Sara Kruzan Sentenced to Life Without Parole @ 16 years old

The Rhodes scholars of the criminal justice system managed another abhorrent {aka causing repugnance; detestable; loathsome} win: sentencing 16-year-old human trafficking victim Sara Kruzan to die in prison for killing her pimp.
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Here’s how things look from Sara’s perspective:
Sara Kruzan deserves to be punished. But she also deserves hope. She deserves hope that she didn’t survive being raped and sold for three years for nothing. She deserves hope that the darkest chapter of her life has passed, and a horizon lies ahead. She deserves hope that she can change.
When Sara met G.G., the 31-year-old man who would become her pimp, she was 11. Sara’s mom struggled with drug addiction, so when G.G. would drive Sara and her friends to the roller skating rink or the mall, it felt like having a real parent around. He gave Sara presents and told her she was special- so special, that she should never give sex away for free. He convinced her she was a product.
G.G. groomed Sara like this for two years before he raped her. By then, his control was complete and he forced her into prostitution. Sara and the other girls who G.G. exploited were out on the streets from 6pm to 6am, every night. Twelve hours a night, seven days a week, for three years, Sara was raped by strangers so G.G. could profit. After three years, she snapped, and she killed him.
Surviving sexual violence is one of the most difficult things in the world. Surviving repeated sexual violence as a child doubtlessly takes its mental and physical toll. G.G. stole Sara’s 8th, 9th, and 10th grade years- money and rape took the place of dances and dates. How can a person ever recover from something like that? But Sara survived.
What Sara did was terrible, and she knows it. But if ever there are mitigating circumstances for a crime, these are them. To tell someone like Sara who has overcome such abuse that her destiny is to die in prison, no matter how much she changes, is cruel.
The vast majority of women in prison have histories of abuse from families and/or intimate partners. Does this mean they are not accountable for their actions? Of course not. Murder should always be punished. But Sara Kruzan’s case is one of ludicrous over-sentencing of a young girl who escaped from hell in a heinous way.
Sara Kruzan deserves to be punished. But she also deserves hope. She deserves hope that she didn’t survive being raped and sold for three years for nothing. She deserves hope that the darkest chapter of her life has passed, and a horizon lies ahead. She deserves hope that she can change
Thank you to Amanda Kloer from change.org for her well written account of Sara’s story.
Here’s a statement from Sara herself – most chilling to me is that the judge told Sara, then 16, that she lacked ‘moral scruples’ and therefore deserved life in prison.
One of the first things Sara did after her sentencing was use a dictionary to learn what the words “morals” and “scruples” meant.
The National Center for Youth Law, (NCYL) together with Human Rights Watch (HRW) and California Sen. Leland Yee ( D-San Francisco/San Mateo), has been working to ban Life Without Parole for juveniles in California.
NCYL works to ensure that youth in trouble with the law are treated fairly and appropriately for their age and capacity to change. NCYL promotes reforms that keep youth from entering the juvenile justice system, and also strives to protect the safety and welfare of youth in custody.







