Employees
those inside the prisons as well as their loved ones. Lori was quickly contacted by others, including prison staff, who wanted to tell their stories without fear of retaliation. She realized the need for more advocacy
for those directly impacted by the state's carceral system and decided to form a nonprofit. Lori has spent her life helping to amplify the voices of others including children and adults with special needs. She has lived in southwest Missouri her entire life and enjoys spending time with her family and loved ones.
In addition to her business and academic pursuits, Hannah enjoys engaging in creative activities such as making art and decorating. Her artistic projects range from painting and sculpture to interior design, reflecting her diverse talents and interests. Committed to growth, creativity, and social impact, Hannah has received recognition for her academic achievements and entrepreneurial success. As she completes her marketing degree, she plans to expand her businesses, further her activism, and explore new opportunities to make a meaningful impact in her community and beyond.
Board Members
Since becoming a criminal defense attorney, Carissa has spent time with clients in prisons and jails across the state. Hearing the experiences and conditions her clients were living in while held in custody ignited a passion for advocating for prison reform. After learning about Missouri Prison Reform, Carissa reached out to become involved with the organization to aid in bringing awareness to the struggles, treatment, and circumstances in which people are being forced to live in across Missouri. She has since become a member of the board and looks forward to the positive impact reform can have on custodial facilities in the state.
Prior to joining MJC, Amy was a trial attorney with the law firm of Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, in both their Chicago and St. Louis offices. She has extensive trial, appellate, and mediation experience and has prioritized public interest work throughout her career.
Since 2012, Amy has been part of a team of advocates helping to lead efforts to seek second-chance sentences for Missouri youth sentenced to die behind bars. For the last several years, she has both provided direct representation to those clients and worked for changes in the law to end juvenile life without parole sentences. That work included state and federal habeas litigation, as well as a successful class action culminating in a systemic overhaul of the parole process for juvenile lifers. Under the reformed process, juvenile parole hearings have gone from an 86% denial rate to a 100% grant rate. Amy is the recipient of the 2020 ABA’s Livingston Hall Juvenile Justice Award for her work on behalf of juvenile lifers. In addition, she has played a pivotal part in state-wide litigation related to, among other things: inadequate treatment for inmates with chronic Hepatitis C; the parole revocation process that impacts thousands of Missouri parolees; Missouri’s chronically under-resourced and over-burdened public defender system; and the protection of individuals’ First Amendment rights, especially the right to protest against police violence and racial injustice.
Amy is a 2010 graduate of Northwestern Pritzker School of Law. While in law school, Amy served as a student attorney with the Bluhm Legal Clinic’s Center on Wrongful Convictions, where she helped represent clients in post-conviction, actual innocence cases. Amy is a proud alumna of Grinnell College, where she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in economics in 2006. She is an avid gardener, and lives in St. Louis with her partner, three young children, and menagerie of animals.
Brandon is the recipient of several awards, including the “Up & Coming Lawyer” award from Missouri
Lawyers Weekly (2019); Roy F. Essen Memorial Award for Outstanding Work as a Young Lawyer (2022) (St. Louis County Bar Association) and The Ronda F. Williams Community Awareness award in 2022 (The Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis).
impactful legislation for municipal and state legislatures, improving the conditions
inside of county jails & state prisons. Chelsea began her 10-year legal career right as the Ferguson Uprising sparked its national movement, fighting for the rights of
protesters wrongfully detained by police and settling her first federal §1983 civil rights case during her first year of practice. She has served on several non-profit boards, including Missouri Prison Reform and Missourians to Abolish the Death Penalty, and Chelsea has led numerous municipal and state political efforts, from campaign management to communications director to policy development. She is proud to work with Missouri Prison Reform to advance the rights and compassionate treatment of those living under the state carceral system.