3/23/19- The Tennessean “I think juvenile justice statistics have a long way to go. You could protect confidentiality and the kids’ names, but we should know a lot more,” Simon Singer, CJRA Expert.
3/23/19- The Tennessean “I think juvenile justice statistics have a long way to go. You could protect confidentiality and the kids’ names, but we should know a lot more,” Simon Singer, CJRA Expert.
3/4/19- Atlanta Journal Constitution “The rates of those re-offending are similar if they’re on GPS tracking or not,” Jason Rydberg, CJRA Expert.
Read the February 2019 newsletter here.
2/24/19 – USA Today “Unlike most crimes which involve the buying and selling of a consumable product … human trafficking entails the buying and selling of human beings, and they’re exploited over and over again,” – Jay Albanese, CJRA Expert.
2/20/19- CU Denver Today “We found that neighborhoods with one or more medical or recreational dispensary saw increased crime rates that were between 26 and 1,452 percent higher than in neighborhoods without any commercial marijuana activity,” Lorine Hughes, CJRA Expert.
2/16/19 – The Atlantic “If you just go by the raw numbers, it is undoubtedly an undercount of domestic-violence homicides,” April Zeoli, CJRA Expert.
2/5/19 – Education Dive “A juvenile justice arrest is meant to be kept quiet, while being removed from school for disciplinary reasons is more “directly visible” and widely known among the school community and even potential employers,” Beidi Dong, CJRA Expert.
Read the January 2019 newsletter here.
1/21/19 – NJ.com “As much as real life scenarios can be useful in terms of giving the officers a sense of what can happen, they can not create or mimic the sense of real stress, fear and uncertainty that accompany the real life events,”Maria Haberfeld, CJRA Expert.
Read the December 2018 newsletter here.