Radley Balko | June 15, 2009
Hawkins was a felon, convicted of second-degree murder and assault, and a heroin addict who spent most of his adult life in and out of prison and on and off parole. The system lost track of him one day in July 2007, after he had been out on parole for about two years and failed a drug test at his rehab center. Although parole officers spent countless hours making more than 340 attempts to find him — phone calls to relatives and friends, certified letters, arrest record checks, visits to his last place of employment (Goodwill) and his last known address (the Samaritan Inn), sometimes with police officers in tow — they never found him.
Hawkins died one year later, in July 2008, at 54, of metastatic lung cancer. His family has the death certificate and certificate of cremation to prove it.
The system still hasn’t found him.
But it’s still trying…
The case is still active, Len Sipes said yesterday. Sipes is the spokesman for the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency, or CSOSA, the federal agency that took over the D.C. parole office nine years ago when the federal government assumed responsibility for the city’s prison system. According to its records, a warrant for Hawkins’s arrest, issued in April 2008, is still outstanding. He is to be supervised on parole until April 27, 2016.
Last month, Hawkins’s parole officer called one of his sisters to ask whether she had seen him lately.
“They said they were trying to get in touch with him because he’d been violating parole and they needed a number for him,” said Maria Watson, Hawkins’s younger sister. “I said, ‘Well, you can call 1-800-G-O-D.’ “
…The phone call was only the latest frustrating twist for Hawkins’s family. Parole officers have called other siblings for the past several months, they said, and they have all told the officers the same thing: Edward is dead.
I can see how the parole officers might have had some difficulty piecing together such puzzling, ambiguous hints about Hawkins' whereabouts. If only the family had been more cooperative.
Oh, and here’s the punchline…
CSOSA’s 344 or so community supervision officers, or parole officers, are responsible for keeping track of 15,000 parolees at any one time. The most potentially dangerous — currently about 800 — are fitted with ankle bracelets equipped with GPS tracking devices. Officers keep tabs on the rest through the Supervision and Management Automated Recording — or SMART — system.
But the system must be smart, right? I mean, it says so right there in the acronym.
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Well, you can call 1-800-G-O-D.
Call me judgemental, but considering second degree murder and
assault...I'm thinking that's the wrong number. Maybe the angel
with the book of life and the white pages of damnation can forward
the call.
According to the GPS readings, the fugitive is hiding in a small chamber approximately two meters below the surface. Must be some sort of escape tunnel or spider hole.
But the system must be smart, right? I mean, it says so
right there in the acronym.
"Smart Growth" works the same way
Sometimes the memory and emotion gone out of our mind. the
chronicle Watch which initial impulse in a day and began the past
memory and respect.
The post from replica
watches Company.
I have to say that I am torn about this.
It's hard for me to decide which is more threatening: a bureaucracy
that can't get its act together in database terms and makes
Brazil type errors like this one - or a bureaucracy where
they finally get their act together and perfect their databases and
have perfect knowledge.
The "holes" in bureaucracy are often a necessary safety valve that
allow people to survive the "system".
Pretty sad. Seems they would cross reference his SSN with SSDI
(Social Security Death Index) which clearly shows him deceased. Not
very bright are they?
RT
www.privacy-tools.4-all.org
How SMART can you be if you screw up the acronym. Am I missing something or is that a magical T?
Tulpa,
Call me judgemental, but considering second degree murder and
assault...I'm thinking that's the wrong number.
Considering Saul of Tarsus was guilty of much worse, I will go
ahead and call you judgmental.
But, it would probably be the way to bet.
Hawkins died one year later, in July 2008, at 54, of
metastatic lung cancer. His family has the death certificate and
certificate of cremation to prove it.
Suure he did. Cremated, you say?
[makes mental note]
So, when the junkie felon's family says he's dead, the parole officer is supposed to believe them?
No, when the junkie felon's family provides the death
certificate and cremation certificate, the parole officer is
supposed to either believe those, or verify with the issuing
authority.
Or at least not act like he's an agent of the Department of
Underground Mortuary Busters.
Supervision and Management Automated Recording System... that would be SMARS, correct?
Call me judgemental, but considering second degree murder and assault...I'm thinking that's the wrong number. Maybe the angel with the book of life and the white pages of damnation can forward the call.
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