Military Sons Tell Mom Not Every Soldier Gets Care Packages Like Them So She Sends 10,000 Boxes
LeAnn Boudwine couldn't believe it when her deployed sons said that some soldiers had never received a single package in the mail.
Over 640,000 people will no longer have to be afraid of being arrested for minor nonviolent crimes – such as walking a dog without a leash, open container drinking, littering, being in a park after hours, and spitting – that they committed decades ago.
Offenders might find themselves under arrest after reporting a crime, or after calling in a fender bender. Potential employers might also see the warrant during a background check. Additionally, legislators said that the arrest warrants wasted valuable police time.
"The people who have these warrants have not been in trouble with the law for a decade or more, and it is time that they are given the opportunity to live productive lives, free from summonses hanging over their heads," Darcel Clark, the Bronx district attorney, said in a statement.
"Someone who owes a $25 fine should not be arrested and brought down to central booking and spend 20 or 24 hours in a cell next to a hardened criminal. That's not fair, and that's not justice," said acting Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, according to the Associated Press.
(WATCH the video below)
#video @BrooklynDA requests vacating thousands of low level summonses #1010WINS pic.twitter.com/OhjPZTyVHQ
— Juliet Papa (@winsjuliet) August 9, 2017
#video @BrooklynDA requests vacating thousands of low level summonses #1010WINS pic.twitter.com/OhjPZTyVHQ
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