LOOKING INSIDE: Portraits of Women Serving Life Sentences
More than 200,000 people in the United States are serving life sentences, a punishment that barely exists in most other western countries. Since the time I was a public defender, I’ve believed that if judges, prosecutors, and legislators could see people who have been convicted of serious crimes as individual human beings, they would rethink the policies that lock them away forever.
Before I photographed each of these women—all convicted of homicide—I visited them, learning about their lives. It broke my heart to meet a young woman who had been sentenced as a 15-year-old to life in prison, to meet a 70-year-old who wonders whether she’ll die behind bars, and all the women in between. Each woman is so much more than the one act that sent her to prison for life. They are all hard-working, resilient, dignified, introspective, and remorseful. They strive to live a meaningful life, to be worthy of our compassion.
Which leaves us as a society with the question: what do we do with a redeemed life?