OUR IMPACT
Each year, we help more than 1,000 individuals in RI avoid the revolving door of criminal justice system that can have lasting negative effects. More than 90 percent of those who received and completed Justice Assistance services have turned their lives around, become law-abiding, employable citizens and have had their records expunged.
The Papitto Opportunity Connection awards Justice Assistance $11.2 Million over 6-years to create the Comprehensive Offender Resource and Employment Service (CORES).
United States Department of Justice presents Certificate of Excellence.
Community Correction Act is written and becomes law.
United States Attorney General, Janet Reno, visits Rhode Island and gives the Keynote Address at the Neil J. Houston, Jr. Memorial Awards ceremony.
The Annie Laurie Aitken Foundation awards Justice Assistance a 15-year grant to support crime victims. Project Restitution and Project Victim Services went statewide.
Article I, Section 23 of the Rhode Island Constitution, entitled, The Rights of the Crime Victim is written and wins passage with 65% of the vote. The first such constitutional amendment in the United States.
Crime Victim Bill of Rights is written and becomes law.
Justice Assistance is founded.