Pubdate: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 Source: States News Service (US) Copyright: 1999 States News Service Author: Charles Davant DOES MORE PRISON TIME MEAN LESS CRIME? WASHINGTON March 26 (States) -- On a cold December night in 1994, gang members gunned down 18-year-old Maximino "Mino" Galindo in an alley in east Pueblo, a city torn by gang violence. Galindo's slaying was the fifth gang-related murder that year. "I really wish all this gang violence would stop, but I think it would take a miracle," the boy's mother said at the time. Five years after Galindo's death, gangs are still active on the streets of Pueblo, but something like a miracle seems to have taken place. Last year, there were no gang-related murders. Even more striking has been the drop in total crime in this city of 100,000: Since the start of 1995, Pueblo's total crime rate has been cut in half, down 52 percent through the end of last year, according to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports. In 1998, there were five murders in Pueblo and Pueblo County, down from 10 in 1995. There were 37 forcible rapes, down from 49. Robberies plunged from 184 to 77. Aggravated assaults dropped from 1,720 to 460. And 173 vehicles were stolen, down from 551 in 1995. Similar drops have taken place in cities nationwide. "It makes me feel like our community is safer than it was before," Pueblo Police Chief Jim Billings said. Pueblo's streets are safer, and the handiest explanation for the change -- and the one usually cited by tough-on-crime politicians -- is stiffer prison sentences. Since the legislature doubled the maximum sentences judges could give violent offenders in 1985, the state's prison population has grown almost 400 percent. In June 1998, the latest date for which statistics are available, one in every 285 Coloradans was behind bars, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Pueblo Police report that several well-known gang-leaders from the early 1990s are now locked up. With fewer criminals walking free, is it any wonder that the streets are safer? The explanation for the drop in crime is nowhere near that simple, two Colorado criminologists said, and the tougher sentencing laws beloved of politicians are just a tiny part of a big picture. "There are many factors that are having an effect here," said Kevin Reitz, a criminologist at the University of Colorado Law School. "Certainly the growth in the prison population and tougher sentencing is one of them. But experts would also point to several other important factors." The number of men aged 15 to 30 -- the group most likely to break the law -- has shrunk as that generation aged. The often violent "crack" cocaine market has receded as that drug's dangers have become better publicized. There are more police on the streets, and efforts to encourage ordinary citizens to participate in crime- fighting have paid off. Pueblo's Police Chief touted his own "community policing" effort as a big contributor to the city's increased safety. Cops are now responsible for certain neighborhoods, so they can pursue beat-specific solutions to chronic problems. The number of neighborhood watch groups has grown from 40 to 80. Officers now patrol high schools, and the police department is trying to reach out to the community through "Beyond the Badge," a weekly crime prevention talk-show on KPPC radio. "There has been an overall change in philosophy, where the police no longer think that crime prevention is solely the responsibility of the police department," Billings said. "Now it has changed to the recognition that there needs to be a partnership where we work hand-in-hand with the community." The single biggest factor in determining the crime rate in American cities is not community policing or sentencing laws but the health of the local economy, University of Southern Colorado criminologist Bob Keller said. High-paying jobs keep people off the street and minimize the economic disparities that are the engine of most violent crime, he said. Keller downplayed the significance of tougher prison sentences, pointing out that the prison population started growing in 1972 with no commensurate drop in the crime rate until the mid 1990s. He said politicians are squandering tax revenues by building new prisons to fight crime, when investments in education and efforts to attract better-paying jobs to the state would have a bigger long-term impact on public safety. "I don't understand why legislators cannot get that through their heads," Keller said. "It won't be long before there are two classes of people in this country: Those who are in prison and those who are guarding them." By Charles Davant - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry