Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jul 2001 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2001 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Barry Saunders Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) HARD TRUTHS FROM BEHIND THOSE BARS Noted 20th-century philosopher Richard Pryor once told a funny but poignant story about filming a movie in an Arizona prison where most of the inmates were young black dudes. He talked, among other things, about a profound sense of loss, about how these strong young warriors could be out helping to build a better world but instead were locked up, victimized by "the man." After weeks spent getting to know these noble "warriors" -- one of whose heinous crimes had earned him a triple life sentence -- Pryor reached a different conclusion. He chucked his romanticism for their plight and gleefully proclaimed, "Thank God for prisons." Some of the inmates I've known -- some of whom I've shared cells with -- made me equally grateful for our penal system. Most black people, who are overwhelmingly the victims of these violent black miscreants, feel the same way. Thank God for prisons, indeed. But I've also known men who had no business being in prison and who wouldn't have been there had it not been for the color of their skin. Before I became the paragon of virtue you see standing before you today, I'd been to jail four times. I was sent there by black cops and white cops, white judges and black judges. For instance, one egregious case was for something called verbal assault: I called some chump everything but a Moon Pie for accusing me of stealing his basketball. I didn't even know that was a crime, but I discovered that it was when I found myself manhandled, handcuffed and tossed into the back of a cop cruiser and taken to jail. By a black cop. After a few nights in jail, for which taxpayers footed the bill to feed and house me, and a trial, I received probation. I can't say race was solely responsible for my 16-year-old self being locked up and receiving a record for such a minor "crime" -- at the time I was so mean I couldn't stand my own self -- but I have a hard time imagining one of my white classmates from the good side of town being locked up for committing the same offense. Whether bias was at work in my case or not, the racial inequities in sentencing for drug crimes are beyond dispute. An N&O story earlier this week reported that 92 percent of the people in state prisons for the two most common categories of drug charges -- selling and possessing with intent to sell certain types of narcotics -- were black men, despite surveys showing that blacks, whites and Hispanics use illegal drugs in roughly the same proportion. Any so-called black leader -- religious, social or civic -- who read that story and wasn't jolted into action ought to be ashamed. And then ignored. The incarceration of young black men devastates black women, black children - -- many of whom will grow up without fathers, making them more likely to become incarcerated black men -- and society as a whole. Oh, you think it doesn't adversely affect you? OK, where do you think that $1.2 billion the state needs to build even more new prisons will come from? - --- MAP posted-by: GD