Pubdate: Tue, 29 Aug 2000 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2000, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Forum: http://forums.theglobeandmail.com/ Author: Barrie McKenna Note: With a report from Scripps Howard News Service TEXAS TOPS ALL STATES IN PRISON POPULATION Study Says Governor And Presidential Hopeful George Bush Plays Down Crime Issue On Campaign Trail Washington -- A sobering study that brands Texas the prison capital of the world has suddenly thrust Texas Governor George Bush's get-tough record on crime into the spotlight in the presidential race. An exploding prison population in the 1990s vaulted Texas past California - -- a state nearly twice its population -- as the jurisdiction with the largest prison population in the United States, according to a study released yesterday by the Washington-based Justice Policy Institute. One out of every 20 adults in Texas is either in jail, on parole or on probation, and its prison population grew faster than all other states in the 1990s, the study found. The authors also found that if Texas were a separate country, it would easily lead the world in putting its people behind bars. "It's a factory system," Jason Ziedenberg, a senior researcher at the institute and the report's co-author, said in an interview. "It would have a higher incarceration rate than Russia, China, the United States and the rest of the industrialized and non-industrialized world." Texas, with 20 million people, has a prison population of 163,190 and a total of 706,600 people under some form of criminal justice control. Texas accounted for one out of every five people added to the U.S. prison population in the nineties, according to the institute, which favours rehabilitation over imprisonment. In marked contrast to previous Republican presidential candidates, Mr. Bush has played down the crime issue as a major topic on the campaign trail. He did not mention crime -- which has been declining in recent years -- in his acceptance speech at the Republican national convention in Philadelphia earlier this month, and he wasn't talking about it yesterday in Austin, Tex. Yet his get-tough record is well known. In six years as governor, Mr. Bush has presided over 143 executions. Fully one-fifth of all executions in the United States since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976 have occurred in Texas. Democratic presidential nominee Al Gore has said he wants to be "a law-enforcement president" and has advocated beefed-up policing over incarceration. A Bush campaign spokesman defended Mr. Bush's record yesterday, arguing the state's crackdown has taught criminals there are consequences to their actions. "What the authors of that study might not understand is that Texas also has been very aggressive in using rehabilitation efforts and faith-based organizations to change people's hearts," spokesman Mike Jones said. "The bottom line to all these efforts is that, under Governor Bush, Texas has the lowest violent crime rate in 26 years and the lowest murder rate since the 1950s." But the study raises questions about the soundness of locking people up to fight crime, not just in Texas, but across the United States. The country has the largest prison population in the world at two million people. The study pointed out that the Texas prison boom has not had a matching impact on the crime rate. Crime has dropped in Texas, but at a significantly slower rate than in the rest of the country, and well behind states of similar size, such as New York. "In light of these lackluster results, the architects of Texas' prison policies should question whether these mediocre crime drops are worth the social costs the state is paying," the study concluded. From 1995 to 1998, crime fell 5.1 per cent in Texas, or half the national rate and well behind a 20-per-cent drop in New York. The U.S. Justice Department reported Sunday that violent crime dropped 10.4 per cent last year nationwide to its lowest level since the government started gathering data in 1973. Mr. Zeidenberg insisted the report was not politically motivated nor calculated to embarrass Mr. Bush. He said both Democrats and Republicans share the blame for the state's criminal justice system; Mr. Bush became Texas Governor in 1994 by beating Ann Richards, a Democrat. He also pointed out that Mr. Gore must likewise answer for a doubling of the federal prison population to more than 135,000 since 1992. The study comes as Texas prison officials and legislators are appealing for more funds to build 14,600 new prison spaces by 2005. "The sheer numbers of people in prison and jail in Texas are signs of a system fixated on punishment, and devoid of compassion," Mr. Zeidenberg and co-author Vincent Schiraldi said in a statement. But Larry Todd, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, said the increased prison population is a result of get-tough policies Texas voters approved in a series of elections over the last decade, rather than any administrative decisions made by Mr. Bush. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens