Pubdate: Mon, 02 Jan 2012 Source: Buffalo News (NY) Copyright: 2012 The Buffalo News Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/GXIzebQL Website: http://www.buffalonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61 Author: Ronald Fraser Note: Ronald Fraser, Ph. D., writes on public policy issues for the DKT Liberty Project. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) NEW YORK WAS THE SOURCE OF AN INCARCERATION 'EPIDEMIC' How did America's addiction to prisons and mass incarceration get its start and spread from state to state? Perhaps the best explanation is found in a new book titled "A Plague of Prisons: The Epidemiology of Mass Incarceration in America." According to public health expert and Columbia professor Ernest Drucker, the rapid growth and spread of American prisons follows the classic life cycle of an infectious bacterial or viral epidemic. From 1970 to 2009, the number of federal prisoners increased from 21,094 to 208,118, while state prisons went from 177,737 to 1.4 million. When the 767,620 people in local jails are added in, America's grand total for 2009 was nearly 2.4 million people behind bars- a world record. As for New York, from 1970 to 2009, state inmates increased fourfold, from 12,059 to more than 58,000. To show his toughness, New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller sponsored the so-called Rockefeller Drug Laws of 1973. These laws, says Drucker, launched America's prison epidemic. "These laws," he writes, "mandated an elaborate new set of lengthy sentences for many drug offenses. In some cases sentences for possession and sales of small quantities of drugs were equal to those given for many violent crimes - - rape, assault and robbery." The Rockefeller laws then became the model used by lawmakers in other states. In this way, the initial outbreak became contagious. In New York, exposure to the Rockefeller laws was 30 times higher for blacks and Hispanics than for whites, and by 1990 these drug laws accounted for a third of the state's entire prison population. This exposure pattern was repeated in other states. Drucker claims the epidemic is sustained by post-prison parole policies. Violations of administrative and technical parole rules, not new criminal charges, annually account for about one-third of all state prison admissions in America. Ex-convicts re-entering society are often unable to find a job, decent housing and other social services and, says Drucker, 25 percent to 30 percent of the children growing up in some black and Hispanic communities have a parent behind bars. This increases greatly the chances that these children will themselves one day be incarcerated. Drucker concludes: "We can now identify the features of an infectious disease gone out of control . . . Our decision to criminalize drug use in the United States has caused our epidemic of incarceration." The Rockefeller Drug Law Reform Act of 2009 closed down mandatory sentences found in the original draconian statute, and earlier drug law reforms in 2004 and 2005 helped New York state's prison population decline from 70,199 in 2000, to 58,687 in 2009. Hopefully other states will once again follow New York's lead. The prison epidemic spread one state at a time, and that is how America's plague of incarceration can end. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom