SENATE BILL 672 Youth Rehabilitation & Opportunity Act Gives young adults sentenced to life without parole the chance to request a parole hearing after serving at least 25 years, recognizing the potential for growth without guaranteeing release. Description:...
FAMILIES UNITED TO END LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE
Latest News & Reports:
SB 672 (Rubio): The Youth Rehabilitation and Opportunity Act
Existing law requires the Board of Parole Hearings to conduct a youth offender parole hearing for offenders sentenced to state prison who committed specified crimes when they were under 25 years of age. Existing law makes a person who was convicted of a controlling...
NEW REPORT: AB 109 FUNDS ARE DUE FOR REFORM
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, April 24th, 2025 CONTACT: Tina Curiel, cjcjmedia@cjcj.org, (415) 621-5661 x. 103 NEW REPORT: AB 109 FUNDS ARE DUE FOR REFORM AB 109 funds continue to support bloated law enforcement bureaucracies. Could they be used for treatment...
Legal Resources & Bills to Follow:
JAILHOUSE LAWYERS MANUAL-NATIONAL LEGAL SUPPORT DIRECTORY 2021
CLICK HERE
CALIFORNIA LEGAL RESOURCE LIST
Compiled by Ella Baker Center English click here Español click here
JAILHOUSE LAWYERS HANDBOOK
CLICK HERE
FUEL Organizers & Actions:
Open Letter To The LWOP Community
by Lester Pope For far too long men and women across the LWOP community have been given the Long Walk of incarceration -- with no relief, reprieve or redemption. We have been perpetually excluded because society has found no compassion for the humans within us they...
LWOPS Support Group at SATF (B-Yard)
On Labor Day, September 1, 2025, incarcerated residents at California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility & State Prison (SATF) in Corcoran held its third annual hygiene drive to the help local unhoused community in Kings County by donating money and hygiene items.
Joshua Palmer #B66703 ASP
My name is Joshua Palmer, CDCR #B66703 and in June 2018 I was sentenced to Life Without the Opportunity for Parole-LWOP. When I was sentenced the judge said, “you are a broken unredeemable person who is unsafe to live in society.” She was right. When I committed my...

Welcome to FUEL (Families United to End Life Without Parole): a non-profit organization dedicated to advocating for justice and reform in the criminal justice system. Join us in our fight for justice, compassion, and a more equitable future.
Our Work:
FUEL participates in a wide variety of actions that include rallies, caravans, meetings, picnic, webinars, LWOP strategy workshops, and additional activities and events that increase awareness and advocacy to end LWOP. Check out our calendar to be a part of future events!
Our Mission:
To end all forms of the death penalty – death by incarceration as well as death by injection. Further, we support incarcerated persons with LWOP sentences and assist families in gaining the skills and knowledge to advocate for the end of LWOP.
Our Background:
We began as a small group making a concerted effort to grow through social media and word of mouth, both inside prison and in the community. In just a few months, the core group expanded their numbers and took on a name that reflected our purpose. The group became known as Families United to End LWOP – FUEL.
Through broad outreach within the criminal justice community, and inside the prisons, within a short period, the group became a source of hope for both women and men serving the “other death penalty”, and an organizing tool for their loved ones in the communities. FUEL partnered with other organizations and joined coalitions which were also engaged in the movement to end LWOP, most significantly, the Drop LWOP coalition.
As the group organized in the community, men and women on the inside began to form Inside FUEL chapters within their facilities, which helped to generate pro-social activity and inspire hope while developing ideas toward ending LWOP. We believe that no one should be defined by their worst decision in life. These motivated men and women raised money for FUEL, as well as funds for charities dedicated to crime survivors. In addition to money, they have donated beautiful handicraft and high valued art that they created. Inside FUEL have also invited coalition members into prisons to create a sense of unity while vigorously organizing.

FUEL members have launched petitions telling their loved one’s story and appealing to the Governor for clemency. The group also launched a petition on behalf of all serving LWOP and delivered it to Governor Brown in November of 2018 during their Seeking Redemption Rally. Material from men and women in prisons throughout the state were part of the packet given to the Governor. Constantly seeking ways to share the humanity of people serving the “other death penalty” has been the motivation to create individual brochures for the men and women. These have given those serving LWOP and their family members a way to tell their story.
FUEL holds rallies in Sacramento and has directed caravans around prison facilities experiencing high incidents of needless covid deaths. The group has participated in numerous panels, led seminars, co-sponsored Town Halls and held workshops on commutations in the communities and within the prison facilities. We are proud to be co-sponsors, with other powerful groups in the state, of SB 300 a piece of legislation challenging the LWOP sentence.
Among our happiest moments was welcoming the husbands of two of our core members home from serving the unforgiving sentence of LWOP. We fight for that to repeat itself until everyone serving the other death penalty is given the opportunity to come hope. The fight continues!
PRISON POLICY NEWS
Prison Policy Initiative What's new on all of the Prison Policy Initiative websites
- Hunger as punishment: How states restrict SNAP benefits for people on probationby Prison Policy Initiative on March 4, 2026
Added Hunger as punishment: How states restrict SNAP benefits for people on probation to the Prison Policy Blog. A patchwork of statutes and administrative […]
- Is your local government collaborating with ICE? Here’s how to find out — and push backby Prison Policy Initiative on March 4, 2026
Added Is your local government collaborating with ICE? Here’s how to find out — and push back to the Prison Policy Blog. From the deputization of local […]
- Specialty courts: A disappointing form of diversionby Prison Policy Initiative on March 4, 2026
Added Specialty courts: A disappointing form of diversion to the Prison Policy Blog. It seems like specialty courts — also called treatment courts, […]
- Resource spotlight: Data projects tracking police misconduct, use of force, and employment historiesby Prison Policy Initiative on March 4, 2026
Added Resource spotlight: Data projects tracking police misconduct, use of force, and employment histories to the Prison Policy Blog. The need for law […]
INSIDE FUEL
“WHO I WAS AND WHO I AM TODAY”
by Naseli Tagoai #H82876 ASP My Story: I should start by who I had been in my family.., Then who I thought and believed I was.., And should be, to and in a lifestyle I’d chosen to live, and the very destructive antisocial core belief system and dysfunctionally warp...
Michael Duncan
What I Am Doing Today I left Pelican Bay State Prison in August of 2023. There I helped organize and create the Community Garden program. I had been part of Pelican Bay's Garden Club since its inception in 2018. The Community Garden, however, grew fruit and vegetables...
What Does Inside FUEL At Mule Creek Look Like?
by Dortell Williams I arrived at Mule Creek in May of 2024, a little over a year ago. I immediately began looking for like-minded people. I wanted to run a Civic Engagement class here, as we did at Chuckawalla. I looked for guidance among the like-minded people I knew...
William Douglas Mello
I am 54 years old & of Indigenous Tribal decent (Indian) and Cantonese Chinese. I have been incarcerated since 1987. I was 18 years old. I am serving “LOWP” sentence and am presently at Calipatria State Prison and am house on “D” yard, where many (most) of us...
Kelsey Thomas
I want to first Thank You for taking the time out to read my story. My name is Kelsey A. Thomas, CDC number D-83629, and I was arrested in 1986, at the age of 28, for Robbery Murder. I was charged with First Degree Murder Special Circumstances, in 1986. In 1988, I was...
Nathaniel Criss
Hope is a Process by Nathaniel J. Criss How can I deliver hope to someone who has the sentence of life without parole? I quickly found the answer to this questions within my own life experience of having LWOP. Nobody "delivered" hope to me. I found it over a period of...






