Pubdate: Thu, 6 Aug 2009 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2009 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Howard Mintz Referenced: The ruling http://www.caed.uscourts.gov/caed/Documents/90cv520o10804.pdf Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) CALIFORNIA MAY HAVE TOUGH BATTLE AHEAD IF IT APPEALS ORDER TO REDUCE PRISON POPULATION A federal court's sweeping order this week forcing California to cut its prison population by 40,000 inmates may have been as predictable as it was dramatic, a judicial thunderbolt state officials should have seen coming for nearly two decades. While putting Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration on the clock to come up with a plan to cure prison overcrowding within 45 days, the decision by a unique three-judge panel was the product of 27 years of legal fights over California's ever-swelling prison system. It also follows more than a dozen previous orders warning the state that prison conditions had reached a bleak level of unconstitutional conditions. As a result of the prison system's checkered history responding to court orders, state officials may have a tough time defending themselves if, as expected, the state follows through with plans to appeal the ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court. An appeal to the high court would set up an unprecedented test of the power of the federal courts to issue such a sweeping mandate under a 1995 law designed to curb the federal judiciary's oversight of state prisons. In the 184-page ruling, the three judges went to great lengths to emphasize how much time California has had to solve its prison mess, and why that warrants an order that would cut the inmate population from about 150,000 to 110,000 in two years. Appeal Likely "Unfortunately," the judges wrote, "where the political process has utterly failed to protect the constitutional rights of a minority, the courts can, and must, vindicate those rights." In separate interviews Wednesday, Matthew Cate, secretary of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, and Attorney General Jerry Brown appeared to back an appeal to the Supreme Court. Prompted by the state's staggering budget deficits, including a $1.2 billion hole in the corrections budget, the governor and corrections officials already have a proposal on the table that could cut the inmate population by about 37,000 inmates over the next several years, a number not far from the court's target. But Cate and Brown said that in addition to other differences with the court's order, they dread allowing federal judges to dictate how the prison system is run. "Federal courts coming in and putting a cap on the inmate population is just too strong of a solution to the problem," Cate said. Prisoner rights lawyers, as well as legal experts, say even the conservative Supreme Court may be skeptical of the state's position, given the lengthy legal battle over California's prisons. Tuesday's ruling stemmed from two separate lawsuits, one a 1990 challenge to mental health conditions in state prisons and the other a 2001 suit over inmate medical care. "These judges have been extremely careful to give the state more than enough opportunity to demonstrate it had the ability on its own to bring its medical and mental health system into compliance with the constitution," said Kara Dansky, executive director of Stanford law school's criminal justice center. Lawyers for inmates say the state has essentially been on notice since 1995, when a federal judge found after a trial that the state's mental health care was constitutionally inadequate, just as a host of new tough-on-crime measures were pushing the prison population well over 100,000. Corrections officials have been scrambling to comply with court orders ever since. Deal Fell Through In February, the three-judge panel warned after a trial that the state had to devise a fix and cut its inmate population or risk a court-ordered cap. State efforts to comply, including a near deal this summer with lawyers for the inmates, went nowhere, triggering this week's final ruling. Many prison experts, including former Schwarzenegger prisons chief Jeanne Woodford, testified that the system needed repair. Woodford was traveling this week and could not be reached, but told the judges: "I think it's unbelievable that in this state that we have the kind of overcrowded conditions that we have." This week's ruling, noting that by 2005 an inmate was dying needlessly every six or seven days, suggested the state had a variety of options that would not threaten public safety, including: using good time credits for early release of inmates; diverting inmates who violate parole out of the prison; shifting low risk offenders serving short sentences to other programs; and adopting sentencing reforms. Republican lawmakers and others have criticized the ruling, saying it would jeopardize public safety. Cate and Brown are miffed the court did not consider what they say are improvements in the last several years in prison medical and mental health services, a point they plan to make to the Supreme Court. "It is hard to say how spending more on prisoner health care than anywhere in the world is cruel and unusual," Brown said. "That's why that appeal is probably necessary." Legal experts, however, say the Supreme Court is likely to be less focused on the factual findings of the judges and more on whether they exceeded their authority under the 1995 Prison Litigation Reform Act, which limited prison-related lawsuits but included exceptions when overcrowding creates intolerable problems. "If there ever was a case that fits under this law, this is it," said Donald Specter, director of the Prison Law Office and a lead lawyer for the inmates. [sidebar] PRISON TIMELINE April 1990: Lawsuit filed in Sacramento federal court over inmate mental health care. September 1995: Federal judge finds that state"s mental health care in prisons amounts to cruel and unusual punishment. April 2001: Class action lawsuit filed over prison health care. January 2002: State reaches settlement that requires widespread improvements in inmate health care. October 2005: Federal judge overseeing health care case finds system "broken beyond repair," and appoints receiver to monitor prison system. October 2006: California hits record prison population of more than 160,000 inmates, double capacity. Special three-judge court appointed to oversee the two prison condition cases. August 2009: Panel of federal judges orders state to devise plan to reduce prison population by 40,000 inmates, finding overcrowded prisons violate constitution. Source: Mercury News reporting - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake