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America at the Crossroads
By Jesse Katz
NEW ORLEANS - Presumed innocent, they shuffle into the sooty,
granite fortress on Tulane Avenue every morning, ankles shackled,
hands chained to their hips. Every evening, at least a dozen
leave Orleans Parish Criminal District Court as felons, an exodus
of the desperate, foolish, heartless and addicted. In one courtroom,
Donald Smith is slapped with a 30-month prison term after being
caught stumbling in the shadow of the Superdome at 1:00 AM with
a crack pipe in his pocket. Down the hall, veteran New Orleans
police Det. Norbert Zenon Jr. gets a seven-month sentence for
fondling a woman while purporting to examine injuries she suffered
at the hand of an abusive boyfriend. Next door, prosecutors lay
out their death penalty case against Blaise Fernandez, a former
high school football star who will be convicted of murdering a
security guard during the robbery of a Popeyes chicken stand.
Before the day is done, Renetta Wells is looking at a maximum
of 15 years for attempted cocaine distribution; after being approached
near the French Quarter by an undercover cop, she helped find
a dealer who could sell him a $10 rock. And on it goes, in the
grimmest courthouse in the biggest city in the strictest state
in the world's most incarcerated country, a nation that is now
holding an estimated 2 million of its citizens behind bars. That
statistical milestone - 1.24 million men and women in state prisons,
623,000 in county jails, 140,000 in federal penitentiaries - is
expected to be reached sometime today (02/15/2000), according
to a study by the Justice Policy Institute, a Washington think
tank that supports alternatives to imprisonment.
Although calculating a single day for such an occasion is an imprecise
science - and clearly done for political effect - nobody denies
that the 2 million era is upon us or that the growth in incarceration
over the last decade represents a social experiment unlike any
this country has seen. "This is the most punishing decade
on record," said Vincent Schiraldi, the institute's director,
noting that the nation's inmate population at the start of the
1990s was 1 million, an unprecedented number at the time. To
double that - adding another million in just 10 years - is to
equal the growth of the prison population during the previous
90.
LOUISIANA INCARCERATION RATES HIGHEST IN THE UNITED
STATES
Based on the U.S. Justice Department's most recent data, 461 of
every 100,000 Americans are now serving a prison sentence of at
least one year. California, though home to the largest total
prison population, is about average per capita, with 483 inmates
per 100,000 residents. In Louisiana, the rate is 736, tops in
the nation - a symbol of resolve for some, a badge of shame for
others. "I think there's a lot of people who should be in
the penitentiary and who don't always go," said Harry Connick,
Sr., the New Orleans district attorney. "But I also think
there's some who do go who perhaps shouldn't be there."
Having reached such an extraordinary tally so fast, the United
States appears deeply ambivalent about what it has sown. While
a plummeting crime rate stands as vindication for many, a growing
number of critics - not just liberals but also fiscal conservatives
and anti-government independents - is beginning to question the
costs, both economic and social, of keeping so many people locked
up. (In this context "anti-government independents"
could include anyone from any political extreme, from left-wing
anarchist-types such as those who upset the WTO meeting in Seattle,
to the right-wing crusader types, like the men involved in the
bombing of the Federal building in Oklahoma City. By lumping
them together under the label "anti-government," it
infers that anyone who is a critic of the Federal Government is
an extremist. WFI Editor)
Drug offenders account for the greatest percentage of new inmates,
yet hardly anyone believes the drug war is closer to being won.
Sentences everywhere have become longer and sterner, but each
year 500,000 ex-convicts still return to society, often less equipped
to function than before. Racial disparities are so extreme -
blacks are nearly seven times more likely to be incarcerated than
whites - that many African Americans consider the prison system
nothing short of a modern-day slave plantation. (The republic
as a whole was modeled after the slave plantation. WFI
Editor)
As crime rates continue to drop, even a few law-and-order have
begun to wonder if the $40 billion that taxpayers pony up annually
for incarceration could not be better spent. "There are
some who think we ought to keep everybody in jail and throw away
the key - I know, because I was one of them," said John Hainkel,
president of the Louisiana state Senate. But that was before
the New Orleans Republican took over as chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee. Now, four years later, he has come to the
conclusion that the state's swelling correctional budget is undermining
another of his priorities - improving Louisiana's dismal investment
in public schools. "It's no great mystery," said Hainkel,
a believer in education's crime-fighting virtues. "The State
of Minnesota has the highest rate of college graduates and the
lowest rate of individuals in prison."
Not wanting to appear "soft" on crime, politicians have
spent decades preaching punishment over prevention. Some of the
rhetoric has been opportunistic. But some also has been driven
by a genuine sense of despair - that our culture grants too much
discretion and demands too little accountability, that our judicial
system has all but collapsed under the sheer volume and impossible
complexity of contemporary societal ills. (When a judicial system
collapses due to the "volume" of crime, it can mean
not only that the civil society is breaking down, but also that
the police state is pre-occupied with suppressing legitimate dissent.
WFI Editor)
In the name of justice, or vengeance, or perhaps mere expediency,
the United States embarked on a bold new course, embracing swift
and harsh punishment as the best defense against rising crime.
Minimum sentences for most offenses became mandatory. Parole
boards were stripped of their powers. Juveniles increasingly
faced trial as adults. Repeat offenders were jacketed with lifetime
labels - gang member, sexual predator, three-strike felon - eliminating
the messy guesswork of judging their capacity to reform. (Leading
to a dramatic rise in dangerous police-chases of fleeing fugitives.
WFI Editor)
"Many of us want to believe in 'the better angels of our
nature,' that even if people sin or do horrible things, that they
can somehow be cured," said Leonard Steinhorn, an expert
on race relations at American University's school of communications.
"We want to forgive, but what often trumps everything is
fear. We lurch toward conclusions, not always because they're
the most rational ones, but because compared to other choices
they seem to be the safest." For those at the forefront
of the victims' rights movement, self-preservation needs no apology.
While a large chunk of the country has now experienced the inside
of a prison cell, an even larger chunk has experienced the pain
- emotional, physical, financial - inflicted by those who continue
to victimize.
The voices of clemency insist that they too favor severe punishment
for severe crime. They worry, however, that America's lock-down
is not motivated by fair retribution but moral righteousness -
the desire to draw a line between "us," the law-abiding
public, and "them," an irredeemable class. "The
whole thrust of everything now is to perceive and define people
who offend society as being a breed apart from the rest of humanity,"
said Wilbert Rideau, a black man who was convicted of slashing
the throat of a white woman during a Louisiana bank heist in 1961.
Behind bars, he became an award-winning journalist, eventually
earning the respect of his jailers and the faith of the state
pardon board. But no governor has been willing to pay the political
price of releasing such a celebrated killer, leaving him, at 58,
one of the longest-serving inmates in Louisiana history. "The
thing is, people change," Rideau said. "They change
with experience and they change with education. If you want a
society that has no room for forgiveness, no room for compassion
and no room for change, you're going to be living in a very dangerous
place."
RACISM STILL CENTRAL TO INCARCERATION RATES
In his case, as in many others, race is often the subtext, an
unspoken code that contributes to the perception of criminals
as "The Other," a distinct and deviant caste. Although
blacks make up about 13% of the U.S. population, they constitute
50% of the state and federal prison population. The odds that
a black man will do time at some point in his life are 1 in 3;
for whites, it is 1 in 25.
The disparity has only increased under the war on drugs, which
has disproportionately targeted young black males. Most racial
and ethnic groups consume drugs at roughly the same rates, meaning
that whites account for about 75% of the nation's drug users.
Blacks, however, account for about 75% of the nation's drug prisoners,
a function largely of law enforcement priorities and a lack of
resources for treatment. "They should put up a statue here
of a black kid on a street corner with a bag of dope in his hand,"
said Joseph Meyer, Jr., a New Orleans public defender, as he walked
the cavernous, marbled halls of Criminal District Court. "You
get rid of those cases and you could get rid of half the judges
in this building."
Many critics will be using the occasion of America's 2 millionth
prisoner to take special aim at the drug war, condemning it as
destructive and hypocritical, especially in a country that loses
many more lives to alcohol and tobacco. In at least 30 rallies
and vigils planned across the country today, groups like the November
Coalition and Common Sense for Drug Policy will assail the "prison-industrial
complex" for being as noxious as the ills it is supposed
to solve. Their assessment has been shared recently by some less
likely figures, including a number of federal judges and academics,
National Review publisher William F. Buckley, Jr., billionaire-philanthropist
George Soros, conservative commentator Arianna Huffington and
New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, a Republican who began calling for
the legalization of drugs last summer. Even the warden at the Louisiana Department of Corrections intake and classification center concedes that cost-effective alternatives, from electronic monitoring to diversion programs, could be used to shrink the state's incarceration rate - if the incarceration business did not have a financial interest in perpetuating itself. "We've used prison beds to stimulate the economy," said C. M. "Marty" Lensing, who runs the Elayn Hunt Correctional Center in St. Gabriel, about 15 miles outside Baton Rouge. "In other words, it's an industry." SOURCE: Excerpted from the 02-15-2000 issue of the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Edition, from an article entitled, "A Nation of Too Many Prisoners?" Reprinted in the public service of the national interest of the American people.(WFI EDITOR: Crimes proliferate in societies where the human bonds between the people of the community have been severed. When people were able to leave their doors unlocked at night, they knew who their neighbors were. As society has broken down, the ties that bind people together as friends and family also dissolve, which happen to be the ties that also bind the people to a civilized standard of behavior. Under the influence of the republic America has become a land of strangers. Only in the isolation that this causes, can we find the madness that leads men to commit the atrocities that litter today's headlines. The great tragedy of crime, be it a petty crime or a crime against humanity, is that it derives of the abandonment of basic humanitarian values. When people disregard the humanity of the other people who are their contemporaries, it is the beginning of the slide of humanity into barbarity, a slide which ultimately cannot be halted with increased violence.) |
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