Jeana Raines got her life back on Tuesday, as the Minnesota Board of Pardons wisely forgave and erased long-ago transgressions. The mother of three has since paid restitution for check forgery and earned two college degrees.
The story of Raines and six other Minnesotans, also pardoned, couldn't come at a more fitting hour. Because also this week, hundreds of other Minnesotans will humbly recall past criminal acts.
We need only look in the mirror to see them.
Like Raines, these Minnesotans broke the law, some by selling drugs, others by arson or indecent exposure. Unlike Raines, they never got caught, thus granted the freedom to mature and move into full adult lives to test their infinite potential.
This stark unfairness has gnawed at Emily Baxter, 35, since she was a little girl growing up with a mother who drove a bookmobile and a father who taught vocational skills and volunteered regularly in their small community.
With a two-year Bush Foundation Fellowship, Baxter, a lawyer with the Council on Crime and Justice, has created a brave and provocative project launching Thursday. Its title: "We Are All Criminals."
The project features cryptic photographs and brief mea culpas written by many of this community's upstanding citizens — pediatricians, lawyers, teachers, business professionals — all of whom committed crimes as juveniles. None is identified.
If one in four Minnesotans has a criminal record, Baxter calls this group "the other 75 percent." She also calls them us. You haven't ever committed a crime? Keep thinking.