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Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Zoom Webinar
12:00-1:15 PM (HST)

The Hawaiʻi State Judiciary’s Committee on Equality and Access to the Courts (CEAC) and the King Kamehameha V Judiciary History Center are pleased to present the Equitable and Sustainable Futures Speaker Series. Five public programs are scheduled through May 2025 to build pilina (connection and collaboration) between stakeholders across the justice system. Through engaging public discussions, this series seeks to drive critical change in law, policy, and institutional practices to improve public awareness, safety, and wellbeing. The series is cosponsored by the Hawaiʻi State Bar Association Civic Education Committee.

Program 2 of 5-Part Series

Resources and Operations: Sustainable Solutions for the Future of Hawaiʻi’s Justice System

Political willpower and resource allocation are frequently cited as reasons preventing widespread reform to Hawaiʻi’s justice system. This panel discussion will explore ways in which Hawaiʻi’s justice departments can creatively identify and sustain resources, and invest in programs that effectively improve public safety and wellbeing. Featuring key voices from legal, advocacy, and oversight sectors, this discussion will explore reforms needed to move towards a more efficient, sustainable, and equitable justice system. Panelists will discuss their experiences navigating political, financial, or other logistical barriers and achievements made to improve services in their respective fields.

This programming series is a follow-up to CEAC’s Racial Equity Speaker Series that occurred virtually between January and May 2021 (access recordings here). 

Featured Panelists:

Salmah Y. Rizvi is the Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaiʻi. She is an appellate impact litigator, community organizer, and crisis manager. She works to build lasting peace that safeguards civil rights, by seeking truth, justice, and healing.

Rizvi’s civil rights litigation, research, and advocacy have focused on increased monitorship of prisons, enhanced living conditions for incarcerated people, integrative mechanisms for reentry courts, abolishing mandatory minimums, religious freedom, protection of free speech rights of LGBTQIA+ students, activists’ right to boycott, divest, and freely assembly, voting rights, reproductive care expansion, and racial justice in appellate spaces. She has worked on civil rights issues intersecting human rights, native Hawaiian rights, crim-immigration, and asylum. Rizvi has also served as pro bono counsel to the ACLU of Maryland and intern to NYCLU.

As Founding President of the 501c3/501c6 American Muslim Bar Association, Rizvi designed six national committees on the Judiciary, Advocacy, Policy, Education, Mentorship, and Legal Resources. She also sat on the Board of Directors of Witness to Mass Incarceration. Rizvi was Washington D.C. Associate at the law firm Ropes & Gray LLP, which named her a Chambers Rising Leader. Rizvi clerked for the Honorable Judge Theodore A. McKee of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and the Honorable Judge J. Michael Seabright of the U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaiʻi. Rizvi has argued at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She also worked for the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice in the Southern District of New York. And she was an NYU Center for Human Rights and Global Justice Fellow in Ramallah, Palestine. Rizvi is a recipient of the Soros Fellowship, Vanderbilt Medal, Truman Scholarship, and Institute of Nonprofit Practice Changemaker Award. 

Prior to law school, Rizvi impacted high-value missions for the U.S. Departments of State and Defense. She was appointed the first Chairwoman to the Defense Department’s Islamic Cultural Employee Resource Group, through which she worked to protect the civil rights of Muslims within highly-militarized institutions and led ninety-two analysts in demanding accountable intelligence reporting, free from Islamophobia. Members of Congress and the President’s office honored Rizvi for this work. She also served as a Human Rights Commissioner in Maryland.

Rizvi holds a J.D. from the New York University School of Law, an M.S. from the Georgetown School of Foreign Service, and a B.A. in Anthropology from Johns Hopkins University. In her free time, she organizes for the Zawiyah Foundation of Hawaiʻi. She speaks multiple languages and has travelled to over seventy countries. Born in Indonesia, Rizvi is the daughter of immigrants—a Pakistani father and Guyanese mother. Raised as a Shia Muslim, Rizvi’s fight for justice is embedded in her creed. Rizvi resides in Honolulu, with her children who are learning ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi and her husband, Dr. Saquib Ali Usman, who teaches Anthropology at the University of Hawaiʻi.

Steve Alm is Prosecuting Attorney for the City and County of Honolulu. Elected in 2020, he is the third person to hold the post since 1990. Alm previously served as U.S. Attorney for Hawaiʻi and as circuit court judge from 2001 to 2016. As a judge, he helped create the nationally noted HOPE (Hawaii’s Opportunity Probation with Enforcement) program for the Hawaiʻi State Judiciary. The HOPE program has served as a model to many court systems and others at high risk of recidivism. Judge Alm also Chaired the Penal Code Review Committee in 2005 and 2015. A notable recommendation in 2015 was the removal of small drug possession from the Repeat Offender Statute thus giving judges discretion to sentence hundreds of defendants to probation since then so they can get treatment in the community rather than a mandatory prison term. Prosecutor Alm is an alumnus of the UH Lab School.

Mark Kawika Patterson is currently the Administrator of the Hawai`i Youth Correctional Facility, Kawailoa Youth and Family Wellness Center. Mr. Patterson began his career in Hawai`i’s Department of Public Safety over 34 years ago as a corrections officer. He rose to the ranks of Warden in 2007 and began a successful tenure working at Women’s Community Correctional Center (WCCC). At WCCC, he facilitated a transitional process to instill trauma-informed practices throughout the facility, state agencies, and community partners.

In June 2014, Mr. Patterson was recruited to build upon his success at WCCC and assist the reform efforts at the Hawai`i Youth Correctional Facility for the Office of Youth Services (OYS). In this role, he continued his trauma-informed care work to integrate opportunities to identify and address trauma and strengthen family connections. His passion to rethink the corrections approach and move toward a therapeutic approach was centered on the Hawaiian concept of creating a pu`uhonua—a traditional Hawaiian place or sanctuary of healing. He is involved in numerous state and national trauma-informed care initiatives and consults with national experts on how trauma-informed care environments can improve outcomes in correctional settings. In 2018, Mr. Patterson and OYS partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice’s Ending Girls’ Incarceration initiative and in July 2022, Hawai`i achieved a first-ever milestone—zero girls incarcerated in the Hawai`i Youth Correctional Facility. His advocacy pushed laws and policies to integrate therapeutic and indigenous methods of healing for the incarcerated population and supported Hawai`i’s efforts to reduce youth incarceration by 82% in the last 10 years. Mr. Patterson is an active member of the Opportunity Youth Action Hawai`i group, an assembly of state and community partners whose project, “Kawailoa: A Transformative Indigenous Model to Replace Youth Incarceration,” was selected as a W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s Racial Equity 2030 Challenge award for $20 million over an eight-year commitment.

Mr. Patterson is currently the chair of the Correctional System Oversight Commission (established in 2019 through Act 179). His service has been instrumental in Hawai`i’s movement to become a trauma-informed state over the past 15 years.

Liam Chinn is a public safety and police reform expert with more than 20 years of experience working locally and internationally. Based on Oʻahu, he supports grassroots mobilization and capacity building efforts for coalitions across the state focused on shifting away from more policing and incarceration toward a public health based approach to safety. This includes Going Home Hawaii, which is the largest reentry coalition in the State, and the Reimagining Public Safety in Hawai’i coalition, coordinated by the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawai’i. 

Keke Walker is a grassroots organizer and advocate for harm reduction and mental health, with over 10 years of experience in housing case management across Hawai’i, California, and Oregon. They bring lived experience to their work with the Reimagining Safety Coalition O’ahu. Keke also serves as Board Treasurer for The Cupcake Girls and as a Grant Advisor for New Moon Fund. They hold a Bachelor’s in Social Sciences from Portland State University and currently work as a Development Associate/Grant Writer for a Black theater collective, alongside their ongoing volunteer time doing community outreach in O’ahu’s Chinatown.

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