Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jul 2003 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2003 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Tony Rizzo, The Kansas City Star Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) KLINE PUSHES FOR TOUGHER SENTENCING GUIDELINES FOR PROPERTY CRIME Kansas' sentencing guidelines may be about to face the biggest overhaul in their 10-year history. Attorney General Phill Kline is pushing for a task force of law enforcement officials to study and recommend possible changes. His proposal has varying degrees of support from other top law enforcement officials in the state. Nola Foulston, district attorney in the 18th Judicial District, which includes Wichita, agrees that now is a good time to revisit the philosophy behind the guidelines. "Even today, after 10 years, I think some have the feeling that they stymie justice," she said. Other district attorneys, such as Paul Morrison in Johnson County and Nick Tomasic in Wyandotte County, generally favor the current guidelines, although both say improvements can be made. "They've done what they were supposed to do," Morrison said. "Never in the history of Kansas have we had more sentencing horsepower for violent offenders." The guidelines were designed under the premise that the most violent, repeat offenders should be held for the longest time in the state's limited number of prison cells. The trade-off was that nonviolent property criminals generally no longer go to prison. Community-based programs are supposed to handle those offenders. Kline thinks the guidelines need to be toughened in areas such as property crime, even if it means spending money to build more prisons. "We have a serious problem," Kline said. "There are too many career criminals on our streets." Kline thinks public safety, not prison population management, should be the primary focus of legislative sentencing policy. Specific Sentences The Kansas Legislature adopted the guidelines in 1993 to replace a system of indeterminate sentencing that was widely criticized for being inconsistently applied from judge to judge and region to region. Lawmakers replaced the broad latitude afforded in the old system with a more rigid set of sentencing options determined by the severity of the crime and the criminal's record. The guidelines take such factors as race and geographic location out of the equation. They also give a specific sentence in months as opposed to a range of years. For instance, under the old system a man convicted of rape could receive a minimum sentence of five to 20 years and a maximum sentence of 15 years to life. Even with the maximum term, he would be eligible for parole after serving 71/2 years. Under the guidelines, a rapist with no criminal record would receive a sentence of 155 months, just under 13 years. If the person had a previous rape conviction, the sentence would be 253 months, about 21 years. A career criminal convicted of rape would be looking at 54 years in prison under the guidelines. Maximum credit for good behavior is 15 percent under the guidelines, as opposed to 50 percent under the old system. The lack of judicial discretion is one thing that bothers Foulston. "Under the old system, judges had the ability to look at the individual characteristics of each case," she said. But to Tomasic, taking the individual prejudices and philosophy of a particular judge out the equation is one of the guidelines' strengths. "Now you have a good idea of what sentence you're facing, whether you're in Wyandotte County, Johnson County or Dodge City," he said. Missouri's sentencing system gives judges a wider range of options. The state does not have a sentencing grid like the Kansas system. Crowded Prisons Prison numbers show how the Kansas guidelines have succeeded. The percentage of prison inmates serving sentences for property crimes has dropped from about 21 percent in 1993 to just more than 6 percent as of December 2002. With that success comes the problem of prison crowding, because many of the violent offenders are serving longer sentences. The state's prison system is starting to see the effects of "stacking," said Barbara Tombs, executive director of the Kansas Sentencing Commission. Criminals are coming into the system, but they are not leaving at the same rate. The result is a prison population routinely near the state's maximum capacity of 9,114. "We've been operating at 98 to 99 percent of capacity," said Corrections Secretary Roger Werholtz. The population is projected to surpass capacity within a few years, even without any changes to the guidelines. The Legislature has modified the guidelines in recent years to temporarily ease crowding. This year lawmakers approved a measure requiring treatment outside prison for certain drug offenders. Cost of Crime Building -- and running -- a new prison is not cheap. The construction cost of adding a 128-cell wing to the El Dorado Correctional Facility is estimated at $7.1 million, according to the Corrections Department. And annual operating costs would be about $3 million to $4 million, depending on whether the unit was used for medium-or maximum-security prisoners. Expensive, yes, but Kline said the human cost of additional crime needed to be considered, too. Foulston agreed that the need for people to feel safe from crime should be a higher priority than how much it is going to cost to put someone in prison. "We're not advocates of building a big black hole out in western Kansas to house all the prisoners," she said. "But we don't need number crunchers telling us we need to put somebody in the penitentiary." Tomasic and Morrison agree that they would support changes that would put more repeat property criminals in prison. But Morrison said he is frustrated when he hears judges and prosecutors complain they can't send an offender to prison because of guidelines. The guidelines have built-in provisions that judges and prosecutors can use for either lighter or harsher sentences in appropriate cases, he said. "Many guidelines detractors are long on generalities but short on specifics about how they can be improved," Morrison said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake