Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke announces her office will cease diverting nonviolent gun possession cases to the county’s Restorative Justice Community Courts (RJCC), where 82.8% of cases involved gun charges. This shift cuts the RJCC’s caseload in half and eliminates rehabilitation pathways for eligible individuals, sparking strong reactions from advocates of the restorative justice model, who emphasize its effectiveness in reducing recidivism rates from 65% to just 13% within a year.
In place of the RJCC, the State’s Attorney’s Office is proposing new legislation aimed at establishing a gun crime diversion program for first-time nonviolent offenders. Critics argue this transition risks increasing incarceration rates and exacerbating issues prevalent in marginalized communities, particularly given that 96% of gun deaths in Cook County have affected Black and Latino individuals since 2017. With the RJCC model designed to foster responsibility and community relations, the abrupt policy change raises significant questions about the future of justice for younger offenders in the county.
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