November 15, 2024

cjstudents

News for criminal justice students

Expungement a waiting game for metro Detroiters seeking clean slate

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An Aug. 12, 2022 expungement fair at the Center for the Works of Mercy in Detroit sought to help people expunge their criminal records.

Charles Powells was grateful, but frustrated. 

It was 12:30 p.m. He’d been waiting since 8 a.m. outside Catholic Charities’ Center for the Works of Mercy in Detroit for an Aug. 12 expungement clinic that started at 11 a.m. There, he’d have a chance to meet with pro-bono lawyers and begin the lengthy process of getting his record expunged.

But this wasn’t the first clinic Powells had gone to. It wasn’t his second, either. It was his third — and he was 19th in line. Others had been waiting outside the center since 6 a.m.

“It’s chaotic. I don’t want to cause no riff, I’m just frustrated,” said Powells, 50, of Detroit. “We’ve got a system that doesn’t give us any consideration.”

Booker T. Walker, a returning citizen and criminal justice organizer with Michigan Liberation, tried to console Powells as he was making his rounds, offering help and guidance to the dozens of others waiting in line at the clinic Michigan Liberation helped organize. 

Communications director for Michigan Liberation Marjon Parham, middle, helps sign in metro Detroiters hoping for help expunging their criminal records Aug. 12, 2022 at the Center for the Works of Mercy in Detroit.

“We can’t wait on the government,” Booker, 65, of Detroit told Powells. “We’re doing the best we can. What else can we do?”

Powells is not alone in his frustration. Since new expungement legislation dubbed the Clean Slate Act took effect in April 2021, more people are eligible for criminal record expungement through an application process. But with high demand, technology hurdles and court backlogs due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it takes about six months to a year, and sometimes longer, to get their clean slate. 



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