Growing up in the criminal justice system

Leon Hymes
While serving his fifth year of a nine-to-life sentence for murder, Leon Hymes was transferred from Division For Youth to the Department of Corrections.
The move from one location to another was a cold dose of reality of growing up from childhood to adulthood within the criminal justice system. It also marked the beginning of a six and a half year stretch in which Hymes wouldn’t see his mother. The time apart from his family—seventeen years behind bars–shaped how he connected to his family and forged his relationship to the world.
In December 1990, 15-year-old Hymes was arrested for shooting and killing a man at a party at his girlfriend’s house in the Bronx. He was convicted and sentenced in 1992 having already spent almost two years in Spofford Detention Center in the Bronx. But as an older juvenile inmate Hymes enrolled in a mentorship program to help younger inmates.
Though not a model prisoner–he was denied parole four times–he says that trying to provide younger inmates with the guidance that he didn’t get gave him purpose and kept him going.
Now home for almost two years he’s reconciled family relationships and helps run Choices, an alternative-to-detention program for at-risk youth. When the U.S. Department of Justice released a scathing report last summer exposing horrid conditions inside NY’s youth detention facilities, from excessive restraining measures to overmedication and misdiagnoses, Hymes could relate.
I spoke with Leon about his own experiences in the juvenile justice system and the issues that today’s kids face:
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SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS: How have you tried to help an adolescent family member adjust to live outside of a juvenile detention center?
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Michael Cohen is a student at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, graduating in December 2010.



[...] Banner editor Michael Cohen sat down with Leon Hymes, who spoke about his stint in a juvenile correction facility and subsequent [...]
[...] The Bureau of Justice Statistics’ national report on sexual victimization in juvenile facilities, released on January 7th is loaded with potential stories and the news bits from the dailies after the release of the report provide feature fodder as well. That’s why I’m currently working on a story for newjerseynewsroom.com about one of the New Jersey facilities listed in the report as one of the nation’s 13 facilities with the highest rates of sexual victimization. After DOJ report in August, I spoke with some people who run an alternative-to-detention program in downtown Manhattan. That encounter resulted in this multimedia piece. [...]