Sen. Kamala Harris Kamala HarrisTexas Democratic official urges Biden to visit state: 'I thought he had his own plane' The Hill's Campaign Report: Biden on Trump: 'He'll leave' l GOP laywers brush off Trump's election remarks l Obama's endorsements A game theorist's advice to President Trump on filling the Supreme Court seat MORE (D-Calif.), a 2020 White House hopeful, would end mandatory minimum sentencing, the death penalty and cash bail in an effort to create a criminal justice system focused on fairness and building safe communities, based on a plan released Monday.

Harris aims to end mass incarceration by shifting to a "crime reduction" policy that the campaign said puts "building safe and healthy communities at the center."

Her reform plan calls for ending mandatory minimum sentencing at the federal level and incentivizes states to do the same. It also ends the federal crack and powder cocaine sentencing disparity that has disproportionately impacted black Americans for decades.

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Harris would also legalize marijuana at the federal level, as well as expunge those convictions, and would end federal bans preventing formerly incarcerated individuals from accessing public assistance programs.

She would also end money bail, the death penalty and solitary confinement, and commits to clearing the nationwide rape kit backlog in her first term in the Oval Office.

Harris also said she would create a national Police Systems Review Board to collect data on police shootings and implement "evidence-based safety standards."

Harris highlights her background as a prosecutor, district attorney and attorney general in discussing her reform plan.

"My entire career has been spent making needed reforms and fighting for those who too often are voiceless -- from young people arrested for the first time and getting them jobs instead of jail, to grieving Black mothers who wanted justice for their child’s murder as the system ignored their pain," she said in a statement. "This plan uses my experience and unique capability to root out failures within the justice system."

Along with the plan, Harris's campaign released a 30-minute video of a conversation she recently had with experts and advocates on the nation's criminal justice system.

She is one of 10 Democrats to appear in the third presidential primary debate Thursday in Texas.

Harris has defended her background as a “progressive prosecutor,” but critics have attacked her record.

During the second Democratic presidential debate, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard Tulsi GabbardRepublicans call on DOJ to investigate Netflix over 'Cuties' film Hispanic Caucus campaign arm endorses slate of non-Hispanic candidates Gabbard says she 'was not invited to participate in any way' in Democratic convention MORE (D-Hawaii) said she was “deeply concerned” about Harris’s prosecutorial record, saying Harris “put over 1,500 people in jail for marijuana violations and then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana.”

Gabbard, however, appeared to refer to the number of Californians sent to state prisons for marijuana-related offenses while Harris served as the attorney general. The attorney general’s office doesn‘t directly prosecute the majority of drug cases in the state, according to The Mercury News’s fact-check of the debate.

Former Vice President Joe Biden Joe BidenFormer Pence aide: White House staffers discussed Trump refusing to leave office Progressive group buys domain name of Trump's No. 1 Supreme Court pick Bloomberg rolls out M ad buy to boost Biden in Florida MORE during the same debate also highlighted his career as a defense attorney in contrast to Harris's background.

— This report was updated at 8:36 a.m.