California to Release Thousands of Prisoners

What a Clusterfuck that state is in...


Supreme Court Demands California Release 30,000 Inmates


The Supreme Court ruled Monday by a 5-4 vote that California prison overcrowding is unconstitutional, and forced the state to release some 30,000 inmates in the next three years. Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion that overcrowding led to severe violations of inmates? basic rights and led to a well-documented history of ?needless suffering and death.?

The ruling affirmed the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal?s ruling that called for the release of up to 46,000 prisoners. The state shed some prisoners after it temporarily sent inmates to out-of-state prisons, and sent those in state prison to county jails. The court?s mandate will force the state to reduce its prison population to 137.5 percent of its capacity.

?For years the medical and mental health care provided by California?s prisons has fallen short of minimum constitutional requirements and has failed to meet prisoners? basic health needs,? Kennedy wrote. ?Over the whole course of years during which this litigation has been pending, no other remedies have been found to be sufficient. Efforts to remedy the violation have been frustrated by severe overcrowding in California?s prison system. Short term gains in the provision of care have been eroded by the long-term effects of severe and pervasive overcrowding.?

Kennedy said in his opinion that prison overcrowding led to terrible conditions where more than 40 inmates had to share one toilet, or over 200 people were housed in a gym. Lawyers said that prison overcrowding and poor health care drove prisoners with mental illness to commit suicide in ?holding tanks where observation windows are obscured with smeared feces,? and inmates were ?discovered catatonic in pools of their own urine after spending nights in locked cages.?

There are about 146,000 inmates right now incarcerated in California prisons that were meant for just 80,000 people, Southern California?s KPCC reported Monday.

?This landmark decision opens an important new chapter in California?s long struggle over whether to expand or contract our bloated prison system,? says Emily Harris, the statewide coordinator for Californians United for a Responsible Budget, a progressive criminal justice reform group. ?This is an important moment for California to push forward much needed parole and sentencing reforms to reduce California?s prison population.?

Harris said that among the options available was the amendment or repeal of the state?s three strikes law, which calls for longer sentences for people who are convicted of a felony if they?ve been convicted of one or more serious felonies in the past. Harsh sentencing policy means that many people are serving 25 years to life in prison for crimes that range from violent assault to possession of drugs. KALW?s The Informant reported that as of December of 2010, 40,998 Californians were incarcerated on third strike offenses and 8,727 were in prison for what was considered their third strike.

Harris added that the state had plenty of other options to deal with overcrowding, including releasing terminally ill patients and eliminating laws that demand people who violate their parole be returned to prison and revisiting drug sentencing laws, which have fueled much of the prison population growth of the last few decades.

According to Critical Resistance, a prison abolition group, California spending on prisons has grown from five to ten percent of the state?s general fund in the last decade. Thirty years ago, the state spent two percent of its money on corrections.

Criminal justice reform advocates say that harsh, punitive mass incarceration doesn?t necessarily improve public safety. Mike Males over at the Center for Juvenile and Criminal Justice found in a new report that Three Strikes implementation varies from county to county?prosecutors have a great deal of discretion when it comes to deciding whether and which which a person?s offense will be counted as a ?strike.? Males also found that the counties that used the law the most didn?t actually see any improvement, or impact whatsoever, on crime levels.

?The Supreme Court has done the right thing by acknowledging what even the state itself has not disputed ? that the egregious and extreme overcrowding in California?s prisons contributes to a failure by the state to keep its prisoners safe by providing the basic levels of medical and mental health care mandated by the U.S. Constitution,? said David Fathi, the director of the ACLU?s National Prison Project. Farris, too, called on the state to tackle drug sentencing reform.

?Today?s decision crystallizes the urgent need for California to invest in meaningful parole and sentencing reforms and alternatives to incarceration, especially for low-level, non-violent offenders. Reducing the number of people in prison not only would save state taxpayers half a billion dollars annually, it would lead to the implementation of truly rehabilitative programs that lower recidivism rates and create safer communities.?

Supreme Court Demands California Release 30,000 Inmates - COLORLINES
 

tank

EOG Dedicated
Re: California to Release Thousands of Prisoners

The crime rate will go up over 25% over night.I bet half of them are illegals.
 
Re: California to Release Thousands of Prisoners

How Prison Unions Helped Create Overcrowding Problem in California

by Duane Lester
0 Comments and 15 Reactions :
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Photo Credit: verifex

They?ve been packing them in California prisons for decades, far past capacity. Now, thanks to the ACLU, the Supreme Court has ordered the state of California to lower the prison population to the number of prisoners facilities were designed to hold.

That means tens of thousands of prisoners will just be set free:
It is one of the largest prison release orders in the nation?s history, and it sharply split the high court.

Justices upheld an order from a three-judge panel in California that called for releasing 38,000 to 46,000 prisoners. Since then, the state has transferred about 9,000 state inmates to county jails. As a result, the total prison population is now about 32,000 more than the capacity limit set by the panel.

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, speaking for the majority, said California?s prisons had ?fallen short of minimum constitutional requirements? because of overcrowding. As many as 200 prisoners may live in gymnasium, he said, and as many as 54 prisoners share a single toilet.

Kennedy insisted that the state had no choice but to release more prisoners. The justices, however, agreed that California officials should be given more time to make the needed reductions.

In dissent, Justice Antonin Scalia called the ruling ?staggering? and ?absurd.?

He said the high court had repeatedly overruled the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals for ordering the release of individual prisoners. Now, he said, the majority were ordering the release of ?46,000 happy-go-lucky felons.? He added that ?terrible things are sure to happen as a consequence of this outrageous order.? Justice Clarence Thomas agreed with him.
Let?s look at the cause of this problem. California?s prison population is far over capacity. Why?

