Wednesday, May 29, 2019

All Hail Jail!



More than 90 percent of state and federal criminal convictions are the result of guilty pleas, often by people who say they didn't commit a crime. theoutline.com, 8/7/17

Standard stuff, really. Someone who cannot afford a lawyer is charged with a crime, perhaps one they committed or perhaps one they did not. A public defender with a massive caseload is appointed, often meeting their appointed client immediately before trial. The prosecutor reminds the person charged that if the plea bargain is not accepted, judges almost always increase the jail/prison time substantially if there is an ultimate conviction by trial. The public defender confirms that harsh reality. For those who simply don’t trust the system… or their overwhelmed public defender… copping a plea is an evil necessity. We all know that, but too many of us believe that folks in that situation probably committed some other crime that they are getting away with… and so what?! We just don’t care. Oh, and in the federal system, where there is no parole, the percentage of plea bargains is 97%!

Looking at the statistics, you can pretty much assume that for the vast majority of those charged with a crime, their fate lies not with a judge or jury but with a single individual (and his/her boss), the prosecutor. So a lot of people go to jail (in theory a short-term incarceration) or prison (generally for sentences of a year or more) simply to avoid much worse. For felonies and even a few misdemeanors, those convicted get a blot on their records that impacts future employment potential, their ability to get certain governmentally required licenses for certain jobs, their families lose their income/nurturing and they get to spend time in one of the cruelest environments our country can offer: dangerous, unfair, constantly noisy, usually overcrowded with horrible food and second-rate medical care. And the United States incarcerates 25% of the world’s total prisoners … and represents only 5% of the earth’s population!

We went through a prison-building spree when three-strikes legislation was in fashion. Many states and the federal government even “outsourced” some of that incarceration to uncaring corporate prisons only concerned with profitability and rife with despicable conduct from guards and prison officials. For those who copped a plea, the unfairness of the system festers. Unwanted gang affiliations might be the price of survival. Anger builds. And if they were second-rate criminals or pure innocents when they entered the system, they sure as heck have attended “lectures” from fellow bragging inmates on criminal opportunity and expertise. With most states following the California pattern, since then-Governor Ronald Reagan led the movement and shut down most state mental hospitals in the late 1960s/early 1970s, the mentally ill have increasingly become charges of the California’s jail/prison system. Mixing it up with the criminally insane is never a good thing.

We’ve shuttered a number of prisons, even though the number of inmates keeps growing. In most states and the federal government, austerity measures have slammed jails and prisons very hard. You have to wonder if jail time in the 21st century itself violates the proscription against “cruel and unusual punishment” set forth in the Eighth Amendment. Federal courts have so ruled against blue state California’s massively overcrowded prison system. So what’s the solution? Releasing non-violent prisoners early? Releasing folks convicted of marijuana possession, a substance that is now legal in lots of states? Some of that is happening, very, very slowly. But some prison policy makers have tried other solutions in the Golden State. How’s that going?

“[More] than 175,000 people sentenced to county jails instead of state prisons in the last eight years because of sweeping changes to California’s justice system, according to an analysis of state data by the Marshall Project. The reforms were intended to ease prison overcrowding — and they have… But the changes were also supposed to help people convicted of nonviolent crimes, by letting them serve their sentences close to home in county jails with lots of education and training programs.

“It hasn’t worked out that way in some urban counties. Jails built to hold people for days or weeks — awaiting trial or serving short sentences for petty crimes — have strained to handle long-term inmates, many with chronic medical and mental-health problems and histories of violence.” Abbie Van Sickle and Manuel Villa writing for the May 24th Los Angeles Times.

Yet many jails today are even more overcrowded than regional prisons, often lacking in medical and psychiatric support systems (inadequate everywhere) that are much “better” in prisons built for long-term housing. Violence in many urban jails has long-since passed the breaking point. As case in point, one inmate confined for long-term incarceration in a jail vs a prison:

“Ever since he stole his first car at age 10, Cody Garland has spent much of his life behind bars. Now 35, he has served time at eight different California prisons… But the hardest stint, he says, was not in a state penitentiary. It was in a Sacramento County jail, where in 2016 he was sentenced to serve eight years for burglary, identity theft and other charges.

“Medical care at the jail was even worse than in prison; untreated glaucoma left him legally blind, he says… Solitary confinement — in a windowless room — was a common punishment; Garland says he lost track of whether it was day or night during a spell in solitary and began to hear voices.

“Mental-health help was hard to get, he alleged, even after he started swallowing shards of metal and tried to hang himself. He detailed the treatment in a lawsuit accusing the county of subjecting inmates to inhumane conditions — a claim the county denies… ‘I’ve done a lot of prison time,’ he says, ‘and this was the worst time I’d ever done.’…

“Statewide, assaults on jailers increased almost 90% from 2010, the year before prison downsizing began, to 2017, the most recent year for which there is complete data. Mental-health cases, which had been declining in jails, have risen. County spending on medicine for inmates has jumped (to almost $64 million in 2017 from $38 million in 2010), and the cost of psychotropic medication has recently surged. Legal challenges over inmate treatment have expanded to about a dozen county lockups.

“A spate of suicides… Deaths in California jails jumped by 26% in the years after they started receiving long-term inmates, peaking at 153 in 2014 before falling to 133 in 2017. That year, California had 17.7 deaths per 10,000 inmates; Texas, which has the second-largest jail population, had 13.2…

“California’s experiment in prison downsizing has implications for states across the country as they try to cut the size of their prison systems. Some, such as Texas, are tackling the issue because of the high cost of locking people up, while others, such as Alabama, are under pressure to relieve overcrowding and violence. And in many regions, voters are concluding that prison populations, which include disproportionate numbers of people of color, reflect outdated ‘tough on crime’ policies.” LA Times. And richer municipalities (as in the Silicon Valley) often have vastly superior local jails. It’s money combined with a long-term American proclivity favoring incarceration.

For prisoners, it’s living hell, with profound damage done to those incarcerated, particularly in those cities with the worst and most overcrowded jails. As a follow-up, Cody Garland figured out how to force a transfer to a state penitentiary: “Garland no longer spends his days in the Sacramento jail. Since December, he has been living in a prison medical facility in San Luis Obispo, where he says his health problems have improved.

“How did he get transferred? In 2018, he hit a sheriff’s deputy in the jail. Garland did not contest charges of resisting an officer and assault likely to produce great bodily injury, a felony… He begged his public defender to make sure that this time, he went to prison… ‘They wanted to give me six months in jail,’ he recalled recently. ‘I said I’d take two years if you’d just let me go to prison.’” LA Times. We should be ashamed.

              I’m Peter Dekom, and it seems that all across the land there is this sweeping malaise decimating empathy, sympathy, humanity and respect for our fellow human beings… me, mine and not them or theirs.




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