Growing up in Roxbury, Andrea’s life was filled with instability. When Andrea was eight months old, she lost her mother to a car accident while going to visit her father in prison. She and her brothers bounced around – living with relatives and sometimes in foster care – until her father got out of prison when she was eight years old, and she met him for the first time.
Andrea and her family relied on public housing and food assistance while her grandmother struggled with alcoholism. Her two brothers sadly cycled in and out of the prison system. She lost her twin brother Andre, when he passed away while in the custody of the Department of Corrections as a pre-trial detainee.
Andrea is the only candidate in the field with a strong, legislative track record on criminal justice reform and community policing.
As Boston City Councilor, she worked with partners at the State House, including Governor Baker, to secure line-item funding for investments in community policing. She established the first-ever system of civilian oversight over the Boston Police Department, ultimately establishing an Office of Police Accountability and Transparency in the City of Boston. Andrea led efforts to adopt the use of police body-worn cameras and spearheaded the fight to increase diversity in Boston’s public safety agencies.
She has made real, tangible reform in the areas of criminal justice and police reform, and will continue these efforts as Attorney General to reaffirm faith in a true justice system.