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Looking into inequities of Maryland's incarceration rates

Attorney General Anthony Brown and Public Defender Natasha Dartigue announced the creation of the Maryland Equitable Justice Collaborative (MEJC), a new initiative dedicated to reducing the mass incarceration of African Americans and other marginalized groups in Maryland prisons and jails. The goal is to examine the scope and causes of this crisis, and to develop a comprehensive plan for reform and recommendations by January 2025.
Public Defender Natasha Dartigue (at mic) and Attorney General Anthony Brown (directly behind Dartigue) and announced the creation of the Maryland Equitable Justice Collaborative (MEJC), dedicated to reducing the mass incarceration of African Americans and other marginalized groups in Maryland prisons and jails. The goal was to examine the scope and causes of this crisis, and to develop a comprehensive plan for reform and recommendations by January 2025. Today we got an update. Photo: Maryland AG/Flickr

Ten years ago, when police chased Freddie Gray on the streets of Sandtown and arrested him, more people from his neighborhood were in state custody than from any other census tract in Maryland. That, according to data analyzed by the Justice Policy Institute and the Prison Policy Initiative.

Their latest count shows things have changed only slightly: The Justice Policy Institute’s most recent data show Sandtown-Winchester and nearby Harlem Park rank no. 3 in the number of residents incarcerated -- although by rate, per 100-thousand people, Sandtown is still No. 1 in Maryland.

That detail is part of the picture as public officials and criminal-justice reformers work to implement reforms proposed this spring by the Maryland Equitable Justice Collaborative. Its work is premised on statistics that show Black people make up roughly 30% of Maryland’s population, but they are 51% of its adult arrests, and 71% of its prisoners and parolees. We talk with Maryland Public Defender Natasha Dartigue to learn more.

Links: Breaking the 71%: A Path Toward Racial Equity in the Criminal Legal System, WYPR reporter Wambui Kamau's piece on the report can be found here, and the Baltimore Banner reporting can be found here.

Sheilah Kast is the host of On The Record, Monday-Friday, 9:30-10:00 am.
Melissa Gerr is a Senior Producer for On the Record. She started in public media at Twin Cities Public Television in St. Paul, Minn., where she is from, and then worked as a field producer for Oregon Public Broadcasting in Portland. She made the jump to audio-lover in Baltimore as a digital media editor at Mid-Atlantic Media and Laureate Education, Inc. and as a field producer for "Out of the Blocks." Her beat is typically the off-beat with an emphasis on science, culture and things that make you say, 'Wait, what?'