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Mr.
Cranston J. Mitchell was nominated to the United States Parole Commission by President
George W. Bush. The nomination was confirmed by the United States Senate on March
6, 2003.
At the time of Mr. Mitchell's appointment to the Parole Commission he was serving
as a Correctional Program Specialist for the Department of Justice, National Institute
of Corrections (NIC) in Washington, DC. Prior to the NIC position he spent approximately
twenty five (25) years in state government, working for the State of Missouri.
His longest tenure in state government was eighteen years (18) with the Missouri
Department of Corrections as Chairman and Director of the Board of Probation and
Parole. He also worked as a counselor and administrator in the Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education, Division of Vocational Rehabilitation, and as a police
officer in the City of St. Louis, Missouri for seven (7) years.
Mr. Mitchell was the recipient of a Danforth Fellowship and was selected to
attend the Program for Senior Executives in State and Local Government at Harvard
University in Cambridge, MA. He was honored by the Association of Paroling Authorities,
International and presented with the Vincent O'Leary Award for his contributions
to the field of parole. He also was the recipient of the Jonathan Jasper Wright
Community Leadership Award given to him by the National Association of Blacks
in Criminal Justice.
Mr. Mitchell is a native of St. Louis, Missouri and graduated from the University
of Missouri-St. Louis with a BS degree, majoring in political science.
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