From High School To High Security

From High School To High Security
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Originally published on Youthradio.org, the premier source for youth generated news throughout the globe.

Reginald Dwayne Betts went from the high school honor roll to the penitentiary. He spent 9 years in adult prison beginning at age 16, for car jacking in Virginia. Tonight he'll be the first person in his family to graduate from college, and more than that, he'll deliver the student commencement address at the University of Maryland.

Betts beat the odds in a big way. Recidivism rates are already high within the juvenile justice system, and they're 34% higher for youth tried as adults. The Senate is currently considering the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA), a bill that would make it harder to place youth in adult jails. Reginald Dwayne Betts looks back on everything he's endured to get where he is today.

Listen to his story here, or read the transcript below:

2009-05-21-RDB.jpgBy: Reginald Dwayne Betts

When I was 16 years old, I was certified as an adult and sentenced to nine years in prison. I was certified because I had a robbery charge and in the state of Virginia if you have a robbery, murder or rape, you can automatically be certified as an adult and so I was rubberstamped and sent into the system.

When they sent me from the juvenile detention center to the Fairfax County jail, at the time they had a sight and sound policy and that meant that juveniles couldn't be within the sight or the sound of adults. Because they didn't have the proper facilities to hold me in the jail, they put me in solitary confinement. I didn't have a mattress, I didn't have a blanket, I didn't have a pillow and I only had the clothes that I wore on my back for seven days.

You know, that sort of prepared me to understand that jail was not designed to be in my best interest and there wasn't anybody that I could complain to.

The reality is that in prison people care about your ability to protect yourself or to do whatever you need to do to survive. If you're younger, you aren't prepared physically or emotionally to deal with prison. It took me seven years in prison before I talked to a mental health worker. And, um, I had spent time in two super maximum security prisons, I had spent over a year in isolation, not once was I asked, you know, how was my mental health.

For my first, you know, four to six years, no matter where I went, I would be the youngest person in the block that I was in. If I marked an adolescent shift, it was when somebody younger than me asked me for some advice, that's when I realized that, you know, I'm basically growing up in a jail cell.

Like, I have all of these memories in my head that have replaced the adolescent markers. Like, I was in a cell below someone that beat a man to death. And I remember the guards carrying the dead prisoner on a gurney like the nurses pushing him down the walkway, banging on his chest, trying to revive him.

The thing is, what are you gonna do with all the memories that you have once you leave prison? And, I mean, that's the question posed to all the young people who get sent to prison. Because it's like, you will accumulate these memories and a lot of them won't be good, and the thing becomes, what will you do with all those memories once you get home?

Additional Resources:

The Campaign for Youth Justice (CFYJ) is dedicated to ending the practice of trying, sentencing, and incarcerating youth under 18 in the adult criminal justice system.

Reginald Dwayne Betts' memoir will be published in August by Penguine Books.

Act 4 Juvenile Justice is a coalition of youth advocacy groups organized around Congressional reauthorization of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA).

Youth Radio/Youth Media International (YMI) is youth-driven converged media production company that delivers the best youth news, culture and undiscovered talent to a cross section of audiences. To read more youth news from around the globe and explore high quality audio and video features, visit Youthradio.org

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