Topic: Prison Sentence

4 chapters across the catalog

Big BRICS
Episode 961 1:01:12 - 1:05:10

961: Big BRICS

Institutional Power, Job Discrimination and Prison Sentencing

The discussion challenges the idea that only white people hold institutional power, citing black CEOs and organizations like BET. It acknowledges systemic issues such as harsher prison sentences for minorities but notes that men of all races receive significantly harsher sentences than women for the same crimes.

Sologamy
Episode 929 1:32:57 - 1:40:07

929: Sologamy

Jeff Sessions, War on Crime and Mandatory Minimums

Attorney General Jeff Sessions issued a memo directing federal prosecutors to seek the toughest possible charges and mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses. This policy reverses Obama-era reforms intended to reduce the federal prison population. Critics point to the profit motives of private prisons and the reliance on inmate labor as underlying drivers for these harsher sentencing guidelines.

Huge Samoan
Episode 541 9:24 - 13:04

541: Huge Samoan

Manning Prison Sentence, Comparison to Historical Leak Cases

Chelsea Manning received a 35-year prison sentence, the longest ever handed down in the United States for leaking government secrets to the media. New York Times reporter Charlie Savage notes that this sentence is a categorical departure from historical precedents, such as the two-year sentence given to a Navy analyst in 1984 or the probation and short jail terms seen in other recent leak cases. The severity of the punishment is contrasted with sentences given to actual foreign spies, suggesting a strategic effort by the administration to create a deterrent effect.

The Future of Media
Episode 28 25:24 - 27:59

28: The Future of Media

Privatized Prisons, Luxury Jails, and Incarceration Rates

The rise of privatized prisons in the United States is linked to corporate lobbying for stricter mandatory sentencing laws. In California, "luxury jails" exist where wealthy offenders can pay a daily fee for better accommodations. The U.S. incarceration rate is noted as being the highest in the world, surpassing China and Russia, while Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger calls for more prison construction.