Pubdate: Sun, 02 Sep 2001 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2001 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/162 Author: Fox Butterfield, The New York Times STATES EASE ANTI-CRIME EFFORTS AS PRISON COSTS SOAR Reversing a 20-year trend toward tougher laws, a number of states have quietly rolled back some of their most stringent anti-crime measures this year, including those imposing mandatory minimum sentences and forbidding early parole. The new laws, along with a voter initiative in California that provides for treatment rather than prison for many drug offenders, reflect a political climate that has changed markedly as crime has fallen, the cost of running prisons has exploded and the economy has slowed, state legislators and criminal justice experts say. After a two-decade boom in prison construction and a quadrupling of the number of inmates, states spend $30 billion a year to operate their prisons, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. With voters saying they are more concerned about issues such as education than about street violence, state legislators are finding they must cut the growth in prison inmates to satisfy the demand for new services and balance their budgets. With several states re-examining their criminal laws, including New York, Alabama, Georgia, New Mexico and Idaho, the changes are likely to hasten a decline in the number of state prison inmates, which began to fall in the second half of last year for the first time since 1972, experts and lawmakers say. Perhaps the most significant changes, the experts say, occurred in four states that this year dropped some 1990s sentencing laws that required criminals to serve long terms without the possibility of parole. The four are Louisiana, Connecticut, Indiana and North Dakota. Iowa passed a similar law this year, giving judges discretion in imposing what had been a mandatory five-year sentence for low-level drug crimes and certain property crimes. "These may be small states, and the new laws are not comprehensive reforms, but it is very significant that these are not just liberal Northeastern states," said Nicholas Turner, director of the State Sentencing and Corrections Project at the Vera Institute of Justice in New York, a research organization. "What has happened this year in these states implies a lot about a change in the political culture." Not everyone has supported the revised laws. Some legislators have been accused of being "soft on crime," and prosecutors have complained that scrapping mandatory minimum sentences takes away one of their best tools to get criminals to plea bargain and trade information about other criminals in exchange for lesser sentences. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake