VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   USA   News   Young offenders – victims of US detention system  
MORE ON THE STORY
27.07.2009, 09:11 5 comments

Russia's prison-born children marked for life

Growing up behind bars is a grim reality for Russian children whose mothers are serving jail sentences. Critics say some inmates are using their children to secure better living conditions for themselves.

16.05.2009, 08:15 1 comment

Bulgaria sees alarming rise in child-abandonment cases by young mothers

With teenage pregnancy on the rise in the Eastern European state of Bulgaria, orphanages say more children are being abandoned by young parents.

07.05.2009, 21:55

‘Merchant of death’ files case against American agents

Russian businessman Victor Bout, who was accused of arms smuggling during a trial in Thailand, has filed charges against three American intelligence agents.

Lithuania, Vilnius: View of one of the cells, 12 march 2004 in the Lukiskiu prison in Vilnius. (AFP Photo / Eric Feferberg) 16.01.2010, 10:46

Lithuanian prisoners to pay for energy consumption

On Friday the Lithuanian parliament changed its Code of Execution of Sentences. Now detainees will have to pay for the energy they use, at special prison rates.

24.03.2010, 22:02

Russia may target Internet users for illegal file sharing

Russian police plan to combat illegal file sharing by focusing on Internet users rather than service providers.

image from www.icj-cij.org 22.07.2010, 18:34 34 comments

UN Court rules Kosovo independence is legal

The UN court has ruled that Kosovo’s unilateral secession from Serbia was legal. The non-binding decision is believed to have implications for Kosovo and become a precedent for de-facto states seeking independence.

14.01.2010, 18:40 22 comments

Yushchenko brings Stalin to court over genocide

Kiev’s Court of Appeals has found Josef Stalin and other Bolshevik leaders guilty of genocide against the Ukrainians during the famine, or “Holodomor” as it is called in Ukraine, of 1932-33.

An image grab taken from a video broadcast by Iran's state-run English-language Press TV on July 14, 2010, shows Iranian nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri (AFP Photo / DSK) 14.07.2010, 16:23 20 comments

A long, strange trip for “defected” Iranian scientist

In March, US media reported on the “defection” of Shahram Amiri, an Iranian nuclear scientist who went missing in Saudi Arabia who is now accusing US officials of abducting him.

27.07.2010, 17:46 21 comments

US “sparked Russian spy sensation” in wake of WikiLeaks broadside

In an effort to distract attention from the release of thousands of secret documents on the Afghanistan War, the US rounded up 11 Russian “spies” according to internal sources.

23.07.2010, 16:04 15 comments

Russia accuses US special services of lawlessness after “abduction” of pilot

As Moscow expresses its outrage at the detention of a Russian pilot in Liberia and his extradition to the US, Washington has apologized for failing to promptly provide notice about the details of the case.

Young offenders – victims of US detention system

Published: 18 November, 2009, 10:06
Edited: 19 November, 2009, 09:55

(12.8Mb) embed video

TAGS: Crime, Human rights, Law, USA


In the US city of New Orleans, the current juvenile detention system is coming under fire. A worrying number of young offenders are now becoming victims of violence and abuse while incarcerated.

Jeremiah Douglas is back on the streets of New Orleans. Like many of the kids here, at some point Douglas was locked up in America's juvenile justice system.

“Growing up I was raised around the ’hood mentality,” he told RT. “You know certain things I had to do, certain things I wasn’t supposed to do and I did it ’cause I thought it was cool.”

Douglas' story is not unique. Most juveniles who are incarcerated in the United States are poor and black.

Louisiana has the highest rate of kids getting locked up in the country.

Their advocates say that these children just need something to do to stay out of trouble as, once imprisoned, many of them become victims of the system.

”It was a regular occurrence for us to visit children who had been raped who had broken ear drums, shattered jaws,” said Dana Kaplan of the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana. “A huge litany of just unbelievably horrible things happen to them while they were incarcerated.”

Raven Spears, who also had been locked up, said that she faced abuse when behind bars. ”Fighting, fighting, fighting and guards they were cursing us – stuff like that,” she said.

Advocates said that, when imprisoned, these kids are a statistic that can be easily forgotten by general public and politicians.

“There’s very little public scrutiny, there is very little transparency or accountability,” said Kaplan. “The general public or elected officials overall, not to say everyone, but elected officials overall might not consider these youth to be their primary constituency.”

She also added that the situation these kids find themselves in is rooted in the country’s past.

”Youth of color are overrepresented in the juvenile justice system,” Kaplan said. “In Louisiana, in the deep South, there certainly is a particularly virulent history of racism. So you can not deny that there is a history of racism that has kind of led us to where we are today.”

However, in spite of the obstacles, these teenagers are striving for success.

”I’m trying to be a millionaire, successful,” said Jeremiah. “When I die I want people to say Jeremiah did this. I want to be somebody like Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Jesse Jackson – what they all did back in the day.”

Persevering in a place where the odds are stacked against them.

+3 (6 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
17.11.2009, 16:28 4 comments

Georgian soldiers become political asset

173 is a company. A company of the 23rd Battalion, 2nd Brigade of the Georgian army, that is. And they're off to join the thousands-strong crowd already fighting in Afghanistan.

United States, Washington : Former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger attends the ceremonial swearing-in of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the State Department in Washington on February 2, 2009 (AFP photo/Nicholas Kamm) 18.11.2009, 12:01 14 comments

“Progress in Russia–US relationship will continue” – Henry Kissinger

Despite the US and Russia having a long history of discord, the progress in the countries’ relations will continue, Henry Kissinger, US Secretary of State 1973-1977, told RT.

Sean November 18, 2009, 20:15
0

David: speak for yourself.

David November 18, 2009, 11:21
0

USA - prison house of the oppressed.