The ?three strikes rule,? promoted by one of the most powerful lobbies in California ? The California Correctional Peace Officers Association ? is part of the problem:
In three decades, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association has become one of the most powerful political forces in California. The union has contributed millions of dollars to support ?three strikes? and other laws that lengthen sentences and increase parole sanctions. It donated $1 million to Wilson after he backed the three strikes law.

And the result for the union has been dramatic. Since the laws went into effect and the inmate population boomed, the union grew from 2,600 officers to 45,000 officers.

Salaries jumped: In 1980, the average officer earned $15,000 a year; today, one in every 10 officers makes more than $100,000 a year.
The above article also details the union?s involvement with a victim?s rights PAC that lobbies to keep prisoners in prison, increasing the prison population.
[Lance Corcoran, spokesman for the union,] does not deny that the two are closely connected.

?We support a number of victims? rights groups,? he said.
When asked why the correctional officers union is involved in victims? rights at all, Corcoran said: ?There are people that think that there?s some sort of ulterior motive, but the reality is we simply want to make sure [the victims'] voices are heard.?

But Corcoran acknowledges that the union has benefited from the increase in the prison population after these laws passed.
The union has also lobbies against the use of private prisons in California. They don?t use union guards:
In California, the first group of private facilities ? Eagle Mountain among them ? opened in 1988, a time when the inmate population was mushrooming. With state-run prisons bulging, inmates had begun challenging the conditions of their confinement and judges were issuing orders that threatened to lead to widespread releases unless crowding was eased.

?The hallways were filled with double bunks and the inmates used buckets to go to the bathroom,? recalled Craig Brown, undersecretary of the Youth and Adult Corrections Agency at the time.

?We were just desperate for space,? Brown added. ?Building new prisons was one answer, but that took too long. So the privates became part of the mix.?

Privatization appealed to the Republican governor at that time, George Deukmejian, as well as to his GOP successor, Pete Wilson. But from the start, the private facilities were bitterly opposed by the labor union representing prison guards, the California Correctional Peace Officers Assn.

The union fought privatization in part because it does not represent guards at the company-run facilities. But Brown, now a lobbyist for the union, said its opposition goes beyond that: ?Government?s job is 100% to protect the public. With the privates, the job is to make money.?

Though California?s private prisons have won high marks from state officials and independent auditors, some private lockups in other states have been dogged by violence, mismanagement and escapes.

Over the years, the union has used such horror stories to help sway California legislators against any effort to expand private prisons, which have been limited in the state to housing small numbers of low-security inmates. The union has distributed news clippings of private prison problems elsewhere in the country, as well as a CBS television ?60 Minutes? segment on troubles at a Corrections Corp. of America lockup in Ohio.

Davis was sympathetic to the union arguments. Two years ago, he proposed closing five of the nine private prisons, saying that he opposed the concept of privatization in corrections and that the tumbling population of low-security inmates made them no longer necessary.

Defenders of private facilities cried foul, suggesting that Davis had been motivated by politics. The prison guards union, they pointed out, was one of Davis? biggest campaign contributors ? having spent $2.3 million to get him elected in 1998. In 2002, a few weeks after Davis proposed closing the five private prisons, the union gave him $250,000.
It?s a one-two punch. Unions fight to keep prison populations high, then fight the construction of new, privately owned prisons which would ease the overcrowding.

And private prisons could have been the answer.

This article explains how a private prison corporation built a prison in nine months, had it operational in a year. It held three thousand.

But rather than that, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association used its power to keep facilities from being constructed, helping to create the situation we have today.

It?s incredible the union still has the nerve to accuse the corporation of greed. 2938u4ji23
 

tank

EOG Dedicated
Re: California to Release Thousands of Prisoners

How Prison Unions Helped Create Overcrowding Problem in California

by Duane Lester
0 Comments and 15 Reactions :
Email This : Print This
Photo Credit: verifex

They’ve been packing them in California prisons for decades, far past capacity. Now, thanks to the ACLU, the Supreme Court has ordered the state of California to lower the prison population to the number of prisoners facilities were designed to hold.

That means tens of thousands of prisoners will just be set free:
Let’s look at the cause of this problem. California’s prison population is far over capacity. Why?

The “three strikes rule,” promoted by one of the most powerful lobbies in California — The California Correctional Peace Officers Association — is part of the problem:
The above article also details the union’s involvement with a victim’s rights PAC that lobbies to keep prisoners in prison, increasing the prison population.
The union has also lobbies against the use of private prisons in California. They don’t use union guards:
It’s a one-two punch. Unions fight to keep prison populations high, then fight the construction of new, privately owned prisons which would ease the overcrowding.

And private prisons could have been the answer.

This article explains how a private prison corporation built a prison in nine months, had it operational in a year. It held three thousand.

But rather than that, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association used its power to keep facilities from being constructed, helping to create the situation we have today.

It’s incredible the union still has the nerve to accuse the corporation of greed. 2938u4ji23
Absolutely a home run here Joe!!!Do you realize you have just made the all time dumbest post in history??
The unions made these people go out and break the law?????:LMAO:LMAO:LMAO
Next in your demented brain you will claim these people would be law abiding citizens if it was not for 3 strikes your out and the unions!!What a retard!!
 

mr merlin

EOG Master
Re: California to Release Thousands of Prisoners

Losing billions educating and giving free medical to illegals, and they think letting criminals out of jail is the solution? They deserve what they get.
 

markinsac

EOG Dedicated
Re: California to Release Thousands of Prisoners

Something just doesn't jive here. If California had their prisons at capacity let's say in 1970 and the population continued to increase, why then naturally weren't more prisons built? Is this toooooo hard to figure out?
 
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