....LawPundit

.........The Moselle River at Traben-Trarbach
.........photo copyright © Feb 16 2010 by Andis Kaulins


Andis Kaulins LinkedIn
14x14 Blog Feed | 14x14 Twitter & Feed
Best Legal Commentary Blogs
lawyer blogs
...
History : A Question of Evidence


LawPundit Links
LawPundit Blogroll & Websites
(alphabetically)

The Blog of the White House
ABA Blawg Directory
ACLU Blog of Rights
Advocate's Studio
A Fistful of Euros (EU)
Al Nye the Lawyer Guy
arstechnica (technology)
Australian Trade Marks Law
Bag and Baggage
Balkinization
Bank Law Blog (.uk)
Bartlett Blawg
Becker-Posner Blog
Binary Law (.uk)
BizzBangBuzz
Blawg.com
BlawgIT
Blawgletter
Blawg Review
Blawg Search
Blog@IP::JUR
blog maverick
Brad DeLong (economics)
Build a Solo Practice @ SPU
Business Golf Blog
Business Opportunities Blog
Cambridge IP Blog (.uk)
Canadian Trademark Blog
Caveat Emptor Blog
Cearta (.ie)
Charon QC (.uk)
China Law Blog
Class 46 (EU trade mark news)
Classical Values
Concurring Opinions
Conglomerate
Consumer Advertising Law Blog
CopyFight
Corporate Governance Blog
Counterfeit Chic (Fashion, Culture)
Current Awareness (.uk)
Customs Law
Deal Attorney (M&A)
Deal Book
Delaware Law Office
Deliberations
Dennis Kennedy Blog
Discourse.net
Disputing
Doc Searls Weblog
Dorf on Law
Drug and Device Law Blog
e-comm (.de,.at)
E-Commerce Law
e-Justice Blog
eLegal Canton (.ca)
Election Law
Embassy Law Blog
Empirical Legal Studies
Ernie the Attorney
EU Law Blog
FactCheck.org
Faculty Blog Chicago
Feminist Law Professors
Filewrapper (IP Law)
For the Defense (DRI)
Freedom to Differ (.au)
French Law in English
Future Blogger
FuturePundit
Future Scanner
GermanBlawgs
German Trademark Law
Grahnlaw (EU Law)
Groklaw
Guiding Rights Blog
Handakte (.de)
Head of Legal (.uk)
Health Blawg
Hollywood Entertainment & Media Law
Houston's Clear Thinkers
Immateriblog (.de)
Indefensible
India Patent Blog (.in)
Infamy or Praise
Info/Law of Information
Informationoverlord (.uk)
InstaPundit
Intellectual Property Colloquium
Inter Alia
International Economic Law & Policy
International Trade Law News
Internet Cases
In Their Opinion
IP Dragon
IP Estonia
IP Factor (.il)
iPhone J.D.
IPKat
IP Law Poland
IP Think Tank
I/P Updates
IPwars (.au)
IT Law in Ireland
jurabilis (.de)
Lawdable
Law Firm Web Strategy
LawLibTech
Law Practice Tips Blog
Legal Blog Watch
Legal History Blog
Legal Jobs & Recruitment (.uk)
Legal Juice
Legal Pad (a Cal Law Blog)
Legal Talk Network
Legal Theory Blog
Legal Tweets
Legal Underground
Lessig Blog
Lex Ferenda (.ie)
LibraryLawBlog
Lifehacker (how to tips)
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP Blog) (.au)
Likelihood of Confusion
Lords of the Blog
Marcel Berlins (.uk)
Mashable (what's new on the net)
MassLawBlog
Mediation Channel
Modulator (with the Friday Ark)
NJ Estate Planning & Elder Law
New Media & Technology Law Blog
Nolo Intellectual Propery
normblog (Norman Geras)
Opinio Juris
OUT-LAW
Overseas Property Investment Blog
Paper Chase
Patent Baristas
Patent Docs
Patent Infringement Updates
Patently-O
Patterico's Pontifications
Peter Zura's 271 Patent Blog
Phosita
PLI Patent Blog
Precedent (Law & Style)
Privacy & Security Law
Professor Bainbridge
Robert Paterson's Blog
SCOTUSblog
SCRIPTed
Securing Innovation
Singularity Law
Slaw (.ca)
Social Media Law Student
Southern Appeal
Strategic Legal Technology
Sui Generis
Supreme Dicta
SW Virginia law
TalkLeft
taxgirl
Techdirt
TechnoLlama (.uk)
Technology & Marketing
The Common Scold
The Invent Blog
The Laboratorium
The Lawyer Coach Blog
The Legal Thing
the [non]billable hour
The Prior Art
The Settlement Channel
The Wired GC
TierneyLab (testing science)
TigerHawk (politics)
TimesOnline Blog
Trademark Blog
TTABlog (Trademarks)
Unclaimed Territory
Useful Arts
Volokh Conspiracy
Washington Briefs
WisBlawg
Wise Law Blawg (.ca)
WSJ.com Law Blog
Zeugma


LAW PUNDIT Sunday, February 07, 2010 2/07/2010 05:07:00 PM [Home] [Print]

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy Criticizes California Prisons and Attacks U.S. Criminal Sentencing (8 Times Longer than Europe)
 

The Los Angeles Times in a report by Carol J. Williams headlines that U.S. Justice [Anthony M.] Kennedy laments the state of prisons in California, writing:
"U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy criticized California sentencing policies and crowded prisons Wednesday night, calling the influence that unionized prison guards had in passing the three-strikes law "sick."

He said U.S. sentences are eight times longer than those issued by European courts."

Kennedy is an expert in this field of legal inquiry. See the 2004 Report of the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission Fact Sheet which stated:
"The United States imprisons more people than any other country in the world.

- The nationwide inmate population today is about 2.1 million people. In California alone, there are more than 160,000 persons behind bars.

- Between 1974 and 2002, the number of inmates in federal and state prisons rose from 216,000 to 1,355,748, a more than six-fold increase.

- The likelihood of an American going to prison sometime in his or her life more than tripled between 1974 and 2001.

- According the U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics, the number people incarcerated under state and federal jurisdictions per 100,000 of the total population grew from 139 in 1980 to 476 in 2002....

- In countries such as England, Italy, France and Germany, the incarceration rate is about 1 in 1,000 persons.

- Between 1982 and 1999, direct expenditures on corrections by federal, state and local governments jumped from $9 billion to $49 billion, an increase of more than 440%.

Over-reliance on incarceration disproportionately affects minorities.


- An African American male born in 2004 has a 32.2 percent likelihood of being incarcerated sometime during his lifetime....

- An African America male born in 2001 has a 1 in 3 chance of being imprisoned during his lifetime, compared to a 1 in 6 chance for a Latino male and a 1 in 17 chance for a white male. If current rates of incarceration continue, 32.2 percent of African American males born in 2001 will be incarcerated at some point in their lives, compared to 16.7 percent of Hispanic males and 5.9 percent of white males.

- About 10 percent of African-American men in their mid-to-late 20s are behind bars. In some cities more than half of young African-American men are under the supervision of the criminal justice system.

- More than 60 percent of the people behind bars in America are people of color.

- In 1999, African-Americans constituted 13 percent of drug users, Hispanics, 11 percent, and whites, 72 percent. In that same year, African-Americans constituted 35 percent of drug arrests, 53 percent of drug convictions, and 58 percent of those in prison for drug offenses.

Criminal justice systems do not prepare people to successfully reenter society.

- Approximately 95 percent of all inmates are eventually released.

- Nationwide, more than 650,000 inmates will be released from prison in 2004.

- According to the Criminal Justice Institute, the national recidivism rate in 2000 was almost 34 percent.

- In California, the state with the highest recidivism rate in the country, more than 55 percent of inmates released from prison return within 2 years.

Drug laws, particularly mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes, are the largest driver of expanding prison populations.

- Between 1980 and 1990, the number of drug arrests almost doubled – from 581,000 to 1,090,000

- In 2001, the average federal drug trafficking sentence was 72.7 months, the average federal manslaughter sentence was 34.3 months, the average assault sentence was 37.7 months, and the average sexual abuse sentence was 65.2 months.

- In state court, the average sentence imposed in state courts for felony drug trafficking was 35 months."
The ABA subsequently issued a June 23, 2004 press release as follows:
"ABA COMMISSION CITES OVER-RELIANCE ON INCARCERATION, CALLS FOR NEW "SMART ON CRIME" APPROACH

Recommendations presented to Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy

WASHINGTON, D.C., June 23, 2004 - According to a report issued today by a special American Bar Association commission, America's criminal justice systems rely too heavily on incarceration and need to consider more effective alternatives.

"For more than 20 years, we have gotten tougher on crime," said ABA President Dennis W. Archer. "Now we need to get smarter. We can no longer sit by as more and more people-particularly in minority communities-are sent away for longer and longer periods of time while we make it more and more difficult for them to return to society after they serve their time. The system is broken. We need to fix it."

The recommendations, which do not reflect ABA policy, will be considered by the ABA House of Delegates for adoption as policy at its Annual Meeting in Atlanta, August 9 and 10.

Archer today joined Stephen Saltzburg, chair of the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission, in presenting the commission's recommendations to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.

The recommendations, the result of a nearly year-long review of issues confronting state and federal criminal justice systems, address four primary sets of issues: sentencing and incarceration issues, racial and ethnic disparities in criminal justice systems, prison conditions and prisoner reentry issues, and pardons and clemency processes.

The commission noted that the United States imprisons more people than any other country in the world. With more than 2.1 million people behind bars, and some 650,000 set to be released this year, the commission urged jurisdictions to invest in programs that help inmates return to communities, provide alternatives to incarceration for offenders who would benefit from substance abuse and mental illness programs, and help eradicate the disproportionate impact "tough on crime" laws have on minorities. The commission also called on Congress to repeal mandatory minimum sentences.

"These recommendations are intended to make our criminal justice systems more effective and to utilize our limited resources more efficiently," said Saltzburg. "For too long we have focused almost exclusively on locking up criminals. We also need to look at the other side of the coin: what happens when they get out. We have to remember that roughly 95 percent of the people we lock up eventually get out. Our communities will be safer and our corrections budgets less strained if we better prepared inmates to successfully reenter society without returning to a life of crime."

The commission noted that about one-third of the more than 650,000 inmates who will be released this year can be expected to return to prison. Many of its recommendations are intended to help jurisdictions find ways to reduce the recidivism rate. One method, the commission noted, is for Congress and state legislatures to eliminate unnecessary legal barriers that make it difficult for some to become productive members of society. People with drug convictions-even minor possession charges, for example-are permanently ineligible for federal student loans, housing assistance or public assistance.

The commission also called on Congress to repeal mandatory minimum sentences, particularly with respect to drug crimes. "Mandatory minimum sentences tend to be tough on the wrong people," said Saltzburg. The commission's report notes that the average federal drug trafficking sentence was 72.7 months in 2001. By comparison, the average federal manslaughter sentence was 34.3 months, the average assault sentence was 37.7 months, and the average sexual abuse sentence was 65.2 months.

For minorities the situation is even more striking. The commission noted that an African American male born in 2004 has a 1 in 3 chance of being incarcerated sometime during his lifetime, compared to a 1 in 6 chance for a Latino male and a 1 in 17 chance for a white male. Nationwide about 10 percent of African American men in their mid-to-late 20s are behind bars. In some cities more than half of young African-American men are under the supervision of the criminal justice system.

The commission recommended numerous steps that jurisdictions across the country can take to address those problems. Among the highlights are proposals to:

* repeal mandatory minimum sentences;
* study and fund alternatives to incarceration for offenders who may benefit from treatment for substance abuse and mental illness
* develop and implement policies and procedures to combat racial and ethnic profiling;
* implement prison policies and programs that, from the beginning of incarceration, assist prisoners in preparing to reenter society by providing, for example, substance abuse treatment, educational and job training opportunities, and mental health counseling and services;
* identify and remove unnecessary legal barriers that prevent released inmates from successfully reentering society;
* establish community partnerships that include corrections and police officers, prosecutors, and community representatives committed to promoting successful reentry into the community and that measure their performance by the overall success of reentry;
* expand the use of executive clemency to reduce sentences, as well as other processes by which persons who have served their sentences can request a pardon, restoration of legal rights and relief from collateral disabilities.
* establish criminal justice racial and ethnic task forces to study and make recommendations concerning racial and ethnic disparity in the various stages of the criminal justice process; and
* establish reentry clinics in law schools in which students assist individuals who have been imprisoned and are seeking to reestablish themselves in the community, regain legal rights, or remove collateral disabilities

Archer formed the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission in October 2003 to address the "inadequacies - and the injustices - in our prison and correctional systems" identified by Justice Kennedy in his speech to the 2003 ABA Annual Meeting in San Francisco. In the months since, the commission has held public hearings in Washington, D.C., San Antonio, and Sacramento, Calif. During those hearings the commission heard testimony from more than 75 judges, prosecutors, defense lawyers, corrections officials, state and federal sentencing commissioners, former inmates, victims advocacy groups, and law enforcement officials.

For more information on the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission or a complete set of the commission's draft recommendations, visit the ABA Web site at www.abanews.org.

With more than 400,000 members, the American Bar Association is the largest voluntary professional membership organization in the world. As the national voice of the legal profession, the ABA works to improve the administration of justice, promotes programs that assist lawyers and judges in their work, accredits law schools, provides continuing legal education, and works to build public understanding around the world of the importance of the rule of law in a democratic society."
In spite that report, little has been done in the United States to reform the criminal justice system or its draconian three-strikes sentencing system.

Europe, for example, still has a much lower violent crime rate than the United States:
"The US homicide rate, which has declined substantially since 1991, is still among the highest in the industrialized world. Only the homicide rate of Northern Ireland in the early 1990s compares to that of the United States today. There were 17,034 murders in the United States in 2006[35] (666,160 murders from 1960 to 1996).[36] In 2004, there were 5.5 homicides for every 100,000 persons, roughly three times as high as Canada (1.9) and five times as high as Germany (1.0).[37][38] Most industrialized countries had homicide rates below the 2.5 mark. Overall the homicide rate in the United States was similar to that of some lesser developed Eastern European countries."
It is of course not entirely correct to compare the United States and Europe directly, since each have different demographics, but there are a lot of people in jails and prisons in the United States who simply should not be there and for whom society must find OTHER solutions.

As written by Gary Fields in the Wall Street Journal (November 12, 2009) in U.S. Commission to Assess Mandatory Sentences:
"Congress has ordered the panel that advises judges on prison terms to conduct a review of mandatory-minimum sentences, a move that could lead to a dramatic rethinking of how the U.S. incarcerates its criminals.

The review is a little-noticed element of the National Defense Authorization Act signed into law last month by President Barack Obama. The defense-spending bill calls on the commission to perform several tasks, including an examination of the impact of mandatory-minimum sentencing laws and alternatives to the practice."

We wrote about this problem earlier at LawPundit in USA Drug Policy Flawed : 2.3 Million in Jail or Prison : Limits of the Criminal Sanction : Portugal Leads Way to Legal Reform & Drug Decriminalization.

Solutions are there to be had, but it would require some modernization of the American criminal justice system. Certain aspects of the American economic system also need be reformed and modernized, something which there is a reluctance to do. People must be taken off the streets - and then be put into gainful employment, not into jails and prisons.


A couple of interesting reads on these subjects are also found at:

Marijuana Policy Project (MPP):
  • "Someone is arrested for a marijuana offense every 37 seconds.
  • 89% of these are for marijuana possession — not for sale or manufacture.
  • In the U.S., there are more arrests for marijuana possession each year than for all violent crimes combined.... Because MPP believes that the greatest harm associated with marijuana is prison, we focus on removing criminal penalties for marijuana use, with a particular emphasis on making marijuana medically available to seriously ill people who have the approval of their doctors."
Michelle Malkin - The "new" federal medical marijuana policy

UPDATE from the Washington Post, Don Thompson, February 6:

California law to free inmates early draws protests:
"A law that took effect last month that was intended to reduce inmate overcrowding by allowing early releases at state prisons and county jails is sowing confusion throughout California.

Lawmakers of both parties have called for repealing and modifying parts of the law, a county deputies' union has filed a lawsuit asking a judge to block it and a loophole was exposed after an inmate with a violent past was arrested for attempted rape just hours after his release."
Obviously, the place for violent criminals is jail and prison and these should not be let out. We are in fact in favor of far more stringent penalties for dangerous persons than exist today. In our view, the major legitimate purpose and justification of incarceration is to put such dangerous people behind bars.

When we talk about getting people out of the jails and prisons, we are talking about the petty crimes and white-collar crimes - for which people should not be behind bars if they pose no danger to the public .




Syndicated Blawg

Law_Pundit at Twitter


LawPundit Blog Visitors


Scribd Documents

Documents


LawPundit Archives
LawPundit
Posting Archives


September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
December 2008
January 2009
February 2009
March 2009
April 2009
May 2009
June 2009
July 2009
August 2009
September 2009
October 2009
November 2009
December 2009
January 2010
February 2010
March 2010

The ISandIS Network

Our Websites and Blogs
99 is not 100 Aabecis AK Photo Blog Alpha Pundit Ancient Civilizations Ancient Egypt Weblog Ancient World Blog AndisKaulins.com Andis Kaulins Blog Archaeology Travel Photos (blog) Archaeology Travel Photos (Flickr) ArchaeologyTravelPhotos.com Archaeology Websearch Archaeo Pundit Arts and Sciences Journal Arts Pundit Astrology and Birth Baltic Coachman Bible Pundit Biotechnology Pundit Blogacus Bloggers' Pundit Book Pundit Chronology of the Ancient World CiteULike Civilization Pundit Computer Pundit deli.cio.us (akaulins) DocStoc (AKaulins) DVD Pundit Earn a Ton EarnATon blog Easter Island Script Echolat edu.edu Einstein's Voice Energy Environment and Climate Blog Etruscan Bronze Liver of Piacenza EU Laws EU Legal EU Pundit FaceBook Pundit Figures in Stone Gadget Pundit Garden Pundit getCITED Golf Pundit Google Pundit Gourmet Pundit Hand Proof House Pundit Human Migrations Idea Pundit Illyrian Language Indus Valley Script Infinity One : The Secret of the First Disk (the game) Isandis (blogspot) Isandis.net Isandis Net (blogspot) Isandis Network (blogspot) Jostandis Journal Pundit Kaulins Genealogy Blog Kaulinsium (WordPress) Kiel & Kieler Latvian Blog LawPundit.com LawPundit (blog I) Law Pundit (blog II) Learn a Ton LearnATon blog LexiLine.com LexiLine Group Lexiline Journal Library Pundit Life's Laws and Rules Lingwhizt LinkedIn Literary Pundit Magnifichess Make it Music Maps and Cartography Megalithic Wiki at Wikia.com (Andis Kaulins, founder) Megalithic World Megaliths (blog) Megaliths.net Minoan Culture Multiply Mutatis Mutandis Mysticeti Nanotech Pundit Nostratic Languages Official Pundit Orcim T. Fos Phaistos Disc Pharaonic Hieroglyphs Photo Blog of the World Plaxo Posterous Predynastic Egyptians Prehistoric Art Pundit Private Wealth Blog PunditMania Quanticalian Quick to Travel Quill Pundit Road Pundit Scribd (Andis Kaulins) Shelfari SlideShare (akaulins) Sport Pundit Star Pundit Stars Stones and Scholars (blog) Stars Stones and Scholars (book) Stars Stones and Scholars (website) Stonehenge Pundit Techinax The Enchanted Glass Twitter Pundit UbiquitousPundit Vision of Change VoicePundit WatchPundit Waverful Wine Pundit Word Pundit Writely xistmz YahooPundit zistmz


About the Author, Legal Notices/font>


LawPundit™ is a trademark name.
The LawPundit blog started October 1, 2003. This blog website is updated regularly.

The owner and webmaster of LawPundit.com is Andis Kaulins
B.A. University of Nebraska; J.D. Stanford University Law School
Former Lecturer in Anglo-American Law, FFA, Trier Law School
Author at Langenscheidt, Germany
Alumnus Associate of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, NYC

All materials presented on LawPundit.com are for information only.
No warranties are made regarding the truth or accuracy of postings.
LawPundit specifically disclaims any and all liability for any reliance placed upon the materials published here.
Nothing on this website or blog is intended as legal advice nor is it legal advice.
Always consult your lawyer for legal advice in matters of private or business importance.

Nothing published at LawPundit should be construed as investment advice
or as a solicitation to buy or sell any kind of financial instruments.
Caveat emptor (buyer beware).
The ability to exercise personal responsibility for one's own actions and choices is a kind of immense private wealth.
Take it seriously but enjoy it for what it represents.

LawPundit expressly disclaims any liability for the consequences of links to third party websites.


Legal Notice of Fair Use of Copyrighted Materials
Copyrighted materials on LawPundit are posted under the "fair use" exception
as granted by Title 17 U.S.C [United States Code] Section 107.

This page is powered by Blogger.

This work is licensed under a... Creative Commons License......Creative Commons License


Terms of Use

Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, Impressum (required by German law), Publisher

LawPundit syndicated feeds are intended for personal and professional non-commercial use.
Commercial transformative fair use in blog catalogs or search engines is permissible.
LawPundit can be quoted - in reasonable amounts - with attribution. That is fair use.
We reserve the right to require that anyone cease distributing LawPundit content at any time.







The Law Pundit - LawPundit Weblog - LawPundit Blog - LawPundit Blawg