Pubdate: Pubdate: 03/17 1999 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 1999 Globe Newspaper Company. Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Author: David Nyhan, Globe Columnist RECORD FOR THE MAN IMPRISONED LONGEST Paul Guidel, who was 17 when he committed second-degree murder, lived in a Fishkill, N.Y., prison cell for 68 years, eight months, and two days before being released at age 85. He holds the record for the man imprisoned longest in the United States. He made the Guinness Book of Records. You can look it up. But he has lots of company. The numbers are out again, and the totals are eye-popping: At the rate we're going, we'll have just under 2 million Americans behind bars by the end of 1999. Happy New Year. As of last June, the government counted 1.8 million, an all-time high. And that's not counting the hundreds of thousands of Americans paid to guard, feed, house, inoculate, and otherwise fuss over them. Only Russia imprisons citizens at a higher rate, among the, ahem, advanced countries. We had just under 1.7 million men in prisons and jails run by federal, state, county, and city authorities last June, out of a total of 128 million American males. That means one out of every 76 men is behind bars as we speak, and the number grows daily. At this rate, we're going to run out of men, when you consider the inmate population is six times what it was in the early '70s during Richard Nixon's first term. We cannot sustain these rates. There are as many blacks as whites in prison, but a black male is six times more likely to be sent away as a white male. As many as one out of every four black men between 20 and 30 has had some encounter with the criminal justice system. Only one out of 16 prisoners is female. The New York Times quotes experts saying the prison population explosion is caused by several factors, including longer sentences and a surge in drug-related arrests. In five states, more than one black man out of 10 is disenfranchised - barred from ever voting because of a criminal conviction. Look at it another way: As things stand today, it is as if the total population of Maine and Vermont was behind bars - - and we had to hire everyone in Wyoming to guard them. Ludicrous? Of course. But that's our policy. See any change coming? Not in the near term. Politicians love to point to lowered crime rates - - crime rates have dropped for the last seven years. Longer sentences and harsher penalties sound great on the evening news. People like to hear that, among them fearful voters, eager-to-please pols, those making money off the billions we spend for new $100,000-a-pop prison cells, where it costs 30 grand a year to keep some wretch locked up. Academic studies have shown a direct correlation between voters' fear of crime and media hype, tabloid outrages exploited by news reports, with television the leading offender. ''If it bleeds it leads'' is cynical TV shorthand for the allure of bloody tales to jack the ratings up. Our print brethren gasp trying to catch up in the titillation department. The ultimate result is harsher treatment of criminals, typically young, poor, nonwhite, ill-educated, socially backward, and, let us be frank, sometimes dumb as a mackerel. Yes, there are many, many prisoners who are vicious, violent, and deservedly tucked away. But there are also hundreds of thousands of prisoners who are nonviolent, who could be handled outside the costly and ineffective prison apparatus, who could benefit from learning to read, compute, talk straight and walk straight, stand straight and live straight. House arrest, ankle bracelets, more parole and probation officers, drug treatment where it is needed, when it is needed, and alcohol and spousal abuse programs would be much more sensible, effective, and economical. No, not every poor boy is a good boy. Yes, there are some people too dangerous to release. But the way we're going is the wrong way. It's the easy way, but it's not the cheap way. It's the dumb way. But rare is the politician who'll buck the mob on this score. The votes of a handful of inmate wives, inmate girlfriends, inmate relatives are drowned out by the cacophony that erupts after every notorious crime, every grisly episode recounted breathlessly by some TV reporter doing a formulaic standup outside the cop shop. Passion is what sells on TV. That's why you hear far more often from the angry cop, the aggrieved victim's family, the posturing politician, than you hear from the more thoughtful, less impassioned folk who have managed to overcome their fears and argue reasonably for humane treatment of inmates. Prison can be a cruel environment, particularly for the young and vulnerable. Vicious things happen behind bars. Stacking all these wayward teenagers in with older, hardened, rotting souls is like storing the gas can next to the oil burner. You have only yourself to blame when it blows. Here's another troubling trend: The Sun Belt states are way out of line with prison sentencing. Louisiana and Texas incarcerate 700 of every 100,000 citizens. Maine locks up criminals at about one-sixth that rate, Vermont at one-fourth. How come? Are they more law-abiding up north? Or are those frugal Yankees wiser when it comes to squandering human potential? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea