Pubdate: Thu, 12 Sep 2002 Source: Gleaner, The (KY) Copyright: 2002 The E.W. Scripps Co Contact: http://www.thegleaner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1634 Note: 'Letter to editor' in the subject line of e-mail. Include your name, address and phone number (for verification). Keep the letter within 250 words CRIME DECLINE IN NUMBERS SHOULDN'T MAKE US LAX Still another report has confirmed that crime is down in the United States, but no one should suppose that crime is licked, that the police can go home now and that we can start shutting down the prisons. This report comes from a 2001 government survey based on interviews with victims and concerns all violent crime but murder. The year-to-year decline: 9 percent. A news account says the decline in violent crime since 1993 is 50 percent. As cheer-worthy as that news is, it should be kept in mind that crime today remains several times higher than it was in the 1950s. One writer notes that the decline we've been seeing in the past decade would have to continue for "another three decades" to get us back to those years when we did not have to take all the fearful "precautions" we take today. Among the reasons crime has escalated as much as it has over the past half-century, another analyst has observed, is the widespread breaking up of families and a decline in certain moral norms. These issues and some other factors causing crime increases may be largely outside the range of government action, the analyst is quoted as saying, but tough sentencing is not. While some social scientists deny that the imprisonment of some 2 million people has been the decisive factor in the recent reduction of crime, it cannot be denied that it has been an important factor. Some changes in sentencing practices may well be due -- especially for non-violent crimes -- but no vast overhaul is due. Neither is it time for police to let up on the improved strategies they have developed over the years or for the public to become lax in the tough-minded attitudes that have been adopted. The tragedy of crime is immense in lives damaged, ruined and lost. Government needs to do what it can to help. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth