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Showing Original Post only (View all)Sequestration Puts Spotlight on America’s Dangerously Overcrowded Federal Prisons [View all]
Sequestration Puts Spotlight on Americas Dangerously Overcrowded Federal Prisons
By Jesselyn McCurdy
<...>
How did we get to this point? At a time of historically low rates of crime, our federal prison system is operating at almost 40% over capacity. Weve seen the federal prison population balloon by nearly 800% since 1980. Meanwhile, many states have enacted innovative criminal justice reforms that contributed to the first decline in overall prison population in 40 years.
Testifying before the House of Representatives, Charles Samuels, Director of the BOP, attributed the explosion of the prison population to excessively harsh sentencing and the increasing prosecutions of drug offenses...We also know that immigration enforcement programs like Operation Streamline contribute to this unsustainable prison growth. Operation Streamline is a zero-tolerance program that requires the federal criminal prosecution and imprisonment of all unlawful border crossers in designated sectors. The program annually sweeps in tens of thousands of migrant workers with no criminal history and is a major contributor to prison overcrowding, privatization and the soaring federal rate of Hispanic and Latino incarceration.
We have focused so much on locking people up in this country that we have ignored viable and fiscally sound alternatives to prison. Its time for our elected officials to seriously consider criminal justice reforms that will maintain public safety while reducing the federal prison population. These reforms include eliminating mandatory minimum sentences drug sentences, expanding time credits for good behavior, enhancing elderly prisoner early and compassionate release programs, and making the Fair Sentencing Act retroactive. We also need to eliminate programs like Operation Streamline that have added immigration prisoners to BOP who would need to be housed in new facilities, which would likely be privately operated.
Sending people to prison should be the option of last resort, not the first. We did not have to get to this point, but fortunately we have an opportunity over the next few years to adopt sensible reforms to the federal criminal justice system while maintaining public safety. While Congress is debating how to prevent the sequestration, its time for a real discussion about how we can stop wasting money by incarcerating people who pose little risk to our communities for long periods of time for non-violent drug crimes.
If Congress is serious about trimming the budget, the answer is simple: reduce the federal prison population.
http://www.aclu.org/blog/criminal-law-reform/sequestration-puts-spotlight-americas-dangerously-overcrowded-federal
By Jesselyn McCurdy
<...>
How did we get to this point? At a time of historically low rates of crime, our federal prison system is operating at almost 40% over capacity. Weve seen the federal prison population balloon by nearly 800% since 1980. Meanwhile, many states have enacted innovative criminal justice reforms that contributed to the first decline in overall prison population in 40 years.
Testifying before the House of Representatives, Charles Samuels, Director of the BOP, attributed the explosion of the prison population to excessively harsh sentencing and the increasing prosecutions of drug offenses...We also know that immigration enforcement programs like Operation Streamline contribute to this unsustainable prison growth. Operation Streamline is a zero-tolerance program that requires the federal criminal prosecution and imprisonment of all unlawful border crossers in designated sectors. The program annually sweeps in tens of thousands of migrant workers with no criminal history and is a major contributor to prison overcrowding, privatization and the soaring federal rate of Hispanic and Latino incarceration.
We have focused so much on locking people up in this country that we have ignored viable and fiscally sound alternatives to prison. Its time for our elected officials to seriously consider criminal justice reforms that will maintain public safety while reducing the federal prison population. These reforms include eliminating mandatory minimum sentences drug sentences, expanding time credits for good behavior, enhancing elderly prisoner early and compassionate release programs, and making the Fair Sentencing Act retroactive. We also need to eliminate programs like Operation Streamline that have added immigration prisoners to BOP who would need to be housed in new facilities, which would likely be privately operated.
Sending people to prison should be the option of last resort, not the first. We did not have to get to this point, but fortunately we have an opportunity over the next few years to adopt sensible reforms to the federal criminal justice system while maintaining public safety. While Congress is debating how to prevent the sequestration, its time for a real discussion about how we can stop wasting money by incarcerating people who pose little risk to our communities for long periods of time for non-violent drug crimes.
If Congress is serious about trimming the budget, the answer is simple: reduce the federal prison population.
http://www.aclu.org/blog/criminal-law-reform/sequestration-puts-spotlight-americas-dangerously-overcrowded-federal
BOOM! Feds release hundreds of immigrant detainees in face of sequester
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10022432010
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Sequestration Puts Spotlight on America’s Dangerously Overcrowded Federal Prisons [View all]
ProSense
Feb 2013
OP
The "war on drugs" and "prison-industrial complex" are enormous sources of profit
Fire Walk With Me
Feb 2013
#5
Thank you very much. I was unaware that anything was being done beyond activists drawing
Fire Walk With Me
Feb 2013
#8