Pubdate: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Timothy Lynch Note: The writer is director of the Cato Institute's Project on Criminal Justice. ALL LOCKED UP America's criminal justice system is going to make history this month as the number of incarcerated people surpasses 2 million for the first time. But this is a development for which neither political party will attempt to claim credit. Indeed, people across the political spectrum seem to recognize that this is a sad occasion - an occasion that raises a nagging question: Why do so many Americans need to be kept behind iron bars? To appreciate why this is such an extraordinary moment, one needs to put the 2-million-prisoner factoid into context. It took more than 200 years for America to hold 1 million prisoners all at once. And yet we have managed to incarcerate the second million in only the past 10 years. Analysts at the Justice Policy Institute point out that our per capita incarceration rate is now second only to Russia's. This is hardly something that anyone would tout as an achievement. Throughout the 1990s, billions of dollars were spent on prison construction. But the supply of space did not stay ahead of demand. As soon as prisons were built, they were immediately filled with prisoners. In fact, most prison facilities are operating beyond their design capacity. The massive expenditure of tax dollars on prison construction has spawned some bizarre dynamics. A generation ago, few people wished to live near a prison. Today, small towns and cities undergoing hard times tenaciously lobby for prisons to be built in their back yards. Those cities that are unsuccessful go back to the state legislature to push for more prison construction - and then vie again for the coveted selection site. In California, the Correctional Peace Officers Union has grown so large that it is now a political force. With more than 27,000 dues-paying prison guards, the union gives political contributions to the candidates who promise to build more prisons, hire more guards and increase guard salaries and benefits. And the private firms that contract with the prison authorities for assorted supplies are political players too--since they are well aware that as the prison population grows, their revenues rise ever higher. Some analysts have dubbed this political racket the "prison industrial complex." Proponents of incarceration tend to brush off these side effects. They tell us that when our incarceration rate is low, our crime rate is high - and that the declining crime rates in recent years are the result of tough, no-nonsense incarceration policies. They say we have a simple choice: more prisons or more crime. On closer inspection, the choice is not so stark. The first thing to clarify is what we mean by "crime." For as Stanford Law Prof. Herbert Packer once noted, "We can have as much or as little crime as we please, depending on what we choose to count as criminal." No one can dispute that prison cells incapacitate convicts. A serial rapist, for example, cannot prey upon his neighborhood while he is behind barbed-wire fences. On the other hand, there is no corresponding increase in public safety when the government incarcerates a person for using or even selling drugs. Years of experience show that drugs are not rendered less available by locking up drug offenders. The law of supply and demand states that as long as there is a demand for a product, the market will make that product available at some price. A close look at crime statistics reveals that the drug war is fueling the growth in our prison population. In 1981, only 22 percent of federal inmates were drug prisoners. Today, 60 percent are drug prisoners. One nasty (but unavoidable) effect of waging a drug war with limited jail space is that violent criminals will sometimes be released from prison in order to make room for drug offenders. That "displacement effect" can be addressed in one of two ways. We can end the drug war - or we can build more prisons. It might make sense to build more prisons if we were about to capture the last few hundred remaining drug dealers and users. But since we are nowhere near that point, it is not good policy to put more money into prison construction. Indeed, the government estimates that the number of American drug users to be about 18 million. Because policymakers have refused to come to grips with the discordant effects of a failed drug policy, we should declare a moratorium on new prison construction until the drug war is ended. Limited prison capacity is one of the only things restraining the politicians from escalating a futile crusade to even higher levels. The writer is director of the Cato Institute's Project on Criminal Justice. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D