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DeAndre Brown Appointed Director of Office of Reentry

Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris announced today that DeAndre Brown has been promoted to permanent executive director of the Shelby County Office of Reentry. Brown has served as interim executive director since August of 2021. Brown and his wife, Vinessa Brown, founded Lifeline to Success, a nonprofit organization for ex-offenders, after his own incarceration and reentry.

According to a press release from Harris’ office, Brown has expanded programming focused on the mental health of returning citizens since joining the Office of Reentry, including hosting a job fair and block party that drew hundreds. Brown has also extended the FOCUSED program to include inmates with the Division of Corrections. FOCUSED combines job training with other assistance such as family reconnection, financial literacy, and voting rights restoration. In addition, Brown has also established in-prison training programs for janitorial work and the care of natural African American hair.

“DeAndre Brown has shown that he is devoted to helping the formerly incarcerated turn their lives around,” said Harris. “We had hoped his experience and connections to the community would help to grow the reentry programming, and, we were right.”

“I still don’t believe this is happening,” said Brown. “I am actually living the dream. I promise the citizens of Shelby County to use everything in me to make sure the men and women in this program have an opportunity to be successful when they return from prison.”

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Criminal Injustice: How the System Traps the Poor

DeAndre Brown says he was a career criminal. He started selling drugs on the streets of North Memphis at age 19, and by 28, he’d worked his way up the chain of command to head the operation. Brown says he was a nerd growing up. Despite having to navigate his mom’s crack use at a young age and commuting back and forth to rural Arkansas for grade school, he says he was a good student. He even got a full scholarship to Rhodes College and planned to become a doctor.

But there was a problem: He needed gas money to get him from his mom’s house in Raleigh to campus. Like so many growing up in poverty, Brown says he turned to illegal means to earn money because it was instant gratification.

Justin Fox Burks

DeAndre Brown with participants of the LifeLine to Success program

He connected with guys in his neighborhood who were selling drugs out of the house next to his mom’s. “I saw the opportunity to make some quick money,” Brown says. “It looked easy for those guys to stand on the corner with some dope in their pockets and walk up to cars. So that’s what I did.”

Twenty-five years later, just a few miles from where Brown ran a drug operation for nearly a decade, he now sits in his office in a converted Frayser house. It’s where he’s run an ex-offender re-entry program called LifeLine to Success since 2009. Brown believes he’s an anomaly, because when someone — especially someone in poverty — gets into the criminal justice system, it’s hard to escape.

In the System

Josh Spickler, executive director of Just City, a Memphis organization striving to mitigate the damages caused by contact with the criminal justice system, says the system is “complicated and nuanced.

“It involves rules of court and rules of evidence,” Spickler says. “It involves laws. It involves procedure and so many things that you have to know to navigate it clearly and successfully.”

When someone in poverty is accused of a crime, those challenges are intensified, Spickler says. Wealth and poverty impact a defendant’s experience from pre-trial to post-conviction, and possibly forever.

“People in poverty have had a lot more trouble getting back to even in the criminal justice system,” Spickler says. “And people of means, who didn’t do anything too terrible, can usually buy their way back to even.”

When the poor are accused, they are appointed counsel, while “people of means and wealth have always had the ability to hire the best criminal defense lawyer. The appointment of counsel is probably the biggest differentiator.”

The country’s public defense system was established by the U.S Supreme Court’s 1963 Gideon v. Wainwright decision, which acknowledged the right for a state-appointed attorney under the Fourteenth Amendment.

Chip Chockley

Josh Spickler

Spickler says this decision was a “great win for civil rights in America,” but “what’s followed has been anything but fully securing that right.” He says the indigent systems are an “afterthought” in many communities. Public defenders largely lack significant resources and investigative tools private lawyers have, such as expert witnesses, which Spickler says are especially important in serious matters.

“There are great public defender offices, and we have one right here in Memphis,” Spickler says. “But, as great as they are, they have bad circumstances. They’re representing 35,000 people with like 90 attorneys. You don’t even have to know much about the law to know you don’t want a lawyer with that many cases.”

The Shelby County Public Defender’s office currently has 90 full-time attorneys and handled more than 24,000 cases in 2018. Approximately 2 percent — $9.3 million — of the county’s general fund is allocated to the public defender’s office. Another $5.5 million comes from the state. The public defender’s office provided the numbers above, but declined to be interviewed further.

Another “glaring” issue, Spickler says, is pre-trial detention, which is solely meant to deter the accused from committing another dangerous crime or fleeing to avoid prosecution if released. “But the way we do that, in this community especially, is with money,” he says. “Based on a British system that’s centuries old, we decided a dollar amount is the answer to that problem.”

The idea, Spickler says, is if you have money on the line, you’re incentivized to return to court and to not commit another crime. “We put a price tag on it, but the fact is, money has nothing to do with it,” Spickler says. “With pretty high certainty, we can predict who comes back and who doesn’t come back and who reoffends.” Spickler says there is readily available data that should be used to assess people’s risk instead.

“But, we just say if you can pay this, you can get out, and if you can’t, you can’t,” Spickler says. “That has nothing to do with who’s risky and who’s not. In fact, if you have the means, you’re more of a risk. So why would we make it about money?”

Defendants who can’t make bail must remain behind bars until their trial date, which could be a year or more down the road. Building a defense takes participation from the accused, which is hard to give in jail, Spickler says.

“Strike two, if you’re poor, is that you have to make decisions about your case while you’re behind bars.” Most often, people in that situation enter a plea bargain, Spickler says.

“People are detained in cages before their guilt or innocence is determined,” he says. “They are desperate to get out. They don’t have the time or the resources nor the patience to build a defense in jail. Their incentive is to get out. A guilty plea is a better alternative.”

Pleading guilty means they now have a criminal record and, depending on the crime, still might serve additional time behind bars.

Permanent Punishment

Spickler says with a record, ex-offenders face “a myriad of challenges that are extremely insidious,” impacting all parts of life. Lawyers refer to this as “collateral consequences.”

“Collateral is a really bad word to use,” Spickler says. “It implies it’s an afterthought or not all that important, but it’s everything. Moving on after life within the criminal justice system is next to impossible for a lot of people, especially if you’re poor.”

Justin Fox Burks

Beverleye Orr leads a LifeLine to Success class to help ex-offenders re-enter society.

One reason is expenses add up after incarceration, he says. “Every sentence passed down comes with a bill. A literal bill. Like a credit card bill.” Post-conviction court costs can range from hundreds to thousands of dollars. Spickler says Tennessee is “particularly bad” because the consequence for not paying them is drivers license suspension.

“The costs aren’t based on reality anymore,” he says. “They’ve added costs for this, costs for that. If you go down the list, it’s shocking the things we assess costs for. Things like building law libraries. It’s astounding the amount that can rack up for relatively minor offenses. If the crime is at all serious and there’s any jail time, then you can get into the thousands really quickly.”

Spickler says a lot of Tennesseeans have lost their licenses because of this law. “I’m talking about 40,000 to 50,000 Tennesseans who can’t move around legally.”

And if ex-offenders can’t drive, then they can’t get jobs to afford to pay their court costs, Spickler says. If they do drive in order to get a job and are pulled over and found guilty of driving without a license, then there’ll be more court costs to pay. “It just keeps going. For so many people, they can never pay it back.” As a result, people are locked out of the mainstream economy, housing, and educational opportunities.

“When we lock people out of the mainstream economy by taking away their drivers license or not hiring them because of prior history, we are steering them toward other means of supporting themselves,” Spickler says. “And some of those are criminal. At best, they’re underground and not paying taxes. But at the very worst, they’re heading toward a world where crime is lucrative and appealing. The cycle builds on itself pretty quickly.”

A big piece of Just City’s work is helping policy makers understand the full impact of their policies, Spickler says. “There are real consequences years and years later after criminal justice involvement,” he says. “Perhaps there should be for certain offenses, but for so many, even after they are released, damage unnecessarily continues to rack up. We have to turn that around.”

Spickler says these continuing consequences are anything but collateral. “Permanent punishment” is a better phrase for it, he says.

“When we pass laws dealing with people who’ve broken the law, it’s important to maintain a civil and safe society,” Spickler says. “But, we have to start thinking about how long we want the punishment to go on.”

A Lifeline

DeAndre Brown knows the struggle of re-entry all too well. Brown was incarcerated for the last time 14 years ago. In his first week of that 25-month-long prison sentence, Brown says he decided it was time to “try something different.

“Reality set in really quickly,” Brown says. “I made up my mind then to figure out a way to help other people be right.”

When he was released, Brown turned the janitorial service he once used as a front for his drug operation into a legitimate business. Brown says he and his family were doing well for about two years, until a hospital where his company was contracted to clean asked him to be a volunteer chaplain. When the hospital did a background check, his contract was terminated.

“The minute they found out I had a criminal history, they took the keys,” Brown says. “They told me I had to go.”

Brown says he, along with his wife and children, were homeless after that. Looking to support his family, he says finding a job was “out of the question.” So he returned to the idea that sparked in prison — finding a way to help others in his situation. Brown says the termination of the hospital contract was the impetus for starting LifeLine to Success.

Brown says many ex-offenders are stuck when they’re released, and finding an environment that’s conducive to positive living can be the initial challenge. “With drive and determination to prove the world wrong,” Brown sought to change that in Memphis.

Through classes, volunteer work, employment, and therapeutic group settings, the LifeLine to Success program teaches conflict resolution and basic life skills, with the goal of showing ex-offenders how to survive in the world without resorting to crime. Since 2009, 1,216 ex-offenders have completed the program.

“We have people who were living on the sidelines of life but now have the desire to be involved,” Brown says. “They’d wake up, sit on the porch, get high, and play video games, but now they want to be productive because they’ve tasted what real life can be like.”

Brown says the program takes in people with multiple offenses that are mostly violent. They often have low skills, minimal education, and some mental health issues. “We take the folks people run from and are afraid of and put them in a room together,” Brown says. “And it works. It’s all love.”

The program works similar to a gang, Brown says.

“We’re just flipping what we know works in the hood and turning it around into something positive,” Brown says. “We give them a culture, a color, and some lit — literature, I mean. Sorry, that’s the gang code.”

When participants start the program, they are not officially “on the team,” Brown says. But after they meet initial requirements, they receive a green T-shirt, indicating they’ve made the payroll. “The shirt makes grown men cry,” Brown says. “They’ve never really felt a part of anything and now they are and they didn’t have to get beat up to get in.”

The program’s mission is to change the perception of what it means to be a convicted felon to both the community and ex-offenders, and Brown believes “we’ve exceeded that mission.”

Over-Criminalized

The number of people brought into the criminal justice system and accused of crimes far surpasses that number from 40 years ago, Spickler says.

The Tennessee prison population is the largest it’s ever been. In 1990, the state prison population was 13,975, according to Tennessee Department of Corrections data.That number rose to 30,799 in 2018.

“We filled up our jails and prisons and our courtrooms,” Spickler says. “We’ve created so many more crimes. The criminal justice system has been grown to tackle a lot of things in society.” That’s why Just City advocates for a smaller criminal justice system.

“When we say smaller, we mean a smaller budget and less use of the system for problems it can’t fix. We have to depend less on the criminal justice system.”

Thomas Castelli, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Tennessee agrees. He says, as a society, the country has over-criminalized certain behaviors.

“The government has the power to regulate certain conduct by citizens,” Castelli says. “There’s all different ways to do that, but the most extreme is to criminalize that conduct. We have a tendency when we don’t like something and want to discourage it, to make it a crime.”

For example, Castelli says in Tennessee it’s a crime to drive with a suspended license. He says in some cases it might be warranted, but in thousands of cases, people just can’t afford to renew it. “So we criminalize that instead of finding a civil way to handle it.”

Castelli also says “we’re really bad at understanding motivations for criminal conduct like mental health or addiction.”

Typically, people in poverty have less access to health insurance and quality health care and are more susceptible to addiction and mental health issues, he says. This means they are also more likely to enter the system.

“Our criminal justice system is kind of a hammer,” Castelli says. “The solution is you get tossed into the system. Sometimes that’s the only way for people to actually get treatment.”

Castelli says Tennessee should consider pre-booking diversion programs, which allow people to enter treatment programs to address mental health or addiction without “getting sucked into the whole court system.” This is a way to address those underlying causes of criminal behavior before you get involved in the criminal justice system on an ongoing basis, Castelli says.

“We can do better at identifying those causes before people are arrested,” he says. “Instead of arresting them, get them in the programs trying to make an effort to address these issues. See if that works before we start using criminal laws as the cure-all.”

System Overhaul

Addressing the various issues with the criminal justice system will take a holistic approach, Castelli says. “Multiple things need to be fixed. Some things need to be scrapped and reinvented. It’ll take a lot of laws.”

Castelli says there are “a lot of moving parts” in the criminal justice system: “There’s no one part we can fix and say, ‘There, it’s done.’ Some of it goes beyond the justice and legal system and relates to public health and wealth equity.”

There is a role for every level of government to play in addressing the issues, he says, but the “heaviest lift lies with the state.” Local governments can do certain things like diversion programs, while the federal government can provide funding or create initiatives affecting federal criminal law.

“The state sets the majority of the criminal laws and what the punishments for them are,” he says. “They’re the ones who authorize these fees and costs. It’s a state law that takes away drivers licenses, sets fees for appointed counsel, and takes away people’s voting rights. These are all fixes that have to come from the state.”

Castelli says with Tennessee Governor Bill Lee entering his second year in office, “it will be interesting to see whether the governor has any initiatives to address some of these issues.”

In May, the governor, who has been vocal about criminal justice reform, signed a law removing the fee for ex-offenders to have their criminal record expunged. Lee said last month the move is an effort to remove the barriers to finding employment many face upon re-entry.

“We need to remove those obstacles for those who’ve served their sentences and paid the price for their crime,” Lee said. “We need to remove obstacles to make it easier for them to re-enter. I think anything we can do to remove a barrier for someone who has re-entered or is in the process of working, trying to get their feet back under them, trying to be a taxpayer, instead of a tax taker, we improve their success rate, and expungement fee reductions will improve that process.” Lee’s office did not respond to the Flyer‘s inquiry for additional comment.

“At the end of the day, what we’re doing is taking away someone’s liberty,” Castelli says. “The most crucial civil right you have is your liberty and your right to live free and not be incarcerated. The consequences are huge.”

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News The Fly-By

Playback Memphis Brings Together Police and Felons

Felons and police officers may seem like especially strange bedfellows, but a Memphis theater troupe has built a bridge between some who enforce the law and some who have broken it.

And now those groups are planning to join together to help kids in Frayser stay out of trouble.

Last fall, Playback Memphis, an improv troupe that uses theater to promote healing and reconciliation, paired a group of five Memphis police officers with six ex-offenders from LifeLine to Success, a ministry that helps felons turn their lives around and re-enter society.

Memphis Police Officer Joy Knowlton (center) acts out a personal story with fellow officers and ex-offenders from LifeLine to Success.

“In the Playback method, someone shares a reflection or observation or personal story. We have a team of actors and a musician, and we bring those stories to life on the spot using music and metaphor,” said Playback Memphis Director Virginia Murphy.

The group met for 10 weeks and shared personal stories from their lives. Playback Memphis members taught the participants how to use improv to act out those stories.

“We listened to ex-offenders tell stories of their childhoods, about growing up in difficult situations. And a lot of the officers had those very same stories, including myself, growing up in a home with domestic violence,” said Memphis Police Officer Joy Knowlton. “The only difference between us is some of us turned right and some of us turned left.”

In the end, friendships were formed, and any distrust between the two groups faded away.

“Our clients found a way to express themselves that they didn’t even know existed. It allowed them to remove a lot of stress and reveal some their experiences,” said LifeLine to Success Executive Director DeAndre Brown. “Doing that with police officers made it even better. We had those people who used to run from police, and to be able to meet with them every week on purpose was a big deal.”

The group of police officers and felons acted out some of their stories for the public in a performance in early December. But the work didn’t stop there. Murphy’s goal, in getting the two unlikely allies together, was to get them to assist in Playback’s plan to work with troubled youth in Frayser.

“We wanted to do a project where police and ex-offenders could come together, and if you could break down barriers and bring some healing and transformation between those two groups who we typically don’t think of as having harmonious relationships, they can go out and have an impact on young people,” Murphy said. “They will have a reach Playback wouldn’t have on its own.”

Playback runs an anti-bullying program called Be the Peace in area schools. And they hope to establish it in the Achievement School District in Frayser soon. When they do, the police officers and ex-offenders who participated in the fall session will join them in that work.

“We want to take the Playback model into the schools in our neighborhood to help children use conflict resolution skills,” Brown said. “We have identified a Frayser Success Zone around the elementary school across the street and the high school across the street.”

In addition to helping Frayser kids, Knowlton said she hopes the Playback model may eventually expand within the police department.

“This needs to be an experience for every officer. I would like to see the [Memphis police] training academy give officers a chance to see Playback to help officers touch back with their roots and remember why they chose this career,” Knowlton said. “For me, [Playback offered] a reminder of why I chose to be a police officer and give back to the community.”

