Pubdate: Sun, 11 Oct 2015 Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) Copyright: 2015 PG Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/pm4R4dI4 Website: http://www.post-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341 FAIR RELEASE New Guidelines Will Thin Costly Bloated Prisons Six thousand drug offenders will be released from federal prisons between Oct. 30 and Nov. 2, their terms cut short by new sentencing guidelines in the United States. Their release reflects not just the revised, retroactive guidelines enacted by the U.S. Sentencing Commission, but the nation's growing concern about the number of citizens it jails. About one out of every 100 Americans is incarcerated, a third for drug crimes. Freeing eligible nonviolent drug offenders is a bold and necessary first step in restoring a criminal-justice system burdened by Draconian sentencing of the 1980s and 1990s. Although America has just under 5 percent of the world's population, it has about 22 percent of the world's inmates, in part, because of aggressive drug prosecution and "three strikes" laws adopted by 23 states and the federal government in the 1990s. (Pennsylvania's was enacted in 1995.) Since 1980, the federal prison population has spiked by 800 percent, and prisons are nearly 40 percent over capacity. The sentences come at great cost, not only to prisoners, but also to taxpayers. Prisons consume a third of the Justice Department's $27 billion budget. Under relaxed sentencing guidelines issued last year, about 46,000 of the nation's 100,000 drug offenders are eligible for release if they meet certain conditions, including good behavior in prison. Each case will be reviewed by a federal judge, and those released early (an average of two years taken off the sentence) will go to halfway houses or be on supervised home release. The estimated one-third who are not U.S. citizens will be deported. Naysayers fear that the mass release, expected to include another 8,500 next year, will result in increased crime and homelessness if the former inmates are unable to find work or housing. But recidivism is a risk whenever any inmate is released; more than three-quarters of inmates are arrested again within five years of their release, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. As prison doors swing open, doors to post-prison education and employment must open, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom