Pubdate: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: Jerry Large / Times Staff Columnist REASON HAS BEEN LOST IN THE WAR ON CRIME Sometime while you're waiting for your laundry to dry, check out the December issue of The Atlantic Monthly. There's a good article on what has come to be called the prison-industrial complex. It turns out crime does pay, not necessarily for the criminal, but for companies alert to the profit potential of a booming industry. Hey, why invest in an Internet stock that's bound to tank sooner or later when you know that crime has legs? You and I put slop in the trough and the hogs come running. The thing is that as taxpayers and citizens we are not getting our money's worth, and I suspect most of us know that. We just haven't been interested enough to do anything about it. Crime and punishment is one of those areas where quick and easy beats out reason. Take California, which has the biggest prison system in the Western world. In 1977, California had 19,000 people in prison and was respected for its drug treatment and education programs. Today, it has 159,000 prisoners, and has become, the article shows, a "revolving door" for poor people, illiterate people, substance abusers and people with severe mental problems. As California goes, so go the rest of us. Simply no room Last year, the California system took in 140,000 prisoners and released 132,000. A revolving door. Because of ever tougher sentences, there's just no room despite a huge growth in the number of prisons over the past decade. A couple of months ago, I was part of a small group that heard Angela Davis speak about the prison problem in California and around the country. Davis is well-known as an activist. She now teaches at the University of California at Santa Cruz and is crusading to change the way we deal with crime. "The expansion of prisons has nothing to do with the crime rate," she says. She speaks of prisons as institutions of social control. "Prisons are the place where we put all of the people we don't want to deal with. "Some people are under scrutiny constantly. If a white woman and a black woman go into a boutique, who is watched? Who has the opportunity to get away with crime?" According to a U.S. Sentencing Commission report from 1995, 52 percent of all crack users are white, 38 percent black. But 88 percent of those sentenced for crack offenses are black, 4.1 percent white. One in four black men is likely to wind up in prison at some point in his life. Prisons are for people most of us don't care about. The overwhelming majority of people in prison are illiterate. Most of them are messed up by alcohol or other drugs and many have significant mental trouble. We don't deal with those underlying causes. Doesn't it make sense to try to prevent people from committing crimes in the first place and to screen those who have committed crimes to determine whether they and we might benefit from remedial education and drug treatment? Of course it does, and we know it. Last fall Davis was part of a national conference that drew more than 3,000 people to discuss alternatives to imprisonment. A 1997 report, "Seeking Justice: Crime and Punishment in America," included several opinion polls in which the majority of voters offered alternatives to imprisonment opted for those alternatives. But we don't change. An easy way out The Atlantic article traced the current emphasis on prisons as the only answer to crime back to liberal politicians who needed a shield against conservative claims that they were soft on crime. They found that building prisons was an easy retort. And now everyone is afraid to stop for fear of seeming weak. We know we are walking down the wrong path, but we keep walking. We have gotten so tough that often we no longer make many distinctions between nonviolent and violent crimes. What does it say about our nation that we imprison a higher percentage of our population than any other nation? Do we aspire to be the world's leader in everything, including the production of illiterate, drug-addicted criminals? A couple of weeks ago, Times reporter Jim Lynch wrote a piece about Washington's prison problem, and, in it, he found some hope for change. Rep. Ida Ballasiotes, R-Mercer Island, whose daughter was murdered by a convicted sex offender, has introduced a bill to save taxpayers money by reducing sentences for nonviolent drug offenses. She is a fitting person to begin putting on the brakes because her interest in crime goes beyond posturing. Being tough on crime needn't be tough on us. You can reach Jerry Large c/o The Times, P.O. Box 70, Seattle, WA 98111. Phone: 206-464-3346. Fax: 206-464-2261. E-mail: - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady