DiscoverAmplified VoicesDr. Reece - From Surviving Harm to Drop LWOP Movement Leader - Season 5 Episode 12
Dr. Reece - From Surviving Harm to Drop LWOP Movement Leader - Season 5 Episode 12

Dr. Reece - From Surviving Harm to Drop LWOP Movement Leader - Season 5 Episode 12

Update: 2025-11-09
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Justice shouldn’t confuse accountability with exile. That’s the heartbeat of the conversation Amber & Jason had w Dr. Reece, a survivor whose near-fatal domestic violence experience led her from theater stages to forensic psychology & into the powerful world of restorative justice circles inside prisons. Her story begins with a family divided by a decades-old case and moves through the practical realities survivors face—housing, work, safety—alongside the emotional aftermath that the legal process rarely addresses.

We dig into the shock of hearing an officer call the man who harmed her “a perfect gentleman,” the moment an ADA said she wasn’t her lawyer, and the system’s narrow notion of accountability as “as many years as we can get.” Dr. Reece wanted something different: for the harm to be named and addressed, and for the person who caused it to change. That conviction took her underground—literally—into prison basements where survivors and people who committed serious harm sit face to face, ask why, and do the hard work of repair. The result is profound: "lifers" often become stable leaders, credible messengers who interrupt violence and mentor youth more effectively than any billboard campaign.

We also discuss the explosion of life sentences and LWOP in the United States, why risk and rehabilitation get ignored for politics, and what the research actually shows about dangerousness over time. Dr. Reece shares the goals of Drop LWOP New England—creating meaningful opportunities for release through second look, parole, and commutation—and explains Connecticut’s Domestic Violence Survivor Justice Act (DVSJA), which recognizes the link between victimization and later criminalization. This isn’t softness on harm; it’s smarter public safety rooted in evidence, context, and real human change.

If you care about survivor healing, reentry, & safer communities, this conversation offers a different map: connection over separation, truth over slogans, and hope as a condition for transformation. Subscribe, share with a friend, and tell us: what does meaningful accountability look like to you?

About Dr. Brashani Reece: 

It’s rare for a survivor of violent crime to become a leading advocate for the very people the system is designed to punish. But Dr. Brashani Reece's journey is far from typical.
 
 As the Executive Director and Co-Founder of
Drop LWOP New England, Dr. Reece's path to activism and commitment grew as she became a trained facilitator, working with incarcerated people and witnessing the transformative power of accountability and personal growth. She now co-leads Drop LWOP New England with her husband, Steven "Farooq" Quinlan, who is serving a life without parole sentence in Rhode Island. Her work is a testament to the belief that healing is possible and that even the most extreme sentences are not a solution. 
 

 Dr. Reece brings both a scholar’s rigor and a survivor’s empathy to the fight against extreme prison sentences. 

In addition to its website, the Drop LWOP New England can be found at its website, on Blue Sky, and on Instagram

Dr. Reece encourages people to Take the Pledge to end extreme prison sentences.

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Dr. Reece - From Surviving Harm to Drop LWOP Movement Leader - Season 5 Episode 12

Dr. Reece - From Surviving Harm to Drop LWOP Movement Leader - Season 5 Episode 12

Amber & Jason - Criminal Legal Reform Advocates with Lived Experience