The Tension Between the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Roles as Leaders of the Abolition Movement and Attorneys for Individual Death Row Inmates

 

PLEASE PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO THE INSTRUSTIONS AND ANSWER EVERYTHING THAT IS ASKED!

THE BOOK where this information MUST COME FROM is
“Evan J. Mandery, A Wild Justice (W.W. Norton, 2013)”

https://annas-archive.org/md5/eb9860c4b08faa9f0c2da04c428be4ab
Is it possible for lawyers to represent both a cause and individuals? With reference to at least two specific instances, explain the tension between LDF’s role as leaders of the abolition movement and also attorneys for individual death row inmates. Explain how LDF resolved this tension in each instance. Offer your own critical assessment of LDF’s attempt to balance these roles and whether the tension is fundamentally irreconcilable.

The Constitutional Issues Surrounding Evidence and Confession in the Case of John Jones

 

 

John Jones has hired your law firm to represent him on charges of distribution of methamphetamine. (You chose state or federal court, apply the applicable Rules of Evidence, AZ or FRE). John tells you during the client intake interview that he was driving his brand new Tesla and had not received his plates for his car. The paper tag must have fallen off in the wind or the rain, when it was monsooning out. He was pulled over by law enforcement. John was kind of nervous and sweating, so the officer asked him to step out of the car and began searching. The officer searched everywhere, including the glove compartment, center console, and the trunk! John admits to you that he was nervous because he knew he had 2 pounds of methamphetamine in a gym bag in the trunk. Of course the drug dog found the gym bag and the methamphetamine. John didn’t know what was in the bag, but he’s been helping out his friend, Thomas. Thomas had asked him to take the gym bag to some guy over in North Scottsdale. John hadn’t been able to get over there yet. He’d always wondered what Thomas had given him, but he was too scared to look in the gym bag. John is scared of Thomas. John blurted out that the gym bag was his to the officer. The officer hadn’t asked, John just said it.

After that, the officer started asking him questions, and John told the officer everything. John told the officer about his friend Thomas (weird the officer seemed to know Thomas), and about taking the bag to North Scottsdale. (the officer even knew the address is North Scottsdale! So weird!). John was trying to be as helpful as possible to the officer and told him everything. The officer didn’t say a word, John just blurted it all out. John is scared and really doesn’t want to go to prison as he’s not a drug dealer, he was just being helpful, but now Thomas won’t even return his calls! Rude!

What constitutional issues can you raise as far the evidence and confession?

 

Leadership Strategies in Correctional Facility Management

 

Scenario

You have received a position that requires you to oversee a group of 30 correctional officers. This job will be challenging, because these officers are noted for holding negative, and sometimes even hostile, attitudes toward the institution’s leadership, as well as the prisoners they oversee.

Your job is to try to create a better rapport between the officers and prisoners in an attempt to ensure better behavior from the prisoners as a whole. The facility is designed to hold 1,200 male inmates, but it currently houses 1,376. Most are classified as medium security, though there is a minimum-security dormitory that is used to reward good behavior. You have been assigned to oversee one of the three minimum-security units. It houses 345 inmates in a space designed to hold 275. All indoor recreation areas have been converted into makeshift dormitories, and portable toilets have recently been installed in the only accessible exercise yard.

The prison that you have been assigned to has also received many complaints of abuse from prisoners, and you are directed to correct this problem with the officers. These complaints range from relatively minor issues, such as failure to distribute mail in a timely manner, to serious violations, including deliberate denial of access to daily meals. The unit is currently down six officers, which has disrupted shift schedules, and the administration recently increased mandatory overtime and announced suspension of all vacation and personal leave until further notice. The CO shortage has also made it difficult to move inmates for meals, medical care, visitation, and classes. Officers have also complained that they are not getting breaks and that they do not have the opportunity to eat, go to the bathroom, or sit down, sometimes for an entire 12-hour shift.

