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  • Harsh Realities

    HARSH REALITIES
    By Joe Piasecki

    Pasadena Weekly
    http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/det ail/harsh_realities/6982/
    March 5 2009
    CA

    Students discuss crime and punishment at Washington Middle School
    screening of 'Juvies'

    Some 3,000 juveniles are currently behind bars, with 20,000 more on
    some form of criminal probation, according to the LA County Probation
    Department.

    In 1999, Leslie Neale became a writing teacher at Los Angeles Central
    Juvenile Hall, and over time continued working with juvenile offenders,
    developing relationships with several young men and women who had
    been sentenced to years of hard time.

    Later, Neale became involved with a project in which 12 juvenile
    offenders were given video equipment training and asked to document
    their lives.

    One of them was Duc, a high school student who had driven a car from
    which a gun was fired. Although no one was hurt, the boy was tried
    as an adult and received a sentence of 35 years to life. Another was
    Anait, a 14-year-old Armenian immigrant who was locked up for seven
    years because she gave a ride to two friends who later were involved
    in a fight that killed a boy.

    Neale came to believe that the punishments dealt to these and several
    other young people were overly harsh for the crimes they had been
    involved with, and began work on "Juvies," a 2004 documentary that
    splices their stories with commentary questioning the fairness of
    the juvenile justice system itself.

    "I think the Duc story impacted me the most," Neale said. "I was
    just there to teach and I had no plans to make a documentary, and
    then I realized people did not know what was happening. I was just
    like everybody else; I thought gangbangers were out to kill everybody."

    Neale said it took more than a year for the courts to allow her to
    film the kids. "I used to joke that we had no problem sending kids to
    prison as young as 14, but don't dare try and photograph them," said
    Neale of the film, which includes narration by actor Mark Wahlberg
    and hip-hop recording artist Mos Def.

    "I heard Mark had a history as a juvenile offender. We asked his
    agent and sent them a rough cut, and he said absolutely. He said,
    that could have been me. With Mos Def, I was just trying to find a
    voice to read the poetry, and he immediately said absolutely."

    On Feb. 26 members of Washington Middle School's Student Peace
    Ambassadors Project, a violence-prevention initiative by the nonprofit
    El Centro de Accion Social, hosted a screening of "Juvies" to encourage
    fellow students to make positive choices.

    "It's a powerful documentary. It shows the reality of what happens
    when you get caught up in the juvenile criminal justice system. You
    can end up doing life when you're a kid," said El Centro Director
    Randy Jurado Ertll.

    "When someone's been charged with a felony, it's hard to get that
    off their record or for them to get a job and live the rest of their
    lives. So many young people, especially in middle school, are unaware
    of the consequences. We want to help them make the right choices,"
    he continued.

    The Student Peace Ambassadors Project was established at Washington
    Middle School and John Muir High School six months ago after five
    students at each school were chosen to attend a conflict resolution
    workshop performed by the nonprofit Western Justice Center. Those
    students then recruited others into the group, which has organized
    speaking engagements by community figures such as Pasadena Police
    Cmdr. John Perez, who oversees the officers patrolling Pasadena high
    schools and middle schools, and anti-gang activist Tim Rhambo.

    The initiative is also a push to keep kids in school.

    "A lot of times, the reason students drop out is because they join
    a gang or do other things they aren't supposed to be doing," Ertll
    said. "We don't want them to destroy their own futures."
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