Pubdate: Thu, 22 Oct 1998 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1998 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Tom Teepen AMERICAN JUSTICE COMES UP SHORT AMNESTY International's recent rip on the U.S. criminal justice system has put American backs up. Don't we provide legal counsel, civil liberties, open trials, appeals? Wouldn't the world's criminal-justice average rise if no nation did worse at it than we do? Yes. But even so, Amnesty has caught our not inconsiderable shortfalls and lapses. Many are now built into what passes for the system, secured there by a crude politics that, claiming to protect us from crime, in fact wastes money on practices that in their injustice and inhumanity actually produce more crime -- at the willful neglect of policies that would be less pricey and more effective. Much of what is amiss in the U.S. system came together in the execution in Virginia this month of Dwayne Allen Wright. First, we executed. No other industrialized nation still does that. The death penalty deters no crime, is hugely expensive and sets a state-sanctioned example that killing is an OK way to solve problems. It is borne in gross disproportion by the poor, compounding class angers. Second, Wright was black, and the residue of racial prejudice that fouls every level of the criminal justice system piles up on our death rows in a final grotesque racial disparity and rankling social irritant. Third, Wright committed the murder for which he was killed at 17. Few nations permit executions for juvenile crime -- at last count, only Yemen, Saudi Arabia, lran and Pakistan. Fourth, Wright was borderline retarded and was diagnosed at 13 with severe mental illness and brain damage. He never received the treatment doctors recommended for him in juvenile facilities. And finally, Wright's attorney failed to mention those mitigations at the sentencing hearing, leading two jurors to swear later they would have voted for life imprisonment if they had known. We are building ever more prisons to house mainly non-violent offenders, most sentenced for drug crimes. Alternative sentencing is both cheaper and less likely to create repeat offenders. And those who must be incarcerated are now largely denied the jailhouse education programs that also cut recidivism. We emphasize imprisonment and cruelty -- and cruelty it is: We leave all other prisoners pretty much at the mercy of any prison's worst -- and disdain crime prevention. We stint on drug treatment. We fail to provide most new, poor mothers the home visits by parenting counselors that pay off in far lower eventual crime. We fund few after-school programs -- when most juvenile crime occurs, not at night as curfews assume. We wink at police and prison excesses and abuses. Once the enlightened standard, our justice system now puts us in the world's backwater with some very sorry company. We'll stay stuck there until we stop punishing thoughtful counsel and rewarding, in the name of some ever meaner ``toughness,'' the political bidding war for more of what we know doesn't work. Tom Teepen is national correspondent for Cox Newspapers. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry