Pubdate: Tue, 24 May 2011 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Authors: Jess Bravin and Bobby White TOP COURT SETS STAGE FOR FELONS TO GO FREE WASHINGTON - California could be forced to release tens of thousands of felons early after the Supreme Court ordered it Monday to reduce overcrowding, in a warning to states that efforts to get tough on crime must be accompanied by adequate prison funding. In a 52-page opinion illustrated with photos of teeming prison facilities and cages where mentally ill inmates are held, Justice Anthony Kennedy cited lower-court findings that preventable suicide and medical neglect "needlessly" cause the death of at least one inmate a week in California's prisons. The state system was designed for 80,000 inmates but holds nearly twice that many. The decision comes 21 years after a suit was filed on behalf of an inmate alleging that treatment provided to mentally ill inmates was so poor as to violate the Eighth Amendment prohibition of cruel and unusual punishments, a claim consolidated with a later case alleging similarly deficient care of inmates with physical ailments. California has conceded the constitutional violations but wanted more time to fix them. Two years ago, a special three-judge federal court in California found that overcrowding and staffing shortages have overwhelmed prison medical facilities. Monday's decision upholds the lower-court order giving California two years to cut its prison population to 137.5% of capacity. The district court order applies to 33 state prisons, which as of Monday held 143,435 inmates-or 180% of their intended capacity, said Terry Thornton, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The state has until 2013 to cut that population to 109,805, or by 33,630 inmates, Ms. Thornton said. The ruling doesn't instruct officials how to reach that maximum population over the next two years. Prison overcrowding is widespread across the country. Alabama, California, Delaware, Illinois and North Carolina were among states reporting inmate populations significantly above their intended capacity, according to a Bureau of Justice Statistics report based on 2009 data. The federal prison system was at 136% of capacity, the report said. Alabama's prisons have nearly twice as many inmates as they were built to handle, according to a March report by a state-level bipartisan panel convened to find solutions for overcrowding. The state faces extra costs of up to $151 million over five years to house new inmates and "risks federal court intervention if crowding is not reduced," according to the report. The decision applies only to California, but its broader implications were clear: When a state sends a criminal to prison, it takes on the responsibility to feed and care for him, Justice Kennedy wrote. If taxpayers were unwilling to pay the cost of incarceration that meets constitutional standards, "courts have a responsibility to remedy the resulting Eighth Amendment violation," Justice Kennedy wrote, even if that means freeing convicted criminals. California's top prisons official, Matthew Cate, said the state could satisfy the court's requirements without releasing inmates early if the Legislature passes the governor's budget proposal, which includes funding for transferring some prisoners to county jails. In addition, the state is building new prisons and health-care facilities. But funding uncertainty and political gridlock could delay those efforts and force the state to release inmates. Without Gov. Jerry Brown's plan to shift inmates to local jails and pay for new facilities, Mr. Cate says he has "serious concerns" about public safety. Prison release orders are a "last resort remedy," Justice Kennedy wrote. But California has been under court order to improve prison conditions since 1995, and none of its efforts have succeeded, he wrote. "At one time, it may have been possible to hope these violations would be cured without a reduction in overcrowding," Justice Kennedy wrote, joined by liberal Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. "A long history of failed remedial orders compels a different conclusion today." The majority acknowledged a risk of "some adverse impact on public safety in some sectors." But it said the state need not indiscriminately let loose thousands of felons. Officials could mitigate the risk by "diverting low-risk offenders to community programs such as drug treatment," easing up on "technical parole violations" that return parolees to prison, or leasing space in out-of-state prisons, Justice Kennedy wrote. In a furious dissent, Justice Antonin Scalia accused the majority of upholding "perhaps the most radical injunction issued by a court in our nation's history." He disputed the premise of the prisoners' case-that all severely mentally or physically ill inmates be treated as a class-contending instead that only prisoners who had experienced "atrocious treatment" were entitled to a remedy. Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts, filed a separate dissent arguing that violations stemming from overcrowding could be fixed through less radical means, such as repairing dilapidated facilities and improving record-keeping. "I fear that today's decision will lead to a grim roster of victims. I hope that I am wrong," Justice Alito wrote, adding: "In a few years, we will see." The majority opinion cited the state's continuing budget problems as reason for doubt that a remedy would arrive short of court order. California prisons held more than 20,000 inmates in the 1970s, during Mr. Brown's first stint as governor. Today, as a result of "three strikes" and other tough sentencing laws, the prison population has skyrocketed, at times topping 160,000. Prison construction has failed to keep pace. Some observers suggested the ruling could help crack political gridlock in California. Mr. Brown signed into law last month a bill that would shift inmates convicted of offenses deemed nonserious, nonviolent and nonsexual to county jails. Mr. Brown estimated the shift would save California's general fund about $485 million and would reduce overcrowding. The governor proposed to pay some of the county jail costs with money from tax and fee increases, but those haven't been approved by the Legislature. An attempt to relieve prison overcrowding was begun by former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who authorized in 2007 nearly $7 billion for prison construction. Work on some of the nearly two dozen proposed facilities has begun. The court-appointed receiver overseeing the state prisons' health-care system, J. Clark Kelso, said transfers to county jails won't solve the whole problem. "We continue to need capacity to meet the rest of the mandates of the court," said Mr. Kelso's spokeswoman, Nancy Kincaid. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D