Sangetta Prasad of the DA’s Office said the Emerging Adult Unit is an effort to keep defendants between ages 18 and 25 from a life of crime. Five hundred cases will be reviewed each month with an eye towards finding non-violent offenders who are at a phase of their development when they can be diverted from criminal behavior.
Prasad said the young people “can succumb to peer pressure and they need mentorship. But at this time, because of what the world is going through, they are particularly in need of the contacts and the support and the connections that traditionally the criminal justice system does not provide.” The program works with nonprofits for job training and offering literacy skills help for those in need.
The unit is the first of its kind in the country and is part of Krasner’s efforts to curb the number of young people in the prison system.
Prasad said the goal is to help emerging adults in order to “build up the communities and in turn heal the city.”
Keisha Hudson, Chief of the Defender Association of Philadelphia, called it an “incredible initiative.” She said if successful, “it will have an impact on public safety.”