Why This Prison Created Father-Daughter Dances for Inmates
Inspired to turn their lives around, these dads attended parenting classes to attend a fancy father-daughter dance.
Over the last five years, San Francisco's Presiding Judge John Stewart and his colleagues have dismissed over 66,000 arrest warrants for quality-of-life crimes, such as sleeping on the sidewalk.
His logic? People living in poverty do not deserve to be put in jail just because they're too poor to pay a fine.
San Francisco judges are reportedly being encouraged to cite treatment and rehabilitation options rather than fines, though court officials have been receiving criticism for dismissing the crimes in the first place.
According to the San Francisco Gate, Martin Halloran, head of the police union, told Chronicle columnists that the court was "sending a message that there is no accountability for what you have done, and the laws on the books can be violated with no repercussions. I don't think it's what the public wants."
Judge Stewart, however, told SF Gate that though the people have a right to be upset, he and his colleagues do not plan on enforcing punishment against the homeless population, saying "it's the right thing to do."
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