Incarceration in a Pandemic

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Featuring Professor Mark Osler, School of Law

Date & Time:

Wednesday, June 24, 2020
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Admission:

Free and open to the public

Location:

Webinar

CLE Credit

1.0 CLE credit approved

Event Code 309766
On-Demand Event Code 320666

 

 

COVID-19 presents a unique challenge to prisons and jails, where conditions make social distancing difficult. States and the federal systems have taken a variety of approaches. What have we learned?

Registration is required.  A link to join the program will be emailed to the address provided with registration at 9:00am CST on June 24.

 

Speaker

Mark Osler is the Robert and Marion Short Professor of Law at the University of St. Thomas (MN). He also holds the Ruthie Mattox Preaching Chair at First Covenant Church, Minneapolis. Osler's writing on clemency, sentencing and narcotics policy has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and The Atlantic and in law journals at Harvard, Stanford, the University of Chicago, Northwestern, Georgetown, Ohio State, UNC, William and Mary, and Rutgers.

A former federal prosecutor, he later won the case of Spears v. United States in the U.S. Supreme Court, with the Court ruling that judges could categorically reject a mandatory 100-to-1 ratio between crack and powder cocaine in the federal sentencing guidelines. Osler's 2009 book Jesus on Death Row (Abingdon Press) critiqued the American death penalty through the lens of Jesus' trial. His second book, Prosecuting Jesus (Westminster/John Knox, 2016) is a memoir of performing the Trial of Jesus in 11 states. Most recently, he is the author of Contemporary Criminal Law (West, 2018), a casebook.

The character of Professor Joe Fisher in the Samuel Goldwyn film American Violet was based on Osler, and he has been the subject of profiles by Rolling StoneThe American Prospect, and CBS News. He is a graduate of the College of William and Mary and Yale Law School.

To make an accessibility request, call Disability Resources at (651) 962-6315.