Anonymous ID: 39d257 May 28, 2019, 9:10 p.m. No.6614521   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6614406

sauce for where you got this post?

provide some sauce and it will be notable, and def worth digging into.

Looks like a facebook post? or a comment post somewhere?

Anonymous ID: 39d257 May 28, 2019, 9:19 p.m. No.6614591   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4616 >>4665

>>6614406

Maybe this is her????

 

Mary Price is General Counsel of FAMM. She directs the FAMM Litigation Project and advocates for reform of federal sentencing and corrections law and policy before Congress, the U.S. Sentencing Commission, the Bureau of Prisons, and the Department of Justice.

 

She is a member of the American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice Section, is a member of its Sentencing Committee, serves on the ABA’s Task Force on the Reform of Federal Sentencing for Economic Crimes, and was a founder of Clemency Project 2014, serving on its Steering, Screening and Resource committees. Previously, she served on the Practitioners’ Advisory Group to the United States Sentencing Commission.

 

Ms. Price’s expertise on federal sentencing law and policy has led to media interviews and guest slots on national outlets such as the PBS NewsHour, MSNBC’s Up with Steve Kornacki, NPR’s Morning Edition and All Things Considered, HuffPost Live, and The Diane Rehm Show, among others. She is frequently interviewed and quoted in national print and on-line media. Her op-eds and articles have been published in a variety of outlets including Forbes, the National Law Journal, Huffington Post, the Federal Sentencing Reporter and Main Justice. She has appeared on academic and conference panels addressing issues such as the economics of sentencing reform, compassionate release in the federal Bureau of Prisons, and white collar sentencing. She has testified on numerous occasions before the United States Sentencing Commission on reforms to the federal sentencing guidelines.

 

Prior to joining FAMM, Ms. Price was associated with the law firm of Feldesman, Tucker, Leifer, Fidell & Bank, LLP where she handled appeals of courts martial and conducted administrative advocacy on behalf of U.S. service members.

 

https://famm.org/about-us/staff-board/mary-price-general-counsel/

Anonymous ID: 39d257 May 28, 2019, 9:23 p.m. No.6614616   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6614591

here is more information from that profile.

 

Mary Price’s Published Work

Forbes, September 24, 2014: “Wanting A Trial By Jury Is Not A Crime. So Why Do We Treat It Like One?” Op-Ed

New York Times, September 15, 2014: “White Collar Sentences.” Letter-to-the-editor.

Miller(ing) Mandatory Minimums: What Federal Lawmakers Should Take From Miller v. Alabama, Volume 78 Missouri Law Review 1147 (Fall 2013)

FAMM/Human Rights Watch report, “The Answer Is No: Too Little Compassionate Release in US Prisons,” 2012

Bureau of National Affairs, Criminal Law Report, “Highlights and Lowlights From the New Report On Mandatory Minimums From the U.S. Sentencing Commission,” article by Mary Price and James Felman, 2012

Huffington Post, September 24, 2012: “Sentencing of Sholom Rubashkin.” Op-Ed

Movie: Unjustified (2012)

Testimony before the United States Sentencing Commission, February 15, 2012: Federal Sentencing After Booker. Testimony

Testimony before the United States Sentencing Commission, March 17, 2011: Proposed Drug Amendments. Testimony

MainJustice, November 22, 2011: “It’s Not the Judges.” Op–Ed

National Law Journal, July 25, 2011, “Out of Control Fraud Guidelines.” Op-Ed

Written Testimony to the House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, October 12, 2011, The Status of Federal Sentencing and the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Six Years After Booker. Testimony

Article in the New England Journal on Criminal and Civil Confinement, Winter, 2010

Testimony to Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, Canada, October 28, 2009, Mandatory Minimums in the United States. Testimony

Testimony before the United States Sentencing Commission, March 20, 2007: Compassionate Release. Testimony

National Teleconference following release of Booker v. United States, January 25, 2005. Transcript.

Federal Sentencing Reporter, June 2006, Firearm Offenses, “Model Sentencing Guidelines.” Article

Federal Sentencing Reporter, “A Case for Compassion.”

Federal Sentencing Reporter, “The Other Safety Valve”

Mary Price, Sentencing Reform: Eliminating Mandatory Minimums, Easing Harsh Sentencing Structures and Building “Smart-on-Crime Solutions,” 28 Champion 18 (2004). Article

Testimony before the United States Sentencing Commission, March 9, 2001, Proposed Ecstasy Guideline. Testimony