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Brutal Prisons Are Hurting Us All

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We could start by reducing the size of the prison population. One way is to greatly reduce most sentences. While those convicted of brutal crimes should certainly get long sentences in secure facilities, it is unreasonable to impose a 3 year sentence for a credit card theft of less than $100. What about a three-strike law awarding life sentences to those convicted of three felonies over a period of several years? That might make sense if the crimes were all seriously violent. Unfortunately, such laws have been applied to people committing only minor, non-violent felonies. For example, the US Supreme Court upheld a life sentence where the 3 strikes consisted of credit card fraud, a forged check, and not showing up to do a repair job for which advanced payment was collected. A total of just under $230 was involved [7].

While it is important to lock up killers, rapists, and others who have demonstrated that they are dangerous, incarceration for activities posing no physical threat to others is overkill. Marginal offenders, exposed to hardened criminals in prison, often commit worse crimes after release [8]. Rather than the sledge hammer of a prison sentence, we could sharply reduce the numbers in prison by using much less costly, less damaging, and more effective ways to deter, punish and correct anti-social behavior.

Even minimal drug rehabilitation programs are likely to be more effective in treating drug addiction than time in prison. Devoting more resources to improving and implementing such programs as substitutes for prison sentences would be a promising and cost-effective strategy. Even better would be to decriminalize drug use [2].

Consider petty thieves, stealing audio units from cars, or merchandise from stores. Some combination of community service work (e.g., park maintenance), group therapy, and a requirement to compensate the victims over some period of time, would do a lot more to straighten them out than would penning them up with groups most likely dominated by vicious characters. Sizable (in terms of their ability to pay) fines might be part of the mix, particularly with respect to crimes of a purely financial nature, such as check forgery or credit card fraud. House arrest, using some sort of electronic monitoring, is another possible alternative [9].

Dealing with educational deficiencies, and chronic illnesses, physical or mental, would be very helpful in reforming criminals. This could be done in prisons or, at a much lower cost, as part of non-penal programs for convicted criminals.

A major factor motivating criminal behavior initially and impeding the reform of "beginner" criminals, is an inability to find a decent job. The suggested educational and medical assistance mentioned above can certainly help, as can halfway houses, but there are two basic problems that don't have obvious solutions.

The understandable reluctance of employers to hire people with criminal records is a big problem. Federal, state, and local government agencies can help by making suitable jobs available to ex-cons [10]. Tax incentives and government liability insurance might also be used to encourage private employers to hire ex convicts.

Another problem is that, during hard times, such as we are now experiencing, even ordinary, reasonably qualified people, without criminal records, are having difficulty finding work. This problem is exacerbated by competition from the large number of immigrants, both legal (including guest workers and those under the H-1B program) and illegal, from poor countries who are willing to work for less [11].

Within the walls

It is natural to feel that those who have committed serious crimes, causing innocent people to suffer, deserve harsh punishment. Such punishment may serve to "balance the books", making the victims and/or their families feel that justice has been done, It can also be argued that it will deter the kind of criminal behavior that resulted in this punishment. These are valid points.

Accepting them still leaves the question of just how severe the punishment should be. Clearly there are limits to what should be done. The kinds of torture inflicted on convicted criminals in the past is not acceptable today in civilized society. Cruel and unusual punishment is explicitly prohibited by the US constitution. I doubt that many of even the most vociferous advocates of the hard line approach would personally be willing to tear out fingernails. Apart from squeamishness and common humanity, there are good utilitarian reasons for excluding cruel treatment of prisoners,

There is ample evidence that treating people brutally is most likely to produce brutes. Many, if not most violent criminals were maltreated as children [12]. If our goal is to ensure that those who complete their prison terms will be most likely to behave viciously in the future, then the most effective way to accomplish this would be to make their prison stays as painful as possible, encouraging guards to abuse prisoners and prisoners to abuse one another.

It is important to recognize that taking away peoples' freedom, locking them up for months or years, is in itself a severe punishment. There is no need for amplification. Even if we don't care at all about the lives of the prisoners, it would be wise to treat them so as to make it more likely that they will become law abiding, tax-paying citizens after release, rather than hoodlums. This is not an unattainable goal, as there are many instances of criminals who have reformed. Human beings are very complex. It is a big mistake to assume that they cannot change.

Serious, good quality in-prison programs to deal with addiction, medical problems and educational deficiencies, as mentioned, above would be important basic steps. Vocational training is an obvious further step. But we can do more. Allowing, and encouraging prison inmates to form and operate organizations of a benign nature, such as music or acting groups, would relieve a lot of stress, and help them develop important social skills that many of them lack big time. Making it easier for convicts to maintain contact with their families is another way to facilitate rehabilitation.

There have been many successful experiments in which prisoners have been employed outside the walls in ways useful both to themselves and to others. For example, thousands of California prisoners have been trained in fire-fighting and perform very well on teams fighting forest fires [13]. There are also manufacturing facilities within some prisons that employ inmates. Particularly where private companies are involved, some thorny issues arise [14]. One is that the use of prison labor takes jobs away from other people and depresses wages. Since a portion of what the prisoners earn goes to the prisons, there is the risk that prison administrators, and perhaps correctional officers unions, might develop a vested interest in prison labor to the point where they become advocates of longer prison terms. We certainly don't want to resurrect the old Georgia chain gangs.

The treatment of juvenile offenders is a closely related matter that is also being handled badly. I have not addressed it here in order not to expand an already lengthy essay. For the same reason I have not discussed the privatization of prisons, which is exacerbating all the problems discussed above.

Bottom line

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http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~unger/myBlog/endsandmeansblog.h

Stephen H. Unger Professor, Emeritus, Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Columbia University. Apart from technical areas, I have a strong interest in technology and society issues and in engineering ethics. I have written essays on a (more...)
 

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Be Fair When Someone Served His Time by HarveyY on Monday, Mar 22, 2010 at 12:18:32 PM
A lot of people by Richard Pietrasz on Tuesday, Mar 23, 2010 at 6:08:01 PM