We can do better. Listen and have your eyes opened: • See criminal justice reality and needed reforms through real-life stories of people with lived experience with crime on both sides of the law. • Learn about practical solutions for breaking the cycle of crime, achieving healing for victims, and building safer communities. Hosted by David Risley, former career federal prosecutor and former Director of Public Safety Policy in the Illinois Governor's Office. Co-hosting many episodes is Lynard Joiner, who went to prison for 17 years in a case prosecuted by Mr. Risley, and who is now Executive Director of Shifting Into New Gear (SING), delivering reentry services and support to people returning to society after release from prison. What Makes Us Unique • Unexpected Partnership: The partnership of Mr. Risley and Mr. Joiner, who first met on opposite sides of a federal courtroom on opposite sides of the law, enables listeners to get the real story from both perspectives and demonstrates the power of forgiveness and healing. • Beyond Theory: We bring you raw, honest stories from people who've lived through incarceration, police our streets, experienced victimization, live in high-crime communities, or work daily in the justice system—paired with concrete examples of cost-effective problem-solving that actually work. • New Vision of Justice: Instead of legal and social barriers amounting to permanent punishment, we showcase successful reentry programs, community-driven approaches to healing trauma as both a cause and effect of crime, crime prevention, problem-solving courts, and restorative practices that help both victims and offenders rebuild their lives. Featured Topics • Life before and inside prison • Life after prison: challenges, barriers, and successes • Restorative justice in action • Effective, community-centered solutions • Victim healing and offender accountability • Trauma-informed approaches to crime prevention • Criminal justice policy reform Justice Voices is essential listening for concerned citizens, policy-makers, justice professionals, community leaders, and anyone interested in how we can create safer communities by shifting from a punishment approach to justice to a problem-solving approach.

Justice Voices
Claim This Podcastby Eye-Opening Stories, Practical Solutions
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Podcast Overview
We can do better. Listen and have your eyes opened: • See criminal justice reality and needed reforms through real-life stories of people with lived experience with crime on both sides of the law. • Learn about practical solutions for breaking the cycle of crime, achieving healing for victims, and building safer communities. Hosted by David Risley, former career federal prosecutor and former Director of Public Safety Policy in the Illinois Governor's Office. Co-hosting many episodes is Lynard Joiner, who went to prison for 17 years in a case prosecuted by Mr. Risley, and who is now Executive Director of Shifting Into New Gear (SING), delivering reentry services and support to people returning to society after release from prison. What Makes Us Unique • Unexpected Partnership: The partnership of Mr. Risley and Mr. Joiner, who first met on opposite sides of a federal courtroom on opposite sides of the law, enables listeners to get the real story from both perspectives and demonstrates the power of forgiveness and healing. • Beyond Theory: We bring you raw, honest stories from people who've lived through incarceration, police our streets, experienced victimization, live in high-crime communities, or work daily in the justice system—paired with concrete examples of cost-effective problem-solving that actually work. • New Vision of Justice: Instead of legal and social barriers amounting to permanent punishment, we showcase successful reentry programs, community-driven approaches to healing trauma as both a cause and effect of crime, crime prevention, problem-solving courts, and restorative practices that help both victims and offenders rebuild their lives. Featured Topics • Life before and inside prison • Life after prison: challenges, barriers, and successes • Restorative justice in action • Effective, community-centered solutions • Victim healing and offender accountability • Trauma-informed approaches to crime prevention • Criminal justice policy reform Justice Voices is essential listening for concerned citizens, policy-makers, justice professionals, community leaders, and anyone interested in how we can create safer communities by shifting from a punishment approach to justice to a problem-solving approach.
Language
🇺🇲
Publishing Since
4/28/2021
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Recent Episodes

March 13, 2026
Ep. 27: Sonya Massey and Mental Health Board
<p><strong>Sonya Massey Called for Help. A Deputy Shot and Killed Her. Here's What Has to Change.</strong></p><p>Sonya Massey was a mother, a sister, a cousin. She was managing lupus, raising her children, living her life in Springfield, Illinois. In the early hours of July 6, 2024, she called police because she heard banging outside her home. She was alone. One of the responding Sangamon County deputies — Sean Grayson — shot and killed her. He was subsequently convicted of murder.</p><p>Her cousin Sontae Massey is now Associate Director of the Massey Commission, the body created in her name. He joins Justice Voices alongside Adam White, Massey Commission staff member and expert on Sangamon County's mental health landscape, to make a case that is at once personal and structural: Sonya's death was preventable. And without action, it will happen again.</p><p>The action in question: a referendum asking Sangamon County voters to approve a half-cent sales tax increase to fund a county 708 Mental Health Board — the kind that 66 of Illinois' 102 counties already have. Sangamon County doesn't.</p><p><br><strong>In this episode:</strong></p><ul><li>Who Sonya Massey was — in her family's words</li><li>What the body camera footage reveals about the night she died</li><li>Why both guests say, without any doubt, she would be alive today if a co-responder had been on scene — and what a co-responder actually is</li><li>What a 708 Mental Health Board would do (and what it would not do — it coordinates and funds services, it doesn't deliver them directly)</li><li>Why Sangamon County's existing providers are siloed, underfunded, and competing against each other for the same grants</li><li>The case for stable core funding over grant dependency</li><li>What the proposed tax actually covers — and the three major categories it exempts (registered vehicles, medical devices and drugs, groceries and gas)</li><li>The $4/$7 return: every dollar invested in mental health saves $4 in healthcare costs and $7 in criminal justice costs (Dept. of Health and Human Services)</li><li>What Winnebago County's mental health board produced: a 60% drop in ER visits, 165 new behavioral health jobs — and voters who just renewed it overwhelmingly</li><li>Who controls the money — the Board's professional commissioners, not the elected County Board</li><li>The survey data: only 17% of providers call current services adequate; 40% of residents report an unmet need in the past three years; 89% support increased funding; 60% deal with mental health concerns they never discuss</li><li>Sontae's warning: this wasn't the first time it happened in Sangamon County — and without structural change, it won't be the last</li></ul><p><strong>Chapter Markers</strong></p><ul><li>[00:00] Cold open — "Without a shadow of a doubt, Sonya would still be here today"</li><li>[01:00] Introduction — Sontae Massey and Adam White</li><li>[01:30] Who was Sonya Massey?</li><li>[03:00] The night she died — what led to her killing</li><li>[07:00] Sean Grayson convicted of murder</li><li>[07:30] A co-responder would have saved her</li><li>[08:30] What is a co-responder? — Sontae and Adam</li><li>[10:00] Why doesn't Sangamon County have one?</li><li>[10:30] The Massey Commission — formation and calls to action</li><li>[13:00] Two commissions, one conclusion: we need a mental health board</li><li>[17:30] What would the board actually do?</li><li>[18:00] The gaps: schizophrenia, youth, substance abuse, and more</li><li>[18:30] The funding problem — why grants aren't enough</li><li>[20:30] $15 million in stable core funding</li><li>[21:00] The sales tax: what it is and what it isn't</li><li>[22:00] Three categories exempt from the tax</li><li>[23:30] Groceries and gas — not taxed; clothing — taxed</li><li>[24:00] Half a cent on the dollar — what that means in practice</li><li>[24:30] 95 mental health boards already exist in Illinois — we're the outlier</li><li>[25:00] Winnebago County: the proof of concept</li><li>[26:30] The elected County Board won't control the money — the professional commissioners will</li><li>[27:00] Return on investment — addressing voter skepticism</li><li>[28:00] $4 in healthcare savings, $7 in criminal justice savings per dollar invested</li><li>[29:00] The survey data — 17%, 40%, 89%</li><li>[30:00] Addressing skeptics: the board is professional, not political</li><li>[33:00] 60% of people deal with mental health concerns they never talk about</li><li>[34:00] A unanimous vote — Republican and Democrat alike</li><li>[34:30] "Sonya called for help and received harm" — what happens if this fails?</li><li>[35:00] Sontae's warning: it will happen again</li><li>[35:30] Vote yes — how to do it, even as an independent</li></ul><p><strong>Key Figures & Terms</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Sonya Massey</strong> — Springfield, Illinois resident killed by Sangamon County Deputy Sean Grayson. Grayson was subsequently convicted of first-degree murder.</li><li><strong>Sean Grayson</strong> — Former Sangamon County deputy sheriff, convicted of murder in the killing of Sonya Massey.</li><li><strong>Dawson Farley</strong> — Grayson's partner, present at the scene.</li><li><strong>The Massey Commission</strong> — A Sangamon County body created following Sonya's death to identify systemic gaps across law enforcement, mental health, economic equity, and community education. Produced 115–120 calls to action; 26 are prioritized for action this year.</li><li><strong>Sangamon County Mental Health Commission</strong> — A separate temporary body convened by County Board Chairman Andy Van Meter, tasked with designing the structure of a 708 Mental Health Board and recommending a funding mechanism. Recommended a sales tax over a property tax.</li><li><strong>708 Mental Health Board</strong> — A statutory framework under Illinois law allowing counties to fund local mental health services through voter-approved taxation. Currently active in 66 of Illinois' 102 counties, operating 95 boards.</li><li><strong>Co-responder</strong> — A trained mental health professional, such as a licensed clinical social worker, who responds alongside law enforcement to calls involving emotional distress or mental health crisis.</li><li><strong>Andy Van Meter</strong> — Sangamon County Board Chairman who convened the Mental Health Commission following the Massey Commission's recommendation.</li></ul><p><strong>The Numbers That Matter</strong></p><p><br><strong>Stat</strong> <strong>Source</strong><br> | $4 saved in healthcare per $1 invested in mental health | U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services<br> | $7 saved in criminal justice per $1 invested | U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services<br> | $38,000–$60,000/year to incarcerate one person using mental health services | National estimate<br> | $2,000–$4,000 per ER visit for a mental health crisis | National estimate<br> | 60% decline in ER visits — Winnebago County after mental health board created | Winnebago County data<br> | 165 behavioral health jobs added — Winnebago County | Winnebago County data<br> | ~$14.7M estimated annual revenue from proposed half-cent sales tax | Sangamon County estimate<br> | 95 mental health boards across 66 of Illinois' 102 counties | Illinois data<br> | 17% of local providers call current mental health services adequate | Sangamon County Mental Health Commission survey<br> | 40% of residents report an unmet mental health need in the past 3 years | Sangamon County Mental Health Commission survey<br> | 89% of residents support increased county funding for mental health | Sangamon County Mental Health Commission survey<br> | 60% of survey respondents deal with mental health concerns they never discuss | Sangamon County Mental Health Commission survey</p><p><strong>Guests</strong></p><p><strong>Sontae Massey</strong> is the Associate Director of...</p>

June 4, 2025
Ep. 25: Healing Trauma in High Crime Communities
Skyla Pawnell and Gloria Hicks discuss their journeys from trauma victims to community healers in East St. Louis, highlighting the power of transformation in high-crime areas.

January 7, 2025
Ep. 24: Breaking free from addiction and a cycle of crime and jail
Rickey Brown shares his story of breaking free from an addiction-driven cycle of crime and jail. He graphically describes what it is like to see the world through the eyes of an addict.
34 total episodes available
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Frequently asked questions
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- What is Justice Voices?
- How often does this podcast release new episodes?
This podcast updates bi-weekly.
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This podcast is available on 9 platforms including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and more. You can also use the RSS feed directly.
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No, this podcast does not typically feature guests.
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