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Browse our press releases and press mentions below.

All Press Releases & Press Mentions

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Brooklyn Court Rethinks Incarceration for Individuals With Mental Illnesses

Brooklyn Court Rethinks Incarceration for Individuals With Mental Illnesses

NowThis

NowThis, the social media-focused news outlet, created a five-video series on our Brooklyn Mental Health Court, which offers community-based treatment not incarceration for individuals with serious mental health diagnoses. Watch the following videos to learn more: Episode 1 - D.A. Eric Gonzalez, Episode 2 - Judge Matthew D'Emic, Episode 3 - Dave Kelly and Kerry Rowe, Episode 4 - Ruth O'Sullivan, Episode 5 - Colleen King

Jun 2, 2022

New Podcast Unites Youth from NYCHA Developments

New Podcast Unites Youth from NYCHA Developments

Pix11

Youth Nation Grindin’ gives the youth in the communities the opportunity to step up to the mic and share their experiences. Eugene Rodriguez from the Neighborhood Safety Initiatives, one of the programs assisting with the podcast, said it’s not just about talking, it’s about listening to what young people have to say about what impacts them every day.

May 11, 2022

Many Cities are Putting Hopes in Violence Interrupters, but Few Understand Their Challenges

Many Cities are Putting Hopes in Violence Interrupters, but Few Understand Their Challenges

NBC News

Detailing some of the joys and challenges of violence interruption work, NBC News highlights Save Our Streets and interviews James Brodick, the Center for Court Innovation’s director of community development and crime prevention. He stresses the need for workforce development in communities, including violence interrupters, so they face less burn out or have ceilings on their professional trajectories.

May 10, 2022

Taking A Restorative Approach To Youth Justice

Taking A Restorative Approach To Youth Justice

WNYC

WNYC Radio Rookies reporter Deborah Ugo-Omenukwa worked with the Center to explore restorative justice in youth courts. She spoke with our Brownsville Community Justice Center to learn more about restorative approaches to the legal system, and the difference between punishment and consequences.

May 2, 2022

How A Secretive Police Database Affects Young Black And Brown Men

How A Secretive Police Database Affects Young Black And Brown Men

WNYC

The Center’s Youth Action Institute (formerly called the Youth Justice Board) alum and current WNYC Radio Rookies reporter, Rainier Harris, is an advocate for abolishing the NYPD’s gang database, which he researched as part of our 2020 report called ‘All Eyes on Us.’ As Rainer shares on this segment, the database is a list of more than 17,000 people that police have labeled as gang members, often without any known affiliations to a gang.

May 2, 2022

New York Giants Touchdown Fellow Shambaleed Nayyer ’22 Aims To Decriminalize Mental Illness In Pakistan

New York Giants Touchdown Fellow Shambaleed Nayyer ’22 Aims To Decriminalize Mental Illness In Pakistan

John Jay College

John Jay College senior Shambaleed Nayyer is a winner of the 2021-2022 New York Giants Touchdown Fellowship, which supports year-long internships at leading criminal justice organizations. Through her fellowship, Shambaleed has been working with Center program Manhattan Justice Opportunities, researching felony alternatives to incarceration programs across the country, and exploring new ways to improve our programming.

May 2, 2022

Shania Roseborough ’22: New York Giants Touchdown Fellowship Unlocks Life-Changing Internship

Shania Roseborough ’22: New York Giants Touchdown Fellowship Unlocks Life-Changing Internship

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

John Jay College senior Shania Roseborough is a winner of the 2021-2022 New York Giants Touchdown Fellowship, which supports year-long internships at leading criminal justice organizations. Working with the Center’s Midtown Community Court, Shania is brainstorming different ways to further improve relationships with local communities and community-based organizations and is listening to justice-impacted folks to create new solutions to the system.

Apr 2, 2022

Common Council Sets Aside $800k to Help Syracuse Tenants Navigate Housing Problems

Common Council Sets Aside $800k to Help Syracuse Tenants Navigate Housing Problems

WAER 88.3

The Center’s Syracuse Peacemaking Center will continue operation for another two years, thanks to funding from the city’s Common Council. Program ambassadors are working with community partners and guest speakers to provide residents a safe place to talk and connect them with mental health services. Our Leah Russell tells WAER how the program has “seen firsthand how housing concerns are exacerbating mental health issues.”

Mar 28, 2022

Interview: Planner and Urban Designer Ifeoma Ebo

Interview: Planner and Urban Designer Ifeoma Ebo

Architectural Record

Ifeoma Ebo, an urban designer and planner based in New York City, worked with the Center's Brownsville Community Justice Center and tenants of the Brownsville Houses to activate outdoor areas to build safe, shared spaces. In 2019, the Justice Center, young community members, and Ebo came together to create low-cost solutions and organized B-Lit, an event that transformed the park into a multicolored dance floor that welcomed residents of all ages.

Mar 18, 2022

Staten Island mom continues efforts to feed her neighborhood

Staten Island mom continues efforts to feed her neighborhood

PIX11

In response to a gas outage, Staten Island community members came together to create their own solution to fight food insecurity. A group of volunteers went door-to-door delivering food and supplies. Leticia Lucero from the Center's Neighborhood Safety Initiatives says the community really came together to do this work, sharing how great it feels to highlight positive things happening in communities, especially among all that's going on in the world.

Mar 18, 2022

Midtown Community Court launches specialized court focused on offenders with serious mental illnesses

Midtown Community Court launches specialized court focused on offenders with serious mental illnesses

AM New York Metro

Providing alternatives to incarceration, the Center's Midtown Community Court's new Misdemeanor Mental Health Court (MMHC) will support individuals suffering from mental illness. Low-level offenses, such as shoplifting and illegal drug use, will now have social services and community service options that are restorative to both the community and participants. The Court's Youth Part has also been expanded to include young adults ages 18 through 25, reducing the risk of recidivism by targeting the root causes for criminal justice involvement.

Mar 18, 2022

The Meaning of a Stolen Diaper

The Meaning of a Stolen Diaper

The New Yorker

Using the example of parents and caretakers stealing diapers and baby products, the New Yorker looks at the debate happening in New York about low-level prosecution. The article cites our new report on shrinking New York's misdemeanor system and Michael Rempel, co-author of the study, shares that the harms that jail produces "are criminogenic—leading to higher rates of recidivism than would have otherwise arisen had people been released.” 

Mar 12, 2022