Stitching amends: Inside Missouri’s restorative justice quilt program
by Juliet La Sala · The Washington TimesInmates in maximum security at South Central Correctional Center in Licking, Missouri, are making quilts for foster children, weighted vests for kids with autism and sleeping mats for the homeless — not because they have to, but because they choose to.
The idea behind this part of Missouri’s Restorative Justice Program is straightforward: Inmates who have caused harm to their communities can and should spend part of their incarceration trying to repair that harm. This philosophy has drawn international attention, inspired an award-winning Netflix documentary and spread to 10 other prisons across the state.
“The program’s philosophy aims to promote understanding, accountability and healing. This is based on a recognition of wrongs done, of damage caused and how to repair that damage to any possible extent,” Cindy Roach, the correctional center’s restorative justice coordinator, told The Washington Times in an email.
The program caught the eye of filmmaker Jenifer McShane, who reached out to the prison after seeing the inmates’ quilts. What followed was “The Quilters,” a short documentary that premiered at the DC/DOX Film Festival in 2024, won Audience Awards at the BendFilm Festival and the Middlebury New Filmmakers Festival, earned a Jury Award at the Santa Fe International Film Festival and was shortlisted for an Academy Award in the best documentary short category before arriving on Netflix in May 2025.
“Since the airing of ’The Quilters’ on Netflix, we have been absolutely overwhelmed with letters, calls, emails and donations from well-wishers all over the world,” Karen Pojmann, the Missouri Department of Corrections’ communications director, told The Times in an email.
“We have received donations of materials and supplies from just about every state and international shipments from England, Ireland and as far as Australia,” Ms. Roach added.
Since the program began tracking its numbers in 2022, inmates have delivered approximately 11,221 items to organizations in need. More than 1,600 quilts of various sizes have gone to foster homes, auctions, church benefits, the Missouri Special Olympics and other charities.
Inmates also make teddy bears, sleeping mats crocheted from recycled plastic bags for the homeless, kids’ stocking hats, baby blankets and afghans. Skilled artists on the team produce Vacation Bible School murals, tapestries and paintings. Currently, 23 inmates work daily on these projects at the prison.
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It all began about eight to 10 years ago with Tamara Stell, who led the prison’s Restorative Justice Organization and recently retired. She brought a foster kids initiative to the facility, and the rest is history.
Ms. Roach shared with The Times what one inmate told her about what the program means to him. “I would say it gives you a self pride to know that you’re helping out and giving back to a child that may not be getting anything for their birthday,” she quoted the inmate as saying. “A lot of the inmates have been in foster care, so it really resonates with them. They are letting the foster kids know that they matter — that they are thinking of them and care about them.”
The program’s reputation has also attracted an undisclosed New York City fashion company that reached out to Missouri’s restorative justice programs. After learning about the inmates’ skills, organizers determined that the company’s couture tailors would direct their training visits to other correctional camps across the state instead.
Restorative justice is a volunteer program; the inmates are not paid. This distinguishes it from Missouri Vocational Enterprises, a separate paid job-training program where inmates can earn wages, complete apprenticeships and receive Department of Labor-approved certifications. Inmates can hold paid jobs alongside their volunteer work.
“Restorative Justice does include components such as a course called Impact of Crime on Victims, through which offenders gain a better understanding of the long-term effects of their crimes and may experience a personal transformation and learn to take accountability,” Ms. Pojmann wrote.
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Ms. Pojmann said that while the Missouri Department of Corrections provides some funding, the restorative justice programs primarily rely on donated materials and supplies, inmate contributions from canteen purchases and yearly fundraisers.
A 2023 study published in “Criminology & Criminal Justice,” which examined 27 separate research studies involving more than 22,000 adult participants, found that restorative justice programs were associated with a small but significant reduction in general recidivism — roughly a 17% reduction in reoffending compared to traditional approaches.
The study found no significant effect on violent recidivism, and results varied widely. However, that same analysis found significant improvements in victim and inmate satisfaction, victims’ sense of fairness, and inmate accountability.
Overall, Ms. Roach says the program has measurable effects on inmates and their sense of personal redemption.
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“Each day, each offender in our little quilt shop comes to work with a mission to create something beautiful, something uniquely designed by them that they can be proud of in helping to give back,” she said. “It is their dedication towards responsibility, remorse and reparation that makes this program a success.”
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Juliet La Sala
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