Pubdate: Tue, 26 Aug 2003 Source: Beaufort Gazette, The (SC) Copyright: 2003 The Beaufort Gazette Contact: http://www.beaufortgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1806 Author: Scripps Howard News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) CRIME RATE STILL GOING DOWN Law Enforcement Efforts Paying Off Crime rates in America, which for demographic, economic and other reasons were supposed to either level off or bounce back up in 2002, have surprised the sociologists making the predictions. The fact is they are down again, according to an Associated Press account of a Justice Department report. They haven't been this low since the keeping of national records on property and violent crimes began in 1973, and here is the further news that ought to bring cheer: The decline over the past 10 years has been 50 percent. The reason? Experts differ, but what seems clear in the welter of speculation and counterspeculation is that law enforcement has improved in both prevention and the capture of lawbreakers, and that sending record numbers of people to prison for lengthy sentences has been effective. After all, if you are behind bars, you are not on the street committing dozens of crimes a year. It's hardly a matter that warms the heart that so many Americans -- mostly young men -- have been imprisoned, and there should be continued efforts to find substitute means of dealing with the least dangerous lawbreakers and of keeping them from breaking the law in the first place. An extra incentive in this cause is money. Prisons are expensive, and many states now have near-hopeless budgets. Obviously, though, states should be careful about taking shortcuts; it should not be assumed that crime cannot rise again, that crime itself does not have huge costs, that there is no current effort to distinguish between those criminals who should and should not be sent to prison or that the convicts have no responsibility for their fate. If crime rates do not head up again, prison populations eventually will decline. In the meantime, the fact that Americans responded to a rise in crime with efforts that have been beating it back should give us confidence in our capacity to deal with social issues, especially when published reports tell us that many European nations have been experiencing a crime increase during the same period crime here has been declining. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin