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California took a big step in rolling back the War on Drugs, Prison Overcrowding

Posted on 11/7/14 at 6:30 pm
Posted by Sentrius
Fort Rozz
Member since Jun 2011
64757 posts
Posted on 11/7/14 at 6:30 pm
quote:

Major victories for marijuana legalization and minimum wage drew enormous fanfare on Election Day, but a ballot measure quietly passed in California could mean even more for the future of the country.

Proposition 47 downgrades penalties for a number of nonviolent drug and property crimes from a felony to a misdemeanor. It passed with support from 58% of voters.

It may not sound revolutionary to lessen the intensity of punishment for a set of crimes, but in a state whose criminal justice policies have become a dark icon of the United States' unparalleled zeal for incarceration, the measure is a crucial shaft of light.

More prisons, more problems: California's criminal justice system is one of the harshest in the country. The state is most notorious for its 1994 "Three Strikes and You're Out" law, which imposed a life sentence for almost any crime, no matter how small, if the defendant had two prior convictions deemed serious or violent by the California Penal Code. The state is under a Supreme Court order to cut down its massive prison population, which suffers from the kind of overcrowding that led then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to ship inmates off to private prisons in Mississippi and prompted a federal judge to estimate that a prisoner died every week purely due to medical neglect.

Experts see the new proposition as a necessary step toward correcting California's mass incarceration debacle. "It would officially end California's tough-on-crime era," Thad Kousser, a professor of political science at the University of California at San Diego, told the Washington Post. 

It's not the state's first attempt to mitigate the extremity of the three-strikes law. In 2012, a measure was passed that prevents a life sentence when the third conviction is for a minor crime.


quote:

Where next? For critics of America's criminal justice system, the hope is that reform in California will help carve out reform across the nation. Federal reform is an urgent matter. More than 2.4 million Americans are behind bars today — more than the combined population of 15 states or the U.S. armed forces. And that problem is racialized: The United States imprisons a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid.

For serious changes to take place, we need to rethink why we put people in prison in the first place. Is it to rehabilitate them? Or is it, as recidivism rates and institutionalized discrimination in employment, housing, education and voting rights suggest, to debilitate them? People are starting to catch on.


LINK
Posted by Sentrius
Fort Rozz
Member since Jun 2011
64757 posts
Posted on 11/7/14 at 6:31 pm to
Another article here....

quote:

Proposition 47 is aimed at reducing California’s prison overcrowding problem, according to The Atlantic, and with good reason. Conditions in the state’s overcrowded prisons are so deplorable that prisoners have brought multiple class-action suits, one of which, Plata v. Brown, made it to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court ruled that California’s prisons were so overcrowded that they did, indeed, constitute cruel and unusual punishment, according to Reagan appointee Anthony Kennedy, who wrote the majority opinion.

quote:

“California’s prisons are designed to house a population just under 80,000, but at the time of the three-judge court’s decision, the population was almost double that. The State’s prisons had operated at around 200% of design capacity for at least 11 years. Prisoners are crammed into spaces neither designed nor intended to house inmates. As many as 200 prisoners may live in a gymnasium, monitored by as few as two or three correctional officers. As many as 54 prisoners may share a single toilet.”


And while Proposition 47’s goal of easing California’s prison overcrowding is laudable, it’s the way that the problem is being tackled that is noteworthy. Prop 47 reduces for non-violent drug offenses, such as possession, to misdemeanors rather than felonies, the Los Angeles Times reports. This means that thousands of inmates in California prisons serving time for possession — even possession of crack, meth, or heroin — are eligible for immediate release.

In other words, Proposition 47 addresses the issue of prison overcrowding by going straight for its original cause: The War on Drugs. California now treats drug use, thanks to Proposition 47, as a disease to be treated, rather than a crime to be punished. And the new law backs up that sentiment with real action: the money that would otherwise be spent on mass incarceration — estimated to be in the hundreds of millions per year — will be funneled toward drug treatment and prevention programs.

Scaling back the War on Drugs in California is a laudable starting point, but it doesn’t go far enough. Addicts will still have to get their fixes in back alleys while looking over their shoulders, from a distribution system that relies largely on gang warfare, rather than from clinics that receive a product — tested for contaminants — from a legal and regulated distribution system. Still, a small step in the right direction is better than no step at all.

Beyond California, Proposition 47 could potentially indicate a seismic shift in how states prosecute the War on Drugs. Prior to Propsition 47, the states’ collective approach to the nation’s drug problem has been one of more laws, more enforcement, more prisons. If California’s experiment succeeds in reducing the state’s prison overcrowding problem, legislation similar to Proposition 47 may soon be coming to your state, and none too soon.


LINK
Posted by Five0
Member since Dec 2009
11354 posts
Posted on 11/7/14 at 7:00 pm to
I do have an issue with this:

" Proposition 47 requires that police who catch perps with a stolen firearm (value under $950, not an NFA item) must charge them with a misdemeanor. Not a felony. Provided no other crimes have been committed, the cops can’t arrest the ballistic miscreants. They can only issue them a ticket and a summons to appear in court. And bad guys who’ve been convicted of what used to be a felony can petition the court to have their charge reduced and ta-da! their gun rights restored. "
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