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The Bureau of Land Management updates a proposed Western Solar Plan to the delight of wildlife advocates, grant funding helps New York schools take part in National Farm to School Month, and children's advocates observe "TEN-4 Day" to raise awareness of child abuse.

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Biden voices concerns over Israeli strikes on Iran, Special Counsel Jack Smith details Trump's pre-January 6 pressure on Pence, Indiana's voter registration draws scrutiny, and a poll shows politics too hot to talk about for half of Wisconsinites.

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Cheap milk comes at a cost for residents of Washington's Lower Yakima Valley, Indigenous language learning is promoted in Wisconsin as experts warn half the world's languages face extinction, and Montana's public lands are going to the dogs!

IL Lawmakers Pass Bill to Prevent Unfair Youth Sentencing

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Wednesday, May 24, 2023   

Illinois could soon be the fourth state to pass a law to prevent unfair youth sentencing.

The legislation encourages criminal courts to recognize youth who are convicted for acts of self-defense or as victims of violence.

Often, young survivors of sexual assault, sex trafficking or domestic abuse are convicted in adult court and given long prison sentences.

Madeleine Behr - policy director at the Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation - said the bill would allow judges in these cases to review mitigating information, and give them more discretion to not sentence using mandatory minimums.

"It's just really important to keep in mind how trauma impacts kids as they're growing up, and throughout their young adulthood and really, the neurobiology of trauma with that," said Behr. "The ability for judges to say, 'I can move the child's case back to juvenile court for sentencing,' it gives the judges more options."

The bill, sponsored by state Rep. Lilian Jiménez - D-Chicago - has passed in both House and Senate.

More than 32,000 people in U.S. prisons today have been there since childhood, according to a report by Human Rights for Kids - which ranks Illinois 11th among states for incarcerating minors in adult prisons.

Behr cited cases like those of Chrystul Kizer, Cyntoia Brown-Long, and Sara Kruzan as reasons for the changes outlined in the bill. Gov. JB Pritzker is expected to sign it into law - and Behr said it can't happen too soon.

"We often have a system that has mandatory minimums as kind-of arbitrary guidelines that really are focused on punishment and retribution, rather than healing and restoration," said Behr. "There are not a lot of cases specifically I've seen in Illinois that this law will impact, but I'm hoping that it's a preventative measure."

Some 24% of boys and 45% of girls in the juvenile justice system have experienced trauma through at least five Adverse Childhood Experiences, according to a report by the nonprofit Rights4Girls.




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