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David Trone on Crime
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Leader of Second Chance Task Force, improve reentry outcomes
David is the leader of the new Second Chance Task Force to promote policies that will improve reentry outcomes for returning citizens--
working to implement the First Step Act, clear eligible criminal records, and 'ban the box' on job applications.
Source: 2024 Maryland Senate campaign website DavidTrone.com
, Jul 31, 2023
History of working with ACLU to help reform justice system
I've supported the ACLU's efforts to fix our justice system. In 2015 the ACLU created the Trone Center for Justice and Equality in recognition of June and my longtime support. I'm also proud to chair the ACLU's Private Sector and Education
Advisory Council. The council released a report showing how hiring returning citizens is good for business. The report uses data from my own company, where we've banned the box and hired over 100 returning citizens. They are some of our best employees.
Source: 2018 MD-6 House campaign website DavidTronecom
, Oct 29, 2018
Criminal justice system discriminates against minorities
I've supported the ACLU for 20 years, and in Congress I will continue fighting to fix our criminal justice system that discriminates against people of color. I'm 100% pro-choice, and
I support equal pay and paid family leave. I support the Full Equality Act to fight discrimination against LGBTQ people.
Source: League of Women Voters 2018 House MD-6 Questionnaire
, Sep 9, 2018
Asked Biden Administration to abolish federal death penalty.
Justice Trone wrote the Court's decision on Federal Death Penalty Abolition Act on Dec 15, 2020:
Legislative summary of H.R.4052: This bill prohibits the imposition of a death penalty sentence for a violation of federal law. A person sentenced to death before enactment of this bill must be resentenced.
Press release and letter on Connolly.House.gov: Capital punishment is unjust, racist and defective. The United States stands alone among its peers in executing its own citizens, a barbaric punishment that denies the dignity and humanity of all people and is disproportionately applied to people who are Black, Latinx, and poor. In their letter, the lawmakers called on President-Elect Biden to affirm his commitment to eliminating the death penalty--as laid out in his criminal justice reform plan--by ending it through executive action on Day 1 of his administration. The lawmakers also made clear that in the 117th Congress, they will continue to work to advance H.R. 4052, legislation to permanently abolish the death penalty.
ProPublica summary by Isaac Arnsdorf 12/23/20: Throughout the campaign, Trump highlighted executions as a contrast to Joe Biden`s opposition to the death penalty, reinforcing Trump`s `law and order` message. The Justice Department has killed 10 people since July, with three more executions scheduled before Biden`s inauguration. `Death penalty all the way,` Trump said at a February 2016 campaign event. `I`ve always supported the death penalty. I don`t even understand people that don`t.`
Until this year, the Justice Department hadn`t executed anyone since 2003. A drug that most states and the federal government used in lethal injections, a sedative called sodium pentothal, became unavailable because the sole American manufacturer stopped making it. Shortly after Trump`s presidency began, his first attorney general, Jeff Sessions, [pushed] to resolve these issues so that the federal Bureau of Prisons could resume executions.
Source: Supreme Court case 20-HR4052 argued on Jul 25, 2019
Sponsored stricter rules for police accountability.
Trone co-sponsored George Floyd Justice in Policing Act
This bill addresses policing practices and law enforcement accountability:
- lowers the criminal intent standard--from willful to knowing or reckless--to convict a law enforcement officer for misconduct in a federal prosecution,
- limits qualified immunity as a defense to liability in a private civil action against a law enforcement officer, and
- grants administrative subpoena power to the Department of Justice (DOJ) in pattern-or-practice investigations.
Rep. Elise Stefanik in OPPOSITION (3/1/21): I voted against H.R. 1280--this bill poses a grave danger to law-abiding police officers, as it would eliminate qualified immunity protections, lower the standard for federal civil rights lawsuits, and limit access to necessary equipment during emergencies and natural disasters. Democrats rushed this bill to the House Floor without accepting any input from Republicans, expert testimony, or significant data. I am proud to sponsor the JUSTICE Act with Senator
Tim Scott, to provide necessary reforms to end police brutality while protecting our law-abiding officers.
OnTheIssues explanation of `qualified immunity`: `Qualified immunity` means that police officers (and other government officials) cannot be sued for actions on duty, unless knowingly taking unreasonable actions. This bill would limit `qualified immunity,` which means the family in cases like George Floyd`s could sue the police for civil damages.
Biden Administration in SUPPORT (3/1/21): We must begin by rebuilding trust between law enforcement and the people they are entrusted to serve and protect. We cannot rebuild that trust if we do not hold police officers accountable for abuses of power and tackle systemic misconduct--and systemic racism--in police departments.
Legislative Outcome: Passed House 220-212-0 on March 3, 2021, rollcall #60; received in Senate on March 9; no further Senate action during 2021.
Source: H.R.1280 21-HR1280 on Feb 24, 2021
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Other candidates on Crime: |
David Trone on other issues: |
MD Gubernatorial: Ashwani Jain Dan Cox Doug Gansler John B. King Kelly M. Schulz Larry Hogan Peter Franchot Robin Ficker Rushern Baker Thomas Perez Wes Moore MD Senatorial: Angela Alsobrooks Benjamin Cardin Chris Chaffee Chris Van Hollen Colin Byrd Larry Hogan Robin Ficker
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