Pubdate: Tue, 8 Sep 1998 Source: Tulsa World (OK) Contact: http://www.tulsaworld.com Author: Barbara Hoberock, World Capitol Bureau PROSPECTS FOR PAROLE SLIMMER Fewer State Inmates Win Nods From Board, Approval From Keating OKLAHOMA CITY -- Inmates holding out for parole appear to have a slimmer chance than ever of obtaining one. For repeat and violent offenders, the outlook is worse. The percentage of inmates the Pardon and Parole Board has recommended to Gov. Frank Keating for consideration hit at least a four-year low. And the Republican governor's recommendation rate also hit a four-year low. When Keating took office in 1995, the Pardon and Parole Board, appointed by his predecessor David Walters, was recommending 26.6 percent of the inmates who appeared before it. That figure has dropped to a single digit -- 9.6 percent as of July. Inmates who get a favorable recommendation from the board still have to get approval from the governor before they are paroled. Of the 1,274 candidates Keating reviewed in 1995, he approved 81.5 percent, a figure that has dropped to 67 percent as of July. Keating's approval rate has seen a steady decline since he took office. Keating has appointed the entire board, selecting members he thought were "fair but tough." "I am confident they are fair," he said. "The statistics suggest they are tough." The low approval rate has some families of inmates complaining that Keating has a "throw-away-the-key" mentality. "They have complained about the board being conservative," says J.D. Daniels, Pardon and Parole Board deputy director. "The board takes these cases on their own merits and votes its conscience." Keating, a former U.S. attorney and FBI agent who has held numerous federal jobs, makes no apologies for his conservative approval rate, saying, "I despise crime and criminals." He adds, "I am the only governor in the state's history to arrest, prosecute and supervise" prisons. Corrections has long used the prospects for parole as a "carrot and stick" to control behavior of inmates behind bars. The number of misconducts on an inmate's prison record is made available to the Pardon and Parole Board, as well as the number of programs an inmate has completed, victims' concerns, inmate support letters and district attorney opinions. Keating appears to put little faith in parole as a behavior control tool, saying the prospects for restrictive housing or being placed in segregation for inmates who act out behind bars is enough motivation to keep them in line. Keating has a few rules of thumb when considering inmates for parole. Although the board may give an inmate a favorable recommendation, he will deny parole if the Pardon and Parole Board investigator doesn't recommend it. He says inmates may be able to put on a good face for the board, but the investigator really knows what is going on. First time, non-violent offenders have a shot. Chronic repeat offenders, whom Keating calls "walking crime waves," don't. Also, violent offenders have little chance of being turned loose. "Some forfeit the right to be out," Keating said. Some 81 percent of those sent to prison in fiscal year 1998 were sentenced for a non-violent offense, according to Department of Corrections records. And of all fiscal year 1998 inmates who went into the system, 33 percent were for drug offenses, according to department records. Other fiscal year 1998 figures include the following: 12 percent were incarcerated for larceny; 9 percent for drunken driving; 9 percent for second-degree burglary; 8 percent for fraud; 6 percent for assault; 5 percent for sex crimes; and 4 percent for robbery; and 2 percent for murder. Keating's theory on corrections is that its first purpose is for punishment. Rehabilitation is a factor for those who some day will be released, but not for those who have long sentences or those who will never be released. Rehabilitation, Keating says, is not to correct antisocial behavior for those who will never get out of prison. Overall, he says the process works well. "The crime rate is down in every category," Keating said. "It is not due to the economy, but because we are very careful as to who we release." He also has an interesting observation, saying there is no vigilantism because people know the system is working. Barbara Hoberock can be reached at (405) 528-2465. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry