For 3,278 people, it was nonviolent offenses like stealing a $159 jacket or serving as a middleman in the sale of $10 of marijuana. An estimated 65% of them are Black. Many of them were struggling with mental illness, drug dependency or financial desperation when they committed their crimes. None of them will ever come home to their parents and children. And taxpayers are spending billions to keep them behind bars.
READ STORIES FROM A LIVING DEATH
Explore the Report:
- Executive Summary
- Recommendations
- Methodology
- Findings: The Use of Life without Parole for Nonviolent Crimes
- How We Got Here: Skyrocketing Extreme Sentences and Mass Incarceration
- Case Studies: 110 Offenders Sentenced to Die in Prison for Nonviolent Crimes
- First-Time Nonviolent Offenders
- Nonviolent Teenage Offenders
- Tying Judges' Hands: Mandatory Life without Parole
- Life without Parole for Nonviolent Offenses under Habitual Offender Laws
- Life without Parole for Marijuana
- Life without Parole Due to Crack/Powder Cocaine Sentencing Disparity
- Aging and Elderly Nonviolent Prisoners
- Terminally Ill Nonviolent Prisoners
- The Reality of Serving Life without Parole
- The Financial Cost of Sentencing Nonviolent Offenders to Life without Parole
- Comparative International Practice and Fundamental Rights to Humane Treatment, Proportionate Sentence, and Rehabilitation