Darrow symposium looks at Cook County Jail, race and justice 2016-03-14
This article shared 2921 times since Mon Mar 14, 2016
About 65 people helped to celebrate the life and work of famed attorney Clarence Darrow at the March 13 annual Darrow tribute on Chicago's South Side.
After a short ceremony outside with politicians and advocates at the Darrow Bridge, the inside program at the Museum of Science & Industry focused on Cook County Jail, first with a performance by Fawzia Mirza of a 1902 speech by Darrow to jail inmates, and next by a presentation by Hanke Gratteau, who is director of the Cook County Sheriff's Justice Institute.
In 1902, famed attorney Clarence Darrow told a roomful of inmates in the Cook County Jail that people are in jail "simply because they cannot avoid it on account of circumstances which are entirely beyond their control." This yearwhen many of the inmates of Cook County Jail are still locked up because they cannot afford $5,000 bail, because they committed crimes of survival, or because they are mentally illthe Darrow symposium, on the 78th anniversary of Darrow's death, explored why this is still true.
Speaking on the topic "Cook County Jail: Then and Now, The Impact of Poverty and Racism," Gratteau described today's jail population and the efforts underway to create enlightened policies and practices regarding incarceration and housing evictions. Under Gratteau's leadership, the Institute mines data to expose the consequences of criminalizing homelessness, mental illness, drug dependency, and the devastating effects of generational poverty.
Darrow, who died March 13, 1938, is remembered for his crusading role as "attorney for the damned" in such controversial cases as the Scopes Monkey Trial, the Leopold and Loeb murder case, and the pardoning of the Haymarket anarchists.
The Darrow committee members are Anita Weinberg, Tracy Baim, Nina Helstein and Nina Barrett. For more details see www.darrowbridge.org .
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This article shared 2921 times since Mon Mar 14, 2016
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