9 TH ANNUAL HARRY FRANK GUGGENHEIM SYMPOSIUM ON CRIME IN AMERICA Justice &Prosperity Reviving the Economic Potential of America’s Justice-Involved Communities and Individuals (and the Role of the Press) $ FEBRUARY 10TH & 11TH 2014 524 W. 59TH STREET NEW YORK, NY Agenda MONDAY, FEB. 10 TUESDAY, FEB. 11 CONFERENCE ROOM L-61 VENUE: 9TH FLOOR CONFERENCE ROOM 8:00 – 8:30am 12:45 – 2:15pm 8:00am – 8:30am 1:00 – 2:00pm CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST LUNCH CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST STORY LAB WORKSHOP 1: (PRIVATE FOR FELLOWS AND INVITED GUESTS) UNDERSTANDING 8:30am DISCUSSION OF TRENDS & 8:30 – 10:00am JUSTICE STATISTICS WELCOME ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE PANEL 5 Workshop Leaders: REPORTING THE CHALLENGE OF POLICING Jeremy Travis, President, John Jay College William J. Sabol, acting director, Bureau of Justice Presentation of CJJ year-end survey: THE WEB: BALANCING Statistics 8:35 – 9:10 am Speaker: Ted Gest, President Criminal Justice Journalists ECONOMIC SECURITY AND Ted Gest, President, Criminal Justice Journalists KEYNOTE & Q&A PRIVACY RIGHTS William J. Bratton, Commissioner, 2:15 – 3:45pm Tyson Johnson, Head of Business Development, 2:00 – 3:00pm New York Police Department PANEL 3: REBUILDING Bright Planet STORY LAB WORKSHOP 2: COMMUNITIES, SAVING LIVES: Carmen Ortiz, U.S. Attorney, District of Massachusetts MINING JUSTICE DATA 9:10 – 9:15am THE PRIVATE SECTOR’S ROLE CONFERENCE INTRODUCTION Tim Ryan, Managing Director, Kroll Advisory Solutions Workshop Leaders: Cyber Investigations Carol R. Naughton, Senior Vice-President, investigative reporter, Steve Handelman, Director, Center on Media, Crime Andrew Lehren, Purpose-Built Communities New York Times and Justice, John Jay College Moderator: Dara N. Byrne, Associate Professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice Navjeet K. Bal, Counsel, Public Finance Group, Ted Gest, President, Criminal Justice Journalists 9:15 – 10:45am Nixon Peabody Glenn Martin, Founder, Just LeadershipUSA 10:00 – 10:20am 3:00 – 3:15pm PANEL 1: BEYOND THE WAR BREAK ON CRIME: PUBLIC SAFETY Moderator: Katti Gray, Contributing Editor, BREAK The Crime Report THROUGH COMMUNITY 10:20am – 12:00pm RECOVERY AND REINVENTION 3:15 – 5:00pm 3:45 – 4:00pm PANEL 6: CONVERSATION ON JUSTICE, THE ECONOMY AND The Honorable Dana Redd, Mayor, Camden NJ BREAK CORRECTIONS THE MEDIA/PROJECTS James Craig, Chief, Detroit Police Department Rick Raemisch, Executive Director, Colorado Moderator: Associate Director, Center 3:45 – 5:15pm Department of Corrections Joe Domanick, Dean Esserman, Chief, New Haven Police Department on Media, Crime and Justice PANEL 4: BREAKING THROUGH Jeffrey A. Beard, Secretary, California Department of Moderator: Jesse Wegman, NY Times Editorial Board THE INVISIBLE PRISON: Corrections and Rehabilitation 10:45 – 11:15am THE SECOND CHANCE Brad Livingston, Executive Director, Texas BREAK ENTREPRENEURS Department of Criminal Justice Robert Scates, Activist, The Green Light Movement Adam Gelb, Director, Pew Public Safety Performance Project 11:15am – 12:45pm Rob Lilly, Founder, PowerHouse Events and Catering Moderator: Martin Horn, Distinguished Lecturer, John PANEL 2: CRIME TRENDS: Founder, Pigeonly CRIME AND THE ECONOMY Frederick Hutson, Jay College of Criminal Justice Moderator: John Valverde, Associate Executive Al Blumstein, Professor, Carnegie Mellon University Director for Program Operations, The Osborne 12:00 – 1:00pm Richard Rosenfeld, Professor, University of Association WORKING LUNCH Missouri-St. Louis (LUNCH & FOLLOWING WORKSHOP PRIVATE FOR FELLOWS & INVITED GUESTS) Preeti Chauhan, Assistant Professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice Moderator: Steve Handelman, Director, Center on Media, Crime and Justice FORD, Beverly murder-suicide of a woman suffering from Beverly Ford is a Boston-based journalist and mental illness, and her child. author who has spent more than 20 years as a reporter and freelance writer for The Boston KASTE, Martin JOHN JAY/H.F. GUGGENHEIM Herald, The London Telegraph, Bloomberg Martin Kaste is a correspondent on NPR’s Na- News and other publications. She currently tional desk. He covers the Northwest, with an works as a freelancer for both the New Eng- emphasis on technology and privacy stories. REPORTING FELLOWS land Center for Investigative Reporting and In addition to general assignment reporting the New York Daily News. In addition to co- throughout the region, Kaste has contributed authoring the book, The Boston Mob Guide to NPR News coverage of major world events, in 2011, she was a ghost writer for the 1991 including the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and the ARMAGHAN, Sarah CLARK, JB book The Kennedys: Scandals and Tragedies 2011 uprising in Libya. Focusing on technol- Sarah Armaghan covers local politics, educa- JB Clark works as a law enforcement reporter and authored a book on domestic violence in ogy and privacy issues, Kaste has reported tion and crime for Newsday in Suffolk County, for the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal in 2001. In 1991, she was on a team of reporters on the government’s wireless wiretapping NY. At the start of her journalism career at the Tupelo, a post he has held for two years. He which won the Associated Press Spot News practices as well as the data-collection and New York Daily News, she spent four years previously wrote about education and politics Award, and received awards in 1991 and 1995 analysis that goes on behind the scenes in so- covering the New York Police Department and at the DeSoto Times-Tribune in DeSoto Coun- for juvenile justice reporting from Parents of cial media and other new media. His privacy crime throughout the city’s five boroughs. ty, Miss., a suburb of Memphis. He graduat- Murdered Children. She was a guest panelist reporting was cited in a US Supreme Court She worked as the overnight runner, chasing ed from the University of Mississippi’s Meek at a 2009 Neiman Foundation series at Har- opinion concerning GPS tracking. Before mov- breaking crime from midnight until 8 a.m., School of New Media in 2010 where he served vard University and has lectured on crime and ing to the West Coast, Kaste spent five years where she was able to see the city’s toughest for a year as the news editor of the school’s breaking news at local colleges and universities. as a reporter for NPR based in South America, neighborhoods in harrowing moments that student newspaper, The Daily Mississippian. where he covered the drug wars in Colombia, most people don’t ever get to experience. In He has a deep interest in public policy, how HOLLAND, Gail the financial meltdown in Argentina, the rise the Daily News’ Bronx Bureau, Sarah launched it affects average citizens in their day-to-day Gale Holland covers homelessness and pover- of Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva a series called “Faces of Crime” where she de- lives, and especially how it can be used to heal ty for the Los Angeles Times. She started at the and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and other sto- tailed the accounts of gangbangers, victims Mississippi’s poverty and education woes. paper in 2005 as an assistant city editor over- ries. Prior to joining NPR in 2000, Kaste was a and families on both sides through their re- He and his wife April serve on the leadership seeing law enforcement and court coverage. policital reporter for Minnesota Public Radio in spective plights. Sarah has also covered the team at Origins Church in Tupelo and are pas- Three years later, she joined the paper’s higher St. Paul for seven years. Kaste is a graduate of NYPD and crime for The Wall Street Journal, sionate about trying to love and care for the education reporting team and spent two years Carleton College, in Northfield, MN. as well as politics, education and crime in less fortunate members of their community. working on a series on abuse and corruption Rockland County, NY for Newsday Westchester. in a $6 billion college construction program. KAVANAGH, Shane Dixon DAMRON, Gina She and her colleague Michael Finnegan won Shane Dixon Kavanaugh covers crime, crimi- BARNES, Greg Gina Damron covers public safety and crimi- the 2012 Worth Bingham investigative report- nal justice and breaking news for the Orego- Greg Barnes is the The Fayetteville Observer’s nal justice for the Detroit Free Press. She has ing award from the Nieman Foundation for the nian in Portland. He also regularly contributes Sunday editor, responsible for assigning and won national and state awards, including hon- series. She subsequently spent 1 � years writ-writ- feature and enterprise stories for publications editing the centerpiece story for Sunday’s ors from the Michigan Associated Press Media ing news columns about city life before taking such as s the New York Times, Vocativ, and front page and regularly assisting the metro Editors, Best of Gannett, State Bar of Michigan on her latest assignment. She has worked for City Limits. A graduate of the City University editors. He often writes the centerpieces him- and Detroit Chapter of the Society of Profes- USA TODAY, Copley News and the LA Weekly, of New York Graduate School of Journalism, self. A reporter and an editor for more than sional Journalists. Damron was named SPJ and her writing has appeared in Newsday and he previously covered politics and economic 30 years, he was honored by the N.C. Press Detroit’s Young Journalist of the Year in 2011. the Guardian newspaper. A Los Angeles na- development for Crain’s New York. He also Association (NCPA) with public service and Most recently, she and fellow Free Press re- tive, she is struggling to understand why LA’s spent four years as the editor and publisher investigative awards each of the past three porter L.L. Brasier won the Silver Gavel Award skid row and homelessness have persisted of OVERFLOW, a quarterly print magazine in years for his special projects on the mental from the American Bar Association for their largely unchanged her entire adult life.
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