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Jeff Landry became governor of Louisiana last month. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP
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Jeff Landry became governor of Louisiana last month. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP
Louisiana



‘UNCONSCIONABLE’ CRIMINAL JUSTICE BILLS COULD FUEL SOARING INCARCERATION IN
LOUISIANA

Reform advocates condemn raft of measures expected to pass under new far-right
governor



Oliver Laughland in New Orleans
@oliverlaughland
Mon 19 Feb 2024 07.00 ESTLast modified on Mon 19 Feb 2024 07.03 EST
Copy link



Louisiana’s Republican-dominated state legislature is poised to enact a swathe
of new criminal justice measures as a special legislative session convenes on
Monday, leaving reform advocates concerned about soaring rates of incarceration
that may follow.

The session, called by the state’s new far-right governor, Jeff Landry, will
consider two dozen items including broad restrictions on parole eligibility,
measures to resume executions, the lowering of the age limit for adult
prosecutions, and changes to post-conviction procedures often used to remedy
wrongful convictions or excessive sentences.



The results are likely to undo hard-won bipartisan reform efforts in 2017, which
helped shrink the state’s prison population by about a quarter and led to
Louisiana losing the title of America’s most incarcerated state, with the rate
of imprisonment slipping below Mississippi’s in recent years.



Landry, the state’s former attorney general, came to office in January after a
campaign centered on hardline law and order. A former sheriff’s deputy, he was
sworn into office in a ceremony lined by flags associated with the “blue lives
matter” movement that aligns with law enforcement and is often associated with
white nationalism, marking the end of eight years of Democratic incumbency in
the deep south state.

In announcing the session on 8 February, Landry argued a raft of new laws would
“repeal soft-on-crime policies that enable criminals and hurt our communities”
and pledged to “make our state safe again”.

While rates of violent crime in Louisiana have long been among the highest in
the nation, the state has seen a significant decline since the end of the
Covid-19 pandemic. And as details of the proposed new laws came into focus,
advocates expressed alarm at a number of severe measures they argued would do
little to improve public safety, continue to disproportionately affect Black
communities and cost the state billions to enforce.

Republican victory in Louisiana signals hard-right turn for once bipartisan
state
Read more

“Our elected officials are pushing strategies that assume violence will always
happen and there’s nothing they can do to prevent it other than just punish
people,” said Sarah Omojola, director of the non-profit Vera Institute of
Justice’s Louisiana office. “But what people in Louisiana really need and want
is prevention.”



Among the bills state lawmakers are set to consider is one that would expand
methods of execution, including legalizing the use of nitrogen hypoxia, the
controversial suffocation procedure recently used for the first time in Alabama.
The bill would also maintain the state’s use of electrocution as an available
method and give confidentiality to providers of drugs for lethal injections.

Although nearly 60 people still sit on Louisiana’s death row, the state has not
executed anyone since 2010. Its former Democratic governor, John Bel Edwards,
announced shortly before his final term ended that he was opposed to capital
punishment, although he failed to meaningfully intervene during a mass clemency
effort last year.

Other bills would lead to longer periods of incarceration for broad categories
of cases by removing parole eligibility for extended periods of time to those
deemed “dangerous offenders” by the state. Such a definition could be imposed
not only for those convicted of violent crimes but also by raising previous
criminal records, conduct during previous periods of incarceration and “any
previous efforts to rehabilitate”.

Landry has also encouraged lawmakers to change the rules of parole board
hearings to require unanimous decisions before granting applications.

The legislature will also consider undoing recent legislation that raised the
age for most adult prosecutions to 18 in order to protect juveniles from abuse
and harsh conditions in adult prison. It will also examine a bill that would
significantly tighten rules on post-conviction relief for those seeking to
overturn a conviction or sentence after exhausting appeals, by removing local
prosecutors’ rights to waiving mandatory time limits to file applications.

Post-conviction relief has been a key tool in local prosecutors’ offices,
notably in New Orleans, seeking to address past harms in the criminal justice
system by re-examining historical cases involving prosecutorial misconduct, due
process violations, and sentencing that was disproportionate as well as racially
biased.

“This slate of items Landry has proposed are dangerous, expensive and
disingenuous,” said Samantha Kennedy, executive director of the Promise of
Justice Initiative, a New Orleans-based advocacy and legal group. “I think what
it does is cover up misconduct and excessive sentencing mostly coming from the
1990s.”

Kennedy added: “These cases are fraught with all kinds of problems, and that is
why we have a parole system and all these other checks and balances that this
special session is proposing to destroy. It is unconscionable.”

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