I want to see changes in our criminal justice system.

I love cops; I'm fascinated by the criminal justice system.

If we do not maintain justice, justice will not maintain us.

I was born realizing the flaws in the criminal justice system.

I have complete faith and trust in our criminal justice system.

A lot can be debated about criminal justice and its delivery system.

We have to deal with the way that race influences our criminal justice system.

Burdensome fees have made it harder for people to exit the criminal justice system.

Squeeze human nature into the straitjacket of criminal justice and crime will appear.

Society is now less convinced of the absolute accuracy of the criminal justice system.

Generally speaking, the public appetite for criminal justice policy is just tough talk.

Sometimes our criminal justice system is about punishing people and not reforming people.

I don't really retain much from the first couple semesters of my criminal justice studies.

Stop and search is an integral cog in a racially disproportionate criminal justice system.

I want to be a figure for prison reform. I think that the criminal justice system is rotten.

Experience has taught me that privacy truly is the touchstone of our criminal justice system.

The criminal justice system, like any system designed by human beings, clearly has its flaws.

The men and women who work in our prisons are the unsung heroes of the criminal justice system.

Yes, for my undergrad I majored in Criminal Justice and minored in Political Science and English.

Forensic techniques are enormously useful in a wide range of fields outside the criminal justice system.

I'm very mindful of the need to ensure we have a criminal justice system in which people have confidence.

The Supreme Court has made it nearly impossible to prove race discrimination in the criminal justice system.

'Criminal Justice' is one of the most exciting projects I worked on, as it had a very unique storyline to explore.

If you grew up where I grew up, you would experience a very different criminal justice system than Camden, New Jersey.

I am happy that the urgency to reform our broken criminal justice system has found allies all across the political spectrum.

Black and brown communities are significantly and disproportionately impacted by deficiencies in our criminal justice system.

We need to incorporate that age-old concept of redemption into the work that we do in the criminal justice system in California.

It is apparent, if you go back through our history, that the grand juries of the criminal justice system do not value black lives.

We need transformational change of our criminal justice system - not just, you know, a handful of consent decrees or policy reforms.

I majored in criminal justice. I like 'CSI,' all that, '24.' I watch those shows on A&E, if I watch TV. I don't really watch TV shows.

As a former attorney general. I have the greatest respect for the criminal justice system. But it is not good at intelligence gathering.

To me poverty, mental health, and addictions don't sound like criminal justice problems. They sound to me like a social justice problem.

Once I discovered the theater at Santa Clara and once I got into the theater program, I never got into specific criminal justice studies.

The purpose of the criminal justice system is both to rehabilitate and to punish. If we can rehabilitate somebody, that's a huge, huge win.

Our criminal justice system is failing all of us. It is not keeping us safe. It is contributing to a vicious cycle of crime and punishment.

We need criminal justice reform. You have heard people talk about that all over the country. I was able to work on that specific issue at home.

Criminal justice reformers prattle on about 'over-incarceration' in America when in fact our nation suffers from an under-incarceration problem.

I took a sociology class, and I got an A in it. Then I found out you could get an emphasis in criminal justice. I wanted to be an administrator.

I find it very frustrating how much passing the buck there is in the criminal justice system when it comes to taking responsibility for outcomes.

America's criminal justice system isn't known for rehabilitation. I'm not sure that, as a society, we are even interested in that concept anymore.

It's really important to me that the public have confidence in their criminal justice system. We don't operate very well if the public doesn't trust us.

I went into criminal justice because I want to learn more about the law, about what's going on in this world, and be a mentor to kids from where I'm from.

Any legitimate system of criminal justice must first concern itself with justice. If just punishments also deter, rehabilitate, or protect, all the better.

I want to help other people clear their records, and I want to help them avoid some of the loopholes that get people caught up in our criminal justice system.

I went into journalism to learn the craft of writing and to get close to the world I wanted to write about - police and criminals, the criminal justice system.

Michael Brown's death and the suffocation of Eric Garner in New York for selling untaxed cigarettes indicate something is wrong with criminal justice in America.

To change criminal justice policy in any meaningful way means to propose changing a very longstanding system. It's not realistic to think you can do it overnight.

I don't want to live in a society where we ask sporting leagues or place of employment to dole out harsher punishment than what the criminal justice system would.

Much of the foundation of our criminal justice system is derived from slave patrols and was created when African Americans could still be bought, sold, and traded.

At least 80 percent of American prisoners are grossly over-sentenced. The Supreme Court knows this, but shows scant concern for this human side of criminal justice.

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