Pubdate: Thu, 01 May 2003 Source: Elizabethton Star (TN) Copyright: 2003 Elizabethton Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.starhq.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1478 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) CRIME AND PRISONERS: NEITHER PAYS AND THEY'RE BREAKING OUR BANK Is there anyone out there whose childhood didn't include liberal sprinklings of the adage, "Crime doesn't pay"? We've learned after the financial skyrocket of the '90s, of course, that some big, bold white-collar crimes did pay, but those days are mostly gone and many of the loopholes are welded shut. After several decades of a lock-'em-up-and-toss-the-key binge, most Americans are learning a corollary: Incarceration doesn't pay, either. In most states, the cost of punishment threatens to exceed the cost of the crime. Our prisons are filled to bursting -- we lead the world in the percentage of our populace behind bars. With a steady stream of new prisoners, coming from courts bound by tough mandatory-sentencing laws, most states are shell-shocked by the looming costs of even more prisons. Many are looking for a way out. And why shouldn't they? There is plenty of evidence that harsh mandatory sentencing and "three strikes" laws are little more than a political play on the fears of the electorate. There are countless stories of those tough laws resulting in long sentences for petty crimes. The three-strikes laws have created some especially bizarre stories of offenders getting life sentences for little more than a minor misdemeanor. It may satisfy a national craving for vengeance against criminals, but it also results in demonstrably cruel and unusual punishment. And we, the taxpayers, are footing the bill -- food, clothing, shelter, security and everything else -- for every one of those prisoners. Dangerous felons belong behind bars. There are plenty of criminals in our prisons who should be there -- violent, habitual offenders who must be kept out of society. But is it worth the expense to impose long sentences automatically, not because a judge believes it's necessary, but simply because a formulaic law mandates it? Despite complaints from defense attorneys, and even judges, that the law often forces unfair, overdone sentences, the law-and-order majority in most states has resisted any attempts to change it. But money talks louder. There are nearly thousands of inmates in Tennessee prisons and jails, and the number is growing steadily. If for no other reason than the state's going broke, something needs to give. It's time to look at ways to stabilize, or even shrink, the size of the state's prison population. Some changes in mandatory-sentencing laws are one place to begin. Creative sentences for nonviolent crimes are another. Technology now makes it possible for an offender to work at a public-service job during the day and be locked in his or her home (monitored by an electronic bracelet) at all other times. For many in our prison population, rehabilitation is an option, and it should be pursued with the same fervor that marked the imposition of mandatory sentencing. Common sense should dictate that approach. But if that isn't enough, perhaps sticker shock will do the trick. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom