Few people experience life inside of prison. Even fewer are charged with
the formidable responsibility of deciding whether inmates should be
released. In his twenty-four years on the Rhode Island Parole Board,
Frederic G. Reamer has judged the fates of thousands of inmates,
deciding which are ready to reenter society and which are not. It is a
complicated choice that balances injury to victims and their families
against an offender's capacity for transformation.
With rich retellings of criminal cases--some banal, some brutal--On the
Parole Board is a singular book that explains from an insider's
perspective how a variety of factors play into the board's decisions:
the ongoing effect on victims and their loved ones, the life histories
of offenders, the circumstances of the crimes, and the powerful and
often extraordinary displays of forgiveness and remorse. Pulling back
the curtain on a process largely shrouded in mystery, Reamer lays bare
the thorny philosophical issues of crime and justice and their
staggering consequences for inmates, victims, and the public at large.
Reamer and his colleagues often hope, despite encountering behavior at
its worst, that criminals who have made horrible mistakes have the
capacity for redemption. Yet that hope must be tempered with a realistic
appraisal of risk, given the potentially grave consequences of releasing
an inmate who may commit a future crime. This book will appeal to anyone
interested in the complexities of the criminal justice system, the need
to correct its injustices, and the challenges of those who must decide
when justice has been served.