Miriam Popper
@miriampopper
All opinions are my own
ID: 294055026
06-05-2011 13:10:47
90 Tweet
89 Takipçi
94 Takip Edilen
Supervised release has allowed +9,000 people to remain at home with their families & continue working while awaiting trial. We are so honored that Harvard Ash Center is recognizing this program in this year’s Innovations in American Government Awards competition www1.nyc.gov/office-of-the-…
How is City of New York working to end money bail? “We built a tool to screen people for eligibility. We put the results of that in the hands of defense attorneys. This program relies on social workers, not law enforcement.” The Supervised Release Program is now presenting at #IAG18
Is there a secret sauce for replicating a successful government innovation? Our #IAG18 finalists discuss with Dr. Antonio Oftelie
Excellent piece on how NYC is establishing a new way to reduce the jail population. It’s not just jail or “e-carceration”, there is a third way. via The New York Times nyti.ms/2DMDB4i?smid=n…
Supervised Release is responsible for 38% of the decline in the number of people in jail, which fell below 8k in December for the first time in nearly 40 years. @casesnyc NYC Criminal Justice Agency @courtinnovation Pretrial Justice Institute nyti.ms/2DMDB4i
“Don’t be afraid to talk about when the data doesn’t work well and when it fails.” - Miriam Popper #RethinkJails
Excited to share a piece I wrote for Vital City on leveraging transparent data in partnership with justice system stakeholders. Shared data and a commitment to growth are key for instilling confidence in new and growing programs like Supervised Release. vitalcitynyc.org/articles/letti…
“It’s a new world of retail trader,” says Nathaniel Popper on his new book “The Trolls of Wall Street.” “It’s much bigger than meme stocks. It’s much bigger than even options. This is a whole new universe.” $GME $AMC
.The New York Times 's editorial agrees, the time is NOW to #EndCashBail ow.ly/k48O30bwQT6
TODAY: Tech writer Nathaniel Popper breaks down Bitcoin, from its beginning as a currency for the dark web to its many uses today.
“One of the most important thing to remember is that like all money, it’s about crowd psychology," Nathaniel Popper says. "It’s about faith. It’s about people thinking it’s going to be worth something.” wbur.fm/2ABGQf7