Contact
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Information:
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(415)
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CONGRATULATIONS
to
Our Retirees
Institutional
Police Sgt.
T. Overall 27 years
of service
Sr.
Deputy P. Reed 20 years of service
Deputy
J. Lucero
27
years of service
|
Contributing
Writers
Will
Sanchez-Roy
One
Family
Annelise
Wunderlich
&
Richard O'Connell
The
Corridor Documentary
Vivian
Imperiale
|
©
2015
San
Francisco
Sheriff's
Department
| | |
A
Message from
Sheriff
Ross
Mirkarimi
It
has been a busy and productive spring! Only
weeks ago we announced plans to outfit deputy
sheriffs at County Jail #4 with on-body cameras,
making ours the first jail system in the state
to utilize the devices. Our pilot program will
launch in the next few months and expands on our
ongoing commitment to increase transparency and
accountability within the Sheriff's Department.
Stay tuned for more details on this important
new initiative.
You
know the expression about "idle hands?" The same
can be said about "idle minds." Education,
creativity, music and family all contribute to a
meaningful life for all of us, and carry a
special poignancy for those in jail. It is well
established that inmates who have the
opportunity to learn both academics and skills
while incarcerated have more opportunities when
they leave. Similarly, inmates who can
maintain family and community ties, have a much
better chance of not returning. Jail is
punishment, removal from society, but it can
also be a time of self-improvement and
self-reflection. We are all
extremely proud of the fine work that the
Five Keys Charter High School has been doing for
the last 12 years. The smiling faces of the
graduates and their families are certainly the
reward for staff's planning, teaching and hours
of mentoring. But national recognition as
an innovative program is the bonus prize for all
who have contributed to the success of the Five
Keys. This month, Steve Good, the Five Keys
Charter School Executive Director and I joined
the other finalists for the Kennedy School's
Innovation in American Government Award at
Harvard for presentations to the selection
panel. Regardless of the how the competition
turns out, it was exhilarating to share the time
with so many other people tackling challenging
problems in government.
Pounding
the books is not the only way to learn math,
three-dimensional relationships and patience.
Our new sewing classes at County Jail #2 have
been a big hit. They began as an extension
of a geometry course, but sewing uses the hands
as much as the mind in measuring, cutting fabric
into the needed forms and shaping useful items.
Learning to operate a sewing machine is another
skill, a possible tool for employment, but also
a tool for creativity and self-sufficiency.
The
healing power of music flowed as Naima Shalhoub
performed in honor of Mother's Day, recording
her debut album for the women in Jail #2. Ms.
Shalhoub began bringing music to women in the
jail last year, moving the women to rise, to
sing original songs of freedom, healing and
surviving. Underscoring her commitment to
helping incarcerated women, Ms. Shalhoub will
put half of the profits of her new album into
programs supporting incarcerated women and
reentry. Last month, we welcomed
Rabbi Jill Cozen-Harel into our Chaplaincy
program, which serves our sworn and non-sworn
staff with a "Ministry of Presence." The
stresses of our jobs as peace officers and
custodians of prisoners, serving public safety
and reacting to public discord can take a toll.
Our chaplaincy program is a valuable staff
resource. In closing,
let's honor and remember our veterans who travel
to distant and difficult lands and give
everything to protect our country.
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Honors - from
Harvard!
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Sheriff Mirkarimi
and Five Keys Executive Director Steve Good
prepare to speak at Harvard Kennedy
School in May. |
The
San Francisco Sheriff's Department
(SFSD) has been named a finalist for the
Harvard Kennedy School's prestigious Innovations
in American Government Award. Selected for
vanguarding innovative approaches that address
some of government's most urgent challenges,
SFSD's Five Keys Charter High School and four
other finalists will compete for the award's
coveted $100,000 grant.
Sheriff
Mirkarimi and Five Keys Executive Director Steve
Good travelled to Cambridge in May to give a
live-streamed presentation before the award's
selection committee as to why Five Keys
should win. Watch their presentation here.
"This
is a huge honor made possible by our visionary
and hardworking staff who are pushing the
envelope to meaningfully lower recidivism," said
Sheriff Mirkarimi. "Historically, within the
U.S. prison and jail systems, opportunities
prove few in providing ex-offenders hope through
a working skill. However, those times are
changing, as evidenced by the durable reach of
the SFSD's Five Keys Charter High School whose
common sense approach to improving public safety
is by not letting incarcerated minds decay."
Founded
in 2003, Five Keys is the first public charter
high school in the U.S. to operate in an adult
detention facility. Infusing the five ideals of
community, family, recovery, education and
employment into its curriculum, Five Keys'
growing impact reaches beyond the walls of its
jail-embedded classrooms to 21 community centers
throughout San Francisco and 13 in Los
Angeles -- serving over 9,000 students
annually.
Providing
inmates with an education helps create safer
communities, reduces tax dollars spent on
incarceration, and affords the incarcerated with
the skills they'll need to rejoin communities
and their families upon release. Recidivism
rates for inmates who go through the Five Keys
program is 28% based on re-arrest for a new
felony charge. (The California Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation's 2013 Outcome
Evaluation Report shows that the total
three-year recidivism rate for all felons
released during fiscal year 2008-2009 is 61%,
with nearly 50 percent of those inmates going
back into jail or prison within the first six
months after release.)
In
May, Five Keys won the 2015 Pioneer Institute
Better Government Competition and last year Five
Keys was awarded the Hart Vision Award for
Charter School of the Year (Northern
California). SFSD's Resolve to Stop the Violence
Program won the Innovations in American
Government Award in 2004.
The
city treasurer's Kindergarten to College project
is a second San Francisco-based program
nominated for this year's Innovations in
American Government Award. The program
automatically enrolls every public school
kindergartener in their own savings account.
The
2015 Innovations in American Government Award
winner will be announced this summer.
Read
news coverage of Five Key's Charter High School
as the subject of a new documentary: With
Doc, Mission Residents Go Inside High School In
Jail (Mission Local).
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Body
Cameras Coming Soon to County
Jails
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SFSD will be
the first county jail system in the state
to utilize on-body
cameras. |
On
April 30, Sheriff Mirkarimi and our SFSD staff
displayed to members of the press one of the
body cameras being considered for the
department's new and uniquely groundbreaking
body camera pilot program. "There is no other
jail system in California with body cameras,"
said the Sheriff. "I believe this will be the
wave of the future."
Implementing
on-body cameras in adult detention
facilities is a first-of-its-kind decision in
California and expands on the department's
ongoing work to increase transparency and
accountability. Thirty body cameras will be worn
by deputy sheriffs on all shifts at County Jail
#4. The Sheriff pieced together funds for the
pilot from the department's Materials and
Supplies Budget after requesting and not
receiving funds from the city budget
for the devices in 2013 and 2014. The
department is planning to implement the program
in several months.
Because
the body camera pilot is the first of its kind
in the state, the SFSD has assumed an important
leadership role in creating protocols and
polices from scratch that will govern the use of
the devicies, including rules governing
application and use, privacy rights,
ramifications for failure to adhere, data
storage, personnel training, and public records
requests.
"People
under our lock and key deserve respect and
humane treatment or else we risk fueling the
criminality we strive to abate," stated the
Sheriff. "I don't believe body cameras alone
satisfy the greater call unless they are
accompanied with modernized training, policy
reforms that dissuade misconduct, and the
political will to correct abuse of power."
The
devices will ensure that interactions between
deputy sheriffs and inmates are recorded, better
ensuring the safety of inmates and protecting
deputies against unfounded allegations.
Watch
news coverage of our new body camera pilot
program:
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The
Corridor
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The Corridor follows
one semester inside Five Keys Charter High
School. |
The Corridor is a feature- length
documentary in production that portrays an
innovative experiment: the nation's first high
school custom-built inside an adult jail. The
film follows one semester inside Five Keys
Charter High School in San Francisco County
Jail, observing students, teachers,
and deputy sheriffs prepare for
graduation day, as they navigate a new paradigm
of criminal justice that's based on the human
potential for change. The Corridor
explores the shifting boundaries between
punishment and rehabilitation at a time when
California -- and the nation -- is questioning
what justice really means. The film is directed
by Bay Area filmmakers Annelise Wunderlich and
Richard O'Connell.
You
can see the trailer here.
Watch
news coverage of Five Keys and The
Corridor: Documentary
Captures How A High School in San Francisco Jail
Heals and Reduces Recidivism--Video
(Social Justice Solutions).
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A
Stitch in Time
On Monday, May 11, Sheriff Mirkarimi
participated in the last of a six-week pilot
class teaching basic sewing skills to women
serving time at County Jail #2. The sewing
classes, which met for two hours each Monday
from April 6 through May 11, were part of a
geometry course taught in the jail. In the
class, student inmates applied mathematical
concepts related to shape and area while sewing
re-usable tote bags using donated discarded
table cloths from local hotels.
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A
student discusses the complexities of
sewing a tote bag during the last day of a new
sewing class at
CJ#2. |
The
sewing pilot is the fruition of a collaboration
between Sheriff Mirkarimi and San Francisco
State University instructors Connie Ulasewicz
and Gail Baugh. The trio were inspired by the
success of a 2006 citywide plastic bag ban,
legislated by the Sheriff while he represented
District Five on the Board of Supervisors, and
were looking for ways to further reduce the
city's landfill (discarded textiles comprise 4%
of San Francisco's solid waste). Aida McCray,
program coordinator for the Sheriff's
Department's Women's Resource Center
(WRC), was instrumental in launching the
sewing pilot at the WRC.
During
the May 11th class, under Ms. Baugh's tutelage,
the Sheriff learned how to sew a tote bag strap.
The fourteen student inmates were working
on completing their tote bag projects which
they'll be able to take with them when they
leave the jail. Many of the inmates completed
several tote bags during the six-week course and
some even asked family members to help them
purchase their own sewing machines to use when
they are released. The inmates are strongly
encouraged to utilize the WRC to complete
unfinished sewing projects or to begin new ones
once they leave the jail (including mending,
repairing and creating clothing). Sewing classes
are held Friday afternoons at the WRC,
located at 930 Bryant Street, and are open
to members of the public who identify as
women/LGBTQ.
The
sewing project pilot study will be reviewed and
assessed in coming weeks to determine whether
and when future sewing classes will be offered
at the jail.
Read
news coverage of our sewing pilot: Female
Inmates in S.F. Sewing a Way Out
(SF Chronicle).
|
LIVE!
From CJ#2
|
Naima Shalhoub
recorded and performed her debut album at
CJ#2. |
In
an event reminiscent of Johnny Cash's 1968 live
album performance at Folsom State Prison, in
May, accomplished Bay Area singer and performer
Naima Shalhoub recorded and performed her debut
album Borderlands live in concert for
the incarcerated women at County Jail #2.
In
this special performance, timed to honor
Mother's Day, Ms. Shalhoub extended a gift of
music to the inmates at County Jail #2 that she
began one year ago; the singer has been
facilitating music sessions with a group of
incarcerated women at the jail since May of
2014. Her rapport with her audience and her
finely honed singing talent paid off - the women
were greatly moved by her performance, often
rising to their feet to move, sing and even
shout along with the music.
"Naima
sings from her heart for the poor, the
incarcerated and the oppressed," said Sheriff
Mirkarimi, adding "we all could use another
Johnny Cash, and Naima Shalhoub is stepping
up."
A
first-generation Lebanese American, with a
master's degree in Postcolonial and Cultural
Anthropology, Ms. Shalhoub's Bay Area
performance venues have included Yoshi's, The
Great American Music Hall and the New Parish.
Rhodessa Jones, founder of the Medea Project:
Theater for Incarcerated Women, contributed the
performance's opening ritual and Naima was
joined on stage by Isaac Ho (keys), Tarik
Kazaleh (guitar, oud, tabla), Aaron
Kierbel (drum kit, percussion), and Marcus
Shelby (bass).
Songs
on the album are mainly originals with the
themes of freedom, healing and resiliency, with
a few re-arranged covers including a civil
rights folk song, an Arabic folk song, and a
Billie Holiday cover. Fifty percent of the
profits from Borderlands will be given
to social programming and re-entry programs to
support incarcerated women.
Read
news coverage of Naima Shalhoub's LIVE CJ#2
concert: Naima
Shalhoub Records Debut Album Before an Audience
of Incarcerated Mothers at County Jail (SF
Weekly).
|
Welcome
Chaplain Jill Cozen-Harel
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Chaplain Jill
Cozel-Harel is the first Rabbi to join SFSD's
Chaplaincy
Program. |
In
April, the Sheriff's Chaplaincy Program welcomed
Rabbi Jill Cozen-Harel into its ranks. Chaplain
Cozen-Harel is the first Rabbi to join the
chaplaincy, which is a volunteer program
offering a Ministry of Presence to all sworn and
non-sworn personnel at the SFSD. "I am very
excited to be a part of the Sheriff's Department
and look forward to offering spiritual and
emotional support to the team," said the
chaplain upon her welcome.
Chaplain
Cozen-Harel, who was raised in Los Angeles and
San Diego (and who as a child had a goose as a
pet) was ordained at Hebrew Union College -
Jewish Institute of Religion in New York. She
also studied at the Jewish Theological Seminary,
the Conservative Yeshiva, and the Shalom Hartman
Institute. Chaplain Cozen-Harel holds a Master's
Degree as well as a BA in Cognitive Science from
UC Berkeley (and enjoys integrating that into
her rabbinic and pastoral work). She has served
both schools and congregations, has spent
several years as a chaplain at California
Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco, and is
part of the leadership of the Mission Minyan (a
prayer community in the city). She currently
works for UCSF.
Ever
on-the-move, Chaplain Cozen-Harel has led trips
to Israel, Ghana, and New Orleans. If all this
wasn't enough, she has also run five half
marathons -- but is quick to add that "those
five halves do not equal a whole marathon!" It
doesn't take much imagination to visualize this
energetic woman of faith running a full marathon
if she sets her mind to it. Welcome, Chaplain
Cozen-Harel!
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Love
Your Mother
On
Saturday, May 9, One Family hosted a magnificent
Mother's Day celebration in the education
corridor of County Jail #2. Incarcerated mothers
and their families were honored with quality
time together, engaging activities, delicious
food, and hospitable service. It would have been
impossible to find a face that wasn't smiling in
the room. Whether at the card-making station,
board game station, nail-painting station, photo
booth, or lounging in front of the television
watching the latest version of Annie, each
family seemed to experience the unifying freedom
that breeds the mothers' motivation to
continually strive to be better. Coupling that
energy with comfort food like fried chicken,
macaroni and cheese, collard greens, and pupusas
made for a room filled with love, compassion,
gratitude and empathy.
|
One Family staff
gets into the spirit at this year's Mother's Day
celebration at
CJ#2. |
The
highlight of the day was when each
mother's children courageously stood
up in front of the whole group and used three
words to describe their mother. The children
were brilliantly descriptive, sweet, and
appreciative. After each share, the audience
responded with thunderous applause and eyes like
rivers. The beauty of this event cannot be
captured by words, but only by the feeling of
freedom, loving family, and the willingness of
each to grow as individuals.
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7th
Annual Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department
SERT Challenge
|
Team SFSD took
several prizes at this year's CoCo
Sheriff's Dep't SERT
Challenge! |
At
the 7th Annual Contra Costa County Sheriff's
Department SERT ("Sheriff's Emergency Response
Team") Challenge on May 22, the SFSD competed
against nine other sheriff's departments in the
areas of marksmanship, endurance and agility,
and did our department and our county proud!
Congratulations to Lt. Krol (first place,
shotgun contest), Deputy Tabayoyon (first place,
pistol contest) and Deputy K. Ng (second place
in both the shotgun and pistol contests). The
SFSD team also won second place in the team
range run and third place in the obstacle course
and "rat run." SFSD team members included Lt.
Krol, Sr. Deputy Castellanos, Deputy M.
Gonzales, Deputy Hughes, Deputy Camarra, Deputy
Simms, Deputy K. Ng, Deputy Fernando, Deputy
Tabayoyon, and Deputy
Artificio. |
All
in a Day's Work
An
attempted robbery was thwarted by a quick-acting
Sr. Deputy V. Chew when he
observed a subject fleeing and others giving
chase several blocks from the scene of a
robbery. The robbery, unbeknownst to Sr. Deputy
Chew, originated outside the Civic Center
headquarters of the Public Utilities Commission.
Sr. Deputy Chew, who was driving in an unmarked
vehicle, was able to catch up to and detain the
subject. Kudos to Sr. Deputy Chew!
|
And
the Award Goes to... 
The
Sheriff's Department and Five Keys Charter High
School have been named winner of the
Pioneer Institute's Better Government
Competition! The competition
seeks out and rewards the most innovative public
policy proposals.
Please
see "Honors -- from Harvard," printed above, to
read about Five Keys being named a finalist for
Harvard
Kennedy School's prestigious 2015
Innovations in American Government
Award.
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SFSD
Activities and Programs
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Rep's from CDCR, CA
Dep't of Public Health, San Quentin, and other
agencies toured SFSD's successful condom
distribution
program. |
On May 1, Sheriff
Mirkarimi hosted a group of esteemed
guests, including rep-resentatives from
the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation (CDCR), the California Medical
Facility, the California Department of Public
Health, San Quentin State Prison, and Mule Creek
State Prison, who wanted to learn more about the
successful deployment of SFSD's condom
distribution program. Assembly Bill 999 (Bonta),
as amended on March 21, 2013, requires that the
CDCR develop a five year plan to incrementally
extend the availability of condoms in all
California prisons.
They
began their visit with a meeting with the
Sheriff at City Hall then embarked on a guided
tour of County Jail #5 and -- the condom
dispensary machines -- with Director of HIV
Services, Kate Monico Klein and Chief Deputy of
Custody Operations, Matthew Freeman.
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and
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