Pubdate: Sun, 14 Nov 2004 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Andrew Wolfson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) STATE'S CRIME PENALTIES CRITICIZED Penal Code Author: Sentencing Too Harsh [Photo] Special to The C-J Clay County Deputy Finley Hobbs held handcuffs that had been removed from prisoners he just delivered from the Clay County jail to the state's Roederer Correctional Complex near La Grange in Oldham County, where new inmates are processed. State Corrections Commissioner John Rees said the ranks of state prisoners have grown this year by 1 percent a month. Prisoners from Clay County arrived Friday at the Roederer complex. Some prosecutors say the community's security is worth the costs of incarceration. Kentucky's prison population has skyrocketed 600 percent since 1970 and continues to grow because of "irrational" penalties enacted by lawmakers, according to a study by the man who wrote the state's penal code. The budget for housing state prisoners has risen from $7 million to more than $300 million over that same period and is threatening to bankrupt the system, University of Kentucky law professor Robert Lawson says in a 72-page report that he's shared with leaders in all three branches of government. "We have demonized criminals in mass, lost sight of the importance of distinguishing between dangerous ... and non-dangerous offenders, and laid a foundation for a new citizen underclass made up of parolees, ex-convicts and their families," Lawson says in his report. The number of inmates had climbed from 2,838 in 1970 to 17,330 by last year, according to the report, which cites as the principal causes Kentucky's "brutally harsh" persistent felon law and an array of drug penalties. The number of persistent offenders in Kentucky's prisons has grown from 79 in 1980 to 4,187 this year - more inmates than were held in the entire system in 1970. Only by softening its persistent felon and drug sanctions will Kentucky be able to afford to house the flood of projected new inmates and free resources for treating and training offenders, Lawson says in the study. The study, to be published next year in the school's law review, doesn't include specific recommendations, but it suggests that Kentucky's "three strikes" law be tailored to cover only violent offenses for which the offender previously received prison time. Lawson also said in an interview that the state's two-strikes law should be eliminated. The report also suggests that a law that elevates second drug offenses by one felony level be eliminated. Officials note points Lt. Gov. Steve Pence, who is the state's justice secretary, and other officials said they agreed with much of Lawson's analysis, particularly with regard to drug offenders. "We cannot incarcerate our way out of the drug problem; we need to sentence drug offenders in a smart way," said Pence, whose statewide task force in August recommended expanding options favoring treatment over jail time. State Corrections Commissioner John Rees said the ranks of state prisoners have grown this year by 1 percent a month, mostly low-level offenders. That is "a rate we cannot afford," he said. But neither Pence nor Rees immediately embraced the statutory changes suggested by Lawson, who acknowledged that with the "politics of crime" still tilting toward tough treatment of criminals, it won't be easy for public officials to scale back punishments. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Gross Lindsay, D-Henderson, said changes wouldn't occur unless prosecutors and judges push for them, which he says is unlikely. Jefferson Commonwealth's Attorney Dave Stengel said: "We are all aware of the cost of incarceration, but it does appear that the more people who are incarcerated, the lower the crime rate is, and the public is willing to pay those costs." Experts say a variety of factors has contributed to reduced crime rates, and some research cited by Lawson found no connection. Ray Larson, Stengel's counterpart in Fayette County, said: "Unlike my friend Bob Lawson, I believe that public safety is the fundamental purpose of government and that we should do all we can to guarantee the safety and security of our citizens." Report carries weight Still, Lawson's report carries significant weight because he was the principal drafter of Kentucky's current penal code, adopted in 1975, as well as its rules of criminal evidence, and he has taught many of the lawyers who serve in the General Assembly, said Rees and others. "If they don't listen to him, they are not going to listen to anybody," said Parole Board Chairman John Coy. Louisville lawyer Oliver Barber, a prisoner-rights advocate, said: "The most important thing about this study is who did it - it was not done by a bleeding-heart liberal." Jefferson County Public Defender Dan Goyette said it is a "must-read for Kentucky's criminal justice planners and policy-makers." The study documents how Kentucky's inmate population doubled in the 1980s, almost doubled again during the 1990s and today is "not even close to a crest." Projections show the state's prisons will have 4,350 more inmates in 2010 than at the end of last year, an increase of more than 25 percent. The state would need to build the equivalent of one new prison every two years to keep up with projections, the report says, at an estimated cost of $100 million each. "If perspective is needed, it might be remembered that it took the state almost two full centuries to reach a grand total of 3,000 inmates," Lawson said. Kentucky's situation is not unique. The United States has 5 percent of the world's population but 25 percent of its prisoners and locks up its citizens at six to 10 times the rate of Western European countries. Lawson acknowledges in his report that the penal code he wrote provided extra punishment for habitual offenders, but he notes that it applied then only to those who had served time twice before and allowed parole for persistent offenders. But as a result of "stupendous" changes enacted piecemeal over ensuing decades, Lawson says, Kentucky's code is now one of the toughest in the nation. It is one of only a few states, for example, that applies its persistent felon law to nonviolent offenses. "The three strikes law permits and sometimes even requires punishment that is morally indefensible ... and that works to warehouse for extended periods offenders who are unlikely to inflict serious harm on the public," Lawson's report says. The report also reveals that 3,632 offenders were serving time for drug offenses last year, more than were incarcerated for all crimes in 1970. The rise in Kentucky's prison population also can be attributed in part to the Parole Board cracking down on releasing inmates, according to Lawson's study. The share of parole hearings resulting in parole dropped from nearly two-thirds in 1981 to about one-third in 2002, according to the report. County jails take up slack With prisons unable to house them all, nearly one-third of the state's prisoners - some serving sentences of up to 10 years - now are held in county jails designed to hold defendants for one year or less. There are, for example, 377 state prisoners in Jefferson County Corrections Department facilities. That's a problem, Lawson says, because as difficult as it is to provide meaningful training or drug treatment in a few well-staffed prisons, it is impossible when felons are scattered among 66 county jails. "The simple truth is that the state's jail program is a confinement program and little else, a warehousing of inmates and a total abandonment of effort to facilitate the ultimate return of offenders to the street as law-abiding citizens," the report says. The study, titled "Difficult Times in Kentucky Corrections - Aftershocks of a `Tough on Crime' Philosophy," was compiled based on data provided by state agencies, Lawson said in an interview. He said he began it about a year ago based on his belief that "we are taking people's freedom away when it might not be necessary." "I am not saying there are not some really bad people who should be in prison," he said, "but we are treating them all the same." But Larson, the Fayette prosecutor, says that first offenders are almost never sent to prison in Kentucky and that those being imprisoned represent the "5 percent of the criminals who commit 60 to 80 percent of the crime." "Those who believe that we are incarcerating too many of these career criminals must bear the burden of explaining the reasons ... to future victims ... if they are released, as Lawson proposes," Larson said. Too many locked up Jo Ann Phillips, who is chairwoman of the state Crime Victims Compensation Board, said violent offenders need to be locked up, but she agreed with Lawson's study that too many people are incarcerated. Many offenders, she said, should be doing public service and "paying their own way." Lawson notes in his study that more than 10,000 people enter and leave the state prison system each year - "a massive rotation of inmates that could cause even hard-core, get-tough-on-crime advocates to wonder if the net effects ... might not be more negative than positive." He asserts that the number keeps the system from providing what inmates need to return successfully to the community. Sixty percent of Kentucky inmates are chemically dependent, the report says, yet less than 20 percent who need treatment get it. "We have acted under a belief that no price is too high to pay for protecting the public from crime and have generated incarceration costs that now consume huge proportions of corrections budgets," Lawson says in the report, "all to the detriment of programs that corrections officials know to be crucial to any hope of converting offenders into law-abiding citizens." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin