November 15, 2003 - Tribune Media Services
Lock-'Em-Up Logic Fails On All Fronts
Even a conservative like CaI Thomas sees flaws in sentencing
zeal
After two decades of being "tough on crime" by "locking
them up and throwing away the key" -- to recall two of the
effective political slogans of the past -- the bill has come
due. Many states have become incapable or unwilling to pay the
cost of housing record numbers of inmates. Twenty-five states
have already passed laws easing or eliminating the minimum sentencing
requirements that were politically popular in the 1980s and '90s.
They are also considering early parole for nonviolent, non. dangerous
offenders to ease overcrowding and the cost of warehousing so
many convicts.
Joseph Lehman, secretary of the Washington state Department
of Corrections, told the New York Times (Nov. 10) that the people
behind liberalizing the tough laws "are not all advocates
of a liberal philosophy." Indeed, they are not. I am one
of them.
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), the U.S.
prison and jail population exceeded 2 million for the first time
in June 2002. By the end of last year, 33,000 more inmates had
been added to the total. That means one out of every 142 residents
is incarcerated in this country. The average cost to states per
inmate per day is $57.92, according to the 2000 Corrections Yearbook.
In Georgia, where about 35,000 citizens are behind bars, it costs
taxpayers more than $20,000 per year per inmate and each jail
cell costs $60,000 to build.
What are taxpayers getting for their money?
They get a false sense of security, as if putting current
criminals behind bars ensures there won't be future criminals.
If locking up everyone now committing crimes would eliminate
crime, I'd be all for it, but new criminals are born, or made,
every day. Something is wrong with the system.
Violent and dangerous offenders should be locked up and, in
capital cases, executed. But violent offenders are just 49 percent
of the prison population. Again, according to BJS, the rest of
the prisoners are behind bars for property crimes (19 percent),
drug crimes (20 percent) and crimes affecting the "public
order" (11 percent). This half of the prison population
ought to be doing something else besides sitting in prison and
costing the law-abiding money.
We do retribution well. We should be focusing on restitution.
If I steal your TV set, putting me in prison won't get it
back. Making me pay a fine to the government (whose TV set was
not stolen) won't restore your set, unless you have a very low
deductible on your homeowner's insurance, which will undoubtedly
go up if you file a claim. I t would be better if the law required
me to work to earn the money to buy you a new TV set and to pay
you, not the government, a fine for your inconvenience and trouble.
I should also be forced to pay court costs.
Such an approach would have a number of benefits. First, you
would get your TV back. The victim should always be the law's
primary concern., Second, forcing me to acknowledge that I have
wronged a person and not the state (which is a nonperson) can
help change my view of other people's property. Third, it would
save taxpayers the cost of incarcerating me. And, fourth, making
me pay the person I have wronged is a far better and more proven
method for changing my life and behavior than putting me in prison
where statistics show I am more likely to become a better criminal
than a better citizen.
If the objective of criminal laws is to reduce crime, the
laws currently on the books are clearly not achieving it. The
corporate monsters who rob stockholders and employees of their
jobs and careers shouldn't go to jail. They should be forced
to work to payoff as much as they possibly can to those they
have wronged. That is redemptive for them, and it is restorative
to the victims who lost their retirement and their paychecks
to greed.
Republicans, who were behind many of these "tough on
crime" laws, have an opportunity to fight crime in ways
that will actually work and save the taxpayers lots of money.
That is supposed to be the Republican way. It is certainly the
only way that will succeed.
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