Arrested for Needing Help • OverCriminalized #1: Mental Illness • BRAVE NEW FILMS: JUSTICE
Instead of helping the mentally ill, police often put them behind bars. Watch how one police department is making a positive difference. WATCH MORE: http://bit.ly/1vQgdWN You can fight back. Join us: http://bit.ly/10TAZeP http://bit.ly/1vQgdWQ It’s simple. Diversion programs work better than incarceration – for everyone. In cities like Seattle, San Antonio, and Salt Lake City, we see that successful solutions are a viable option to help end serious social problems. These services alter the course of people’s lives in a positive way and save taxpayers huge amounts of money. We cannot continue to isolate and imprison people who suffer from mental illness, substance abuse, or homelessness. We must treat them with compassion and care to better serve our communities and our pocketbooks. It's time we got serious about pulling our money out of incarceration and putting it into systems that foster healthy communities. Hundreds of thousands of people are locked up not because of any dangerous behavior, but because of problems like mental illness, substance use disorders, and homelessness, which should be dealt with outside the criminal justice system. Services like drug treatment and affordable housing cost less and can have a better record of success. This summer, news stories from around the nation provided the American people with a litany of issues about how police officers respond to community members. By highlighting programs like Crisis Intervention Training (CIT), Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD), and Housing First, OverCriminalized explores the possibility of ending incarceration for millions of Americans who, through successful intervention programs, can put their lives back on track. OverCriminalized focuses on the people who find themselves being trafficked through this nation’s criminal justice system with little regard for their humanity and zero prospects for actual justice. They are victims of unwillingness to invest in solving major social problems, and the consequent handling off of that responsibility to the police, the courts, and the prisons. They are the mentally ill, the homeless, and the drug addicted. Sometimes they are all three. http://bit.ly/1vQgdWQ Quick facts on over criminalization: • Approximately 20 % of state prisoners and 21 % of local jail detainees have a “recent history” of a mental health condition. • Approximately 26% of homeless adults staying in shelters live with serious mental illness and an estimated 46% live with severe mental illness and/or substance use disorders. • In 2012, it was estimated that 23.1 million Americans needed treatment for problems that related to drugs or alcohol. • Pew Research finds that 67% of Americans say that the government should focus more on providing treatment for those who use illegal drugs such as heroin or cocaine. Just 26% think the government’s focus should be on prosecuting users of such hard drugs. http://bit.ly/1vQgdWQ ABOUT BRAVE NEW FILMS Robert Greenwald and Brave New Films are at the forefront of the fight to create a just America. Using new media and internet video campaigns, Brave New Films has created a quick-strike capability that informs the public, challenges corporate media with the truth, and motivates people to take action on social issues nationwide. Brave New Films’ investigative films have scrutinized the impact of U.S. drone strikes; the war on whistleblowers; and Wal Mart’s corporate practices. The company’s films have received more than 56 million views online. WATCH MORE: http://bit.ly/1vQgdWN You can fight back. Join us: http://bit.ly/10TAZeP NEW VIDEOS EVERY WEEK! WATCH our Feature Films - FREE! Set up a free screening in your community: http://bit.ly/1vQgdWT Koch Brothers Exposed http://bit.ly/10TAZv7 Unmanned: America's Drone Wars http://bit.ly/1vQgdX1 WAL-MART: The High Cost of Low Price: http://bit.ly/10TB1mG War on Whistleblowers: http://bit.ly/1vQgcSE Iraq For Sale: http://bit.ly/1vQgcSI Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/10TB1mK Inequality: http://on.fb.me/1vQgedk Security: http://on.fb.me/10TB1mO Justice: http://on.fb.me/1vQgcSM
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