2012 Harry F. Guggenheim Conference on Crime in America

Thursday, February 16, 2012 12:23

2012 Harry F. Guggenheim Conference on Crime in America


Speakers from Panel 1 of the HF Guggenheim Symposium discuss the drug war
Photo by Lisa Riordan Seville

Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy led a blue-ribbon list of speakers from the White House, leading police departments, think tanks, and universities for two days of discussions and briefings at  the 7th Annual Harry Frank. Guggenheim foundation Symposium on Crime in America, on Feb. 6th and 7th, 2012 at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York.

Twenty journalists from around the nation joined participants from the criminal justice community to explore his year's topic,""The Problem That Won't Go Away: How Drugs, Race and Mass Incarceration Have Distorted American Justice (and What To Do About It)." There were six public panels, with 27 speakers. For an agenda of the conference, see HERE.  

The journalism fellows (see list here) proposed reporting projects centered around the conference theme.

In addition to the main theme, the Symposium examined some of the newest and most innovative developments in the areas of prisoner re-entry and early release, and recent US and New Jersey Supreme Court rulings on eyewitness identification.

 Symposium highlights: Risco Mention-Lewis, Assistant District Attorney from Nassau County, and Shelia Rule, founder of Think Outside the Cell Foundation, addressed : "After Prison What? Breaking the Mold on Prisoner Reentry."  Some of the nation's leading corrections chiefs, including Matthew Cate, Secretary of California’s Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation,  and New York State Corrections chief  Brian Fischer came together for a candid conversation about the state of the nation's prison systems and the impact of early release legislation.

William Black, a former top government regulator, discussed the notorious lack of prosecutions and convictions on fraud and white collar crime arising from the economic crisis. Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck and leading civil rights attorney Connie Rice spoke about the challenge of tackling juvenile gangs and violence. 

Dr. Khalil Muhammad, director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and Benjamin Tucker, deputy director of the White House Office on National Drug Control Policy provided a perspective on America's long-running "war on drugs."

On this page you will be able to download podcasts of the panels and keynote addresses, explore some of the research material provided to participants at the Symposium, and see articles written by this year's Reporting Fellows as well as conference coverage.  It will be updated as new material becomes available.

Please check  it out regularly!

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Fellows Stories

For One Former Inmate, A New Life
Ryan Schill, Juvenile Justice Information Exchange

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CT Governor Dannel Malloy Says He's 'Embarrassed' by Police Scandal
Brian Zumhagen, WNYC

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Children affected in meth cases by more than arrests
Susan Tebben, Glasgow Daily Times

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Cincinnati offers Toledo a model in crime fight
Taylor Dungjen, Toledo Blade

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Ex-con finds calling helping others
Taylor Dungjen, The Toledo Blade

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Death of a Police Informer
Jennifer Portman, The Tallahassee Democrat

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Resources from the Conference

The Social Media Revolution in Breaking News Journalism

Download file
Eyewitness Misidentifications and Wrongful Convictions, Brandon Garrett, University of Virginia Law School

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The Year in Crime Coverage 2011-2012, Part I

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The Science of Eyewitness Identification, Prof. Jennifer Dysart

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The Year in Crime Coverage 2011-2012, Part II

Download file

Conference Audio

Keynote Speech By: Gov. Dannel Malloy Download file
Panel 1: America's Addiction Download file
Panel 2:Gangs, Drugs and Urban Violence Download file
Panel 3: Crime and Criminal Justice Trends Download file
Panel 4: America's prisons: What do you mean "Early Release" Download file
Panel 5: After Prisons, What? Breaking the Mold on Prisoner Re-entry Download file
Panel 6: Did you see that man? The Challenge to Eyewitness ID Download file
Workshop 1: Covering Victims: The Two Track world Download file
Workshop 2: Trends & Issues in CJ Coverage Download file
Related Resources: crime trends, Federal Bureau of Investigation, murder, Research
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