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Prison Overcrowding: Open the Gates!

February 10, 2009 24 comments
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/crime/la-me-prisons10-2009feb10,0,5706329.story

From the Los Angeles Times

Judges back a one-third reduction in state prison population

Jurists issue tentative ruling in lawsuit brought by inmates, who say overcrowding in state prisons violates their right to adequate healthcare.

By Michael Rothfeld

February 10, 2009

Reporting from Sacramento — A panel of three federal judges, saying overcrowding in state prisons has deprived inmates of their right to adequate healthcare, tentatively ruled Monday that the state must reduce the population in those lockups by as many as 57,000 people.

The judges issued the decision after a trial in two long-running cases brought by inmates to protest the state of medical and mental healthcare in the prisons.

Although their order is not final, U.S. District Court Judges Thelton Henderson and Lawrence Karlton and 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Stephen Reinhardt effectively told the state that it had lost the trial and would have to make dramatic changes in its prisons unless it could reach a settlement with inmates’ lawyers.

State officials immediately said they would appeal.

If the state is ordered to reduce the prison population, it would likely be able to do so over two or three years, so it would not have to release large numbers of inmates at once. Some methods of cutting the population include limiting new admissions, changing policies so parole violators return to prison less frequently, and giving prisoners more time off of their sentences for good behavior and rehabilitation efforts.

The judges said these types of measures could save the state more than $900 million a year in prison costs, money that could be used by cities and counties to put those who otherwise would have gone to prison into local jails or treatment programs.

The state’s 33 prisons were designed for 84,000 inmates, and they now hold 158,000, nearly double their designed capacity. The rest of the 170,000 in the correctional system are in out-of-state prisons and other facilities. The judges found that with inmates crammed into institutions, they could not receive the care to which they are entitled under the U.S. Constitution.

“There is . . . uncontroverted evidence that, because of overcrowding, there are not enough clinical facilities or resources to accommodate inmates with medical or mental health needs at the level of care they require,” the judges wrote in a 10-page decision.

They said that triple-bunking of inmates in prison gymnasiums has increased the risk of infectious disease and that a shortage of doctors, nurses and correctional officers has denied inmates access to treatment and a decent system to keep their medical records in order.

In the ruling, the judges said they believe the state’s prisons can safely operate at 120% to 145% of their designed capacity. Based on the current prison population, that would mean a potential reduction of 36,000 to 57,000 inmates. They reserved the right to change their numbers and did not say when their final order might come.

“It’s a pretty comprehensive victory for us,” said Michael Bien, a lawyer in San Francisco who has fought for mentally ill prisoners. “It was a message — a very loud, clear message — that it’s time that the public officials in California took responsibility for their own criminal justice system.”

Under federal law, judges cannot order the state to lock up fewer prisoners if such a move would endanger the public, and the panel said that would not be the case if reductions were done gradually.

But Matt Cate, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s corrections secretary, said the ruling “poses a significant threat to public safety” because it could prevent the state from incarcerating as many criminals as it now keeps in seven to 10 prisons.

“If this panel issues a final decision, we will appeal this matter to the United States Supreme Court,” Cate said tersely during a news conference in Sacramento.

State Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown called the ruling “the latest intrusion” on California’s prison system by the federal courts. In a statement, he labeled the order “a blunt instrument that does not recognize the imperatives of public safety, nor the challenges of incarcerating criminals, many of whom are deeply disturbed.”

The judges oversaw the trial starting in November and completed it last week. In their decision, they referred to the testimony of Jeanne Woodford, a former corrections secretary under Schwarzenegger, who told them overcrowding made it impossible for prisoners to get mental health treatment and medical exams. They also cited experts from Texas, Pennsylvania, Maine and Washington.

And the judges used Schwarzenegger’s words and actions against him, citing the state of emergency the governor declared for the prisons in 2006 — still in effect — and quoting him as saying overcrowding had caused “substantial risk to the health and safety” of prison inmates and staff. They noted that Schwarzenegger has made budget-related proposals to reduce the prison population by 40,000 inmates, and that lawmakers have backed similar ideas.

“We cannot believe that such support would exist if the adoption of such measures would adversely affect public safety,” the judges wrote, although the proposals they referred to have not garnered enough support to go into effect.

The state nearly reached a settlement with the inmates last year that would have reduced the prison population by tens of thousands, largely by shifting low-level offenders to local jails and rehabilitation programs. But that deal fell apart when Republican state lawmakers and county prosecutors objected.

Since then, the state has hardened its stance. Schwarzenegger and Brown are now demanding that Henderson terminate court oversight of prison medical care, which he seized from the state in 2006. They say the situation has improved with the hiring of new medical and correctional personnel.

michael.rothfeld@latimes.com

Prison Overcrowding: Will it ever go away?

February 9, 2009 4 comments
indystar.com


February 9, 2009

Prison chief: Safety requires additional cells

Focus on inmates overlooks education needs, foes say

By Mary Beth Schneider
mary.beth.schneider@indystar.com

After serving 12 years of a 20-year sentence for a slew of crimes, including robbery and kidnapping, Kelvin Fuller was moved in 2007 from his maximum-security cell to medium-security confines.

A couple of weeks later, Fuller escaped. He went on a five-day crime spree that included robbing a Fishers bank and attacking and robbing a female bus driver in Merrillville before he was captured in Montana.

To Indiana Department of Correction Commissioner Ed Buss, Fuller is the poster child for why, even though Indiana is cash-strapped in this current economic downturn, the state needs to build additional maximum-security cell blocks at two of its prisons.

Despite double-bunking maximum-security prisoners and even triple-bunking lower-security prisoners, DOC facilities are at 99 percent capacity. With about 7,400 maximum-security prisoners right now and only 6,186 maximum-security beds, Buss fears more Fullers.

“There is no way that he should have been in a medium-security facility,” Buss told lawmakers in a recent Indiana House Ways and Means Committee hearing.

“However, there wasn’t enough beds at the state prison, so you have to take chances. … Unfortunately there’s consequences that come with that.”

If lawmakers are only now beginning to understand that, they have only themselves to blame for at least part of the problem.

Since 1989, the legislature has passed 116 laws creating new crimes or stiffening penalties. Each law alone might account for only a couple of more years in prison on any given offense — but they add up. Overall, lawmakers have approved new laws resulting in 250 to 275 years of additional prison time.

“We clearly have a tendency to want to show that we’re strong on law enforcement by passing more crimes and by elevating things to felonies. That’s somewhat of a contagious disease around here,” said Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville.

Aggravating the problem: The last new prison built in Indiana was in 2001, when Miami Correctional Facility in Bunker Hill in north-central Indiana was expanded by 1,632 medium-security beds. The last maximum-security prison, Wabash Valley Correctional Facility near Carlisle in southwestern Indiana, was built in 1992.

Debate over priorities

Seeking to address the problem, Gov. Mitch Daniels last month proposed spending $40 million to add 612 beds at Miami and 576 beds at Wabash Valley.

They were the only capital improvement projects in his proposed two-year state budget.

At the same time, Daniels proposed boosting the DOC’s budget by $105 million while placing a two-year moratorium on big-dollar university projects, cutting the budget for higher education by an average of 4 percent and essentially flat-lining K-12 education spending.

His proposals set off a debate in the Statehouse over whether the state’s spending priorities are out of whack.

“It would be difficult to justify an expansion of prison beds at a time when the governor’s proposed to sort of flat-line education. It emphasizes incarceration over education,” said House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Crawford, D-Indianapolis.

Senate Minority Leader Vi Simpson, D-Ellettsville, said she’d rather see those prison dollars going to education, including Indiana University at Bloomington, which is in her district.

“The budget expresses the state’s priorities,” Simpson said. “When you’re cutting the higher-ed budget in order to fund the Department of Correction, that seems like priorities turned upside down.”

To Buss, it’s a matter of public safety.

Four years ago, he said, male maximum-security inmates made up 22 percent of the DOC population. That’s risen to 29 percent, the fastest-growing segment of inmates.

“The department’s baseline budget has been flat the last four years, while higher education and other initiatives have gotten priority,” Buss said. “So now it’s simply time to add capacity to prisons.”

Crawford does agree with Buss on one thing: The legislature is partly responsible for the growing prison population.

Larry Landis, executive director of the Indiana Public Defender Council, said he’s identified at least 40 bills this session that would add crimes and prison time.

The DOC “doesn’t really have a choice” except to ask for more money to house the inmates, he said, but the state also needs to find long-term solutions.

Landis recommends giving judges more discretion in sentencing by not requiring mandatory minimum sentences and giving parole boards the discretion to decide whether an inmate is no longer a threat and can be released.

Terry Baumer, director of criminal justice and public safety programs at the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, also blames the war on drugs for filling up prison space that should be used by violent offenders. About a quarter of those who went to prison last year were sentenced on drug charges, he said.

He noted that the crime rate is going down — from a high of 525.1 violent crimes per 100,000 Hoosiers in 1994 to 333.6 in 2007, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics — but Indiana’s prison population continues to grow by about 4 percent each year.

At a cost of $54.28 a day — or more than $19,000 annually to house and feed an inmate — Indiana needs to find alternatives, Landis said.

“We can’t afford this mindless, endless prison construction,” he said.

Short-term solutions

Building the new cell blocks at Miami and Wabash Valley already is Plan B for Buss.

He’d hoped to build a $100 million maximum-security prison but scrapped that idea when it became clear that the state couldn’t afford it now.

If the legislature doesn’t agree to build new cell blocks, Buss will go to Plan C.

“We’ll have to make a decision this summer to start triple-bunking (maximum-security prisoners) or closing program areas here at Wabash Valley like the gymnasium, maybe the school, and converting them to housing units,” he said as he toured Wabash Valley last week with a reporter.

Triple-bunking maximum-security prisoners, he said, is “unheard of.”

“Even California (notorious for prison crowding) doesn’t triple-bunk maximum-security offenders,” he said.

The thought of adding 50 inmates to cell blocks that already house 100 is alarming to corrections officers and inmates.

“We’ll probably have more murders, lots of guys killing each other,” predicted Rodney Johnson, 24, Fort Wayne, who is serving a 34-year sentence at Wabash Valley for aggravated battery and criminal recklessness.

James Manuel, a corrections officer at Wabash Valley, said adding inmates would make an already tough job more dangerous.

Though the overall ratio is three employees to one inmate at Wabash Valley, when inmates are in their cellblocks, particularly at night, they outnumber corrections officers 100 to 1.

“You add another 50 bodies on to that,” Manuel said, “it’d be crazy.”

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