Group 8:
Process in Practice
Carceral
Bonds
Tyler Dougherty,
University of Tennessee College of Law
State and local governments rely on the
municipal bond market to finance politically unpopular and sometimes
unconstitutional carceral projects. Since the 1980s, state and local
governments increasingly construct public prisons by relying on tax-free,
deregulated municipal debt instruments controlled by the ultra-wealthy.
Building on Destin Jenkins’s concept of “bondholder supremacy,” the Article
examines how prison construction becomes tax-free wealth accumulation for
private capital without public, collective input. Ultimately, the municipal
bond market removes decisions about public debt from the political process,
circumvents state constitutions, and hides the true cost of building the prison
arm of the U.S. carceral state.
This Article first identifies and
conceptualizes the role of municipal debt in growing the U.S. carceral project.
Then, the Article uses case studies in New Jersey and Alabama to illustrate how
privatized municipal debt interests stymied popular movements seeking to
interrupt investment in prisons. In New Jersey, bondholders undermined a
community-led campaign to close an emptying youth prison; in Alabama,
bondholders facilitated an unpopular, billion-dollar investment in the state’s
prisons despite DOJ investigation and rampant 8th amendment violations.
This Article seeks to demystify states’ use
of private municipal debt to fund prison construction and explores frames that
support collective decision-making for how society invests in public goods.
Manifesting
Due Process in Manifestation Determination Reviews
Amy Saji, Georgetown University Law Center
Manifestation Determination Reviews (MDRs) are the sole process that
students with disabilities are entitled to when they have violated a code of
student conduct that subjects them to exclusionary school discipline. Under the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), local education agencies
must conduct an MDR hearing within ten days of any decision to remove or change
the placement of a student with a disability. Under the IDEA, MDRs are enforced
through procedural safeguards and are crucial in preventing discrimination for
incidents that are a manifestation of a student’s disability. However, the
varying state practices of implementing MDRs have violated the very procedural
safeguards they were meant to protect. The inconsistent execution of MDRs have
harmful consequences for students with disabilities and their families are duly
unprepared for the consequential nature of an MDR hearing. If and when parents
walk into what they expect to be a collaborative school special education
meeting, they increase the risk of walking out of an MDR hearing with a
referral for expulsion in hand. This
article examines discrepancies in state practices surrounding MDRs, detrimental
implications for the procedural rights of disabled students and their parents,
and solutions that afford students with disabilities the disciplinary
protections they are entitled and safeguard parental rights, as intended under
federal law.
The Bail
Reform Dilemma: When Law & Culture Collide
Joy Radice, University of Tennessee College of
Law
Excessive pretrial detention in America and bail practices have come
under intense scrutiny over the past few decades. Around 500,000 people are
detained pretrial in the United States, as they wait for a magistrate judge to
determine if they can be released or if they must pay bail. Pretrial detention
abounds despite strong Constitutional protections against detention.
The Bail Reform Dilemma: When Law and Culture Collide adds to a
growing body of bail reform scholarship by pulling back the curtain on the
culture of unconstitutional bail practices in many courtrooms throughout the
county. The qualitative evidence in this article stems from an IRB-approved
research project that studied bail decisions in a felony courtroom over a
5-week period in a county in Tennessee. Through a 2-credit course, law students
and community members from Community Defense of East Tennessee (CDET) learned
together and developed a court observation instrument to conduct the research.
This article will reveal a predictable but often undocumented disconnect
between law in practice and law on the books. Part I will examine federal bail
mandates and Tennessee’s controlling statutes and caselaw. Part II will
describe the course structure and IRB research proposal. Part III will summarize
the findings of the research. And Part
IV will outline a preliminary roadmap to greater courtroom transparency the
builds on reforms in other states.
Discussant and Moderator: Charles D.
Weisselberg, University of California, Berkeley School of Law