What challenges do you foresee in overseeing the correctional officers? Why? How can you apply the principles of the path-goal theory to ensure the success of the task entrusted to you?
How will you use supportive and directive leadership to motivate the correctional officers assigned to you?
Can you apply the situational leadership theory to improve the relationship with your officers? If yes, how? If not, then why? Can situational leadership be applied to the inmates?
How can participative and achievement-oriented leadership motivate these officers? Can it be used to motivate the inmates?
What are the situational variables that might affect the application of the path-goal theory of leadership?

Examining the Leadership Style of Judge Judy

Select a well-known personality—judge, lawyer, correctional administrator, or police chief—in criminal justice and talk about this person’s leadership style in relation to the leadership theories discussed in your book.

Answer the following questions in a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation:

Which of the following theories is most suitable for describing this leader’s behavior?
Situational leadership
Multiple linkage model
Cognitive resource theory
Support your choice with reasons and explain why the other theories are not suitable.
How can the leadership substitute’s theory be applied to explain the situational variables for this leader?
Do you think the path-goal theory explains the strategies of influence used by this leader? Why?
Did this leader receive too much credit for the agency’s success, or do you believe that he or she could have been successful despite the subordinates? Why?

 

Policy Alternative Comparative Analysis designed to persuade your government board

Write a 700-800 word Policy Alternative Comparative Analysis designed to persuade your government board on what to do to change the policy you analyzed and how these changes can be best communicated throughout your community.

Begin your analysis with an executive summary (350–500 words) that synthesizes the information you developed for your policy analysis presentation from Week 4:
Describe the local government and community (City of ABC, County ABC, etc) and provide a brief description of the policy and the problem it addresses. Clearly identify and state the problem.
Describe the various stakeholders and target populations involved in and affected by the problem that you will involve in the policy analysis process.
Identify and explain what factors relative to the problem might influence the analysis process.
Discuss the following: where the problem exists, how it developed, major cause, and any other significant information about the problem that should be considered in your analysis.

Use this summary to remind the reader what you are analyzing and why.

Examining the Impact of Outside Funding on Political Campaigns

1. How could/would candidates fund their elections if outside group funding was not allowed?
2. Should outside funding such as PAC’s be allowed?
3. Does outside funding make a difference in political races?
https://www.npr.org/2022/10/22/1129976565/dark-money-groups-midterm-elections-republicans-democrats-senate

 

 

Hate Crime Laws and Social Work Advocacy

LEARNING RESOURCES
• DiNitto, D. M., & Johnson, D. H. (2016). Social welfare: Politics and public policy (8th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson.
o Chapter 11, “The Challenges of a Diverse Society: Gender and Sexual Orientation” (pp. 427–470)
• Lind, A. (2004). Legislating the family: Heterosexist bias in social welfare policy frameworks http://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jrlsasw31&div=45&id=&page.. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 31(4), 21–35. Retrieved from http://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jrlsasw31&div=45&id=&page=
• United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner. (n.d.). About LGBTI people and human rights https://www.ohchr.org/en/sexual-orientation-and-gender-identity/about-lgbti-people-and-human-rights.. Retrieved from https://www.ohchr.org/en/sexual-orientation-and-gender-identity/about-lgbti-people-and-human-rights
• United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner. (2017b). The Universal Declaration of Human Rights. http://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Pages/UDHRIndex.aspx.Retrieved from http://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Pages/UDHRIndex.aspx
Watch the A Prosecutor’s Stand video in the Learning Resources and focus on the “People of the State of California v. Lionel Jackson, Maurice J. Perry” segment that tells the story of Mia Tu Mutch.

Post
• Describe your state’s laws on hate crimes and which groups are included in the law.
• Explain whether there are certain groups you feel should be afforded special protection. Explain why or why not.
• If your state does not have a hate crime law, explain how you as a social worker could advocate for such a law.
• If your state does have a hate crime law, explain how you as a social worker could help advocate for similar laws elsewhere.