Pubdate: Mon, 28 Feb 2000 Source: Newsweek (US) Copyright: 2000 Newsweek, Inc. Contact: 251 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Website: http://www.newsweek.com/nw-srv/printed/us/ Author: Ellis Cose Cited: The Sentencing Project: http://www.sentencingproject.org/ The November Coalition: http://www.november.org/ LOCKED AWAY AND FORGOTTEN We're Going To Have To Face Up To It--The Prison System Doesn't Work With vigils, rallies and teach-ins across America, a ragtag coalition of activists last Tuesday marked the moment when the nation's prison population theoretically rose above 2 million for the first time ever. Spirited though they were, the efforts rated little more than a yawn on the nation's attention meter. They certainly didn't create enough of a stir to overshadow the day's other groundbreaking event: television's first-ever win-a-multimillionaire pageant. In fact, the inmate projections (made by the Justice Policy Institute, a progressive criminal-justice think tank) may have outpaced reality. More conservative statisticians believe we are approaching, but not yet at, the 2 million milestone. Whatever the actual current number, it is clearly going up and almost certainly will reach 2 million before the year is out. Such high incarceration rates may seem a reasonable price to pay to keep America safe. But a number of thoughtful people are concluding it is doing nothing of the sort. And although their qualms have not yet ignited a mass movement, some believe that may be about to change. The problem is that criminal-justice issues, by their very nature, are morally messy. They focus on the supposed dregs of society, a group with no political clout and little claim to compassion. They also, at this point, focus primarily on people who are black or Latino. A majority of Americans "can easily decide it's not their problem," noted Marc Mauer of the Sentencing Project, a group promoting criminal-justice reform. Even many black and Latino liberals are ambivalent about the criminal class. As Los Angeles civil-rights lawyer Connie Rice observes, convicts are "a caste of untouchables" society is all too happy to lock away. Yet even the police are increasingly talking of prevention and community policing as an alternative to locking up people who, for the most part, eventually end up on the streets again. There is also, Mauer notes, a broader recognition of "the impact on whole communities and generations" of sending ever-growing numbers of people to jail. Part of that recognition comes from the work of organizations like the Sentencing Project, which over the last several years has churned out one report after another detailing what it considers flaws in the American approach to justice. That approach has resulted in nearly seven times as many female inmates now (largely for drug offenses) than in 1980—meaning tens of thousands of children look to prison for mothering. And it has resulted in roughly half a million ex-cons, hardened and schooled in prison, re-entering communities yearly. That approach has also, in the opinion of many researchers, resulted in rampant unfairness: nonviolent drug addicts getting more prison time than murderers, minorities getting harsher treatment than whites. Black, Latino and Asian youths (taken together) were 2.8 times more likely to be arrested for a violent crime, 6.2 times more likely to end up in adult court and 7 times more likely to be sent to prison than their white counterparts, says a new JPI study. Another result of the skyrocketing prison numbers is that more and more people have gotten a close-up look at what modern American justice means. Tom Murlowski, now associate director of the November Coalition (a Colville, Wash.-based organization that advocates reform of drug laws), got involved after a friend was sent to prison on a drug conviction. "I never had dreamed of becoming an activist until I saw the woman I care about destroyed," says the former technical worker. Patricia Moore, a former city-council member of Compton, Calif., who was convicted of extortion, was similarly shaken by personal experience. After serving most of a 33-month term, she emerged this month with petitions asking President Clinton to pardon 16 women (all nonviolent drug offenders) she met behind bars. The answer to their problems, Moore concluded, "can't be just in prison." Civil-rights leaders, previously nervous about raising too much of a ruckus about prison policy, are becoming bolder. Some see an opening with next year's U.N. conference on race. With the United States poised to overtake Russia as the most prison-happy place on the planet, they plan to take their concerns to the United Nations. "All the signs point toward more public discussion about such issues," concluded Mary Frances Berry, head of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. That discussion--taking in those who care about everything from civil rights to law enforcement to drug policy--is likely to create some unusual bedfellows. If they end up creating a mass movement, it will not be because they care so much about prisoners, but because they care about what putting so many Americans behind bars does to the country's soul. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake