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Overcrowded: The Messy Politics of CA's Prison Crisis

Axulus

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Hallandale, FL
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Right leaning skeptic
“A prison that deprives prisoners of basic sustenance, including adequate medical care, is incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized society,” wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy for the majority in a Supreme Court ruling against Governor Jerry Brown and the state of California in the 2011 case Brown v. Plata.

The Supreme Court had just affirmed what lower courts had been telling California for decades: Your prisons are too crowded. It's time to fix the problem.

Three years later, after several extensions asked for and granted, California's government has managed to reduce the prison population, but not by enough to meet the 137.5 percent of occupational capacity target set by the courts. But they are close enough, at 140 percent, to give Gov. Brown the confidence to declare victory.

"The prison emergency is over in California," Brown said at a press conference in 2013. "It is now time to return the control of our prison system to California."

Brown's strategy to combat overcrowding has been twofold: Send inmates to out-of-state and/or private prisons, and shift low-level offenders down to county jails, and. Predictably, this latter strategy, called "realignment," has led to an increase in the county jail populations.

"Rather dramatically, overnight, [realignment] changed the makeup of our jails," says Orange County assistant sheriff Steve Kea.

But Brown has been particularly resistant to one type of change: sentencing reform. While California's voters amended the state's Three Strikes law in 2012, without the governor's endorsement, Brown has taken public stances against further reforms, such as SB 649, which would have given prosecutors the flexibility to prosecute nonviolent drug crimes as misdemeanors rather than felonies.

"California is, traditionally, seen as a liberal state," says Lauren Galik, Director of Criminal Justice Reform at Reason Foundation. "But not when it comes to their sentencing laws and prison population."

For years, the California Correctional Peace Officer's Association (CCPOA), the prison guard union, has been one of the most powerful political forces in the state. They were a key player in the campaign to implement Three Strikes, and against the later failed campaign to repeal it. In 2010, they poured more than $2 million in independent expenditures for Jerry Brown's gubernatorial campaign. Lynne Lyman, the state director of the California Drug Policy Alliance, says that the enormous lobbying power of the law enforcement unions has hampered serious reform in the state.

"It really doesn't matter which party an elected official is with," says Lyman. "The contributions that are coming in from the law enforcement associations and the private prison lobby... they're tremendous."

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPRrtTzsGpw[/youtube]
 
If state legislators and the governor were forced to stay in the prisons until the target was met, this thread would have been unnecessary.
 
The problem with prisons is that they are populated as a result of toughness-on-crime policies. Axulus, are you recommending that politicians become soft on crime? Seriousy.
 
The problem with prisons is that they are populated as a result of toughness-on-crime policies. Axulus, are you recommending that politicians become soft on crime? Seriousy.

You can't do both long sentences and not funding the prisons.
 
Our prisons are so devoid of prisoners that we're now seriously making deals with other countries to house theirs.

So, how about it? Wanna make a deal? We'll take those criminals off your hands for a good price. Just remember, if you decide to stop paying us, we'll find ourselves forced to release them back into your territory; at an undisclosed time and location.
 
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