Six observations and a question


My mind has only partially been on anything criminal-justice related, lately, as I finished up the second of my little neighborhood history zines (pre-sale coming soon), and settled back in to Austin routines during the holiday season, after 4.5 months in Mexico. But as 2024 unfolds, here are six observations and a question.

1) I was never a great fan of the “progressive prosecutor” movement, both from a conceptual and a strategic perspective. Conceptually, I believe the prosecutor’s role is inherently regressive. Their only power — to seek state punishment for rule violators — is a regressive function. IMO, there’s no “progressive” way to do that job. Strategically, I believe, based on reams of polling data, that criminal-justice reform doesn’t consistently win in majoritarian election contexts. We do better when the debate is over facts, arguments, and experts. Elections related to crime, by contrast, are more typically about unexamined, inchoate voter feelings and scary anecdotes. In certain towns, like Austin, Democratic primaries are liberal enough to pull it off. (We’re lucky to have José Garza.) But Texas has 254 counties, nearly all of which have their own DA. And we need look no further than the largest (Harris) to see that Democrats running as “progressive” don’t necessarily live up to any meaningful usage of that term.

2) The debacle around the city park in Eagle Pass clearly is an intentional provocation by Greg Abbott, politicizing DPS and the National Guard to obstruct the Border Patrol, ironically. Now that people have died, we’ll see litigation surrounding this. I don’t blame Biden for high migration levels, but I do blame him for waiting to confront Abbott until it got this far, with armed agents of the federal government in a standoff with the National Guard while migrants drowned in front of them. One appears less noble when you’re forced to act and do so only when backed into a corner after pointless, predictable deaths occur. The fecklessness equals that in Uvalde, if not the scope of tragedy. It’s amazing how Abbott can be so profoundly in the wrong, and at the same time the Biden Administration can still seem to find no high ground.

3) The AG’s open records process has become increasingly politicized, particularly on law enforcement and criminal-justice records. They deny records based on the flimsiest of claims now. It’s incredibly frustrating, particularly for someone who started this work in the halcyon pre-Holmes-v-Morales era.

4) Since I’d written on Grits about the Texas prison system’s long-defunct prison-baseball league, I should mention finding this article recently referencing the “Satchel Paige” of the Texas prison system, Claud “Scottie” Walker, a negro-league alum who played for Rube Foster’s Chicago American Giants and was still hurling for the Clemens Unit Panthers, at age 68, in 1963. Walker said the greatest baseball experiences in his life were pitchers’ duels versus John E. Hines, another American Giants alum who pitched for 8 years or so for the Ramsey (Unit) Hard Hitters. I wanna track down more on these two men, so maybe more on these topics, soon.

5) Between Keri Blakinger moving to SoCal, Jolie McCollough getting laid off, and Grits taking most of 2023 away, it’s REMARKABLE how much shit TDCJ and TJJD can get away with with nobody paying close attention. Michele Deitch is right, they need their own oversight agency. That’s a full time job if you have staff, not something one reporter (or blogger) can do by themselves.

6) It’s hard to get too worked up about the Houston mayor’s race because, though I’d prefer John Whitmire have not won, Sheila Jackson Lee couldn’t have been a lamer, less inspiring choice. At least he’s no longer in the senate to block air conditioning in prisons or drug-policy reforms that other red states enacted long ago. To paraphrase Jim Hightower, if God had intended us to vote, She’d have given us candidates.

Finally, here’s my question: What do folks think are the main criminal-justice races to watch during the primaries? Obviously, the Harris and Travis DA races are big: An incumbent win in the latter would be a sanguine result, while an incumbent loss in the former would be an earth-rumbling victory. I haven’t been watching the blow-by-blow in El Paso, but that DA’s race seems like an important one, too. Beyond that, you tell me: Where’s the drama this season?

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

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