http://www.alternet.org/civil-liberties/why-we-need-stop-putting-teenagers-behind-bars?akid=12488.294211.oTfxAF&rd=1&src=newsletter1027393&t=18
When Anjelique Wadlington was first arrested for the possession and
sale of drugs, she was only 17. During the two years she spent at
Riverhead Correctional Facility, she was locked down for 21 hours a day,
crowded into the same dormitory as “adults, the mentally ill and the
misbehaved.”
“Being a child and alone was terrifying,” she said. “You had to grow
really fast or you would be left behind. The guards are rude and don’t
see the mental state the child is in. To them, you are just an inmate.”
The conditions of Wadlington’s imprisonment speak to the profound
problems endemic in our juvenile justice system. Teenagers imprisoned
for even minor offenses face everything from overcrowded facilities to
solitary confinement to an abundance of prisoner-on-prisoner and
guard-on-prisoner violence. But in New York, at least, city and state
officials are finally taking action toward reform.
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