NYSBA Task Force Will Look to Identify Problems with the State’s
Current Parole System and Propose Policy Solutions
New York State Bar
Association (NYSBA) President Hank Greenberg has announced the establishment of
a task force that will study the state’s current system of parole.
“The state Legislature
has undertaken wide-ranging criminal procedure reform in areas of bail, speedy
trial guarantees, and the discovery process,” said Greenberg. “However, these
reforms have focused on issues that arise prior to the trial, conviction, and
sentencing. The task force will do a deep dive into the state’s parole system
and propose reforms to ensure due process and fairness for the thousands of parolees
statewide.”
Greenberg said the
mission and objective of NYSBA’s Task Force on the Parole System will be to
study the current parole system with a focus on release practices as well as
revocation and reincarceration. It will seek to identify problems in the
current system and propose policy solutions, including new concepts in the
administration of the parole system and changes in the law.
Parole is a period of
conditional release to supervision in the community following a period of
incarceration in state or federal prison. Parolees include individuals serving
indeterminate sentences who are discretionarily released from prison to
community supervision and those serving determinate sentences who are required
to serve a specific period of supervised release in the community after serving
a designated term of imprisonment.
According to the U.S.
Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics, New York reincarcerates
the second-most defendants in the nation for technical violations of parole. Technical
violations include parole supervision violations such as simply missing a
meeting with a parole officer. Further, technical violations
accounted for 29 percent of the 21,675 people who were sent to prison in New
York state in 2016, the most recent data available, according to the state Department
of Corrections and Community Supervision.
Past NYSBA President
Seymour W. James, Jr., a longtime criminal defense lawyer who is currently a
partner at Barket Epstein Kearon Aldea & LoTurco in New York City, and
William T. Russell, Jr., a NYSBA Executive Committee member and partner at
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett in New York City, will co-chair the task force.
The members of the Task
Force on the Parole System bring vast experiences from all aspects of the
criminal justice system including judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys.
The members are:
- Daniel R. Alonso,
managing director and general counsel, Exiger, New York City
- Hon. Ellen N. Biben, Supreme
Court, New York County
- Catherine A. Christian,
special assistant district attorney, New York County
- David C. Condliffe,
executive director, Center for Community Alternatives, Brooklyn
- Kwesi Ako Dash, Alliance
of Families for Justice, Brooklyn
- Norman P. Effman, executive
director, Wyoming-Attica; Wyoming County Public Defender
- Eric Gonzalez, Kings
County District Attorney, Brooklyn
- Hon. Kathleen B. Hogan,
New York Court of Claims, Saratoga
- Hon. David R. Homer,
Carter Conboy, Albany
- Hon. Barry Kamins, Aidala,
Bertuna & Kamins, New York City
- Timothy J. Koller, executive
assistant district attorney, Richmond County
- Hon. Leslie G. Leach,
Supreme Court, Queens County
- Sherry Levin Wallach, Bashian
P.C., White Plains
- Wanda Lucibello, Safe
Horizon, New York City
- Karol V. Mason,
president, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York City
- Lorraine McEvilley, Legal
Aid Society, New York City
- Hon. James P. Murphy,
Supreme Court, Onondaga County
- Denise E. O’Donnell,
distinguished senior
fellow, New York University, Marron Institute
- Insha Rahman, Vera
Institute of Justice, New York City
- P. David Soares, Albany
County District Attorney, Albany
- Jean T. Walsh, chief of
Investigations Division, Bronx District Attorney’s Office
- Hon. George A. Yanthis,
retired magistrate judge, Southern District of New York
- Steven M. Zeidman,
professor, director of the Criminal Defense Clinic, CUNY School of Law
Martin Horn, distinguished
lecturer at John Jay College and executive director of the New York State
Sentencing Commission, will serve as an advisor on the task force.
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About the New York State Bar Association
The New York State Bar
Association is the largest voluntary state bar association in the nation. Since
1876, NYSBA has helped shape the development of law, educated and informed the
legal profession and the public, and championed the rights of New Yorkers
through advocacy and guidance in our communities.
Contact: Christian Nolan
[email protected]
518-487-5536