Pubdate: Sun, 20 Aug 2000 Source: Washington Post (DC) Section: Outlook, A Look At ... Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company Contact: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Adam Gelb Note: Adam Gelb, former policy director for Maryland Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, is executive vice president of PSComm, LLC, a public safety management and technology consulting firm in Montgomery County. Interviews outside the prison were conducted by Val Hymes, an Episcopal prison ministry activist. A LOOK AT . . . GETTING OUT OF JAIL With 10 slayings in the nation's capital in a single week, the District's police chief, Charles H. Ramsey, was in the hot seat last month when he announced yet another initiative to stop the killing--deploying more officers to the streets. When violence erupts, police are always called on for the solutions. But the most glaring failure in the nation's fight against crime isn't a police matter. It's the lack of staff, services and support for parole and probation systems--and Washington is no exception. There are now 17,000 criminal offenders on probation or parole here, plus thousands more suspects awaiting trial. And several studies show that people on parole or probation are responsible for a disproportionate share of crime. But as in cities across the country, the community supervision apparatus here is so overwhelmed, fragmented and lax that it neither protects the public nor rehabilitates offenders. While the rise in the U.S. prison population--now topping 1.3 million--has gotten a lot of publicity, the dramatic increase in the number of offenders released to community supervision seems to have escaped public notice. Nearly 5 million Americans now crowd probation and parole caseloads. Once made up mostly of minor offenders, probation rolls increasingly mirror the prison population. More than half of those on probation are convicted felons and about 60 percent are drug addicts, according to the Justice Department. It follows that the best chance we have to put the biggest dent in the crime problem is to target these serious and chronic offenders on probation and parole much more effectively. Parole and probation departments need adequate funding to provide intensive drug testing and treatment; to put more probation officers out in communities in teams with police; and to modernize information systems to ensure that offenders don't slip through the cracks. Yet over the past 20 years, funding per prisoner nationwide has grown three times faster than funding per probationer and parolees. This disparity has left the supervision agencies unable to handle their current caseloads, let alone manage the crush of prison inmates being released daily. A recent and chilling example of the inability of the system to adequately supervise parolees is the brutal slaying of 8-year-old Kevin Shifflett in Alexandria. The man who is the prime suspect in the case was released on mandatory parole on April 7 after serving six years in prison in Virginia for malicious wounding and sodomy. On April 17, he was arrested for felony cocaine possession at a Fairfax hotel, but a judicial officer, apparently either unaware of or without regard for his parole status, put him back on the streets. Two days later, the boy was stabbed to death. Detectives have linked the suspect's DNA to the getaway vehicle. It would be easy to point a finger at the probation and parole officers themselves. But the real issue is that they are understaffed and underequipped, and they lack sufficient legal authority and treatment tools to control their charges. Many of them "supervise" offenders by talking to each one across a desk for 15 minutes a month. They then spend hours churning out forms without access to computers, let alone databases that would alert them to the arrest of one of their 100 or more clients. Even when officials learn somehow that an offender has broken the rules, there's not much they can do about it. The standard practice is to let violations pile up until there are enough to convince a judge or parole board to revoke release and send the offender to prison to serve out his sentence. It's all or nothing. Very few courts or probation offices set or follow policies of graduated sanctions, designed to enforce conditions of supervision and teach offenders that the system is serious about holding them accountable--for their own safety as well as the public's. Some judges even seem to believe that if someone has too many violations, he simply isn't suited to probation. In 28 percent of cases for probation violation brought before D.C. Superior Court judges, probation is terminated without penalty, and the violator is released from his legal obligation altogether, according to a recent University of Maryland study. Twenty-three percent of cases result in no action. Probation is revoked--and the violator is imprisoned--in only 17 percent of cases. Both political parties share the blame for the debacle. Republicans place their chips on more prisons and torpedoed part of the 1994 federal crime law that would have allowed states to spend part of a massive federal infusion of corrections dollars on community supervision. They seek to lengthen prison terms by abolishing parole, but are silent on the equally important question of how to deal with convicts once they do get out. Democrats have put their political bets on more police, who are far more visible and far better organized than parole and probation officers when it comes to labor unions and lobbying. Democrats have shied away from granting stronger legal authority to probation departments. Some even have opposed dedicating drug treatment slots to offenders, preferring to let dangerous criminal addicts stand in first-come, first-served waiting lines with those whose drug habits less clearly threaten public welfare. Drug treatment courts represent the largest effort to shake life into the community supervision system. By combining the carrot (drug treatment) with the stick (frequent drug testing and increased penalties for failed tests), some 450 drug courts across the nation are providing a more intensive level of supervision than ever before. But these courts have had spotty results to date and still handle only a minuscule amount of the total offender population. Much more fundamental changes must be made, in funding, training, basic management and philosophy. Some jurisdictions, including the District and Maryland, are beginning to tackle these challenges. Technology is beginning to connect the police and treatment providers with probation agencies so they can share intelligence quickly. Drug treatment slots are becoming more readily available, and low-cost, high-speed drug testing machines now allow for frequent screening of all offenders, not just the few in drug treatment courts. Most importantly, new legal mechanisms are being created to allow swifter and more certain penalties for violations of supervision. In much the same way that community policing is reinventing law enforcement, community supervision must be transformed from a reactive, closed-door operation into one that is based in neighborhoods, enlists participation from victims and citizens, and aggressively seeks to prevent crime. Adam Gelb, former policy director for Maryland Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, is executive vice president of PSComm, LLC, a public safety management and technology consulting firm in Montgomery County. Interviews outside the prison were conducted by Val Hymes, an Episcopal prison ministry activist. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D