Pubdate: Wed, 17 Sep 2003 Source: Crimson White, The (Edu, Univ of Alabama) Copyright: 2003 The Crimson White. Contact: http://www.cw.ua.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2451 Author: Samantha Hall, Senior Staff Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) PRISON PAROLES PRESENT PROBLEMS The state's prison system has been struggling with overcrowding for the past few years, but the release of thousands of inmates as suggested by Gov. Bob Riley may not be the solution some state officials were looking for. Riley recommended the move in foresight of a possible defeat against his $1.2 billion tax and accountability plan. Now, with the legislature in a special session to determine budget cuts, many officials are afraid of the direction the cuts are heading. Attorney General Bill Pryor said the move to give early parole to prisoners would lead to a lower quality of life for Alabama residents. "I remain extremely concerned about what faces the citizens of Alabama," Pryor said in a written statement. "My warnings about the dangers of increased crime stem from something that, as I understand, has not changed. Alabama citizens will be more unsafe as a result of this budget." The measures discussed by legislators include a release of almost 5,000 non-violent prisoners and the reduction of state police forces, Pryor said. Pryor said that even non-violent criminals, such as those convicted of theft, burglary and drug possessions, still have the capability to commit violent crimes when freed. Pryor suggested that families buy home security alarms and take other lawful actions to protect their families. With a reduction in police force, how does the state plan to release so many offenders? William Segrest, executive director of the State Board of Pardons and Paroles, said the board would continue to follow the same course in motion since last spring. The board has been attempting to give early paroles to non-violent criminals since April, he said. "In the last five months, we have identified persons in the system who are serving time for non-violent offenses and who we think would have an opportunity to make it in the community under strict parole supervision," Segrest said. "Since then we have actually released over 1,300 in addition to the amount we normally let go." Segrest said a similar plan for the next fiscal year, along with the creation of a new parole board, would help the state let go of enough prisoners to save money and decrease the number of prisoners being housed in an already congested system. State legislators are currently considering the creation of a new parole board. This change would call for the state to hire four new parole board members and as many as 100 parole officers to keep up with the 5,000 paroles, Segrest said. These new employees would cost the state almost $35 million to hire, said Cynthia Dillard, assistant director of the State Pardons and Paroles Board. "This amount would be covered by the money we will save when we are not spending $9,000 per year per inmate," Dillard said. Dillard said the $9,000, the approximate amount of money spent on each inmate annually, along with the parole fees paid by released prisoners will help the board save revenue. "The idea proposed will save us as much as $7 million," Dillard said. Brian Corbett, spokesman for the Alabama Department of Corrections, said the changes would help to alleviate overcrowding a little and will possibly save money. He said, however, that the plan would not decrease the number of prisoners enough to completely alleviate the system's crowding problems, nor will it raise money towards building new prisons, something Corbett said is becoming more and more necessary. "Certainly it will help," Corbett said. "But you have to look at this in historical perspective. Since 1980 our prison population has increased by 23,000 inmates. We're at more than double capacity." Corbett said new crimes happen every day, continuously bringing in prisoners. If beds were opened, the 1,700 inmates being housed out-of-state would fill them up. The percentage of inmates breaking parole is high enough in the state to counter-balance the number of prisoners being released, Corbett said. "We do have a 33 percent recidivism [relapse] rate in the state of Alabama, so even 30 percent of those 5,000 that are released are going to come back," Corbett said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom