 116th (current) Congress, Congressman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) introduced the Democracy Restoration Act of 2019 as H.R. 196, which mirrors Senator Cardin’s bill. 862 In addition, the For the People Act of 2019, introduced by Congressman John Sarbanes (D-MD) as H.R. 1, incorporates the Democracy Restoration Act and would prohibit the denial or abridgement of a citizen’s right to vote based on his or her conviction “of a criminal offense unless such individual is serving a felony sentence in a correctional institution or facility at the time of the election.” 863 859F 860F 861F 862F Critics of this type of legislation have argued that Congress lacks the constitutional authority to impose a national standard on states relating to the qualifications of voters. 864 For support, they point to Article I, Section 2’s provision that voters for members of the House of Representatives in each state “shall have the Qualifications requisite for Electors of the most numerous Branch of the State Legislature.” 865 According to the bill’s critics, this clause implies that if states must determine the qualifications of voters for state elections, then states must determine voting 863F 864F Ibid. at 6-11. Senator Cardin’s testimony attached three separate letters of support from multiple organizations. See “Letter In Support Of The Democracy Restoration Act (S. 772/ H.R. 1459) From Civil Rights And Reform Organizations,” March 25, 2015, including AFL-CIO, African American Ministers In Action, American Civil Liberties Union, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC, Bend the Arc Jewish Action, Brennan Center for Justice, Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, Common Cause, Communication Workers of America, CURE, DC Vote, Demos, Drug Policy Alliance, Fair Elections Legal Network, FairVote, FedCURE, Global Alliance, Interfaith Networks, International CURE, Jewish Council for Public Affairs, Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, League of United Latin American Citizens, MALDEF, NAACP, NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc., National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, National Association of Social Workers, National Council of Jewish Women, National Urban League, NETWORK, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby, OurTime.org, People Demanding Action, People For the American Way, Prison Policy Initiative, Project Vote, The Sentencing Project, Voting Rights Forward; “Letter In Support Of The Democracy Restoration Act (S. 772/ H.R. 1459) From Religious And Faith-Based Organizations,” March 27, 2018, including African American Ministers In Action, Bend the Arc Jewish Action, Church of the Brethren, Office of Public Witness, Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, CURE, Disciples Justice Action Network, FedCURE, Global Alliance Interfaith Networks, Institute for Prison Ministries, International CURE, Jewish Council for Public Affairs, Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office, National Council of Churches, National Council of Jewish Women, NETWORK, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby, People Demanding Action, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries, United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society; “Letter In Support Of The Democracy Restoration Act (S. 772/ H.R. 1459) From Law Enforcement And Criminal Justice Organizations,” March 27, 2018, including American Probation and Parole Association, Blacks in Law Enforcement of America, Jorge Montes, Principal at Montes & Associates, Former Chairman, Illinois Prisoner Review Board, International Community Corrections Association. Ibid. at 6-11. 861 S. 1588, 115th Cong. (2017). The 115th Congress runs from Jan. 3, 2017 through the end of Dec. 2018. 862 H.R. 196, 116th Cong. (2019), https://www.congress.gov/116/bills/hr196/BILLS-116hr196ih.pdf. The 116th Congress runs from Jan. 3, 2019 through the end of Dec. 2020. 863 H.R. 1, 116th Cong. §§ 1401-08 (2019), https://www.congress.gov/116/bills/hr1/BILLS-116hr1ih.pdf. 864 See, e.g., von Spakovsky Statement at 4. 865 U.S. CONST. art. I, § 2, cl. 1. 860 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION qualifications for federal elections. 866 Moreover, they argue, Article I, Section 4 empowers Congress to regulate the “Time, Places, and Manner” of federal elections in the states, but does not explicitly authorize Congress to regulate voting qualifications in the states. 867 865F 86F In response, proponents of the legislation maintain that because felony disenfranchisement disproportionately adversely affects people of color, Congress has more leeway. 868 They note that although federalism devolves ample election authority to the states, the U.S. Constitution preserves the right of Congress to regulate federal elections regarding their time, place and manner, and to protect against racially discriminatory voting procedures in the states. 869 The U.S. Supreme Court, they argue, has repeatedly upheld the ultimate authority of Congress to supervise federal elections. 870 Moreover, in upholding the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the Court has upheld the power conferred upon Congress to guarantee equal protection and access to the ballot regardless of race under the 14th and 15th amendments. 871 Given the disproportionate impact of felony disenfranchisement on people of color, supporters of the bill assert, Congress would be well within its power to enact federal legislation to address the issue. 872 867F 86 F 869F 870F 871F 866 von Spakovsky & Clegg, Felon Voting and Unconstitutional Congressional Overreach, supra note 761 at 9. Ibid.; U.S. CONST. art. I, § 4, cl. 1. 868 Cardin Statement at 2, 4. 869 Ibid. at 2 (citing U.S. CONST. art. I, § 4, cl. 1. (“Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such [state] Regulations [of elections]”) and U.S. CONST. amend. XIII, XIV, XV, XIX, XXIV, XXVI (authorizing Congress to enforce, respectively, the abolition of slavery, the duty of states to guarantee due process and equal protection of the laws, the requirement that states not deny or abridge the right to vote “on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude,” the requirement that states not deny or abridge the right to vote “on account of sex,” the requirement that states not deny or abridge the right to vote “by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or other tax,” and the requirement that states not deny or abridge the right to vote of citizens aged 18 and older “on account of age.”)). 870 See, e.g., Ex parte Siebold, 100 U.S. 371, 383-84 (1879) (interpreting the Elections Clause to find that “the power of Congress over [election regulations] is paramount. It may be exercised as and when Congress sees fit to exercise it. When exercised, the action of Congress, so far as it extends and conflicts with the regulations of the State, necessarily supersedes them.”); Ex parte Commonwealth of Virginia, 100 U.S. 339, 345-46 (1879) (“Whatever legislation is appropriate, that is, adapted to carry out the objects the [Reconstruction] amendments have in view, whatever tends to enforce submission to the prohibitions they contain, and to secure to all persons the enjoyment of perfect equality of civil rights and the equal protection of the laws against State denial or invasion, if not prohibited, is brought within the domain of congressional power.”). 871 See, e.g., Shelby Cty., Ala. v. Holder, 570 U.S. 529, 557 (2013) (declining to invalidate Congressional power under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act to enforce “the permanent, nationwide ban on racial discrimination in voting “); South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 337 (1966) (upholding Congressional authority codified in the Voting Rights Act, stating that “Congress has full remedial powers to effectuate the constitutional prohibition against racial discrimination in voting. Congress has repeatedly exercised these powers in the past, and its enactments have repeatedly been upheld.”). 872 Cardin Statement at 2, 4 (pointing out that “Article I, Section 4, of the Constitution grants Congress ultimate supervisory power over Federal elections, an authority which has repeatedly been upheld by the United States Supreme Court” and that “Congress has a responsibility to remedy [racial disparities] and enact a nationwide standard for the restoration of voting rights.”); see also Brennan Center, Legal Analysis of Congress’ Constitutional Authority to Restore Voting Rights, 2009, at 2, 3 n.2, https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/legacy/Democracy/Brennan%20Center%20analysis%20of%20DR A%20federal%20authority%208-10-09.pdf (noting the Supreme Court’s recognition “that Congress’ enforcement powers are a grant of broad authority to eradicate any racial discrimination in voting” and that “[c]riminal 867 121 Prison Gerrymandering and Vote Dilution Prison gerrymandering refers to the practice of counting incarcerated individuals as residents of correctional facilities, rather than their home communities, when redrawing electoral maps (i.e., during redistricting). 873 Like felony disenfranchisement, prison gerrymandering is a collateral consequence of a felony conviction, affecting not just incarcerated people but also their home communities, to which they frequently return. 874 Voters have challenged prison gerrymandering as a violation of the “one-person, one-vote” principle of the Equal Protection Clause, contending that the practice dilutes the voting strength of incarcerated people’s home communities and inflates the voting strength of communities where prisons are built. 875 Because prisoners are disproportionately people of color from more urban areas, and prisons are located in primarily white, rural areas, prison gerrymandering can unequally redistribute and reapportion political power and representation. 876 872F 873F 874F 875F Among the cases litigated thus far, courts have differed in assessing whether prison gerrymandering violates the Equal Protection Clause. In Florida, a federal district court evaluated the districting scheme of Jefferson County’s five single-member districts, which elect representatives to the County’s Board of Commissioners and School Board; the entire county had an estimated population of 14,761 people. 877 In District 3, the county was home to a state prison that confined 1,157 people, only nine of whom were convicted in Jefferson County. 878 The 876F 87F disenfranchisement provisions today continue to have a substantially greater impact on minorities, especially African American men.”). 873 Harvard Law Review Association, Constitutional Law-Equal Protection-First Circuit Holds That Prison Gerrymandering Does Not Violate the Equal Protection Clause, 130 HARV. L. REV. 2235 (2017). 874 See Weiss, Housing Access for People with Criminal Records, supra note 413 at 1 (noting that “as more former prisoners return to their communities, there is a growing concern about how they will fare upon reentry.”). Note that where “an apportionment scheme” confers “greater ‘representational strength’” upon the district where incarcerated people are confined than upon their home district, the equal protection rights of people residing in incarcerated persons’ home districts may be violated. See, e.g., Calvin v. Jefferson Cty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 172 F. Supp. 3d 1292, 1303-04 (N.D. Fla. 2016). 875 See Davidson v. City of Cranston, R.I., 837 F.3d 135, 139 (1st Cir. 2016) (holding that the city’s redistricting plan, which included nonvoting inmates of a city ward’s correctional facility in the ward’s population count, did not inflate that ward’s voting strength or dilute the other five wards’ voting strength in violation of the Equal Protection Clause); Calvin, 172 F. Supp. 3d at 1298, 1325-26 (finding that the county’s redistricting scheme, which counted nonvoting inmates of a state prison as part of that district’s population, enlarged the district’s representational strength and diluted the other five districts’ representational strength in violation of the Equal Protection Clause). 876 Julie A. Ebenstein, The Geography of Mass Incarceration: Prison Gerrymandering and the Dilution of Prisoners’ Political Representation, 45 FORDHAM URB. L.J. 323, 325 (2018). 877 Calvin, 172 F. Supp. 3d at 1295. 878 Id. at 1296. A single-member district is a district in which one elected official represents the entire district, whereas a multimember district is one in which multiple elected officials represent voters in one district. See Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 U.S. 30, 46-48 (1986). The Supreme Court has held that multimember district plans may “impede the ability of minority voters to elect representatives of their choice” when a minority group can show “that it is sufficiently large and geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member district,” that it is “politically cohesive,” and that the majority group “votes sufficiently as a bloc to enable it . . . to defeat the minority’s preferred candidate.” Id. at 48-51. CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION county’s districting scheme, which included the correctional institution’s population in District 3, resulted in a 42 percent deviation of the non-incarcerated population as compared to the other four districts in the county 879 The court found that the scheme denied residents of other districts equal protection of the laws by diluting their “representational and voting strength” while enlarging that of District 3 residents. 880 Moreover, the court noted, the county’s incarcerated individuals lacked a “meaningful representational nexus” with the county government, “in every way that matters for representative democracy.” 881 87F 879F 80 F By contrast, the First Circuit held only a few months later that the redistricting scheme of a city ward in Cranston, Rhode Island was not unconstitutional. 882 The city ward’s population was 13,642, of whom 3,433 were non-voting inmates. 883 The court found no equal protection violation because the plaintiffs had not shown “invidious discrimination” on the part of the ward, and absent a showing of intentional discrimination the court must defer to “local election authorities related to apportionment.” 884 81F 82F 83F On February 19, 2019, another federal court held that a case alleging Equal Protection violations could proceed against the state of Connecticut. 885 This is the first known statewide prison gerrymandering case. 886 At the time of this writing, it is still unresolved. 84F 85F Notably, certain legislative initiatives designed to prevent or rectify prison gerrymandering have been upheld in the courts. 887 In 2010, Maryland enacted the No Representation Without Population Act, which requires districting authorities to count incarcerated individuals as residents of their home districts and survived a constitutional challenge. 888 And a New York law that also requires districting maps to include incarcerated persons as residents of their home districts, rather than the districts where they are confined, was upheld by a New York state trial court. 889 86F 87 F 8F 879 Calvin, 172 F. Supp. 3d at 1298, 1323-24. Id. at 1323. 881 Id. 882 Davidson, 837 F.3d at 146. 883 Id. at 138. 884 Id. at 141. 885 NAACP, “NAACP Challenge to Prison Gerrymandering Moves Forward, First Statewide Challenge in the Nation,” Feb. 19, 2019, https://www.naacp.org/latest/naacp-challenge-prison-gerrymandering-moves-forward-firststatewide-challengenation/?fbclid=IwAR3z9RzHn6XBUQmPR6ynCh4TuXF3LufyLxfEK1hjsoganmckzuNDLeybsDM. 886 Ibid. 887 Fletcher v. Lamone, 831 F. Supp. 2d 887, 904 (D. Md. 2011), aff’d, 567 U.S. 930 (2012); Decision and Order, Little v. LAFTOR, No. 2310-2011 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Dec. 1, 2011), at 8-9 https://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/little/Decision_and_Order.pdf. 888 Fletcher, 831 F. Supp. at 893, 904. 889 Decision and Order, Little v. LAFTOR, No. 2310-2011 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Dec. 1, 2011), at 8-9, https://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/little/Decision_and_Order.pdf. 880 123 Jury Service Jury service represents one of the pillars of the U.S. criminal justice system. The right to be tried by a jury of one’s peers was established in the U.S. Constitution in 1787. 890 The Supreme Court has held that exclusion of people of color from jury service violates the defendant’s equal protection rights because it denies the defendant’s right to a trial “composed of [his] peers or equals…that is, of his neighbors, fellows, associates, persons having the same legal status in society as that which he holds.” 891 In addition, the Supreme Court has recognized that denying a person the right to serve on a jury based on her race “unconstitutionally discriminate[s] against the excluded juror,” not just the defendant. 892 89F 890F 891F Federal courts in the United States prohibit people who have been convicted of a felony from serving on a federal jury. 893 In most U.S. states, individuals with felony convictions are automatically disqualified from serving on juries for at least some period of time. 894 About 30 states ban people with felony convictions from jury service for life. 895 The restrictions in other states vary; some impose the ban until the completion of the sentence, parole, and probation 896 and some for a period of time after incarceration, 897 while others make a juror with a conviction challengeable for cause. 898 Colorado and Maine are the only two states without restrictions on jury service based on criminal records (except that Colorado bans people with felony convictions from 892 F 893F 894F 895F 896F 897F U.S. CONST. art. III, § 2 (“The Trial of all Crimes, except in Cases of Impeachment, shall be by Jury; and such Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes have been committed[.]”). 891 Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 86 (1986) (quoting Strauder v. State of W. Virginia, 100 U.S. 303, 308 (1879)). See also Hernandez v. State of Tex., 347 U.S. 475, 477-79 (1954) (noting that “the exclusion of a class of persons from jury service on grounds other than race or color may also deprive a defendant who is a member of that class of the constitutional guarantee of equal protection” and adding that exclusion of a juror “solely because of their ancestry or national origin” also runs afoul of the 14th Amendment). 892 Batson, 476 U.S. at 87. 893 28 U.S.C. § 1865(b)(5). Federal law specifically excludes from jury service an individual who “has a charge pending against him for the commission of, or has been convicted in a State or Federal court of record of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for more than one year and his civil rights have not been restored.” Id. See also United States Courts, “Juror Qualifications,” http://www.uscourts.gov/services-forms/jury-service/juror-qualifications (last accessed Aug. 25, 2018). 894 Brian C. Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, 53 AM. U. L. REV. 65, 150-58 (2003); see also Anna Roberts, Casual Ostracism: Jury Exclusion on the Basis of Criminal Convictions, 98 MINN. L. REV. 592, 595-96 (2013). 895 Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 150-58. 896 See, e.g., 9 R.I. GEN. LAWS ANN. § 9-9-1.1(c) (stating “[n]o person convicted of a felony shall be allowed to serve as a juror, until completion of such felon’s sentence, served or suspended, and of parole or probation regardless of a nolo contendere plea.”); WIS. STAT. ANN. § 756.02 (disqualifying a person who “has been convicted of a felony and has not had his or her civil rights restored”) and § 304.078 (restoring civil rights after incarceration, parole, or probation). 897 See, e.g., MASS. GEN. LAWS ANN. ch. 234A, § 4 (banning a person who “has been convicted of a felony within the past seven years or is a defendant in pending felony case or is in the custody of a correctional institution”); OR. CONST. art. I, § 45 (banning a person who has been convicted of “a felony or served a felony sentence within the 15 years immediately preceding the date” of jury service). 898 See, e.g., IOWA RULE 1.915(6)(a) (allowing a juror to be challenged by a party for “[c]onviction of a felony”). 890 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION serving on grand juries). 899 The length of disqualification often varies, as some states implement a lifetime disqualification, whereas other states allow for temporary or contingent disqualifications, depending on the particular circumstances of an individual’s criminal record: 89F The disqualification may end at the same time as one’s imprisonment, or sentence, or if one is able to obtain an amnesty, annulment, expunction, pardon, reversal, or restoration of civil rights. The disqualification may be triggered only by a particular type of felony, by incarceration, or only by incarceration for a certain period of time. The disqualification may last for only a certain period of years after conviction, or after completion of one’s sentence. Each jurisdiction makes the cut differently. 900 89F In addition to direct disqualifications to jury service based on an individual’s criminal history, some states limit jury service to “qualified electors,” which indirectly disqualify people with criminal records from jury service based on a primary exclusion from voting. 901 Forty-eight states place restrictions on voting rights for individuals with felony convictions, and voter registration rolls largely contribute to the compilation of lists of potential jurors. 902 Furthermore, about a dozen states have statutory provisions that may make misdemeanor convictions susceptible to disqualification from jury service, depending on the type of conviction or otherwise. 903 90F 901F 902F According to scholarship on the topic, there are two primary rationales for the exclusion of formerly incarcerated persons from jury service. The first rationale posits that formerly incarcerated people threaten the probity of the jury (“probity” as in “[m]oral excellence, integrity, rectitude, uprightness; conscientiousness, honesty, sincerity”); the second contends that (within the context of criminal trials only) formerly incarcerated people are inherently biased in favor of criminal defendants. 904 The inherent bias rationale assumes that individuals with criminal convictions harbor resentment against “the system” that punished them, and will favor the defendant—seen as “a fellow underdog”—due to this bias. 905 903F 904F 899 COLO. REV. STAT. ANN. § 13-71-105; ME. REV. STAT. TIT. 14, § 1211. A grand jury is a body of 16 to 23 people “chosen to sit permanently for at least a month—and sometimes a year” in private proceedings to decide whether to indict an individual accused of a crime. See Black’s Law Dictionary, Grand Jury (10th ed. 2014); see also Wex’s Legal Dictionary, Grand Jury, Cornell Law School, Legal Information Institute, https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/grand_jury (last accessed Oct. 3, 2018). During the grand jury proceedings, the prosecutor presents the case, with or without the accused present, to convince grand jurors that probable cause exists to charge the accused with a crime (i.e., issue an indictment). Id. 900 Roberts, Casual Ostracism: Jury Exclusion on the Basis of Criminal Convictions, supra note 894 at 596. 901 Id. at 598. 902 Id. at 595. 903 Id. at 597. 904 Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 73-74. 905 Id. at 74 (quoting Rubio v. Superior Court, 24 Cal. 3d 93, 101 (1979)). 125 A recent study examined the validity of the inherent bias rationale. 906 Researchers compared the pretrial biases of three groups of participants: individuals with felony convictions, eligible jurors not convicted of felonies, and law school students not convicted of felonies. 907 The study found that a felony conviction alone is not the sole predictor of pretrial bias that favors the defense (as opposed to bias favoring the prosecution). Among the factors that predicted pro-defense/antiprosecution bias, the study revealed that enrollment in law school had a greater effect on pretrial bias than a felony conviction. 908 Furthermore, this study found that a felony conviction does not uniformly lead to negative views of the law that might create a pro-defense/anti-prosecution bias, and found that formerly incarcerated persons did not possess a disproportionately negative view of the law. 909 In fact, there was no significant difference between the formerly incarcerated persons’ view of the law and that of eligible jurors. 910 No similar studies have focused directly on this issue. However, researchers continue to repeat the assertion that a juror with a criminal record is more likely to sympathize with a criminal defendant, without citing supportive data. 911 905F 906F 907F 908F 90F 910F At the Commission’s 2017 briefing, James Binnall, Assistant Professor at California State University Long Beach, argued that the inclusion of jurors with criminal records aids their successful reentry into society: . . . former offenders spoke of their inclusion in the jury selection process and in the jury process generally as a corroboration of their reformation, as a certification of their change. And they also noted how removing barriers to reentry helps a former offender build a personal narrative that acknowledges a criminal past while allowing for a law abiding present. As many scholars have noted, this process of reconciling past events with present and future aspirations is a key component to [a] criminal's successful reentry. 912 91F He noted from personal experience that even after admission to the California bar: I was informed by the Jury Commissioner that I was permanently ineligible for jury service in California because of my prior felony conviction and I would never be summonsed again. I protested mildly, explaining that I was an attorney, had used James M. Binnall, “A Field Study of the Presumptively Biased: Is There Empirical Support for Excluding Convicted Felons from Jury Service?” Law and Policy, vol. 36, no. 1 (2014): 29. 907 Id. at 23. 908 Id. 909 Id. at 29. 910 Id. at 29. 911 Paula Z. Segal, A More Inclusive Democracy: Challenging Felon Jury Exclusion in New York, 13 N.Y. CITY L. REV. 313, 358 (2010) (referencing the contention of some researchers that people “who have been charged with or convicted of committing felonies are likely to bear a grudge against the criminal justice system” despite a lack of supportive evidence). 912 Briefing Transcript at 91-92. 906 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION the special entrance, and was told that I should write my congressman if I was unhappy about California's juror eligibility requirements. 913 912F Federal courts have found that the Constitution requires neither the exclusion 914 nor the inclusion 915 of people with felony convictions on juries. Three federal circuit courts have asserted that the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury does not guarantee a right to “a jury of nonfelons” even if a state law mandates the exclusion of people with felony convictions. 916 In Coleman v. Calderon, the court reasoned that although the California constitution prohibited people with felony convictions from jury service, the right to a jury of non-felons is not a constitutionally guaranteed “fundamental right” that would affect the defendant’s “substantial rights.”917 Accordingly, the court found, the service of an individual with a felony conviction on a jury did not deny the defendant due process under the law. 918 Other courts have contended that the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury is intended to protect the defendant from juror bias, which is not necessarily present when a person with a felony conviction serves on a jury. 919 According to the courts’ reasoning, a mandatory exclusion of people convicted of felonies from juries “would be appropriate only if one could reasonably conclude that felons are always biased against one party or another.” 920 913F 914F 915F 916F 917F 918F 91F The Supreme Court has not ruled directly on jury exclusion statutes, but has noted that “the Constitution does not forbid the States to prescribe relevant qualifications for their jurors.” 921 In 1970, in Carter v. Jury Commission of Greene County, the Court upheld an Alabama statute that allowed only jurors who were “generally reputed to be honest and intelligent” and “esteemed in the community for their integrity, good character and sound judgment.” 922 Black plaintiffs had alleged that the statute was racially discriminatory and violated their right to serve as jurors, 920 F 921F 913 Id. at 88. See Coleman v. Calderon, 150 F.3d 1105, 1117 (9th Cir.), judgment rev’d on other grounds, 525 U.S. 141 (1998) (finding that “[t]he Sixth Amendment does not bar ex-felons from jury service.”); United States v. Humphreys, 982 F.2d 254, 261 (8th Cir. 1992) (noting that the “Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury does not require an absolute bar on felon-jurors” (quoting United States v. Boney, 977 F.2d 624, 633 (D.C. Cir. 1992)). See also Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 71. 915 See Perez v. State, 11 S.W.3d 218, 224 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (Keller, J., concurring) (asserting that “the Constitution does not affirmatively prohibit jury service by felons” and “the Constitution does not confer upon the defendant a right to exclude criminals from the jury”) (emphasis in original); Taylor v. Louisiana, 419 U.S. 522, 538 (1975) (noting that “in holding that petit juries must be drawn from a source fairly representative of the community we impose no requirement that petit juries actually chosen must mirror the community and reflect the various distinctive groups in the population. Defendants are not entitled to a jury of any particular composition.”). See also Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 71-73. 916 Coleman, 150 F.3d at 1117; see also Humphreys, 982 F.2d at 261 (citing Boney, 977 F.2d at 633). 917 150 F.3d at 1117. 918 Id. 919 Humphreys, 982 F.2d at 261 (citing Boney, 977 F.2d at 633). 920 Id. 921 Carter v. Jury Comm’n of Greene Cty., 396 U.S. 320, 332-33 (1970). 922 Id. at 323, 336-37. 914 127 producing evidence that the county clerk charged with recommending jurors to the jury commission consulted primarily white residents and was only “familiar” with black residents who were “convicted of crimes” or “in trouble.” 923 Although they represented 65 percent of the county population, black people thus composed only 32 percent of potential jurors in 1967. 924 But finding the Alabama statute “devoid of any mention of race,” the Court upheld its constitutionality and the discretion of states to base jurors’ eligibility on “good intelligence, sound judgment, and fair character.” 925 92F 923F 924F The Carter case focused on the equal protection rights of potential jurors, and other cases on jury composition have focused on the equal protection rights of defendants. 926 But as mentioned above, courts have often reviewed whether the litigant’s Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury encompasses the right to a jury that excludes people convicted of felonies. 927 Litigants, rather than excluded jurors, have generally launched these challenges to protect against unfair bias in their opponents’ favor, rather than to attain “equal and fair juries.” 928 Excluded jurors rarely challenge their exclusion, as it is frequently difficult to ascertain when exclusion is improper. 929 An excluded juror may never receive a summons, or may not fully understand why he or she was removed from the jury pool, so “it is hard for an improperly excluded juror even to know that a violation has occurred.” 930 925F 926F 927F 928F 92F The most common argument against exclusion of jurors with felony convictions is the “crosssection” argument, which posits that without the representation of individuals with criminal records, the jury will not draw from a broadly representative pool of people from a community. 931 Proponents of allowing people convicted of felonies to serve on juries often cite the Federal Jury Selection and Service Act of 1968, in which Congress declared that all federal court litigants “entitled to trial by jury shall have the right to grand and petit juries selected at random from a fair cross section of the community in the district or division wherein the court convenes.” 932 The Supreme Court has recognized the cross-section requirement as “fundamental to the jury trial guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment,” in that it furthers the purpose of the jury as the community’s check on “arbitrary power” wielded by prosecutors and judges. 933 This goal cannot be fulfilled, 930F 931 F 932 F 923 Id. at 324-25. Id. at 327-28. 925 Id. at 332-33, 336-37. 926 Mitchell S. Zuklie, Rethinking the Fair Cross-Section Requirement, 84 CAL. L. REV. 101, 107-08 (1996) (citing Smith v. Texas, 311 U.S. 128 (1940) (where the Court reversed the conviction of a black defendant upon finding that black people were systematically excluded as jurors)). 927 See, e.g., Humphreys, 982 F.2d at 261; Boney, 977 F.2d at 633. See also Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 71. 928 Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 72. 929 Id. 930 Id. 931 Id., at 75. 932 28 U.S.C. § 1861. 933 Taylor, 419 U.S. at 530. 924 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION the Court has asserted, if the jury includes “only special segments of the populace” or excludes “large, distinctive groups.” 934 However, courts have generally rejected the argument that excluding people with criminal convictions violates the cross-section requirement. 935 Numerous federal circuit and district courts have contended that people with criminal convictions do not constitute a “distinctive group,” given the varying nature of the crimes they may have committed, and that their exclusion promotes the necessary “probity” of the jury. 936 Some scholars argue that the probity argument unfairly presumes that people with criminal convictions would not adhere to the highest principles or act as upright individuals when serving on a jury. 937 93F 934F 935 F 936 F The Impact of Jury Exclusion on People of Color Because people of color are disproportionately arrested, prosecuted, and incarcerated, some contend that jury exclusion based on an individual’s criminal record disproportionately excludes people of color. 938 Researchers have alleged that jury exclusion of people with felony convictions allows attorneys to circumvent the ban against racial discrimination in jury selection that the Supreme Court set forth in Batson v. Kentucky. 939 According to this argument, prosecutors have managed to use contact with the criminal justice system as a proxy for race, given that people of color are more likely to be personally or tangentially involved with the criminal justice system. 940 For example, one study documented multiple prosecutorial objections to prospective jurors based on “having relatives who were in the criminal justice system, were convicted, or were incarcerated; having a criminal history, including having been charged with a crime; having a negative attitude toward, or negative experiences with, the police; having been a victim of a crime; and opposing the death penalty.” 941 937F 938F 93F 940F 934 Id. Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 75-76 (citing “United States v. Barry, 71 F.3d 1269, 1273-74 (7th Cir. 1995) (rejecting a cross-section challenge to felon exclusion); United States v. Foxworth, 599 F.2d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 1979) (rejecting a cross-section challenge to felon exclusion); United States v. Best, 214 F. Supp. 2d 897, 904-05 (N.D. Ind. 2002) (finding the cross-section argument regarding felon exclusion “unavailing”); State v. Compton, 39 P.3d 833, 842 (Or. 2002) (en banc) (rejecting a cross-section challenge to felon exclusion); Carle v. United States, 705 A.2d 682, 686 (D.C. 1998) (rejecting the ineffective assistance claim relating to the cross-section argument); Rubio, 24 Cal. 3d at 99 (rejecting a cross-section challenge to felon exclusion); State v. Brown, 364 A.2d 186, 190-91 (Conn. 1975) (rejecting a cross-section challenge to felon exclusion).”). 936 See, e.g., Barry, 71 F.3d at 1273-74 (reasoning that “alleged felons” do not “comprise a distinctive group”); Foxworth, 599 F.2d at 4 (finding that exclusion of jurors with criminal convictions is a rationally based measure meant to “assure the ‘probity’ of the jury.”). 937 Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 74-75. 938 Roberts, Casual Ostracism: Jury Exclusion on the Basis of Criminal Convictions, supra note 894 at 602. See also Kevin R. Johnson, “Hernandez v. Texas: Legacies of Justice and Injustice,” UC Davis Law, Legal Studies Research Paper No. 19, at 8 (2004), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=625403 (observing that “[c]itizenship and English language requirements for jury service, as well as the disqualification of felons, bar disproportionate numbers of Latina/os from serving on juries.”). 939 See Anna Roberts, Disparately Seeking Jurors: Disparate Impact and the (Mis)use of Batson, 45 U.C. DAVIS L. REV. 1359, 1374-76, 1403-04 (2012); see also Batson, 476 U.S. at 79. 940 Roberts, Disparately Seeking Jurors: Disparate Impact and the (Mis)use of Batson, supra note 939 at 1379. 941 Id. 935 129 The first known empirical study on jury exclusion examined Georgia’s statute permanently excluding people with felony convictions from jury service, and concluded that the statute racially homogenized juries. 942 Noting that up to one-fourth of black men in Georgia had been incarcerated with felony convictions, the author found that 27.7 percent of black men were excluded from juries across all Georgia counties. 943 Moreover, in nine counties, more than half of black men were banned from jury service due to felony convictions. 944 Because the group “most likely to have their lives altered by contact with the criminal justice system” was disproportionately excluded from jury service, the results raised the question of whether the right to be tried by a jury of one’s peers has been denied to black defendants. 945 As the author elaborated: 941F 942F 943F 94F Many minority groups continue to be underrepresented across domains of civic engagement, leading to disparities in juries, the electorate, and possibly even elected office. Furthermore, there is little to no resistance to felon-jury-exclusion policies (and collateral consequences more generally) despite strong preliminary evidence that they have an important and significant impact on racial minorities. The ripple effects of felon jury exclusion could act as a feedback loop back into the criminal justice system, whereby inequalities in the jury selection system ultimately lead to greater levels of racial inequality throughout the criminal justice system itself. 946 945F Another study estimated that the exclusion of people with felony convictions from jury service can reduce the number of black men on juries by about 30 percent. 947 946F Other scholars contend that states may justifiably bar people with felony convictions from jury service, just as they do with gun ownership or voting. 948 Pointing out that a statute banning people with felony convictions from juries was “facially race-neutral” and the alleged racial disparities 947F See generally Darren Wheelock, “A Jury of One’s ‘Peers’: The Racial Impact of Felon Jury Exclusion in Georgia,” Justice System Journal, vol. 32, no. 3 (2011): 335-59. 943 Id. at 348. 944 Id. 945 Id. at 352. 946 Id. at 353-54. 947 Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 170-71 (citing Christopher Uggen et al., Crime, Class, and Reintegration: The Scope and Social Distribution of America's Criminal Class (unpublished manuscript, on file with the American University Law Review, delivered to American Society of Criminology, Nov. 18, 2000), which concluded that “the lower end of the 29 to 37% range is consistent with other estimates in other contexts”). 948 See, e.g., Hans A. von Spakovsky, “Should Felons Be Allowed to Vote? Yes, But . . . ,” The Heritage Foundation, May 20, 2016, https://www.heritage.org/election-integrity/commentary/should-felons-be-allowed-voteyes (defending waiting periods for restoration of voting rights in part because “felons lose many other civil rights as well, such as the right to sit on a jury, own a gun, obtain various professional licenses, or work as a public school teacher or law enforcement official in many states.”). 942 CHAPTER 3: ACCESS TO CIVIC PARTICIPATION “not ‘pronounced’,” the Seventh Circuit rejected an equal protection claim that the statute disproportionately excluded black potential jurors. 949 Many of the arguments supporting felony disenfranchisement might apply to arguments supporting jury exclusion of people with felony convictions. 950 For example, like proponents of felony disenfranchisement, proponents of jury exclusion have asserted that individuals who violate “the social contract” through lawlessness forfeit their right to serve on a jury, and/or display their lack of “moral competence and civic responsibility necessary for their participation in self-government.” 951 948F 94F 950F The counterargument points out that removing people who have experience with the criminal justice system can “creat[e] bias even while being sought in the name of bias-removal” and hence create juries with a less diverse array of viewpoints and perspectives. 952 Data indicate that two characteristics of wrongful convictions are false confessions and law enforcement (or other government) misconduct. 953 Juries composed of individuals who have experienced only positive contact with the criminal justice system (if any) may be less likely to question the validity of a confession or the legality of actions taken by law enforcement. 954 Excluding the significant swath of the U.S. population represented by people with criminal convictions may frustrate the jury’s ability to bring “a collective wisdom and body of experience” to their service. 955 951F 952F 953F 954F 949 Barry, 71 F.3d at 1272. See, e.g., von Spakovsky Statement at 5 (arguing that “the loss of certain civil rights,” including the right to vote and serve on a jury, are “sanction[s] that our society has determined should be applied to criminals.”); 951 Kalt, The Exclusion of Felons from Jury Service, supra note 894 at 121-23. See also “Arguments For and Against Felony Disenfranchisement,” supra notes 668-720. 952 Roberts, Casual Ostracism: Jury Exclusion on the Basis of Criminal Convictions, supra note 894 at 605. 953 Id. at 607-10. 954 Id. 955 Grigsby v. Mabry, 483 F. Supp. 1372, 1378 n.6 (E.D. Ark. 1980), modified, 637 F.2d 525 (8th Cir. 1980); see also Roberts, Casual Ostracism: Jury Exclusion on the Basis of Criminal Convictions, supra note 894 at 605. 950 131 [This page intentionally left blank] CHAPTER 4: FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS Chapter 4: Findings and Recommendations Findings 1. Collateral consequences are pervasive, broad ranging restrictions on the rights and privileges of people with criminal convictions to participate in society and access certain benefits. These consequences exacerbate punishment beyond the criminal conviction after an individual completes the court-imposed sentence. In addition, collateral consequences affect people living on parole or probation in the community while they complete a criminal sentence. 2. Some collateral consequences, such as limitations on working with children for people convicted of particular dangerous crimes, are enacted for valid public safety reasons. Many collateral consequences are unrelated either to the underlying crime for which a person has been convicted or to a public safety purpose. When the collateral consequences are unrelated in this way, their imposition generally negatively affects public safety and the public good. 3. The convicted person generally lacks notice as to what the collateral consequences are in the jurisdiction in which she/he is charged. Except for immigration consequences, collateral consequences are not required to be included in court proceedings, plea bargaining, or counseling by attorneys. The general public, attorneys, and the courts often lack knowledge of what the totality of the collateral consequences are in their jurisdiction, how long they last, and whether they are discretionary or mandatory, or even if they are relevant to public safety or merely an extended punishment beyond a criminal sentence. This absence of public and judicial awareness of collateral consequences of conviction undermines any deterrent effect that might flow from attaching such consequences, separate and apart from the punishment itself, to criminal convictions. 4. There is scant evidence that collateral consequences act as a deterrent; however, the evidence shows harsh collateral consequences unrelated to public safety increase recidivism. This increase in recidivism is caused by limiting or by completely barring formerly incarcerated persons’ access to personal and family support. 5. Many collateral consequence restrictions on professional licensing serve an anticompetitive function and work against the public interest. They hinder the chances for and likelihood of rehabilitation for the formerly incarcerated person. 6. Voting restrictions because of a criminal conviction vary sharply by state. Some states allow individuals to vote while in prison and some require individuals to submit 133 applications for restoration of the right to vote years after they have served their criminal sentence. Other states require a full pardon for the restoration of rights. In November 2018, Florida voters overwhelmingly required the state to restore voting rights to people with criminal convictions who have completed their sentence. The constitutional amendment was approved by a margin of 64% in favor and 35% against with more than 8 million votes cast. 7. The federal courts and some states permanently bar any person with a felony criminal conviction from sitting on a criminal jury because of a belief that such persons will be biased toward criminal defendants. Studies do not show pro-defendant biases among people with criminal convictions. Rather studies show that formerly incarcerated individuals are no more biased than other potential jurors. Some states also bar persons with felony convictions from sitting on civil juries after they have served their sentences. 8. Restrictions on public housing and public benefits, including TANF and SNAP, make people acutely vulnerable upon leaving prison. Many people who leave prison do so without money and resources for basic living expenses, which are not easily obtained in part due to the restrictions on public benefits and housing. These consequences fail to protect the public safety and can lead the formerly incarcerated person toward unlawful means to earn subsistence money. Data show that persons subject to these bans are overwhelmingly women. 9. Many jurisdictions suspend driver’s licenses based on criminal convictions, unrelated to whether the restricted person’s conviction involved a criminal driving violation or an offense linked to driving. These restrictions severely limit employment opportunities, leaving people unable to support themselves, which can lead to recidivism putting the public’s safety at risk. 10. Access to federal financial aid for higher education is suspended for people with drug convictions, but not for other criminal convictions. This restriction is not related to drug offenses, and is not connected to a purpose that has been shown to promote the public good. 11. Employment is difficult to access for those individuals with a criminal conviction as many employers choose to use a blanket ban on hiring any person with a prior criminal conviction regardless of the offense committed by the person. In some jurisdictions employers are not permitted to inquire about criminal history on an employment application but must delay questioning and background checks about criminal history until a group of finalists are chosen by the employer. These jurisdictions do not bar employers from hiring their candidates of choice or performing background checks later in the hiring process. The EEOC has issued guidance to employers on conducting criminal background checks in ways that reduce unnecessary consequences and racial disparities. CHAPTER 4: FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 12. The processes people must undertake to restore rights, for example through applications for pardon or for judicial record sealing, are often complicated, opaque, and difficult to access. They often require hiring a lawyer, court filing fees, collecting evidence and several appearances in court before the state will grant such restoration. 13. States, such as Pennsylvania, have instituted automatic restoration of rights and sealing of criminal records for certain offenses after a period of time with no further criminal convictions without the need for individuals to petition for record sealing. Recommendations 1. Collateral consequences should be tailored to serve public safety. Policymakers should avoid punitive mandatory consequences that do not serve public safety, bear no rational relationship to the offense committed, and impede people convicted of crimes from safely reentering and becoming contributing members of society. 2. Jurisdictions that impose collateral consequences should periodically review the consequences imposed by law or regulation to evaluate whether they are necessary to protect public safety and if they are related to the underlying offenses. 3. Congress should pass legislation creating a process to petition for sealing federal conviction records for certain offenses, such as nonviolent crimes, after a reasonable period of time. It should create a reasonable process where a person’s rights are automatically restored when no public safety concerns are present upon completion of the person’s sentence. Those collateral consequences that specifically relate to the crime and implicate public safety should be lifted only after the applicant has demonstrated a reasonable period of law-abiding conduct. 4. Congress should eliminate restrictions on TANF and SNAP benefits based on criminal convictions as they do not serve the public safety or interest but do impose harsh burdens, particularly on formerly incarcerated women. 5. Congress should limit discretion of public housing providers to prevent them from categorically barring people with criminal convictions from access to public housing. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development should provide guidance on what are reasonable periods of time that public housing agencies could permissibly consider requiring to have passed after conviction or completion of sentence before regaining access to public housing, in addition to what underlying conduct could lead to restrictions on access to public housing. In such guidance HUD should consider and list which crimes against people and property merit restrictions on entry to public housing. 135 This guidance should follow the best practices of state and local housing authorities that have successfully provided access to public housing to people with criminal convictions. Many people convicted of non-violent crimes should be allowed to live in public housing. 6. Congress should lift restrictions on access to student loans based on criminal convictions, except for convictions related to financial fraud. When unrelated to financial fraud, financial aid access restriction does not serve the public safety or interest. Lifting the federal ban on Pell Grants to fund in-prison college programs would enable inmates to gain valuable job skills and significantly boost their employment rates post-incarceration. 7. Congress should require federal courts to give comprehensive notice of federal restrictions on individuals’ rights before guilty plea entry, upon conviction, and on release from incarceration. Notice should include how long those restrictions last, and the procedures that set out a step by step process persons must take to restore rights after release. The individual should also be given notice that there will be state and local consequences. 8. The United States Department of Justice should issue guidance sharing best practices related to collateral consequences of criminal convictions, clarifying at minimum the following points: a. State and local jurisdictions should undertake a comprehensive analysis of collateral consequences authorized or required by their laws, collect them in a publicly available format, and analyze the connection of each restriction to public safety and the broader public interest. Consequences not serving the public interest should be repealed. Arrest alone should never be sufficient justification to limit rights and privileges, except as set forth by the court in which the charges are pending. b. Jurisdictions should compile and clearly identify collateral consequences in a format accessible to the public. Court systems should require these consequences to be incorporated into counseling, plea bargaining, and sentencing considerations. c. States should consider restoration of the right to vote to all people who have been released from incarceration or are on probation/parole and are currently disenfranchised because of criminal convictions. Denying the right to vote does not serve the public safety or interest. d. States should notify people disenfranchised because of a criminal conviction when their right to vote is or can be restored, if restored automatically when that occurs, or what steps they must undertake to restore their right to vote. In states where the right to vote is restored upon release from incarceration or completion of supervision, an opportunity to register to vote and assistance to complete the process should be included as part of the completion of the exit process from prison, parole, or probation. CHAPTER 4: FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS e. States should eliminate blanket restrictions on jury service because of a criminal conviction as these restrictions do not safeguard the jury process. Rather, challenges to potential jurors for cause in cases where bias is presented are effective safeguards. f. The only federally mandated public housing restrictions on access to public housing for convicted persons are bars to Public Housing Authority residents convicted of an offense requiring lifetime sex offender registration or of producing methamphetamines on public housing grounds. For all other offenses, effective local practices to exercise discretion in determining formerly incarcerated persons’ eligibility for public housing should be implemented. g. States should enact policies that enhance employment opportunities for people with criminal convictions while also vigorously enforcing prohibitions on racial discrimination in hiring. Such policies include training and outreach on how to consider criminal history of applicants and robust equal employment opportunity protections. Employers should not automatically disqualify a candidate with a criminal record, except in circumstances when the criminal record directly conflicts with the scope of employment. h. States should clarify and expand opportunities to seal or expunge criminal records. Expungement processes should be transparent and easy to navigate for people seeking record sealing. i. States should set standards for licensing boards and other professional licensing entities for considering granting professional licenses for those with criminal convictions. These standards should require a rational connection between the underlying conduct the conviction reveals and ability to serve in the profession. The standards should ban mandatory denials of professional licenses for any criminal conviction. States with existing standards should monitor licensing boards to ensure the standards are being followed. j. States should repeal restrictions on driver’s licenses not related to an individual’s capacity to safely operate a motor vehicle. 137 [This page intentionally left blank] COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS Commissioners’ Statements Statement of Chair Catherine E. Lhamon As this report documents, many of the more than 44,000 collateral consequences that impact people who have experienced incarceration or have criminal records bear no specific relationship to public safety or to the underlying convictions for which the people were incarcerated. 1 These additional penalties separate and apart from conviction impose heavy burdens on formerly incarcerated persons’ ability successfully to reintegrate into free society and in so doing render all of us less equal and less safe. Some of these collateral consequences especially denigrate particular groups of formerly incarcerated people; all of them communicate government disdain for their worth as people. Where these consequences do not follow logically from the crimes for which people were convicted and do not operate to protect public safety, the federal government as well as states and local jurisdictions would do well to discontinue imposing them. 95F Our criminal justice system is designed to punish persons for their infractions, and deter them and others from future offenses. It is meant to rehabilitate persons who are incarcerated, the vast majority of whom will leave prison and therefore need to be able to sustain themselves and often their families. We all benefit if they are able to participate effectively and responsibly in their communities. Placing impediments in their path to housing, employment, civic engagement, and economic self-sufficiency unrelated to their convictions does not advance these criminal justice goals but does further criminal behavior born of necessity or desperation. I was struck, and encouraged, by the unusually strong bipartisan support we heard during the Commission briefing for reform in this area, designed to strengthen all American communities. I hope very much that Congress, and local communities, heed the call documented in these pages to lift unnecessary restrictions. It is also imperative to shore up public and legal community knowledge about the collateral consequences that attach to convictions so the consequences serve their deterrent effect and so they attach only where related to the convictions imposed. I look forward to the strengthened and safer communities that would result from securing long overdue reform of these proliferating consequences to speed effective reentry for formerly incarcerated persons. 1 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities, June 2019, at ii. 139 [This page intentionally left blank] COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS Statement of Commissioner David Kladney I proposed this project because I thought it was important to bring attention to the overly harsh consequences we impose on people convicted of crimes. These consequences, which are in addition to official criminal sentences, follow people throughout their lives and set them up to fail. Many of these so-called consequences, with few exceptions, bear no relationship to the offense committed and expose the public to a much higher recidivism rate than is necessary. They are additional punitive punishments, plain and simple, with no redeeming value for the individual or the public. A fundamental principle of punishment is the punishment must be proportional to the crime. In other words, the punishment must fit the crime. The cumulative effect of “consequences” not related to the offense create punishments that are lifelong and extremely burdensome, beyond what the legal code has determined is a proper criminal sentence. I believe criminal sentences are themselves generally too harsh, and these irrelevant consequences only exacerbate that injustice, but, more importantly, many of these “consequences” set up individuals attempting to right their lives after interaction with the criminal justice system to fail. One reason there are so many collateral consequences is that they are enacted by many different policy makers and up to the discretion of many different decision makers. We heard from people on the right and the left who came to the same conclusions, even with very different worldviews and different approaches to the law. They echoed two main sentiments: we should reduce collateral consequences because they are overly harsh and unfair to people convicted of crimes, and we should also reduce them for the safety of the public. It makes logical sense that restrictions on people’s ability to survive in legal ways push them to crime. The data bears out this common-sense idea. States with harsher collateral consequences see higher rates of recidivism. Our report catalogues the social science research around recidivism, describing studies that show: Employment opportunities for formerly incarcerated people reduced recidivism Lower barriers to occupational licensing reduced recidivism Lack of stable housing increased recidivism Allowing some people with criminal convictions to live in public housing reduced recidivism Denying SNAP benefits to people with drug convictions increased recidivism States with permanent felony disenfranchisement have increased recidivism rates Those of us who believe in rolling back some of these barriers to good citizenship which make no sense get accused of being cavalier about public safety. This argument offers a false choice. It is entirely possible to keep restrictions related to public safety and remove restrictions unconnected from public safety. This is what I favor, as do the advocates who testified before us. The point is that policy makers should undertake a review of collateral consequences and determine which have a valid safety purpose. Child molesters should be prohibited from being 141 and working around children; a person convicted of felony drunk driving should be prohibited an unlimited driver’s license; a person convicted of fraud should be denied any position of financial trust. Current policy does not make these kinds of connections. Instead it is characterized by blanket restrictions that follow people forever, regardless of whether there is a connection to the crime they committed. It was once seen as political necessity to impose ever harsher penalties on people who committed crimes. Additional restrictions on top of the criminal sentence therefore faced little opposition, much like the steep increases in criminal sentences. We now understand harsher punishment is not the only way to deal with crime. The U.S. is an international outlier in how much we use incarceration. These consequences also demonstrate a strong zeal for punishment not following evidence-based solutions which lead to rehabilitation for many more people trying to leave the criminal justice system behind. SNAP and TANF restrictions provide a useful window into the insidious and spiteful nature of some collateral consequences of criminal convictions. During the height of the “war on drugs,” lawmakers such as Senator Phil Graham came forward with lines such as, “if we are serious about our drug laws, we ought not to give people welfare benefits who are violating the Nation’s drug laws.” TANF and SNAP are designed to provide people with the very bare minimum they need to survive. Prior to these drug law regulations, survival-level assistance programs had never contained restrictions based on the conduct of the person needing assistance, for the simple reason that every person needs food to survive. But now, as the twisted logic of the “war on drugs” continues to filter throughout our code, according to federal law, these benefits may be denied based on a drug conviction but not any other crime, including crimes of violence, fraud, or abuse. This is nonsensical. Even when passed it was illogical and as our understanding of drug addictions and effective treatments has grown, it makes less and less sense by the day. The federal restrictions on these programs can be modified by the states, as our report explains in detail, and we can be thankful that almost all states have limited or removed the restrictions. But this progress is not guaranteed. For example, in Pennsylvania they re-instated the restrictions on receiving benefits just this year. Although the ultimate decisions about these restrictions are left to the states, the federal government should not be putting its thumb on the scale in favor of punishing certain crimes to an extremely harsh degree, and not even the most serious crimes. In addition to affronting the humanity of people with criminal convictions, these restrictions increase recidivism. This increase, as the report describes, has been empirically shown to be true. And it makes logical sense. If you cannot feed your family through employment (a steep climb coming out of prison) or through an assistance program, what will you do? It is unconscionable to increase people’s desperation to this level, and it makes all of us less safe. Restrictions on benefits are not the only place we find counterproductive blanket restrictions. In addition to all the other challenges people face coming out of prison, it’s difficult or impossible for them to get professional licenses in skilled occupations. It’s easier for professional organizations to simply deny a license to anyone with a criminal conviction than undertake a thorough review of their application. It serves an anti-competitive interest to have a blanket ban on a segment of the population. It may also be an overreaction to the fear that someone may COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS reoffend. In reality, they are far more likely to reoffend if they are shut out of employment in a field they are otherwise qualified for. In the most egregious cases, people who took advantage of a professional training program in prison cannot work in that profession when they get out. Licensing boards should understand people are capable of change. As it stands, professional licenses are either denied outright to people with criminal convictions or they have to navigate a complex hearing process regardless of the seriousness or relevance of their criminal history to the profession. Licensing boards should implement rules so that they can grant some licenses to people with convictions based on their applications alone. For more serious or recent convictions, a hearing should be required, but procedures should be transparent and simple to navigate. The board is responsible for the safety of the public, but their decisions should be rational and not arbitrary. This serves all of our interests in licensing qualified professionals to work in the community and in allowing people with criminal convictions to pursue a career. On top of denying people the ability to support themselves, we as a society also ostracize people by taking away their right to vote and sit on a jury, categorically, in some places forever, because they committed a crime. As for jury service, the stated rationale is that people with criminal convictions will be biased toward criminal defendants, but when you actually investigate, that isn’t the case. People with criminal convictions have a range of thoughts and attitudes about criminal defendants and don’t demonstrate a consistent pro-defendant bias. In voting, we don’t impose any other qualifications based on conduct or character. We say if you are citizen and are old enough you can vote. That is democracy. People who have committed crimes also have an interest in their communities, who represents them, and who leads this country. Denying them a voice in the political process forever denies a basic right of citizenship. We should be encouraging people to feel like part of society, not pushing them to the margins. I am struck also by the utter lack of requirements that criminal defendants have any notice of these consequences. It cannot be said that a person is making an informed guilty plea if they have no idea of the true extent of the punishment they are agreeing to. Fair administration of justice demands some kind of mechanism to make pleading guilty a meaningful choice with full knowledge of all the consequences. The Supreme Court has recognized this in the immigration context, and the logic of its decision extends to a range of consequences. It also behooves attorneys to counsel their clients on collateral consequences, even beyond the bare minimum currently required. Some states are innovating in dealing with the breadth of collateral consequences by enhancing opportunities for record sealing. In one fell swoop, such a remedy removes collateral consequences for people who the state reasonably believes no longer pose any threat. Record sealing is only granted after a period of time when a person has no new criminal charges. It strikes a balance between appropriate punishment and allowing people to move on with their lives. The problem with record sealing is that people have to know about the possibility of record sealing and navigate the complicated processes on their own to achieve it. This of course favors people with resources to hire a lawyer or connections that bring them in contact with people who understand the system. Jurisdictions should instead create a transparent process. They should take the initiative of identifying cases eligible for sealing and proactively notify people. This 143 notification would occur only after the period of time has passed and the person has no further legal trouble. Advancements in technology and digital records can make this an automated process. All that is lacking is the political will to institute a program. The way we treat people with criminal convictions after they return to their communities is in need of serious reevaluation. Our report aims to encourage policy makers to undertake these efforts and support, rather than continue to harm, people with convictions. All of us will benefit if they do. COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS Statement of Commissioner Peter N. Kirsanow This report’s findings and recommendations urge the Department of Justice (DOJ) to issue guidance regarding collateral consequences of incarceration. However, the findings and recommendations do not identify the statute or regulation the guidance would be interpreting. 1 And interpreting existing statutes and regulations is all that guidances can do. Neither DOJ nor any other department has a roving commission to issue pronouncements on any and every topic that may be tenuously related to its purpose. 956F In this statement, I will elaborate upon the narrow issue of felon voting. Recommendation 8(c) states: States should consider restoration of the right to vote to all people who have been released from incarceration or are on probation/parole and are currently disenfranchised because of criminal convictions. Denying the right to vote does not serve the public safety or interest. 2 957F I disagree with this blanket recommendation and assertion. Although referred to dismissively in the body of the report, the public does have an interest in having the laws made by people who have managed to clear the very low bar of avoiding incarceration. 3 As I noted in my statement in the Commission’s report on the use of criminal background checks in employment, “The EEOC’s Guidance states that the percentage of Americans who have been incarcerated may reach 6.6%. That means that 93.4% of Americans never serve time in prison.” 4 It is not that hard 958F 95F 1 Roger Clegg, George T. Conway III, and Kenneth K. Lee, The Case Against Felon Voting, The Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies, 2006, http://fedsoc.server326.com/ElectionLaw/FelonVoting.pdf. As a legal matter, felon disenfranchisement laws have long been accepted in the American legal system and easily pass constitutional muster. Indeed, the Fourteenth Amendment explicitly permits states to adopt disenfranchisement statutes, and many such laws were enacted long before AfricanAmericans enjoyed suffrage. These laws are also beyond the reach of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (“VRA”). The legislative history of the VRA and its 1982, as well as common sense, makes it perfectly clear that the statute was not intended to cover felon disenfranchisement laws because it would then exceed the enforcement powers of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. 2 Recommendation 8(c). 3 Report at n. 675-679. A common argument favoring felony disenfranchisement is grounded in the belief that committing a felony violates a social contract, and this violation threatens the order and well-being of the political community. According to this reasoning, the logical response is to deny the violator the right to participate in politics and governance. Another theory embraces the importance of moral character and virtue to the political community, and postulates that any person who commits a felony demonstrates poor moral judgment and an inability to adhere to the moral code of a “civic republic.” Some policymakers believe that if an individual has disregarded the law, that individual should not be entitled to provide input on public policy. Moreover, they believe that an individual’s “impurity” will lead him to “cast [his] votes in a corrupt manner.” 4 Statement of Commissioner Peter Kirsanow in U.S. COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS, ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF CRIMINAL BACKGROUND CHECKS AND THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION’S CONVICTION RECORDS POLICY, 2013, at 291, http://www.eusccr.com/EEOC_final_2013.pdf. 145 to avoid going to prison if 93% of Americans manage to do it. There aren’t many things that 93% of Americans can all do, other than breathe. 5 960F I disagree with the argument that an ex-felon has “paid his debt to society” and therefore should automatically have all his rights restored, including the right to vote. There are multiple purposes of justice: restoration, deterrence—and punishment. It is often impossible to undo the consequences of a crime, or even to know all the consequences. A man is sent to prison for twenty years for selling opioids or cocaine. All the law sees in imposing the sentence is the sale itself. You don’t see the mom who lived in a drugged stupor, only half-feeding her kids and only getting them to school half the time. 6 No one can know all the consequences of any action, but people who engage in wrongful actions know that the consequences exist. Even though a state only incarcerates a person for a set period of time, society is within its rights to determine that the punishment for a crime is not limited to prison time. As Hans von Spakovsky wrote in his testimony: 961F In short, the initial time in prison is not, and has never been, the only way a felon is punished for breaking the law, endangering his fellow citizens and the public and intentionally and knowingly violating the rules of the civil compact that we have collectively implemented to govern our civil society. 7 962 F Any society must be able to set boundaries. This is particularly the case in a country based on social compact theory, as von Spakovsky indicates. The right to include necessarily encompasses the right to exclude. And excluding someone on the basis of felon status is as objective a standard as we can hope to achieve. “Our Nation’s Highways: 2011,” Federal Highway Administration, U.S. Dep’t of Transportation, 2011 (87 percent of U.S. population age 16 and over has a license), https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/policyinformation/pubs/hf/pl11028/chapter4.cfm; Mark Dynarski, “Is the High School Graduation Rate Really Going Up?,” Brookings, May 3, 2018 (the reported high school graduation rate is 83 percent, although this is probably artificially high), https://www.brookings.edu/research/is-the-high-schoolgraduation-rate-really-going-up/. 6 Matt DeLisi, Gloria Jones-Johnson, W. Roy Johnson, and Andy Hochstetler, The Aftermath of Criminal Victimization: Race, Self-Esteem, and Self-Efficacy, 60 CRIME & DELINQUENCY 85, 87 (2014). McGloin and Widom (2001), for example, conducted a 22-year follow-up study of persons who were abused and neglected between 1967 and 1971 and a control group of 520 persons. Psychiatric assessments were done to evaluate adult success in eight domains of functioning: employment, residency, education, social activity, psychiatric disorder, substance abuse, official arrests, and selfreported acts of violence. Among the formerly abused or neglected treatment group, resilience was defined as persons who were successful in at least six of the eight domain areas. Just 22% of individuals met the criteria for resilience. This means that more than two decades after their victimization and exposure to adverse environments, nearly 80% of formerly maltreated persons continued to suffer across multiple domains of life compared with those who had not been maltreated. In sum, across analytical techniques and data sources, victimization has been linked with an array of maladaptive and negative outcomes including delinquency, psychiatric problems, fear of crime, reduced socioeconomic status, social isolation, residential mobility/relocation, and others. [citations omitted] 7 Hans A. von Spakovsky Statement at 2. 5 COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS The report asserts that even if disfranchisement on the basis of felon status may be generally permissible, it is problematic because it has a disparate effect on blacks and Latinos. 8 Disfranchisement has a disparate impact on blacks and Latinos because blacks and Latinos are disproportionately likely to be involved in crime. And contrary to fashionable political rhetoric, it is highly unlikely that racial discrimination is responsible for the incarceration of a significant number of blacks and Hispanics. 9 963F 964F The report notes that despite the disproportionate effect felon disfranchisement has on black voters, black turnout exceeded white turnout in 2012. 10 The report then notes triumphantly, “Moreover, data from the 2016 election show that African-American voter turnout decreased for the first time in 20 years in a presidential election, falling by about 7 percentage points.” 11 Here is something else that was different in 2016 versus 2012: the first black president wasn’t on the ballot. 965F 96F Generally, I do not think it is necessary or even advisable for states to permanently bar ex-felons from voting, though it is certainly within their power to do so. States can plausibly permanently deny the franchise to murderers. After all, a murderer permanently disfranchised his victim. 8 Report at n. 702-729. Statement of Commissioner Peter Kirsanow in U.S. COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS, ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF CRIMINAL BACKGROUND CHECKS AND THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION’S CONVICTION RECORDS POLICY, 2013, at 302, http://www.eusccr.com/EEOC_final_2013.pdf. African-Americans and Hispanics are more likely to commit crimes than are members of other ethnic groups, and therefore there is no great unfairness in their greater representation in the ranks of ex-offenders. As Jeffrey Sedgwick testified at the Commission’s hearing, several decades of scholarly research indicate that African-Americans and Hispanics are disproportionately likely to come in contact with the criminal justice system because they are disproportionately likely to be involved in criminal activity. Earlier in his career, Dr. Blumstein specifically addressed the possibility that differing incarceration rates were attributable to racial discrimination, noting that the disproportionate incarceration of African-American men “generate[s] a deep concern that the disproportionality may be a consequence of profound racial discrimination within the criminal justice system.” After analyzing arrests and convictions, Dr. Blumstein concluded that differential rates of involvement in crime, not racial discrimination, were the primary reason for the disproportionate incarceration of AfricanAmericans. His findings are supported by over twenty years’ worth of research. See also Heather MacDonald, “Is the Criminal Justice System Racist?,” City Journal, Spring 2008, https://www.cityjournal.org/html/criminal-justice-system-racist-13078.html. A 1987 analysis of Georgia felony convictions, for example, found that blacks frequently received disproportionately lenient punishment. A 1990 study of 11,000 California cases found that slight racial disparities in sentence length resulted from blacks’ prior records and other legally relevant variables. A 1994 Justice Dep’t survey of felony cases from the country’s 75 largest urban areas discovered that blacks actually had a lower chance of prosecution following a felony than whites did and that they were less likely to be found guilty at trial. Following conviction, blacks were more likely to receive prison sentences, however—an outcome that reflected the gravity of their offenses as well as their criminal records. See also Matt DeLisi and Robert Regoli, Race, Conventional Crime, and Criminal Justice: The Declining Importance of Skin Color, 27 J. CRIM. JUSTICE 549 (1999). 10 Report at n. 712. 11 Report at n. 714. 9 147 In cases other than murder, I support restoration of a felon’s voting rights after some years have passed in order to determine if the individual has desisted from crime. I would suggest restoration of voting rights perhaps seven years after release. The Bureau of Justice Statistics issued a report in May 2018 that analyzed the recidivism of 401,288 state prisoners in 30 states who were released in 2005. 12 83 percent of the prisoners were re-arrested within 9 years of release. 13 However, the majority of ex-offenders are re-arrested in years 1-6. The percent rearrested increases from 79.4 percent in year 6 to 83.4 percent in year 9. 14 Therefore, if a person has avoided arrest for seven years after his release from prison, we can have a fair degree of confidence that he will continue to desist from crime. The report, of course, promotes the view that this is a reflection on society’s failure to reintegrate ex-offenders (because when is it not society’s fault). 15 The failure here is not on the part of “society,” but on the part of ex-offenders. 967F 968F 96F 970F 12 Mariel Alper, Matthew R. Durose, and Joshua Markman, 2018 Update on Prisoner Recidivism: A 9-Year Followup Period (2005-2014), at 1, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/18upr9yfup0514.pdf. 13 I am aware that arrests are not the same as convictions, but this report only analyzed arrests in order to obtain adequate data from these 30 states. Additionally, “The 401,288 state prisoners released in 2005 had an estimated 1,994,000 arrests during the 9-year period, an average of 5 arrests per released prisoner.” Id. at 1. If released prisoners are arrested an average of five times, it’s likely they will eventually be convicted for something. 14 Id. at 4. 15 Report at n. 833-837. COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS Joint Statement of Commissioners Gail Heriot and Peter N. Kirsanow This report contains some useful information about the collateral consequences of a criminal conviction—defined as the “sanctions, restrictions, or disqualifications that stem from a person’s criminal history.” But it also suffers from some significant flaws, which is why we are unable to support its publication in its present form. 1 We agree with parts of it, but not with others. 2 971F 972F We would classify most of these collateral consequences as falling into four broad categories: (1) those intended to punish; (2) those aimed at the fair distribution of a scarce resource; (3) those intended to protect third parties; and (4) those aimed at stifling competition. Many types of collateral consequences fall into more than one category. Each of these categories deserves a comment here. (We will confine our discussion of ex-offenders’ voting rights to a brief word at the end of this Joint Statement, even though the longest portion of the report is devoted to that issue.) But first, one overarching problem is that at times the report seems to treat a criminal conviction as something that happens almost randomly. For example, the report states, “Because of the significant stigma attached to a criminal conviction, an employer could view an applicant with a criminal record as untrustworthy or lacking in ‘job readiness,’ which is generally perceived as a requisite qualification for both skilled and unskilled positions.” 3 The problem is that employers view applicants with criminal records this way not merely because of some artificial stigma attached to criminal conviction, but because people with criminal records really are, on average, more likely than people without such records to engage in misconduct. Obviously, this generalization is untrue in individual cases, and we would all do well to remember to treat individuals as individuals. But ignoring this group difference will lead to stunningly bad policy. 973F 1 One of us (Heriot) voted no at the telephone meeting at which the report was considered. The other (Kirsanow) arranged for it to be announced at the telephone meeting that he would have voted no if he had been able to attend. In a separate statement, one of us (Kirsanow) discusses the report’s recommendation urging the Dep’t of Justice to issue a guidance on collateral consequences. He points out that the recommendation failed to identify the necessary legal authority for such a guidance. The Dep’t of Justice is not a roving Commission to advise states on legal or policy matters; it acts when Congress, through legislation, gives it the authority to act. Commissioner Heriot agrees with this point and with all or most of the rest of the statement. Only time constraints prevented her from joining in those positions at the time the Commissioners exchanged their statements in the first round. 2 Has the scope of the substantive criminal law—particularly federal criminal law—grown too big? Certainly many scholars and authors have made the case that it has. See, e.g., Harvey Silverglate, Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent (2011); Paul Larkin, The Extent of America’s Overcriminalization Problem, May 9, 2014, available at https://www.heritage.org/report/the-extent-americas-overcriminalization-problem. See also George Will, “When Everything is a Crime,” The Washington Post, April 8, 2015, available at https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/when-everything-is-a-crime/2015/04/08/1929ab88-dd43-11e4-be40566e2653afe5_story.html?utm_term=.2d9dac1344ef. This is an important question that is closely related to the central question of this report. Excessive imposition of collateral consequences is more serious if the scope of the criminal law itself is too big. But because it is distinct from this report’s main question, we will not discuss it further. It also goes well beyond the charge of this Commission. 3 Report at 29. 149 We won’t solve the problem of re-integrating ex-offenders into the economy by being (or pretending to be) naïve. While it is certainly true that formerly incarcerated individuals sometimes struggle as a result of an unfair collateral consequence, sometimes the struggle is the result of the characteristics that drove them to commit crimes in the first place. Any serious effort to assess the benefits and costs of collateral consequences cannot ignore that. 4 974F This report focuses mainly on problems with punitive collateral consequences—those done with the purpose of imposing punishment on ex-offenders beyond the term of their prison sentence. We agree that some particular punitive collateral consequences can be too harsh and hence counterproductive. On the other hand, the zeitgeist seems to be that Americans have over-incarcerated offenders and that some de-incarceration should take place. 5 Similarly, it is frequently argued that monetary fines imposed on individuals who cannot afford to pay them are counterproductive and only result in anxiety and desperation. Indeed, the Commission’s majority has elsewhere made those arguments. 6 We agree that each of these methods of punishment has its drawbacks. Incarceration is expensive and breaks up families. Some people are too poor to pay fees and fines, while others are too rich for paying a fine to feel like much of a punishment. Yet there have to be some negative consequences for law breaking; otherwise many people will eventually conclude that there is no point in following the law. 975 F 976F Punitive collateral consequences are admittedly an imperfect strategy for doing that. Dangling carrots in front of individuals for post-release good behavior—such as restoration of voting rights after a specified period—may also give some ex-offenders incentives to get their lives back on track. Something is necessary. 4 Another way in which the Commission seems unwilling to confront the arguments on both sides of these issues is the use of hyperbolic statements in the Commissioner Statements. They call certain collateral consequences “nonsensical,” or based on “twisted logic,” and argue that these consequences “make no sense,” that they “communicate government disdain for [ex-offender’s] worth as people,” and that they “affront[] the humanity of people with criminal convictions.” See Statement of Commissioner David Kladney at 142; Statement of Chair Catherine E. Lhamon at 139. This is not useful. 5 Commissioner Kladney points that the United States incarcerates at much higher rates than most other countries. This is in part because at the same time prison populations were expanding, the number of psychiatric inpatients was declining—from a high of over 550,000 in 1950 to around 30,000 by the 1990s. Megan Testa and Sara G. West, Civil Commitment in the United States, 7 Psychiatry (Edgmont) 30, 33 (Oct. 2010). As a result, many of those who in an earlier day would have been institutionalized in psychiatric hospitals wound up in prisons instead or on the street. Estimates of exactly how many vary widely. Seth J. Prins, The Prevalence of Mental Illnesses in U.S. State Prisons: A Systematic Review, 65 Psychiatr. Serv. 862 (2014). But today’s incarceration rates are surely influenced by the near absence of psychiatric inpatients in the American systems. This makes incarceration rate comparisons with other countries where psychiatric inpatients are more common unreliable and flawed. I wish we all had a better sense of international comparisons. 6 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Targeted Fees and Fines Against Communities of Color, 2017; “U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Urges Congress to Prioritize Civil Rights Oversight and Legislation,” 2018, available at https://www.usccr.gov/press/2018/12-07-Priorities-for-116th-Congress.pdf (criticizing the use of mandatory minimum prison sentences.) COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS It is sometimes said that an ex-offender “has paid his debt to society” upon release from prison and that any further punishment is thus wrong. In one sense, this is simply circular logic. If the law imposes a particular prison sentence for a particular crime and in addition requires him to perform certain acts (such as community service or the payment of restitution) or deprives him of the possibility of particular benefits, then that is the debt that democratic processes have determined that he must pay to society and not some other. 7 It isn’t over till it’s over. We are mindful of the desirability of closure at some point. But given the strong desire among many Americans to deemphasize long-term incarceration, we are disappointed that more effort hasn’t gone into coming up with workable incentives and sanctions that apply after an offender leaves prison, thus making it possible to shorten actual prison sentences. 97 F The report also fails to grapple with what we term distributive fairness collateral consequences. These are efforts to allocate a limited resource. Take, for example, financial aid for education. The Department of Education presumably has a limited supply of money to distribute for this purpose. It has to come up with rules for determining who gets it and who doesn’t. It isn’t obvious to all how that “pot” should be divided. Is it fair that ex-offenders should get a share, if that means that there will be fewer funds available for other prospective applicants who have been more lawabiding? Isn’t it at least arguably true that the law-abiding applicants—including the many who are poor or have overcome other forms of disadvantage—are more deserving? On the other hand, is it fair if ex-offenders are shut out of educational opportunities that could help their rehabilitation? Add this to the considerations: Would the program be as popular if the average taxpayer thought that benefits were going to ex-offenders? Might there be efforts to scale it back generally or cancel it altogether? 8 Alas, there are no simple answers to those questions and no easy way to balance those competing considerations. They are inherently political decisions. 978F One possible objection to this argument: some offenders may agree to a plea bargain thinking that their “debt” will have been paid once their sentence is served, without realizing that they will face collateral consequences afterwards. Had they known more about collateral consequences, they might have held out for a lower sentence or agreed to go to trial. Commissioner Kladney points out this problem in his Statement when he states, “I am struck by the utter lack of requirements that criminal defendants have any notice of these consequences.” [Italics supplied.] Oddly, he seems to contradict himself in the final sentence of the same paragraph when he writes, “It also behooves attorneys to counsel their clients on collateral consequences, even beyond the bare minimum currently required.” [Italics supplied.] If there is a “bare minimum [of notice] currently required, then there can’t be “an utter lack of requirements.” We are nevertheless sympathetic to the need to warn criminal defendants in some way about collateral consequences up front. Commissioner Kladney is right that attorneys should expend more effort to ensure that their clients are adequately informed. Still, a fundamental problem here is that it is impossible for defendants to understand completely the ramifications of entering into a plea deal. Criminal defendants aren’t ordinarily warned, for example, about the harshness of life in prison. They don’t know how a conviction will affect their relationships with family and friends. We fear some of the outrage about lack of transparency regarding collateral consequences is selective. 8 See, e.g., Emily Badger and Margot Sanger-Katz, “Who’s Able-Bodied Anyway? The 400 Year History of How We Talk About the Deserving vs. the Undeserving Poor,” The New York Times, February 3, 2018, available at https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/03/upshot/medicaid-able-bodied-poor-politics.html (“Free riders threaten society—they undermine the basis of altruism,” said Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, who helped write a work requirement into welfare reform in the 1990s. That’s not a liberal or 7 151 The same dilemma exists with regard to dividing up other limited resources discussed in this report, like public housing, which frequently has waiting lists. 9 Prospective applicants who have obeyed the laws have a sympathetic argument here that they deserve a greater share of these resources. Yet this dilemma is barely acknowledged in the report. 10 We wish that it had engaged these tradeoffs more thoughtfully. 97F 980F One thought that we can contribute to the discussion is that we prefer that decisions about how to distribute limited resources be decentralized. If a single decisionmaker like HUD or the Department of Education dominates the market for public housing or for educational financial aid, then ex-offenders will be either in a very happy or very unhappy position. But if there are multiple entities—such as state governments, local governments, and private charities—sponsoring such benefits, then it is less likely that ex-offenders will be unfairly treated. The report does a better job addressing what we call third-party-protection collateral consequences—those that are intended to ensure the safety and security of some third party from ex-offenders’ misconduct. The Findings, for example, explicitly acknowledge “Some collateral consequences, such as limitations on working with children for people convicted of particular dangerous crimes, are enacted for valid public safety reasons.” Rules that restrict firearm ownership and rules that prohibit individuals convicted of financial crimes from working with conservative belief, he argues, but a human one. “People want to be compassionate, but they don’t want to be taken advantage of.”) 9 Some of the discussion on lifetime bans on public benefits for individuals with drug convictions tries to argue that these bans disproportionately harm women. Report at 72-73. The problem is that prisoners are overwhelmingly male (the number 93% is quoted elsewhere in the report), so the report’s efforts to cast these bans as having an unfair bias against women don’t quite work. The various statistics cited in the report—e.g., that female offenders are somewhat more likely to have been incarcerated for drugs than male offenders and that women are more likely to qualify for certain public benefits in the absence of a drug conviction—aren’t mathematically enough to overcome the fact that prisoners are overwhelmingly male. We are a bit troubled—and perhaps a bit amused—that our staff took a topic (the collateral consequences of a criminal conviction) that overwhelmingly affects men, downplayed the significance of this disproportionality, and somehow managed to instead argue (incorrectly) that certain collateral consequences have a disparate impact on women. It’s a sign of the times: World ends tonight, women and minorities to suffer most. The report also states, “On average, women also earn less money than men for the same amount of work.” Report at 72. But the Dep’t of Labor statistic cited compares all female full-time wage and salary workers (full time defined as “those who usually work 35 hours or more per week at their sole or principal job”) to all male full time wage and salary workers. It does not control for the number of hours worked above 35. Much of that gap simply reflects that female full-time workers tend to work fewer hours than male full-time workers. Women who work between 35-39 hours per week actually earn somewhat more than men who work 35-39 hours per week. See Diana Furchtgott-Roth, Testimony on the Gender Pay Gap, Testimony Before the Joint Economic Committee, September 28, 2010, available at https://www.jec.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/2a1f8ad4-f649-4ad3-a742-268d946962db/furchtgottroth-testimony.pdf. Moreover, even if it were true that “[o]n average, women also earn less money for the same amount of work,” there is no evidence that applies to female ex-offenders vs. male ex-offenders. On the contrary, since male offenders are more likely than female offenders to have committed a violent crime, they may find it harder to secure well-paying jobs or, indeed, any jobs at all. 10 It is not discussed, for example, in “Barriers to Subsidized Housing for Individuals with Criminal Records” at pp. 56-63, in “The Disproportionate Impact of Lifetime Drug Bans for Public Benefits at 70-72, or “Barriers to Financial Aid for Higher Education” at 74-77. COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS money are generally intended to fall into that category, as are those that prevent persons convicted of child abuse or endangerment from working with children. 11 981F On the other hand, the report sometimes fails to address serious third-party-protection collateral consequences arguments. The section on public housing, for example, fails to note that public housing is often home to families with young children, the elderly, people with disabilities, and that many cities have a reputation for failing to protect these and other particularly vulnerable persons living there. In Chicago, in 1981, matters had deteriorated to the point that the city’s mayor, Jane Byrne, moved into the Cabrini-Green housing project on the near North Side for 20 days—a move that finally forced the city police to start taking crime there seriously. 12 Again, we are sympathetic to the argument that ex-offenders have to live somewhere. But is it fair to families who are law-abiding but poor to have to share public housing with individuals who, as a group, are more likely to threaten their safety? Alternatively, might it be good policy, at least in many cases, to create a system in which ex-offenders are encouraged to live in halfway houses or with family members who live in non-public housing rather than to attempt to qualify for public housing on their own? These questions at least deserved an airing in this report. 982 F We are in stronger agreement with the report’s discussion of anti-competition collateral consequences, such as occupational licensing laws. 13 The National Council of State Legislatures 983F 11 See, e.g., Statement of Margaret Love, Executive Director of the Collateral Consequences Resource Center, at 3: “Some serve an important and legitimate public safety or regulatory function, such as keeping firearms out of the hands of violent offenders, protecting children or the elderly from persons with a history of abuse, or barring people convicted of fraud from positions of public trust. Others are directly related to a specific type of crime, such as registration requirements for sex offenders, driver’s license restrictions for those convicted of serious traffic offenses, or debarment of those convicted of procurement fraud.” 12 “When a Mayor Moved to the Cabrini-Green Projects,” National Public Radio, August 30, 2014, available at https://www.npr.org/2014/08/30/344477127/when-the-mayor-moved-to-the-cabrini-green-projects. 13 The fact that we have concerns about the number of licensing laws that exclude ex-offenders does not mean we approve of forcing employers to hire ex-offenders who would prefer not to by threatening them with disparate impact liability under Title VII. For an extended treatment of our views on that subject, see U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Assessing the Impact of Criminal Background Checks and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Conviction Records Policy at 308 (Statement of Commissioner Gail Heriot), available at http://www.newamericancivilrightsproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/EEOC_final_2013-2.pdf; Id. at 289 (Statement of Commissioner Peter Kirsanow), available at http://www.newamericancivilrightsproject.org/wpcontent/uploads/2014/04/EEOC_final_2013.pdf. We prefer the use of modest tax incentives in order to encourage the hiring of ex-offenders, which allows employers to opt in rather than being forced in. We note that there is considerable empirical evidence that so-called ban-the-box laws and policies operate to the disadvantage of African American males who have clean records. Once employers are prohibited or strongly discouraged from checking into the criminal records of job applicants, they often end up hiring fewer African American men rather than more. See, e.g., Amanda Agan & Sonja Starr, Ban the Box, Criminal Records, and Racial Discrimination: A Field Experiment, 133 Q. J. Econ. 191 (2018); Jennifer L. Doleac & Benjamin Hansen, The Unintended Consequences of “Ban the Box”: Statistical Discrimination and Employment Outcomes When Criminal Histories are Hidden (August 2018), available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2812811. In discussing studies like these, this Report states “Researchers have hypothesized that when criminal records are unavailable, ‘employers use race as a proxy for criminal records.’ The findings suggest that Ban the Box policies expose the pervasiveness of racial discrimination in hiring, while also possibly excluding more African-Americans from the job market.” Report at 49. The truth is closer to the opposite. Ban the Box policies don’t “expose the 153 has estimated that over the last 60 years, the percentage of jobs requiring an occupational license has risen from 1 in 20 to 1 in 4. 14 Some of these licensing requirements undoubtedly serve genuine health and safety purposes. Other licensing regulations ensure that senior professionals have an incentive to give appropriate training to apprentices in their field and that apprentices have an incentive to agree to that training. 15 But established insiders can also use licensing requirements as a way of keeping out newcomers who might become their competitors. 16 As one U.S. Court of 984F 985F 986F pervasiveness of racial discrimination in hiring.” Instead, they show that employers prefer to use indicators—like a clean criminal record—to predict which job applicants will make the most reliable employees and which will not. Only when they are prevented from using such indicators do they resort to ham-fisted statistical indicators. Ban the Box policies thus create an incentive for employers to engage in racial discrimination that wouldn’t otherwise exist. Two things may be of note here: First, (and this bears repeating over and over), Title VII was not intended to prohibit employers from adopting job qualifications simply because they have a disparate impact on some protected group. As Senators Clifford Case (R-N.J.) and Joseph Clark (D-Pa.), the bill’s co-managers on the Senate floor, emphasized in their highly influential, bipartisan, interpretative memorandum: Title VII “expressly protects the employer’s right to insist that any prospective applicant, Negro or white, must meet the applicable job qualifications.” “Indeed,” they wrote, “the very purpose of Title VII is to promote hiring on the basis of job qualifications, rather than on the basis of race or color.” Second, it is not true that the only explanation for the harm to African-American men that appears to result from Ban-the-Box laws and policies is that employers use race as a proxy for criminal records. Suppose for example, an employer had been happy to hire applicants who did not have a high school diploma as full-time prior to the passage of a Ban-the-Box law. After that law’s passage she decides to revamp her hiring practices entirely and advertise for part-time college students at a local university (in addition to the full-time workers she had been hiring), because she believes (rightly or wrongly) that college students are less likely to have serious criminal records. Such a practice could well have a racial disparate impact, but it would not be a case of using race as a proxy for a clean record. Rather it would be a case of using college status as a proxy. 14 Suzanne Hultin, The National Occupational Licensing Database, available at http://www.ncsl.org/research/laborand-employment/occupational-licensing-statute-database.aspx. 15 See Gail Heriot, “Apprenticeships: Useful Alternatives, Tough to Implement,” Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 805, available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2877970. 16 In Sensational Smiles L.L.C. v. Mullen, 793 F.3d 281 (2d Cir. 2015) cert. denied, 136 S. Ct. 1160 (2016), fifteen public choice economics scholars, including Nobel prize winner Vernon L. Smith, filed an amicus curiae brief urging the Supreme Court to grant the petition for certiorari. Although the petition was ultimately denied, the brief contained a useful and succinct description of the problem to which we refer: People typically assume that governmental regulations are ‘unbiased and conscientious’ efforts to advance the ‘public interest.’ See John T. Delacourt & Todd J. Zywicki, The FTC and State Action: Evolving Views on the Proper Role of Government, 72 Antitrust L.J. 1075, 1075 (2005); 1 William F. Shughart II, Regulation and Antitrust, in The Encyclopedia of Public Choice 263, 26364 (Charles K. Rowley & Friedrich Schneider eds., 2004); William F. Shughart II & Diana W. Thomas, Regulatory Rent Seeking, in Companion to the Political Economy of Rent Seeking 169 (Roger G. Congleton & Arye L. Hillman eds., 2015). But among many economists, that assumption is largely regarded as false, as experience has demonstrated that governmental regulations often favor special interest groups to the detriment of the public. The evidence for this conclusion is supplied by ‘public choice economics,’ a branch of economics that applies economic theory to study the causes and effects of government actions. Public choice economics has been widely and successfully used to explain and predict the forces that lead to the enactment of anticompetitive regulations…. Public choice economics has been ‘almost universally accepted’ since the mid-1980s as explaining much economic regulation. See Jonathan R. Macey, Promoting Public-Regarding Legislation Through Statutory Interpretation: An Interest Group Model, 86 COLUM. L. REV. 223, 224 n.6 (1986) (citing Joseph P. Kalt & Mark A. Zupan, Capture and Ideology in the Economic Theory of Politics, 74 AM. ECON. REV. 279 (1984)). Research from public choice economics has concluded that special interest groups have significant incentives to use the political and regulatory process to further their own financial interests, and COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS 155 Appeals judge memorably put it, “while baseball may be the national pastime of the citizenry, dishing out special economic benefits to certain in-state industries remains the favored pastime of state and local governments.” 17 987F West Virginia requires that would-be “waxing specialists” and “shampoo assistants” be able to demonstrate their “good moral character” to a government board in order to practice these trades. 18 Until recently, in Texas a drug conviction (no matter how old) automatically prevented one from becoming a licensed well driller or water well pump installer. 19 Are rules like these really best understood as primarily intended to keep the public safe from former criminals? We have our doubts. 20 98 F 98F 90F that legislators and regulators often have incentives to respond to reward the special interest groups. Thus, special interest groups are expected to mobilize to convince politicians and regulators to implement regulations that benefit the interest groups’ members or to block the repeal of these regulations. These problems are particularly acute when self-interested economic actors—such as the licensed dentists in this case—are given the power to influence the rules by which they are governed. In these situations, public choice theory predicts that they will behave as self-interested private actors and act to benefit their own members, rather than as stewards of the public interest. Cf. North Carolina State Bd. of Dental Exam’rs v. FTC, 135 S. Ct. 1101, 11112 (2015). A particularly insidious form of regulation favored by special interest groups is one that, in effect, operates to insulate a special interest group from competition… Abundant evidence demonstrates that, over the past several decades, interest groups have mobilized to protect themselves from competition by expanding the scope of existing occupational licensing regimes or implementing such regimes in industries where it was previously thought unnecessary. The evidence demonstrates that these exclusionary efforts have been driven overwhelmingly by the special interest groups themselves, rather than by consumer complaints or evidence of consumer harm caused by non-licensed competitors. Brief of Public Choice Economic Scholars as Amici Curiae in Support of Petitioner at 5-6, in Sensational Smiles L.L.C. v. Mullen, No. 15-507 (filed Nov. 18, 2015), available at https://ij.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/ct-teethwhitening-brief-of-public-choice-economics-scholars-as-amici-curiae-in-support-of-petitioner-11-18-2015.pdf. See also Craigmiles v. Giles, 312 F. 3d 220, 225 (“The weakness of Tennessee's proffered explanations indicates that the 1972 amendment adding the retail sale of funeral merchandise to the definition of funeral directing was nothing more than an attempt to prevent economic competition. Indeed, Tennessee's justifications for the 1972 amendment come close to striking us with ‘the force of a five-week-old, unrefrigerated dead fish’”); St. Joseph Abbey v. Castille, 712 F. 3d 215 (5th Cir. 2013) (“The FTC determined that it could not rely on state funeral licensing boards to curb such [anti-competitive] practices because the state boards were ‘dominated by funeral directors.’ The funeral directors had organized themselves into industry groups, which lobbied state legislatures and made practices such as a refusal to disclose prices part of their professional ‘ethics’ code”). 17 Powers v. Harris, 379 F.2d 1208, 1221 (10th Cir. 2004)(Tacha, J. for the panel). 18 West Virginia Code 30-27 et seq. 19 Texas Public Policy Foundation Policy Perspective, Working with Conviction: Criminal Offenses as Barriers to Entering Licensed Occupations in Texas, “https://files.texaspolicy.com/uploads/2018/08/16092520/2007-11-PP28licensing-ml.pdf. Because of broader efforts at licensing reform—see Jonathan Zalewski, “On Occupational Licensing, Texas is Once Again the Lodestar State for Legal Reforms,” February 11, 2019, available at https://www.heritage.org/crime-and-justice/commentary/occupational-licensing-texas-again-the-lodestar-state-legalreforms—now the licensing board merely considers past criminal convictions as part of its process. 20 We do disagree with the report’s complaints about lack of uniformity in licensing regulations. We agree that if a state has a particularly unusual rule that seems badly crafted to achieve any public safety purpose, it is likely that public safety is not the rule’s actual purpose. The Louisiana rules requiring occupational licensing for florists, challenged by the Institute for Justice, are a typical example. See, e.g., Peters v. Odom, Appellants’ Brief, available Lastly, we take up the issue of ex-offender’s voting rights—which has become an extremely hot issue in the last few years. Curiously enough, it is the issue to which the report devotes the largest number of pages. 21 Yet limitations on the ability to vote are hardly the greatest challenge faced by ex-offenders. A job and a place to live are far more important. One might even say that the inability to vote is their least important challenge. Unemployed ex-offenders frequently wind up back in prison; those who cannot find a place to live can wind up on the streets. 91F In discussing the issue, the report sometimes goes off track. For example, it complains that prison gerrymandering is a further collateral consequence of incarceration, 22 despite the lack of direct effect on individual prisoners. 92F The report argues that “denying this right to even a ‘subset of the population’ jeopardizes democracy for the entire population,” and that “the right to vote is the ‘essence of a democratic society, and any [italics added] restrictions on that right strike at the heart of representative government.” While the right to vote is, of course, precious, the report’s language glosses over the fact that minors and the mentally ill generally cannot vote and that democracy nonetheless appears basically unaffected. Moreover, the Constitution’s 14th Amendment specifically acknowledges the ability of states to limit felons from voting. 23 93F What explains this overemphasis? Disfranchised ex-offenders are widely thought to be a Democratic-leaning group. 24 The Commission has six members who were appointed by Democrats. We note that at least two other report topics approved by the current majority have recommended broadening access to the ballot, not coincidentally in ways that looked likely to 94F at https://ij.org/wp-content/uploads/2003/12/Appellants-Brief-la-florists.pdf. On the other hand, we see no reason why licensing requirements must be uniform across all 50 states. In some cases, there may be good reasons for some states to be stricter than others. In other cases, we think that states can be “laboratories of democracy” and can teach each other by example what types of licensing rules work best. 21 It devotes 35 pages to voting, but just 25 to employment issues and 16 to housing. 22 Report at 114-115. 23 Earlier in history, convicted felons were usually executed, so there was no need for a policy that dealt with the question of whether they should vote. But in the 19th century a number of states had to deal with the question of whether the increasing number of convicted felons who had been released from prison should be able to vote. On the eve of the Civil War, some two dozen states had either constitutional provisions or statutes that prohibited ex-felons from voting. Because most states also prohibited blacks from voting (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Wisconsin being exceptions) at that time, it is extremely unlikely that felon disfranchisement was motivated by race. See Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza, Democratic Contraction? Political Consequences of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 67 American Sociological Rev. 777, 781 (2002). 24 See, e.g., Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza, Denying Felons and Ex-Felons the Vote: The Political Consequences, Past and Future, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University (February 2002), available at https://www.ipr.northwestern.edu/publications/docs/policybriefs/manzabrief.pdf (finding that had disenfrachised felons been allowed to vote in a few key states, the Senate might have stayed Democratic from 1986 through 2002 and that Al Gore might have won the Electoral College in 2000.) COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS benefit the Democratic Party. 25 It is hard to avoid the possibility that the majority is again driven by partisanship here. 95 F 25 See, e.g., U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, An Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States (2018), available at https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/2018/Minority_Voting_Access_2018.pdf; U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Increasing Compliance with Section 7 of the National Voting Rights Act (2016), available at https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/docs/NVRA-09-07-16.pdf. 157 COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS [This page intentionally left blank] 159 COMMISSIONERS’ REBUTTALS Commissioners’ Rebuttals Statement of Commissioner David Kladney My colleagues Commissioners Kirsanow and Heriot strike out in their statements on this report. They fail to acknowledge the overwhelming evidence that reducing collateral consequences reduces recidivism and keeps the public safe. They misrepresent the positions of our findings and recommendations by saying the Commission’s majority does not believe in punishment. They are wrong. We do believe in appropriate punishment, but not a lifetime of nonsensical punishment. The Commission has not taken a position otherwise, in this or any other report. Commissioners Kirsanow and Heriot believe we should continue to deny voting rights to people with criminal convictions even after they have successfully completed their court ordered sentences. They go so far as to say the only reason I or other Commissioners would support expanding voting rights is that people with criminal convictions are more likely to vote for Democrats. This is not only cynical and profoundly anti-democratic, but it is, sadly, untrue. We do not deny people the right to vote based on who we think they will vote for. If we did, perhaps Commissioners Kirsanow and Heriot could find other categories of the electorate they would bar from voting. We cannot exclude those who have paid their debt based on their potential voting patterns if we want to hold ourselves out to the rest of the world as a free and fair electoral system. To do otherwise is to travel down the road of disenfranchising our political opponents. Short-term partisan considerations have no place in America. Partisan impediments to expansion of voting rights go beyond my colleagues on this Commission. In Florida, where a large majority of millions of voters (65%) chose to enfranchise people with felony convictions, the Republican legislature is working to block the will of the people. A proposal was approved in the Florida legislature that would require payment of all fines, fees and restitution before restoring voting rights, contrary to the intent of Florida citizens. A poll tax if you will, so only those with money will be able to buy back their right to vote. This Commission has documented in detail the pervasiveness of unconstitutional practices in this country around the imposition of fines and fees. Even setting aside that some of these fees may not be properly imposed, conditioning voting rights on their payment means voting is for people with money and no one else. People who cannot scrape together a few hundred dollars to pay their court costs are no less worthy of having the right to vote than people who can. Maybe the next target on their anti-democratic agenda will be those who fail to pay their speeding tickets. My colleagues also fail to mention or attempt to justify draconian restrictions on survival-level assistance in the form of TANF and SNAP benefits, except for an oblique mention that including people with criminal convictions in public programs may lessen public support for the programs 161 overall. This does not engage with the stark testimony we received about the serious personal consequences to people who are denied these benefits. Further, they offer no response to the illogical focus of these restrictions on drug crimes to the exclusion of all other crimes. I believe there is no justification for denying public benefits to people with drug convictions while at the same time granting them to people with convictions for other crimes. Commissioners Kirsanow and Heriot will have to admit their position exhibits a lack of logic and common sense. This lack of common sense extends to the argument proffered by these two conservative Commissioners that the public does not wish to make school loans to those with drug convictions. Yet, that prohibition is for one year only and only for certain crimes. It does not make sense that public support for financial aid would be conditioned on this provision alone. All in all, my colleagues do not appreciate that those of us who seek to reduce collateral consequences do not do so out of naiveté but, as a conservative panelist at our briefing said, for “hard-nosed” public safety reasons. 1 People returning from incarceration need to be part of the community. This is not only for their benefit, but also for all of us who live in the community. It’s true that we must also abandon illogical and harsh consequences that do not relate to the offense committed. Even if my colleagues disagree that people deserve second chances (which one could take from their writing), they should acknowledge that kneecapping the opportunities of people leaving prison leaves everyone less safe. More than 95% of currently incarcerated people will leave prison, many, many without family support, only a bus ticket, and, maybe, 50 bucks in their pocket. 96F We deserve laws and rules not driven by the rationale that people who committed crimes deserve to be continually punished. Punishment for punishment’s sake is a useless and cruel exercise. We can do better and we must. My colleagues fail to engage the arguments on these terms, and therefore they fail to provide a logical response. 1 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Collateral Consequences: The Crossroads of Punishment, Redemption, and the Effects on Communities, June 2019, at 13 (quoting testimony of Vikrant Reddy, Senior Research Fellow at the Charles Koch Institute). [This page intentionally left blank]