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Opinion

Council Searches for New Sources of Money

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It was late Tuesday afternoon, and the City Council was hoping to knock off a little early to get the jump on the Fourth of July holiday, but instead members wound up moving ahead on some taxing matters — as in sales taxes, gas taxes, and “voluntary” taxes on nonprofits and businesses that get tax breaks.

All of the matters are still in preliminary stages, so the votes Tuesday merely moved them a little closer to up-or-down final votes, or “third readings” as they are called. But the council seems to be serious about finding new revenue sources to balance the budget and keep from making cuts in services and employees.

Here’s a look at each possibility.

Councilman Shea Flinn, with the backing of Mayor A C Wharton, wants to give Memphis voters the option to raise the local sales tax from 2.25 cents to 2.75 cents, which would make the total sales tax 9.75 cents. Voters would have to approve it in the November election, but for that to happen, the council would have to take further action. On Tuesday the second reading of the measure was delayed. Flinn said he is fairly confident that the proposal will make it to the voters. But he also knows that some of his fellow members will not vote for it because they fear being branded as “pro-tax” which could make them vulnerable to future political foes.

Councilman Ed Ford Jr. wants to give voters another tax option — a one penny increase in the gasoline tax, with the increase dedicated to budget expenses for public transportation. This also has to pass council a couple more times, and there is some question whether the money can be given straight to MATA, which already gets millions of dollars a year in city funding. Like the sales tax, the gas tax has some appeal because it hits non-Memphians as well as Memphians, and is a “voluntary” tax to the extent that purchases can be controlled.

Councilmen Janice Fullilove and Lee Harris think the city should look at nonprofits and companies in Memphis that get tax abatements through the PILOT or payment-in-lieu-of-taxes programs. PILOTs freeze taxes at pre-development levels for a certain number of years. The nonprofits, Fullilove said, “use the same services” as tax-paying individuals and businesses. Boston and other cities have successfully persuaded “eds and meds” to make voluntary payments to help raise city revenue. The proposal is in the early stages in Memphis. A committee will be formed, but the idea has popular appeal as evidenced by the union lobbying for it at the unified school board meeting last week. The council won’t have leverage until the nonprofits and PILOT businesses come before it seeking something. Then we will see who’s serious.

Councilman Kemp Conrad wants members to approve an ordinance that would amend the city charter to require the mayor and council to adopt a five-year strategic business plan and a six-year consolidated operating and capital improvements budget. Wharton has floated a similar proposal, which is a favorite of business group advisers. The problem is that politics is always more or less a seat-of-the-pants operation. And over the years the council has yielded much of its authority to quasi-public agencies like the Riverfront Development Corporation to take over former city operations. Tax-cutters on the council regularly fall in line when the such agencies come around for their annual review and subsidy.

Give the council credit for this: On a day when many Memphians were leaving work early, they stayed well into the evening to do the people’s business. They voted against a special use permit for a pawn shop at Perkins and Knight Arnold, which is a serious issue for members and their constituents in urban districts. Harold Collins was especially blunt in his opposition, comparing pawn shops to blight.

The council had a healthy discussion of the dreaded car inspection stations. There is strong “feds be damned” sentiment to give all Memphians, not just poor people, a break on the annoying and expensive emissions-related “check engine” light breakdown. Inspection, of course, is as much an expenditure of time as well as money, and both investments can be considerable if the light-related problem has to be fixed in order to pass. Conrad spoke for many of us when he said “Anything we can do to get our citizens out of this ridiculous process, I’m for it.”

Finally, in the most touching moments of the meeting, the council and onlookers gave a very enthusiastic standing ovation to two people: Dr. Mary McDonald for her 35 years of stellar work with the Catholic Schools of Memphis and Deandre Brown and the members of Lifeline to Success, winners of the 2012 Large Group Volunteer of the Year Award. Some 25 members of the “Blight Patrol” in Frayser, all of them wearing lime-green t-shirts, came to the meeting and did a rousing group recitation of their “I am not my crime” coda, as Brown barked out the cadence. Members of the team, including Brown, are former criminal offenders looking to restart their lives in a Christian program working in one of the toughest parts of Memphis.

“You are the model for what this country should be looking for in a second-chance program,” said Council Chairman Bill Morrison.

Brown said he is determined to make Frayser “a nice place to live.” For more on his story, here is a Flyer interview done last year. Also see the group’s inspiring video on YouTube with the lines “I gotta clean up, what I messed up, I’m starting my life over again.”

Fine organization and good thought for everyone on this Fourth of July.