Dear John,
Imagine paying $10 a day to be monitored by the police.
Hundreds of people in St. Louis are forced to do this. For these innocent
people awaiting trial, electronic monitoring bracelets cost them $300 up
front, $10 per day, plus a $50 installation fee. People often have to
start second jobs, sell TVs and laptops, or take kids out of childcare
just to pay these fees.^1
And all of this money goes to a private company Eastern Missouri
Alternative Sentencing Services (EMASS). This company is profiting off of
innocent, low-income Black people under the facade of offering
“alternatives” to money bail.
The St. Louis court system's business partnership with EMASS is
undermining our work to transform criminal justice, and we won’t stand for
it. We’re training community members in St. Louis as Court Watchers so we
can collect proof of the electronic monitoring crisis and force lawmakers
to confront it. Our program is scheduled to run through November, but we
already know it will take more time to win. [ [link removed] ]Will you donate $5 so we
can continue our Court Watch program to expose this blatant exploitation
of innocent Black people?
Electronic monitoring puts people in an electronic cage. If you’re wearing
an EMASS electronic ankle bracelet, you have to charge it for an hour and
a half every day while it’s still on your leg, making it difficult to work
full-time jobs or travel for extended amounts of time. In a 2011 survey,
22% of people reported being fired from a job because of their ankle
bracelets.^2 And that’s if they’ll even hire you in the first place with a
bulky bracelet in plain view. Over 200 people in St. Louis were forced to
wear these bracelets last year.^1
To push back, we need the data to prove how this is impacting Black people
in St. Louis. Since this information isn’t easily available to the public,
we’re gathering it ourselves. So far, we’ve trained over 30 St. Louis
community members in our Court Watch program: they attend hearings and
take notes on every decisions judges make, including when people are put
on electronic monitors.
In November, we’ll be releasing a public report of our findings, which
will:
* Ensure activists and lawmakers in St. Louis have statistics about the
courts to help them back up their campaigns to end electronic
monitoring and other racist practices
* Give us the data we need to push Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell to
call on judges to reject electronic cages, holding him to his campaign
promise of transforming criminal justice in St. Louis County
* Show judges in St. Louis County that the public is watching them, and
that we will hold them accountable if they continue to target
low-income Black communities
It's rapidly nearing time to launch the next phase of our campaign to end
electronic monitoring in St. Louis. [ [link removed] ]Will you chip in $5 to help us keep
our Court Watch program going after our report releases?
Our work has already uncovered some alarming patterns. Different judges
are inconsistent, some assigning electronic monitors all the time while
others rarely do. Some waive the monitor fees, others don’t. Some issue
arrest warrants if people don’t pay their debt to EMASS, others turn their
head.^1 These choices are all in the hands of individual judges who can
only be held accountable if people know what they’re doing.
Our Court Watch program is the most powerful tool we have to expose
electronic cages for the racist, profiteering scam they are. Your support
will help us implement the findings from our November report, train more
people in St. Louis to be Court Watchers, and hire more staff to run the
program.
[ [link removed] ]Please-- help us tear down these electronic cages. Donate $5 to keep
our St. Louis Court Watch program going now.
Until justice is real,
Arisha, Jenni, Charles, Daniel, Tammi, Scott and the Color Of Change team
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Sources
1. "Digital jail: How electronic monitoring drives defendants into debt",
Pro Publica, 3 July 2019,
[ [link removed] ][link removed]
2. "Electronic Monitoring", National Institute of Justice, September
2011, [ [link removed] ][link removed]
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[ [link removed] ]Color Of Change is building a movement to elevate the voices of Black
folks and our allies, and win real social and political change. [ [link removed] ]Help
keep our movement strong.
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