Saturday, February 12, 2022

Laura Ahearn's latest dubious campaign has an unoriginal name -- "Voices For Victims"

Laura Ahearn has been keep a relatively low profile since failing to become the latest professional victim turned politician. But now it seems Ahole has come up with a new idiotic campaign to keep her ugly mug in the spotlight, the "Voices For Victims." It seems Ahole is terrible with coming up with names. Voices For Victims. Crime Victims Center. it seems that Ahole can't come up with a clever acronym because she's a complete moron. 

https://www.newsday.com/long-island/crime/long-island-victims-parole-reform-1.50416606

Violent crime victims rally for parole reform

By Michael O'Keeffe

michael.okeeffe@newsday.com 

Updated November 9, 2021 7:01 PM

Survivors of violent crimes and victim advocates voiced opposition on Tuesday to a New York State bill that would give older inmates who have served at least 15 years of their sentence an interview with a parole board.

The elder parole bill would give offenders age 55 and older who have served at least 15 years of their sentence an interview with the parole board, which would then determine if they should be released to community supervision. The bill was introduced in January by State Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan), who plans to reintroduce it in January after it failed on a first attempt.

The survivors and victim advocates who attended a news conference in Ronkonkoma to protest the proposal and call for parole reform included two victims of the South Shore rapist, the family of a 13-year-old girl murdered by her neighbor and the brother of an Ecuadorian man stabbed to death in a 2008 Patchogue hate crime.

Appearing before parole boards forces victims and their families to relive violent experiences, physical injuries and emotional trauma, said Laura Ahearn, the executive director of the Ronkonkoma-based Crime Victims Center, which provides support services to victims and their families. Ahearn used the news conference to kick off "Voices for Victims," a call for reforms to New York State’s parole system.

"I don’t understand why just because somebody is 55 years old, they suddenly turn them into a good person," said Jenna Glatzer, who was 10 years old when she was assaulted by Scott Carroll, the South Shore rapist who committed a four-year string of sexual assaults and burglaries during the 1980s. "It does not mean that the crimes they had done are somehow lessened because they are a little bit older."

Hoylman said reforms are necessary because corrections costs the state hundreds of millions of dollars, and that allowing inmates who parole boards have determined are not a threat to return to their families is the right thing to do.

Victims and advocates also called for allowing parole boards to require violent offenders denied parole for the first time to wait four or five years — not the current two years — to reapply. The want officials to inform victims of parole hearings and provide a written summary of rights to victims. They also called for victims to receive transcripts of parole hearings at no cost, and preservation of violent crime sentencing records.