Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Globe Xmas Gift: Singing Christmas Carols

The blogger is Rocker for a reason:

"Young musicians get lessons in the law; Teens learn to protect work, avoid misuse" by James H. Burnett III |  Globe Staff, December 25, 2013

The setting was the august boardroom of Goodwin Procter, a global law firm based in Boston, and the topics were the potentially dry-as-dust issues of copyrights, intellectual property rights, and fair use.

The potential clients? Seventy teenagers, engaged, enthusiastic, and most certainly culturally tuned in, from some of Greater Boston’s poorer communities.

As members of the Music & Youth Initiative, a nonprofit music training and mentoring program, they joined with three lawyers on a recent Thursday evening to understand their rights as songwriters. The teens peppered the attorneys with a variety of questions facing young musicians today: Can members of the public copy and download music they find in social media forums? What’s the legal recourse to plagiarism? How much can one “borrow” from another’s work without it being theft?

The overarching themes were avoiding legal trouble and making sure your creations can’t be weasled away from you....

I paid -- twice -- for access to the paper.

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The rage helps warm me, though.

"Mass. SJC bars no-parole life terms for youths; Says brains of juveniles not yet fully developed" by Sarah Schweitzer and Michael Levenson |  Globe Staff, December 24, 2013

The state’s highest court struck down life sentences without parole for juveniles on Tuesday, saying scientific research shows that lifelong imprisonment for youths is cruel and unusual because their brains are “not fully developed.”

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision is retroactive, meaning that, as one example, John Odgren, the suburban special needs student who stabbed 15-year-old James F. Alenson in the bathroom at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School on Jan. 19, 2007, and received a mandatory life sentence, now could have a chance of parole one day.

“We are very hopeful that the parole board is going to examine these kids’ lives carefully and will be giving them a real meaningful opportunity for release,” said Patty Garin, Odgren’s attorney.

But some district attorneys said they were concerned about the ruling and would argue against parole in some cases.

Struck a sour note.

The decision is a marked reversal for Massachusetts, where juveniles found guilty of murder have faced some of the harshest laws in the nation. The decision also is notable for its reliance on the growing field of research into the juvenile brain.

We really gotta get rid of the liberal stereotype because other than gay marriage, this state is the $ame as the re$t -- or worse -- in so many ways.

“Simply put, because the brain of a juvenile is not fully developed, either structurally or functionally, by the age of eighteen, a judge cannot find with confidence that a particular offender, at that point in time, is irretrievably depraved,” the court wrote. “Therefore, it follows that the judge cannot ascertain, with any reasonable degree of certainty, whether imposition of this most severe punishment is warranted.”

“Given the unique characteristics of juvenile offenders, they should be afforded, in appropriate circumstances, the opportunity to be considered for parole suitability,” the court wrote in its decision.

The ruling goes farther than the Supreme Court decision in 2012 that struck down automatic sentences of life without parole for juveniles.

That decision, in the case of Miller v. Alabama, involving a 14-year-youth convicted of murder, declared that such automatic sentences were unconstitutional under the ban on “cruel and unusual punishment” in the Eighth Amendment.

The SJC’s decision also struck down discretionary sentences of life without parole for juveniles.

Because the Massachusetts high court’s decision is retroactive, prisoners sentenced as juveniles will “at the appropriate time” be afforded a parole hearing.

Lawyers said such inmates will have to have served at least 15 years before being considered for parole.

There are currently 63 inmates in Massachusetts who were sentenced when they were juveniles to life sentences without the possibility of parole for first-degree murder.

Garin, Odgren’s attorney, said her client still has an appeal pending of his sentence, but should that fail, he will seek parole.

The decision drew immediate praise from Governor Deval Patrick, who in September signed legislation that raises the age of juvenile jurisdiction from 17 to 18 and has pushed to reduce the number of teenagers sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

“I applaud today’s Supreme Judicial Court’s ruling,” the governor said in a statement. “Young people, even ones who commit terrible crimes, are developmentally and now constitutionally different from adults. Our SJC has wisely held that, while violent felons will be held accountable, youthful ones deserve every opportunity for rehabilitation.”

Except kids are growing up so fast now with the proliferation of $ocial media.

Some district attorneys questioned the decision.

Essex District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett said the ruling will strip away the closure that victims’ families believed they had gained.

“I am concerned for families who thought they had finality about their loved ones being murdered,” said Blodgett, who is president of the Massachusetts District Attorneys Association. “Now they have to go through these parole hearings.”

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said in a statement, “We are mindful of the literature on young adults’ brain development, and we already exercise great discretion in charging juveniles with murder. But we’re also keenly aware of the cases at issue here. Some fact patterns demand life imprisonment. Some defendants do not deserve parole. We will argue — as often and as forcefully as necessary — against parole in those cases.”

For years, Massachusetts has had some of the most punitive penalties in the country for juvenile offenders convicted of murder.

Two decades ago a series of brutal murders galvanized public demands for harsher penalties. In 1996, legislators responded with a law that mandated that juveniles 14 years and older charged with murder be tried as adults.

Because Massachusetts’ penalties for first-degree murder is mandatory life without parole juveniles found guilty of that crime faced a lifetime of incarceration.

As a result, Massachusetts became a leader in the number of youths facing life sentences without parole.

Why do we always lead in the wrong things?

As of last year, the majority of youth with such sentences were concentrated in Massachusetts and four other states: California, Louisiana, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, according to the Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth.

Aren't those places where they had school-to-prison pipelines?

“People thought if we have an extreme response, kids would stop doing bad things, and that has not turned out to be true,” said Naoka Carey, executive director of Citizens for Juvenile Justice, a nonprofit based in Massachusetts.

Carey said the SJC ruling brings Massachusetts back to the middle — she noted that other states that have abolished life without parole for juveniles include Wyoming, Colorado, and Texas. “We’re in some conservative company,” she said.

How embarrassing!

State legislative leaders said they plan to move quickly to overhaul juvenile sentencing laws that might conflict with Tuesday’s ruling....

They always react late and prescribe the wrong things. Haven't they learned, or is this just a way of them spinning wheels back and forth to justify their jobs?

Among pending cases that could be impacted is that of 14-year-old Philip Chism, who has been indicted on murder and other charges in the killing of math teacher Colleen Ritzer at Danvers High School. Chism has pleaded not guilty.

See: Slow Saturday Special: Disturbing Details of Danvers Death

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Also seeOver 60 offenders could have sentences altered

I don't know what the answers are, folks. 

How many of those kids were on pre$cription pharmaceuticals and for how long?