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  • S3E10: When Children Are Sentenced to Life Without Parole, with April Barber-Scales
    Jan 20 2026
    In this episode of Just Justice, Jessica Henry speaks with April Barber-Scales, who was sentenced as a pregnant teenager to life without parole. In 2022, April received a rare commutation from North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper and has since devoted herself to advocating for people in prison and against extreme sentences. Founder of the nonprofit Fenced In: Fighting For Freedom Advocacy, April shares her personal experiences in prison, reflects on the lasting impact of extreme sentencing on children, and why justice must allow room for dignity and second chances. To learn more about April Barber-Scales, her writing, and her organization Fenced In: Fighting For Freedom Advocacy, go to https://aprilbarberscales.com To learn more Jessica Henry, go to https://jessicahenryjustice.com Audio mixing by Kaz Araki
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    38 Min.
  • S3E9: Writing His Way Out: Emile Suotonye DeWeaver on Abolition and Imagination
    Jan 6 2026
    In this powerful episode of Just Justice, writer, organizer, and abolitionist Emile Suotonye DeWeaver, author of Ghosts in the Criminal Justice Machine: Reform, White Supremacy, and an Abolitionist Future, draws on more than two decades of incarceration to offer a deeply personal and sharply analytical critique of the U.S. criminal legal system, along with a bold vision for what justice could look like beyond prisons. Emile reflects on how writing quite literally helped secure his release, why his story is inseparable from the collective wisdom of people still inside the walls, and what an abolitionist future demands of our imagination.

    To learn more about Emilie's work, go to Re:Frame at https://www.reframeconsults.com/about-emile

    Pick up your copy of Ghosts in the Criminal Justice Machine here.

    To learn more about Jessica Henry, go to www.jessicahenryjustice.com.

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    47 Min.
  • Happy Holidays from Just Justice
    5 Min.
  • S3E8: You Don't Have to Be Prison, with Dr. Daphne Brydon
    Dec 9 2025
    Dr. Daphne Bryden joins this episode of Just Justice to explore trauma, transformation, and life after long-term incarceration. Drawing on over two decades of clinical and research experience, Dr. Brydon examines how people sentenced to life as children survive and grow in prison, and how they reclaim their identities and intimacy upon their release. She also tackles complex ideas about what a trauma-informed approach to justice could look like. A must-listen for anyone interested in justice, growth, and healing. To learn more about Dr. Daphne Bryon and her work, go to: https://researchdirectory.uc.edu/p/brydonde For more information about Jessica Henry, go to jessicahenryjustice.com.
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    48 Min.
  • S3E7: Ending State Killing, with Abe Bonowitz from Death Penalty Action
    Nov 25 2025

    In this episode of Just Justice, host Jessica Henry sits down with Abe Bonowitz, co-founder and executive director of Death Penalty Action and one of the most persistent voices in the movement to end capital punishment in the United States. Abe shares how he went from a young man who once said he’d “pull the switch” himself to a lifelong abolitionist, and what decades of work on the front lines have taught him about justice, accountability, and the value of every human life. They discuss the politics behind the recent uptick in executions, why support for the death penalty is at historic lows even as some states ramp up killing, and the cost to victims’ families of capital punishment. Ultimately, Abe offers a powerful vision for justice in a world without capital punishment.

    To learn more about Death Penalty Action and ways to support their work, go to https://deathpenaltyaction.org/.

    To learn more about Jessica Henry got to https://jessicahenryjustice.com/

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    51 Min.
  • S3EP6: Where Hope Lives: Jennifer Soble and the Illinois Prison Project
    Nov 11 2025

    Jennifer Soble, founder and Executive Director of the Illinois Prison Project, is re-imagining justice around a simple but radical belief: people can change. In this episode of Just Justice, Jennifer and host Jessica Henry explore how hope becomes action, and how that hope has brought hundreds of people home. Through compelling stories of freedom and reform, we hear how the Illinois Prison Project fights for second chances through parole, compassionate release, re-sentencing, and clemency. It’s a moving conversation about redemption and legal reform, and the bold passion for justice that makes both possible. Join us.

    To learn more about Jennifer Soble and the work of IPP:

    Visit their website: illinoisprisonproject.org or find them on social media: @illinoisprisonproject.

    To learn more about Jessica Henry, go to jessicahenryjustice.com.

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    45 Min.
  • S3EP5: Meet David Carrillo, the First Incarcerated College Professor in the United States
    Oct 28 2025

    David Carrillo was serving a life without parole sentence when he realized he needed to radically change his thinking, and the way he was living behind bars. From a prison cell, he began a journey of education, reflection, and transformation that led him to become the first incarcerated college professor in the country. In this inspiring episode, we talk about what it means to imagine a life of purpose in a place built for punishment, how education became David’s pathway to hope, and what his story reveals about the power of redemption and the human capacity for change.

    To learn more about David's work: https://www.davidrcarrilloconsulting.com/.

    Check out his memoir, Kiko: From Life Without Parole to Life with Purpose: https://a.co/d/3Qth27p

    For more about Jessica Henry, go to jessicahenryjustice.com.

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    43 Min.
  • S3EP4: Sixteen Years in Prison For A Crime He Didn't Commit: Attorney and Exoneree Jeffrey Deskovic on Justice and Redemption
    Oct 14 2025

    At just 17, Jeffrey Deskovic was coerced into a false confession and wrongly convicted of a murder he didn’t commit, despite DNA evidence that proved his innocence. After 16 years behind bars, he was finally exonerated. Now an attorney and founder of the Jeffrey Deskovic Foundation, Jeff joins Just Justice to share his powerful story and his mission to free the wrongfully convicted. It’s a powerful conversation about resilience, truth, and the urgent need for justice reform to protect the innocent.

    Learn more about Jeffrey Deskovic at:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jeffrey.deskovic/

    Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffreydeskovic/

    Learn more about the Jeffrey Deskovic Foundation (with a link to donate!): https://www.deskovicfoundation.org/

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deskovicfoundation/

    Watch the short documentary "Conviction": https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B0B35H3CR3/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r

    Learn more about Jessica Henry at jessicahenryjustice.com.

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    42 Min.