Pubdate: Sun, 01 Dec 2002 Source: Daily Ardmoreite, The (OK) Copyright: 2002 Daily Ardmoreite Contact: http://ardmoreite.com/stText/sendLetter.html Website: http://www.ardmoreite.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1574 Author: Ron Jenkins, Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) OKLAHOMA STILL NOT SMART ENOUGH ON CRIME OKLAHOMA CITY -- The pressure is on for changes in how Oklahoma deals with law offenders as the state budget crisis deepens and a costly prison population grows. On one side are policy-makers who think the state has erred badly in sending so many drug and alcohol offenders to prison. On the other are prosecutors who call drugs the root of more serious crimes. Gov. Frank Keating, who is winding up eight years in office, last week asked the Pardon and Parole Board to consider up to 1,000 commutations of first-time nonviolent offenders. It's not a case of Keating softening his tough stand against crime, but recognition that many of the inmates "should not have been in the corrections system in the first place," said Keating spokesman Dan Mahoney. Mahoney said many of the 1,000 inmates being considered for commutations are in prison for simple drug possession and should have gone into the community corrections system. Oklahoma currently ranks No. 4 in the country behind Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas in the number of people it sends to prison per capita. In the past 10 years, state prison spending in Oklahoma has doubled to almost $400 million and the inmate population has grown from 14,400 to more than 23,000. During the same period, the state's crime rate fell significantly. "The reason is we have been locking up people for things we don't measure," such as drug and alcohol offenses, said state Sen. Dick Wilkerson, D-Atwood, a former Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation official. He said crime statistics are based on crimes that exist even if no one is arrested, such as murder and theft, as opposed to some drug cases, when a crime becomes evident only upon an arrest. Wilkerson, chairman of the Senate appropriations subcommittee on public safety and the judiciary, blames the rising prison population, in large measure, on a political system that allows district attorneys, and not judges, to determine who goes to prison and for how long. He said progressive ideas like drug courts and community sentencing were enacted into law only after lawmakers agreed to make prosecutors the gatekeepers of the programs. "They have intimidated us in the Legislature and because they have a good lobby, the laws are written where the DA's have, in effect, become the entity that determines the sentences," Wilkerson said. Other reasons for the high prison population is that Oklahoma has not revamped its criminal code and treats felonies too similarly for sentencing purposes, the veteran senator said. "Someone who writes a $50 check is not the same as someone who kills, rapes or breaks into your home," he said. In his mind, prisons should exist for one reason -- "warehousing predators" for the protection of society. Wilkerson says more than 80 percent of state inmates do not fall into the "predator" class but are in prison for drug and alcohol crimes that should be dealt with in drug court and community corrections facilities, where there is supervision and chances are great for rehabilitation. Mark Gibson, president of the Oklahoma District Attorneys Association, said statistics don't tell the whole truth. He said some of those listed as first-time offenders had multiple offenses that were not prosecuted or they were wanted in other jurisdictions for more serious crimes. The real debate, Gibson said, is between those who believe laws should be enforced and those "who absolutely believe that drug offenders should not go to prison." One thing every sheriff or police chief knows is that in dealing with all types of crime, "a huge majority comes from drug offenders," Gibson said. Putting drug offenders in prison "reduces our other crime problems at the same time," he said. Wilkerson says Oklahoma's get-tough-on-crime stance has had unintended consequences. A life-without-parole law passed in the 1980s will soon lead to the establishment of prison nursing homes for elderly inmates with serious health problems, he said. Oklahoma taxpayers will have to pay the high cost of their care. Wilkerson said society is not dealing with young people who get into trouble as well as it did in previous eras. He said he remembers that many of those who went into the Marine Corps with him in 1962 had run afoul of the law and joined the service to escape a jail term. "Ninety-nine percent of them straightened out their lives and made good Marines," many losing their lives in Vietnam, he said. "And it was not boot camp that cured them. It was four years of aftercare. "It was a gunner sergeant standing over them and telling them that their actions have consequences and they are part of something bigger than they are." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager