“Our criminal justice system treats you better if you are rich and
guilty than if you are poor and innocent.”
Bryan Stevenson
Fear of criminals and being soft on crime has been a
Republican go-to- election issue since the race-baiting “Willie Horton” H.W.
Bush commercials during the 1988 presidential campaign. Famously, Republican
Bush attacked Democrat Michael Dukakis for permitting convicted murders to
receive weekend furloughs from prison.
The campaign use of the criminal justice system again
reappeared in the most recent Senate race between Democrat John Fetterman and
Republican Mehmet Oz. Lt. Governor
Fetterman served as chairman of Pennsylvania’s Board of Pardons and called for
prison reform. Oz repeatedly claimed, in
attack ads and statements to the press, that his opponent wanted to release
criminals from prison making Pennsylvania less safe.
It is interesting how contradictory Republican positions
have been when it comes to proposing legislation on criminal justice or in
taking actions while in office. During the 2016 presidential primaries, many
Republican candidates advanced positions on criminal justice. Their conservative
proposals were designed to save taxpayers from paying for expensive prison
systems by limiting prison time.
Former President Donald Trump weighed in with prison reform
signing into law the 2018 First Step Act. This legislation reduced penalties
for crack cocaine offenses and afforded prisoners more opportunities to obtain
an earlier release by participating in programs designed to reduce recidivism.
At the end of his term, Trump pardoned a woman sentenced to
life after her conviction for cocaine trafficking. (The President’s friend, Kim
Kardashian championed her cause.) In
addition, Trump pardoned numerous close allies whom committed crimes in support
of his presidency.
Politics aside, criminal justice in America suffers from
major systemic problems that require the attention of both political parties.
The truth is that it was a concerted bipartisan effort that built our out-of-control
prison-industrial-complex in the first place. For several decades, both
political parties championed long sentences for minor drug offenses. The over-building
of prisons in rural areas became a common pork-barrel project. How the damage might be repaired is the
subject of this commentary.
There is a general consensus that America imprisons too many
people for far too long when compared to the rest of the world or even our own
history. There are now more people serving life sentences than the total number
of prisoners held in U.S. prisons in the early 1970s. Blacks represent 35% of
those in state prison for drug possession even though Blacks make up only 13%
of the population and use drugs in the same numbers as other racial groups.
High unemployment and government assistance rates, loss of
tax revenues and decreased job mobility among former prisoners results in a
loss of $87 billion to our annual GNP. The total cost of the American criminal
justice system is nearly $1.2 trillion each year. Children of parents who are
incarcerated are more likely to live in poverty and suffer from mental health
issues. As an example of the cost to society,
states spend more on those sentenced to 10 or more years in prison than they do
on K-12 students over 13 school years.
What is to be done? Experts agree that there are four
possible justifications for putting people in prison. First, is “punishment,” the price for ignoring
society’s rules. Second is “incapacitation” or removing from society those who
would do us harm. Third is “deterrence,” making would-be criminals think twice
before breaking the law. To address these three goals reformers are now examining
what the lawbreakers deserve. They ask the question what is a proper criminal
sentence. Many beleive that mandatory sentencing laws often do not fit the
crime and are out of proportion to the criminal offense.
The fourth justification for jailing individuals, “rehabilitation”,
has drawn the most attention of criminal justice advocates. Correctional
institutions have done a poor job of “correcting” their populations. The
Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics establishes that following release,
two-thirds of prisoners are rearrested. While in-prison programs need improvement
with updated social science models to reorient those with criminal intent, many
believe that preemptive childhood programs are the true answer. This would include heavy investment in
education, housing, health care and jobs.
To combat criminal justice abuses, there is a vocal,
progressive contingent that has called for the abolition of much of the
criminal justice system. However, most Americans are not in favor of emptying
the prisons or defunding the police. In fact, minorities living in urban areas
have often called for more police as gun violence escalates.
There is still much that can be accomplished. The criminal
justice system can double-down on rehabilitation efforts. Jail sentences for
petty crimes and small-scale drug dealing can be eliminated and replaced with
diversionary programs like special drug and mental health courts. Solitary
confinement can be eliminated as a punishment tool. The present system of cash bail,
which insures that many low-income defendants will languish in jail before
having their day in court, can be reformed. Public safety involving the
mentally ill can be shifted from the police to qualified mental health
professionals. Violence intervention programs to deal with urban gangs can
receive more adequate funding.
President Biden has proposed numerous criminal justice
reforms. These programs have little
chance of gaining traction in the upcoming divided Congress. It will be left to
state and local governments to enact improvements that will make a difference.
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